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What Happened to New England Theology?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2025

Sam Gee*
Affiliation:
John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
*
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Abstract

The New England Theology"-the tradition of American Reformed thought originating in the work of Jonathan Edwards (1703-58)-was, for much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, a subject of opprobrium and condescension. In the 1980s and 1990s a new wave of revisionist scholarship reassessed the New England theologians, arguing for their centrality to early American intellectual history. This article asks why, in the wake of these studies, almost no new work has been done on the New England Theology in more than a decade. It argues that the decline in the subfield is due to the capture of the subject by evangelical scholars at evangelical institutions, tying this phenomenon to the rise of the "new evangelical thesis" in academic history. Finally, the article seeks to chart a way forward for the study of New England Theology by going beyond evangelical readings of the sources.

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For a brief moment, it seemed that scholarship on the New England Theology was on the verge of a breakthrough. The New England Theology—referred to variously as the New Divinity, Edwardsi(/e)anism, Hopkinsianism, and consistent Calvinism—was the tradition of American Reformed religious thought originating in the epochal theological production of Jonathan Edwards (1703–58) and proceeding in variously modified forms into the later nineteenth century via its transmission in private theological home schools (“schools of the prophets”) and, eventually, nascent divinity schools (Yale, Andover).Footnote 1 For much of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the consensus about the New England Theology was summed up by the wit of Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr, who satirically and scurrilously wound it up as a “wonderful one-hoss-shay, / That was built in such a logical way” and “ran a hundred years to a day” before it “went to pieces all at once … / Just as bubbles do when they burst.”Footnote 2 The point of Holmes’s poem, subtitled “A Logical Story,” was that the New England theologians sounded their own death knell by committing themselves to an inflexible, rigorous logic that led ultimately to absurdity. In the early twentieth century, the historian of Puritanism Herbert W. Schneider consigned the New Divinity to an oblivion even more abysmal than Holmes’s: “one of the most intricate and pathetic exhibitions of theological reasoning which the history of Western thought affords … [Those] who have taken the pains to pick their way through this desert have merely succeeded in convincing others that there are no signs of life in it.”Footnote 3

A general reassessment of Jonathan Edwards began in the 1930s and 1940s, a rehabilitation most commonly associated with Perry Miller and the initiation under his auspices of the Yale edition of the Works of Jonathan Edwards in 1957. But Edwards’s reputation was resurrected at the expense of his colleagues’ and students’, who even at the height of Protestant neo-orthodoxy were portrayed as obscurantist, dour, unlovely, and in thrall to the shallow spirit of their age.

Yet after one hundred years of neglect and abuse, this state of affairs began to change. In the 1980s, a few daring books and articles attempted positively to reevaluate these colonial and antebellum theologians and pastors. Historians began to make more dignified claims for the New Divinity. It was “the first indigenous American school of Calvinism,” said one, “the first indigenous American theology,” added another, and, most impressive of all, “the most sustained, systematic, and creative intellectual tradition produced in this country.”Footnote 4 Its proponents were not ersatz Edwardses slavishly failing to reproduce their master’s sublime synthesis of Calvinist religion and Enlightenment reason. Rather, they were themselves sensitive readers of Edwards’s work who modified their teacher’s ideas to suit a changing America, protesting against modern evils such as slavery, unfettered capitalism, and radical individualism.

The 1980s and 1990s witnessed a number of impressive studies on the New England Theology in its social, cultural, and intellectual dimensions.Footnote 5 In 1998, Douglas A. Sweeney, prior to the publication of his own book on the subject, celebrated the ascent of the field: “Long driven by ideological controversy and distracted by the greatness of Edwards’s persona, the study of Edwardsianism in New England seems now to be coming into its own,” he cheered.Footnote 6 On the threshold of the new century, it seemed that the dense network of Calvinist minister–theologians, who had (according to these scholars) been a driving force behind the massive revivals of the early nineteenth century (sometimes referred to as “the Second Great Awakening”) that revolutionized American religious history, were finally going to be given their due.

And then—nothing happened. Judging by published scholarly works, the interest in the Edwardsian stream of piety, thought, and social organization died on the branch at the very moment of its supposed flowering. In retrospect, Sweeney’s proclamation seems more indicative of a bloom already blossomed than of fertile new growth. True, the New England Theology featured heavily in Mark Noll’s monumental survey of American religious history, America’s God (2005).Footnote 7 Catherine Brekus expanded the canon of the New Divinity with her work on Sarah Osborn, a lay religious leader in Newport with connections to the more established Samuel Hopkins.Footnote 8 And beyond all others, Sweeney himself carried the field into the new century with a coedited anthology of primary sources and a coedited volume of scholarly essays on the New England Theology in 2012—the last year in which any edited volume on the subject was produced.Footnote 9 But, by and large, the scholars who had spearheaded the earlier work on the subject moved on to other topics or published work exclusively on Jonathan Edwards in the narrower subfield of Edwards studies. No major scholarly work has been published on the New England Theology since the early 2010s. If the derision of the nineteenth century and the earlier twentieth has vanished, so too has the attention—both negative and positive—that this topic traditionally attracted among students of American religion and culture. The question, then, is why, at precisely the moment when the New England Theology was poised to assume its place at the center of American religious historiography, it seems to have vanished as a serious subject for research in history and religious studies? In other words, what happened to New England Theology?

The argument of this article is that the decline of scholarship on the New England Theology is directly linked to the rise of what Matthew Avery Sutton has recently called the “new and exceedingly positive evangelical historiography” of the 1980s–2000s. Evangelical scholars of evangelicalism, I contend, enlisted Jonathan Edwards in their project to establish their own intellectual bona fides within the secular academy. In doing so, they simultaneously created a new glossy image of Edwards as “America’s evangelical” and enlisted Edwards’s followers in their narrative of the triumph of evangelicalism in America. These historians—among others Mark Noll, George Marsden, and Douglas Sweeney—became victims of their own success. While much of their work on Edwards and the Edwardsians constituted genuine improvements over earlier twentieth-century appraisals, their historical portraits were so compelling that their interpretive frame became (for many unconsciously) a new paradigm. Edwards and his disciples came to be viewed as emblematic evangelicals, rather than intellectual resources for Americans (or even simply non-evangelical Christians) more broadly. Thus research on both Edwards and the New England Theology became siphoned into evangelical institutions and lost its hold on most of the secular historical and religious-studies establishment.

After a whirlwind historiographical tour of the New England Theology, and a demonstration of my argument about the ambivalent construction of an “evangelical” Edwardsianism, I will offer a brief suggestion by way of conclusion for how contemporary historians can move scholarship on the New England Theology forward for the twenty-first century. Without returning to the sometimes ahistorical posture of twentieth-century appraisals of these figures, we should, I contend, also hesitate complacently to see Edwards as the founder of American evangelicalism and his disciples as nothing more than promoters of the same. By searching for new connections and intellectual linkages, new generations of researchers can build on the important work of the 1980s and 1990s (as well as the contributions of evangelical scholars) to reestablish the New England Theologians as significant intellectuals contemplating serious questions of the self and its relation to society and to the divine.

Piety and moralism

The term “New England Theology” was coined by the Congregationalist theologian and Andover professor Edwards Amasa Park in an eponymous article of 1852.Footnote 10 Park defined the New England Theology quite simply as “the formal creed which a majority of the most eminent theologians in New England have explicitly or implicitly sanctioned, during and since the time of Edwards.”Footnote 11 The basic concept, however, of a distinctively American lineage of Reformed theology running from Edwards through a series of generations of disciples did not begin with Park. As Joseph Conforti has noted, the New England Theology was a highly contentious construct cocreated by a number of nineteenth-century theologians to legitimize their distinctive doctrinal positions through an appeal to the historical precedent of Edwards. “By 1852,” Conforti writes, “when Park published a lengthy and learned historical exposition in the Bibliotheca Sacra titled ‘New England Theology,’ the metonymic transformation of the label was far advanced; it had become widely recognized as denominating the hundred-year-old New Divinity movement—the doctrinal interpretation and ‘improvement’ of Edwards initiated by his closest disciples in the decades after the colonial awakening.”Footnote 12

Nevertheless, it was Park—sometimes himself referred to as “the last Edwardsian”—who gave the term scholarly currency. Park insisted that the New England Theology was defined by its affirmation of the moral agency of individuals and a rejection of imputed original sin.Footnote 13 One of Park’s students, George Nye Boardman, wrote A History of New England Theology in 1899, the first book-length study of the tradition. Like Park, Boardman insisted on “an elementary unity underlying” the various phases of the New England Theology.Footnote 14 Frank Hugh Foster’s A Genetic History of the New England Theology (1907) followed soon after. Foster’s work bore the stamp of the new theological liberalism of the early twentieth century, and tended to deprecate the more rigorously Calvinist early theologians in favor of the later, more humanistic Edwardsians of the mid-nineteenth century.Footnote 15

Whatever the merits of these early efforts, the single most important book on the New England Theology in the twentieth century (or any other) was written by Joseph Haroutunian, a precocious Turkish American theologian who taught at McCormick Theological Seminary and the University of Chicago. The book, Piety versus Moralism: The Passing of the New England Theology (1932), was published out of Haroutunian’s Columbia doctoral dissertation and it set the tone for all later efforts in the field. It would not be an exaggeration to call the view the book instantiated the Haroutunian paradigm. For Haroutunian, Jonathan Edwards had been a great, original religious thinker, whose thought was unspoiled by Enlightenment rationalism or sentimentalism. Unfortunately, Edwards’s disciples—men like Samuel Hopkins and Joseph Bellamy—betrayed Edwards by turning his inspired thought into a legalistic dogma. Despite the fact that Hopkins and Bellamy insisted that anyone who was not converted would spend an eternity in the fiery lake, Haroutunian provocatively claimed that they had acceded to the humanitarian spirit of the age. “As seen from the perspective of the theology of Edwards, the history of the New England Theology is the history of a degradation,” Haroutunian wrote;

It declined because its theocentric character, its supreme regard for the glory of God and His sovereignty over man, made it ill-fitted to give expression to the ideals of the eighteenth century New England and to meet its immediate social needs. The social and political forces of the time gave rise to principles which were either inimical or irrelevant to the spirit of the Edwardean theology.Footnote 16

For Haroutunian, writing after World War I, the relative humanism and optimism of the New Divinity (as he perceived it) seemed naive and tawdry compared to the excellence of Edwards’s “theocentric” worldview. This perspective shaped the other most significant interpreter of Edwards and his students in these years, the immensely influential Perry Miller. It is perhaps not often enough appreciated that Miller wrote his famous biography of Edwards in the wake of Haroutunian’s earlier work. But Haroutunian’s perspective clearly shaped the portrait of Edwards that Miller drew. For Miller, Edwards was a proto-modernist prophet. Unlike his contemporary, Benjamin Franklin, he was skeptical of an orderly world operated according to optimistic rationalism and free-market capitalism, and instead understood the tragic, limited character of human life and American destiny. “Edwards’ preaching was America’s sudden leap into modernity,” Miller claimed; even more controversially, in the area of psychology, Miller wrote, “it would have taken [Edwards] about an hour’s reading in William James, and two hours in Freud, to catch up completely.”Footnote 17 Edwards was such an imposing figure for Miller that he never even considered the ways in which Edwards’s disciples might have embodied his ideas in a durable tradition; that was not even a point worth considering for the attentive reader of Piety versus Moralism.

At first glance, one might think that the tide began to turn with the first book of another major American religious historian, Sidney E. Mead. Mead took on the tall task of rehabilitating a figure who was the object of Haroutunian’s most focused opprobrium, the nineteenth-century Yale theologian Nathaniel William Taylor. In Nathaniel William Taylor: A Connecticut Liberal (1942), Mead argued that Taylor’s thought was not dry and legalistic, but rather constituted the basis of “one great strain of American theology.” But to demonstrate this, Mead had to argue not that Taylor was in fact a disciple of Edwards who had gotten his master’s teachings wrong, but rather that he was not an Edwardsian at all. Taylor was, for Mead, both an heir of the eighteenth-century “Old Calvinist” opponents of Edwards’s theology and an early “liberal” who paved the way for progressive Christianity. In sum, then, at this early stage, in the heyday of Haroutunian and Miller, to claim that an American thinker after Edwards was significant, one had to establish that they were not an Edwardsian!Footnote 18

The revisionist approach to New England Theology began in earnest with the work of Joseph A. Conforti, whose book on Samuel Hopkins sought to rescue that most crabbed of theologians from posterity’s condescension. To do this, he sought to establish Hopkins and his peers as genuinely creative followers of Edwards in their own right. Conforti claimed that “Hopkins and other advocates of the New Divinity established the first indigenous American school of Calvinism”—a statement often repeated and expanded by later writers.Footnote 19 Hopkins, he demonstrated, was both a nuanced and a progressive social theorist—he vocally opposed slavery well before most white Americans and diagnosed the disease of market-driven hyper-individualism already in the eighteenth century—and a theological innovator who even disagreed with Edwards, not always to the latter’s benefit. “The New Divinity,” he argued, “was much more than simply a theological vogue; it was also a protest movement with particular appeal to young, pietistic ministers. The New Divinity men were sharply critical of the established ministry, of the development of Puritan theology, and also … of the evolution of New England society.” Conforti also did pioneering work in mapping the dense social networks that enabled the spread of the New England Theology across much of New England through the new “schools of the prophets” and extended kinship networks formed by intermarriage within influential clerical families. All this eventuated in a much more positive appraisal of the New England theologians. “In short,” Conforti wrote, “the New Divinity men did not betray their origins in experimental religion by over-intellectualizing the piety of the First Great Awakening; rather they preserved and bequeathed to the next generation of revivalists its creative tension between social theory and social practice.”Footnote 20

Conforti’s work authorized a general reassessment of New England Theology that flowered through the 1980s and into the 1990s. William Breitenbach, Bruce Kuklick, Allen Guelzo, David Kling, and Mark Valeri, among others, all wrote articles and books that took the New Divinity seriously as a sophisticated, creative intellectual and spiritual tradition. Of special note is Bruce Kuklick’s Churchmen and Philosophers (1985), which claimed that “The New England Theology … represents the most sustained intellectual tradition in the United States.”Footnote 21 Although Kuklick saw the Edwardsian theologians as in certain respects rather provincial and intellectually simplistic compared to their contemporaries in England or Germany, he nevertheless wrote about them as both the major American intellectuals of their day (much more culturally influential than liberal Unitarians or Transcendentalists) and ancestors of Deweyan pragmatism. Kuklick neither dismissed the New England theologians as obscurantists, nor sought to celebrate their Calvinist sensibilities. The professionalization of philosophy in the nineteenth century, the challenges of German historicism and scientific thinking, eventually rendered Edwardsianism obsolete; and yet, for Kuklick, the New England Theology, however unconvincing in its details, was a crucial building block in American intellectual history, a robust tradition of thought that laid the groundwork for the later explosion of American philosophy in its golden age.Footnote 22

The other works in this revisionist strain, while not always agreeing in the details of their accounts of particular thinkers, all filled in gaps in the understanding of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American religious history. William Breitenbach took on Haroutunian directly, arguing “that the so-called peculiarities and innovations of the New Divinity reveal Edwards’s most creative and important contributions to New England theology,” and that that tradition was not a barren legalism devoid of mysticism but rather a blend “of piety and moralism.”Footnote 23 In another essay, he argued (contra Conforti) that New England Theology actually helped to pave the way for the dominance of a commercial ethic in New England.Footnote 24 Allen C. Guelzo boasted that “the intellectual progression from Edwards to Hopkins to Emmons is perhaps the single most interesting phenomenon in the history of American thought,” assigning that tradition the (dubious) merit of undermining the older ideal of a national covenantal community premised on religious unity and civic belonging.Footnote 25 David W. Kling explored the New England theologians’ relation to the revivals of the 1790s–1820s known as the “Second Great Awakening,” showing how extensively third-generation New Divinity preaching underlay that efflorescence of religious experience.Footnote 26 And Mark Valeri did for Bellamy what Conforti had previously done for Hopkins. “Bellamy’s innovations on the theology of Jonathan Edwards made Calvinism significant for the Revolutionary generation,” Valeri argued. “Rather than rehearse Edwards, his mentor and the most sophisticated theologian in eighteenth-century America, Bellamy refashioned evangelical Calvinism.”Footnote 27

Looking back over the previous century and a half of work on the New England Theology in 1998, Douglas A. Sweeney declared the end of the Haroutunian paradigm. “Clearly … the historiography of the New England Theology has seen some important recent changes, not the least of which is that Haroutunian has begun falling precipitously from power.”Footnote 28 Sweeney’s own work on Nathaniel William Taylor rested upon and further developed the revisionism of the 1980s and early 1990s. His Nathaniel Taylor, New Haven Theology, and the Legacy of Jonathan Edwards (2002) reaffirmed Taylor’s central role in the New England theological pantheon and argued for the outsized importance of Edwardsianism in extending evangelical Christianity to thousands of Americans in the nineteenth century, even after the theology itself had become a relic.Footnote 29

But it would seem that the Haroutunian paradigm’s alleged demise, ironically, coincided with the end of significant scholarship on the New England Theology as a whole. In the years since Sweeney’s book on Taylor, there has been much excellent work on Edwards, from deep theological analysis to biography and consideration of just about every angle of Edwards’s vast literary edifice possible. And yet, despite the revisionists’ attempts in the 1980s to establish the New Divinity as an intellectually significant tradition, no real boom in New England Theology ever came. If Edwards has to some extent remained a cottage industry, his heirs certainly have not. Many of them, important in their own day (e.g. John Smalley, Stephen West, Nathanael Emmons) have not even received modern biographical treatment. If the revisionist scholars were correct that New England Theology was a truly significant part of American history, why has it largely disappeared from view?

America’s evangelicals?

The most obvious answer to the foregoing question is that American religion as a discipline has by and large moved away from the theological, the canonical, the elite, and, above all, anything vaguely redolent of Puritanism. Already in 1997, Charles L. Cohen noted the formation of a “post-Puritan Paradigm” in American religious history. After Perry Miller’s outsized achievement, Cohen explained, the field “came to be seen as a set of variations played around the theme of Puritanism dominating the nation’s Protestant sensibility.” But “critics have pointed out how this seemingly expansive galaxy issued from a narrow preoccupation with one particular region, approach, occupational group, and theological tradition” (not to mention one race and gender).Footnote 30 In recent years, the reaction against historical narratives that foreground colonial New England Protestants has only grown stronger. As only the most recent example, Thomas A. Tweed’s new field-defining survey Religion in the Lands That Became America (2025) begins its introduction with the line “There were no Puritans on my street in Philadelphia.” The explicitly stated aim of the book is to decenter white male Protestant theologians in favor of indigenous, black, female, and other nonelite white male points of view.Footnote 31

Cohen listed three factors that contributed to the formation of the post-Puritan paradigm: “the emergence of social history, the ‘discovery’ of popular religion, and the renewed awareness of the colonies’ transatlantic connections.” These elements remain in effect, as do more contemporary interests in the adverse effects on marginalized groups of imperialism and colonialism. This may all go a long way to explaining why the study of New England Theology seems to have died on the branch by the end of the twentieth century. But, in fact, general shifts in the field away from intellectual history or the study of elite culture do not adequately explain the phenomenon. Indeed, the “new social history” had already begun displacing top-down approaches in the field at least as early as the 1970s. For instance, Paul Johnson’s influential study A Shopkeeper’s Millennium: Society and Revivals in Rochester, New York, 1815–1837, published in 1978, attempted to explain Charles G. Finney’s revivals in terms of economic factors in the industrial towns of upstate New York, eschewing theology in favor of statistical analyses of employment and population.Footnote 32 Johnson’s history was, of course, different from current approaches to American religious history that emphasize, for example, the racist dimensions of Protestant theological hegemony.Footnote 33 Nevertheless, considerations of New England Theology persisted well past the advent of social history concerned with class, race, and gender, and some of the best revisionist work, such as Kling’s A Field of Divine Wonders, combined intellectual-historical approaches with social and cultural history that considered the audiences of the New Divinity’s sermonizing.

So then the question remains: what happened to New England Theology? I argue that if we pay close attention to the work being done on New England Theology from the 2000s onward, we can see a major shift in emphasis and motivation that helps to explain the decline of the subfield. Specifically, beginning in the 1990s and cresting in the 2000s and 2010s, work on Edwardsianism (and, indeed, American Protestant theology more generally) became the near-exclusive province of evangelical scholars who enlisted Edwards (and sometimes his heirs) in broader narratives about the history of evangelicalism, the history of America, or both, that sought to establish contemporary evangelicalism as a respectable intellectual tradition with a strong connection to the American project.

As early as 1988, attentive students were beginning to note the rise of a new school in American religious history. Sometimes labeled “observer-participant historians,” these scholars were avowed “evangelicals” who wrote magisterial histories of American religion from an explicitly Protestant point of view. Leonard I. Sweet (himself among this group) celebrated “one of the most arresting phenomena in American religious scholarship today: the emergence in academe of a group of evangelical historians to a position of dominance in fundamentalist/evangelical historiography and to a front-rank position within scholarship on American religious history generally.”Footnote 34 The scholars in question were centered around Wheaton College’s Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals, founded in 1982, and headed up by Mark Noll and Nathan O. Hatch. In addition to Noll and Hatch, George Marsden, Joel Carpenter, Grant Wacker, Harry Stout, and several other eminent historians were associated with the group.

In particular, Marsden and Noll led the charge to redefine the way “evangelicalism” was studied in the American academy. But saying that does not go far enough—for in seeking to establish “evangelicalism” at the center of American history, these scholars also largely invented “evangelicalism” as a category of scholarly analysis and a theological heritage going back to the eighteenth century. As D. G. Hart presciently pointed out in 2004, the “observer-participant” historians were in fact importing a conception of the American religious past into the academy first spearheaded by the “neo-evangelical” leaders of the 1940s, Harold Ockenga and Carl F. H. Henry. These were Protestants who in the wake of the scandal of the Scopes trial (1925) sought to give fundamentalism a face-lift by shedding the image of anti-intellectual sectarianism that it had acquired in American culture. To do so, they rejected the term “fundamentalist” in favor of a term with more ecumenical, positive connotations: “evangelical.”Footnote 35

As several recent scholars have demonstrated, the current meaning of the term “evangelical” as it is used in American culture was a creation of these neo-evangelicals and their academic compeers. Linford D. Fisher has shown that from the sixteenth century through the early twentieth, “evangelical” simply referred to Protestants and was used to establish one’s credentials as a “true Christian.” Even such seemingly non-evangelical groups as Christian Scientists, Unitarians, and Universalists considered themselves to be evangelical. Fisher argues that it was only in the 1970s that the current conception of “evangelicals” as a term for a specific set of Protestants with a core of beliefs distinguishing them from other Christians emerged and was generally accepted. As he puts it,

perhaps the most interesting component of the word “evangelical” is simply its highly contested history. Using the relatively fixed notion of a post-1970s “evangelicalism,” historians have seemingly forgotten that, even in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the appropriation and application of “evangelical” was surprisingly contentious, as a mostly desirable point of identification by groups and individuals who would not at all fit contemporary definitions of “evangelical.” There simply was no one agreed-upon definition of what “evangelical” was, and a close reading of the sources reveals a robust conversation and contestation regarding the term.Footnote 36

For years, the most influential definition of “evangelicalism” was David Bebbington’s “quadrilateral of priorities,” as articulated in his book Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (1989). Bebbington’s synopsis, accepted and propagated by American evangelical historians, posited evangelicalism as a theological tradition marked by distinctive beliefs—the title alone made a claim for a continuous evangelical line from the eighteenth century to the twentieth. Bebbington’s quadrilateral included “conversionism, the belief that lives need to be changed; activism, the expression of the gospel in effort; biblicism, a particular regard for the Bible; and what may be called crucicentrism, a stress on the sacrifice of Christ on the cross.”Footnote 37 These beliefs united early Protestant revivalists, such as John Wesley and George Whitefield, with modern preachers like Billy Graham. More recently, Bebbington’s paradigm has come under heavy fire. The rallying point has been the awareness, generated by white evangelicals’ support of Donald Trump in the 2016, 2020, and 2024 elections, of the highly political and cultural character of the movement. In Kristin Kobes Du Mez’s best-selling Jesus and John Wayne, the intellectualist definition of evangelicalism is denied outright. “In truth, what it means to be an evangelical has always depended on the world beyond the faith,” Du Mez writes. “For conservative white evangelicals, the ‘good news’ of the Christian gospel has become inextricably linked to a staunch commitment to patriarchal authority, gender difference, and Christian nationalism, and all of these are intertwined with white racial identity.”Footnote 38

Matthew Avery Sutton has recently turned attention to Marsden, Noll, Hatch, and their colleagues, arguing that, beginning in the 1970s, these historians constructed a historically continuous, theologically based definition of evangelicalism in order to distance their own brand of Protestantism from the contentiousness of the ascendant religious right. “Over the course of their careers,” Sutton contends, these historians

built a new and exceedingly positive evangelical historiography undergirded by two mutually reinforcing moves. First, they defined evangelicalism theologically, extracting it from specific historical, cultural, and political contexts … Second, as they settled on a minimalist set of beliefs to define evangelicalism, they applied their definition retroactively to a broad host of subjects from the late colonial period to the present. They argued that evangelicalism was, in large part, the product of a rich historical tradition of socially conscious Christians intending to make a better world.

This “new evangelical historiography” came to dominate the field of American history—something already noticed by the Yale historian Jon Butler in 1992, who lamented that recent religious historians had “shaped nothing less than a ‘new evangelical thesis’ in American historiography, a thesis that argues for evangelicalism’s centrality to nearly every important distinguishing characteristic of American life and especially to those characteristics that we find positive and valuable, both now and in the past.” Sutton goes so far as to recommend that contemporary historians drop the label “evangelical” altogether for the period before the mid-twentieth century.Footnote 39

One aspect of this story that has not yet been thoroughly explored—though it is highly relevant both to narratives like Fisher’s and Sutton’s and to the story of the decline of scholarship on New England Theology—is the way in which Jonathan Edwards became the single most important figure for establishing the legitimacy of the new evangelical thesis (to use Butler’s term). As Hart has noted, the renaissance of academic studies of Edwards coincided with a recovery of Edwards by various evangelicals, some of whom—most notably, John Piper—were affiliated with Wheaton and friendly with the observer-participant historians. According to Hart, the evangelical discovery of Edwards began with John Gerstner’s Steps to Salvation: The Evangelistic Message of Jonathan Edwards (1959). Other influential English and American evangelicals, including Iain Murray, Richard Lovelace, and John Piper, all turned to Edwards as an important source of doctrine for contemporary evangelical Protestants. “This born-again Protestant recovery of Edwards’s legacy functioned as the subtext to the monographs and critical editions that began to surface in the 1950s within academic circles,” Hart proposes.Footnote 40

Within the academy, Marsden and Noll’s influential construction of an evangelical tradition depended heavily on a certain portrait of Jonathan Edwards. As Mark Noll famously put it in his coruscating The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind (1994), “the scandal of the evangelical mind is that there is not much of an evangelical mind.” But as Noll noted, “the condition of the evangelical mind in contemporary America could not be described as a scandal unless an earlier history existed to show that serious intellectual labor had been the norm for at least many Protestants in the evangelical tradition.” The evidence for this claim was quite simply the existence of Jonathan Edwards. “The early history of evangelicalism in America is notable for the career of Jonathan Edwards, for Edwards was the most powerful intellectual in American evangelical history,” Noll argued. Edwards “undertook [his] work from the most explicitly evangelical convictions.” He “was an evangelical thinker because he held strenuously to the conviction that God’s action was the basis for human reaction in every area of life.” But, Noll argued, drawing implicitly on Haroutunian, “this greatest of evangelical thinkers was left without successors.” Noll lamented that Edwards’s life and thought, and his place in American culture, had been over the twentieth century primarily the purview of secular academics. “In the great recovery of Edwards’s reputation that has taken place in the last generation, the lead was taken by secular scholars for secular purposes,” Noll averred, “while evangelicals have played only a secondary role in the recovery. Apart from a few noteworthy exceptions such as Richard Lovelace and John Piper, evangelicals continue to neglect Edwards, with the result that the riches of his thought—as spiritually invigorating as it is intellectually challenging—remain virtually unknown among the hordes of evangelicals who are his religious descendants.”Footnote 41 In sum, for Noll, Edwards was the evangelical par excellence, and despite the fact that the New Divinity failed to uphold his magnificent legacy, it was precisely evangelicals who should learn from Edwards, rather than (or, at least, in addition to) secular or non-evangelical Christian academics.Footnote 42

In his grand tour of early American religious history, America’s God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln (2002), Noll turned his attention from Edwards to his New Divinity followers. In Noll’s account, the Edwardsian theologians (in addition to Methodists, Baptists, and some other revivalist groups) took elements of Edwards’s thought and transmuted it into a new “American synthesis” that combined evangelical religion with republican political sentiments and Scottish commonsense moral reasoning. Throughout, Noll emphasizes that these New England theologians were evangelicals, who were largely responsible (again, along with Methodists) for making “evangelicalism … the unofficially established religion in a nation that had forsworn religious establishments.” Noll’s final estimation of the “evangelical” disciples of Edwards was mixed. While he forthrightly stated in his conclusion that Edwards was the most profound religious thinker in American history, he also stressed that his narrative was not one of “decline.” “Jonathan Edwards’s thought was more rigorously doxological than the thought of any nineteenth‐century religious thinker,” Noll wrote, “but evangelists of that latter period did more to Christianize and civilize unchurched Americans in a free‐form liberal society than Edwards could ever have done.” For Noll, then, the New England theologians were a civilizing force that effected the nation’s conversion to evangelicalism. If not as brilliant as Edwards himself (a claim few would contest), they were nevertheless more successful than Edwards in spreading the evangelical gospel.Footnote 43

The most significant Edwards scholar of the twenty-first century, perhaps, has been George Marsden, whose authoritative biography Jonathan Edwards: A Life (2003) won the prestigious Bancroft Prize. The justification for Marsden’s work is the (quite reasonable) criticism advanced by various historians after Perry Miller that the mid-twentieth-century analysis of Edwards was based more on presentist preoccupations, insisting on making Edwards modern, than on a disciplined attention to the eighteenth-century cultural context in which Edwards existed. Marsden sagely wrote in his biography that “Edwards anticipated some traits of later evangelicals, but the facts that he was a Calvinistic thinker, that he was rigorously intellectual, and that he was working in an eighteenth-century context make him very different from his evangelical heirs.” But he also made it clear that Edwards was indeed an evangelical Christian who “was a saint according to the highest Reformed spiritual standards to which he aspired.” At the end of the book, Marsden admitted that “one of my hopes is that this book may help bridge the gap between the Edwards of the students of American culture and the Edwards of the theologians.”Footnote 44 And despite the claims to a studied historicism that Marsden makes in his big book, his later work explicitly positions Edwards as a theological resource for Christians in opposition to the naive secular assumptions of Edwards’s contemporary Benjamin Franklin.Footnote 45 Like Noll, then, Marsden sees Edwards as the source of a revivified evangelicalism, one that rejects the rabble-rousing populism of a Whitefield in favor of an Edwardsian intellectualism and sophistication.

As Kenneth Minkema rightly noted in 2004, the historicist accounts of Edwards that scholars like Marsden (among many others) were producing actually coincided with, rather than contradicted, the frankly theological and religious use being made of Edwards by conservative evangelicals like Gerstner or Piper. That is because the “historical Edwards” (unlike the “neo-orthodox Edwards” of Haroutunian or Miller) was forthrightly biblicist and utterly convinced of the supernatural character of the Christian religion. Edwards as a devotee of the Bible (literally read) and heavily invested in apocalyptic and eschatological contemplation was both a historical fact and another facet of his usefulness for contemporary evangelicals. Accordingly, Minkema was one of the first to note the ascent of evangelical scholarship on Edwards and Edwardsianism:

During the ‘90s, fully one-third of all printed commentary on Edwards was theological in nature, the highest in more than a century. Even more, over half of these theological considerations of Edwards appeared in evangelical publications … Likewise, religious presses of all sizes have been churning out new editions of Edwards’s writings as well as monographs … the “new evangelicals” from across a broad (white) spectrum—have embraced Edwards like never before.

In pointing out this conjunction, Minkema celebrated it: “Not Church vs. Academy, but Church and Academy. That’s the kind of conjunction we need to see more often, because it recognizes that scholars and practitioners in the two spheres can and should learn from each other,” he wrote.Footnote 46

To put it simply, a prominent group of evangelical historians of the late 1970s and onward leaned on Edwards as the definitive proof that a smart, modern, intellectually respectable form of evangelical Christianity was possible in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.Footnote 47 As Douglas Sweeney explained, “more than any other thinker, Edwards has aided evangelicals in gaining credibility and in furthering their agenda in American public life.”Footnote 48 Edwards, positioned as America’s foremost philosopher and theologian—and also as an evangelical—demonstrated that evangelicalism had intellectual bona fides that were undeniable by even the standards of the secular academy. And while some scholars at the time, such as Jon Butler and Bruce Kuklick, pushed back on this conflation of theological commitment with critical history, by and large the “new evangelical thesis” with Edwards as its emblem and poster boy carried the day.Footnote 49 The evangelical scholars succeeded better than they knew—Edwards became the near-exclusive purview of evangelical scholars in evangelical institutions. By the opening decade of the twenty-first century, Edwards was “America’s Evangelical.” With Edwards thus cordoned off, the New England theological tradition to which his work gave rise, as we have seen in the case of Noll’s America’s God, also fell under the shadow of evangelicalism’s wings, and was thereby rendered largely unpalatable to any scholars who did not want to celebrate the (supposed) evangelical heritage.Footnote 50

We can see this more clearly if we attend to the (scanty) scholarship produced on New England Theology in the twenty-first century. The major worker in this field since the mid-1990s has been Douglas A. Sweeney of Trinity Evangelical Divinity School and Samford University. As already noted, Sweeney published the last major historiography of the tradition in 1998. His book Nathaniel Taylor, New Haven Theology, and the Legacy of Jonathan Edwards (2002), which came out of his Vanderbilt dissertation, was the most thorough monograph on Edwards’s legacy since Valeri’s 1994 book on Bellamy. Yet all of his impressive work is premised on the evangelical view of Edwards and his followers. He defines evangelicalism tendentiously as “orthodox Protestantism transformed and reconfigured by the transatlantic awakenings of the early eighteenth century” and writes of the Edwardsians that they “championed an evangelical view of religion, calling parishioners to personal faith, genuine conversion, and self-sacrifice in service of the needy.”Footnote 51 Sweeney’s coedited volume After Jonathan Edwards: The Courses of the New England Theology (2012), an exceptionally helpful resource, also overwhelmingly contained contributions by evangelical scholars, many of whom taught at evangelical institutions such as Trinity, Regent College, and Fuller Theological Seminary.

The most recent single-authored scholarly book on the New England Theology, Catherine Brekus’s Sarah Osborn’s World (2013), is subtitled The Rise of Evangelical Christianity in Early America, and explicitly links Osborn’s brand of Edwardsian Christianity to contemporary evangelicalism. “Although many people associate evangelicalism with modern religious leaders like Billy Graham and Rick Warren,” Brekus writes, “its roots can be traced back to the eighteenth century. In response to social, political, economic, and intellectual transformations that were transatlantic in scope, eighteenth-century Protestants throughout the Atlantic world gradually created a new kind of faith that we now call evangelicalism.”Footnote 52 Even in expanding the canon of the New Divinity to include an influential laywoman, Brekus nevertheless adopts the framing of the observer-participant historians who posit a continuous evangelical tradition.

If one looks at dissertations from the twentieth century to the present, the trend I have laid out becomes even clearer. Dissertations from the 1970s that mention New England Theology include Conforti’s Brown University thesis on Hopkins, E. Brooks Holifield’s Yale study of covenant theology, Patricia Wilson’s study of the concept of grace in Edwards from the University of Iowa, and other studies from the University of North Carolina, Stanford, the University of Chicago, and other predominantly secular universities. Turning to the decade from 2010 to 2019, three of the first five dissertations displayed come out of Trinity International University (all students of Sweeney’s), with the next two originating from projects by students at the Presbyterian School of Christian Education and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Other projects come from Dallas Theological Seminary, Westminster Theological Seminary, Regent University, and Wheaton College.Footnote 53 In other words, while there were perhaps, numerically, just as many dissertations (if not more) being written about the New England Theology in the 2010s as there were in the 1970s, these studies are predominantly housed within evangelical seminaries and divinity schools, many of which have a strong bent toward Reformed theology. That is not, of course, to say that recent studies are less valuable or meritorious than earlier ones. But it does show that, to a great extent, the subject has been siloed into the world of evangelical history and theology and has significantly lost its hold on the mainstream secular academy.

Recent critics of the evangelical historians have perhaps been over-harsh in their condemnations of these scholars. They have done much of the best work in the field, correcting many historical misconceptions and uncovering important aspects of the American past’s turbulent relationship with Protestantism. The problem is not with the work itself; rather, the issue is that these writers, almost all based at evangelical institutions, have been so successful in establishing Edwards and his heirs as influential evangelicals that they have unintentionally made these figures seem unsuitable subjects for many non-evangelical or secular scholars. Where once Edwards and the New Divinity were treated seriously and respectfully by atheist historians like Perry Miller or Edmund Morgan, in the twenty-first century they tend either to be disdained or, more usually, ignored. And if Miller was misguided to treat Edwards as a modern secularist, it may be that the neo-evangelicals are just as partial in treating Edwards and the Edwardsians as the progenitors of later evangelicalism.

If scholarship on the New England Theology did not dry up until the 2010s—and then only in secular colleges and universities and in published works (but not evangelical divinity school dissertations)—then this fact still demands explanation. How could “the most sustained, systematic, and creative intellectual tradition produced in this country” not receive a single monograph or edited volume in over a decade? The answer now seems clear. Evangelical scholars, in taking over the subject from the broad mainstream of American religious history, appropriated it for their own religious and political purposes. Many students who write dissertations on Edwards in an evangelical divinity school will go on to take up work in the church rather than in the academy, in which case there may be little incentive to publish their dissertations. Having branded Edwards and his generations of students “evangelicals,” the evangelical historians unintentionally seeded the demise of the New England Theology as a serious field of study for American history in an age grown increasingly skeptical of the evangelical historiography—and of evangelicalism.

A new approach

By way of conclusion, I wish to address two questions. First, why does it matter if scholarship on the New England Theology has gone by the wayside? Second, if that area of research has any future whatsoever outside evangelical academies and divinity schools, what might it look like?

In answer to the first question, I would suggest that unless one believes that claims like Conforti’s, Kuklick’s, and Guelzo’s are inflated, the scholarship of the 1980s and 1990s on the New England Theology demonstrated the cultural and intellectual importance of that tradition for late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Americans. If historians and religious-studies scholars are still fascinated by Emerson, Thoreau, Fuller, and other Transcendentalists for what they can tell us about American spirituality, then so should they continue to study Hopkins, Taylor, and Osborn. Despite earlier caricatures of these latter figures as so many Casaubons avant la lettre, in fact they were serious intellectuals engaged with the problems and tensions of their contemporary culture, who handled questions (albeit in a technical religious language) still of real importance to us today: fate and freedom, inheritance and self-determination, the meaning of virtue and morality, and the problem of evil. Indeed, no other American intellectual tradition carried on a livelier debate about these questions in the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries. Their answers are sometimes frustrating, but they are also intelligent and provocative. Moreover, the Edwardsians form the background for the rebellions of more respected figures like Channing, Emerson, and the architects of the Social Gospel, the context for whose thought is indecipherable without some awareness of the New England Theology. On the level of popular culture, it is clear that, by whatever name, revivalistic religion and organized benevolence characteristic of the Edwardsians and Hopkinsians were an important strand of American life for many people across differences of race, class, and gender in the early republican and antebellum periods. To ignore the formal thought of the figures who drove these movements is to hamstring any attempts at understanding the phenomena more broadly.

The second question, regarding the future of New England theological history, is more difficult to answer. To liberate the New England theologians from their status as representative “evangelicals,” first we must adopt Sutton’s recommendation to abandon the label for the period prior to the mid-twentieth century. After all, it is entirely unclear whether Edwards really was an “evangelical” by modern standards. While it is true that his emphasis on conversion and experimental religion connects him with nineteenth-century revivalists and twentieth-century neo-evangelical figures, that focus is far from the whole of Edwards. For one thing, his philosophical and theological writings tend to be far more concerned with God the Father and with “being in general” than they are with a personal encounter with Jesus. Later liberals, such as Horace Bushnell (who penned a famous tract entitled The Character of Jesus: Forbidding His Possible Classification with Men), were far more Christocentric and, indeed, even “crucicentric” than Edwards.Footnote 54 Then, too, historical actors themselves, who lived much closer to Edwards’s time than we do, were never sure exactly how to classify him. In 1899, George Nye Boardman wrote that “it is well known that there has been a tendency of late to claim Edwards as the leader of the liberals in theology.”Footnote 55 In the mid-twentieth century, prior to the evangelical interest in Edwards, his main promoters were solidly mainline Protestants with modernist sensibilities such as H. Richard Niebuhr and Haroutunian.Footnote 56 Yet more recently, the eminently liberal Protestant novelist and essayist Marilynne Robinson has expressed her indebtedness to Edwards’s book on Original Sin.Footnote 57 In other words, there was nothing inevitable about Edwards or his followers becoming evangelicals.

If there is any chance at all for a renewal of interest in this subject, historians and religious scholars must seek new frames of reference and ask different questions of the sources. Students should question the existence of an easy continuity between Edwards, Hopkins, Taylor, Billy Sunday, and Billy Graham. We should not turn to these eighteenth- and nineteenth-century texts to discover something about contemporary evangelicalism—for they can tell us little about that—but rather to get a deeper glimpse of the distinctive religiosity and intellect of their own time. In doing so, we may indeed uncover new, creative linkages that go beyond modern conservative Protestantism and neo-evangelicalism.

I can only offer a few suggestions here. The first concerns the ways in which the Edwardsians debated problems that are still of philosophical moment, and that are rarely historicized. We may find, for instance, that the polemics around Edwards’s Freedom of the Will bear a striking resemblance to more recent discussions in analytic philosophy about free will and determinism, as in Harry Frankfurt’s work challenging the principle of alternative possibilities, which is nothing if not Edwardsian in its argument.Footnote 58 Or, still in the precincts of philosophy, we might consider the complexities of Edwards’s (in)famous arguments about personal identity, in which he challenged the Lockean view that the integrity of a person’s self was premised upon their continued consciousness of being that self. Those interested in the neo-Lockean arguments of Derek Parfit, for instance, may well be interested in the discussions touched off by Edwards’s rebuttal of Locke.Footnote 59 In short, the New England theologians can provide a sense of background and historical context to philosophical debates that resound up to the present.

Apart from formal thought, there is also occasion for a second look at the New England Theology’s role in American culture and religiosity. By moving beyond stock images of evangelicalism, we might be surprised to find what else these figures can tell us about the country’s past. I am particularly interested, for example, in the ways in which the New Divinity interacted with and occasionally forcefully resisted the rise of more autonomous, secularized conceptions of the self in nineteenth-century America. Even as some New England theologians—most notably Nathanael Emmons—preached a radical theory of the individual’s power to choose, others, like Emmons’s mentor, John Smalley, held that the will was in thrall to sin until God intervened to enable it to choose rightly.Footnote 60 More remarkably yet, New Divinity stalwarts Samuel Hopkins and Stephen West claimed that the children of believers would inevitably inherit godliness in this life and salvation in the next—an idea that belied the liberal notion that free individuals in a free society could choose their own life course.Footnote 61 And virtually all New England theologians insisted that individual self-interest, including economic gain, must be subordinated to the common good. In several respects, then, these figures, readers of Enlightenment philosophes and Reformed scholastics both, may tell us much about the bumpy road to a secular picture of the individual and a secular society in the United States (to the extent that either has ever prevailed). They exemplify how ideas often associated with the secular Enlightenment were in fact frequently put to avowedly religious purposes, as well as how Calvinism continued to spawn meaningful resistance to secularized modes of thought, including the notion of the autonomous individual, through the nineteenth century.

Other students of the subject will find different questions to ask. What was the relation of New England Theology to market capitalism? Was the New Divinity a spur to liberalism or an attempt at an organic theory of society? Did the Edwardsian emphasis on “moral government” impact how ordinary Americans thought about their own earthly government? How did individual figures, like Emmons, who argued that God was the efficient cause of sin, change the ways Americans thought about evil and suffering in their lives?

In their clinging to traditional communal and familial forms, resistance to the unfettered market, supernatural religiosity, and intellectual curiosity and promiscuity, these pastors and theologians are, if not typical, then at least exceptionally illuminating examples of one major path that the life of the mind and of the spirit took in early America. Many new connections remain to be made, many texts have not yet been studied, and many historical personages affiliated with this movement, who ministered to hundreds of souls and wrote tracts read far and wide, call out for more extended biographical treatment. Beyond the confines of evangelicalism, the New England Theology needs a new generation of interpreters.

Acknoledgments

The author would like to thank Joel Isaac, William Schultz, Daniel Hummel, Eric Carlsson, Bruce Kuklick, D. G. Hart, David Hall, and the two reviewers for Modern Intellectual History for their insights and helpful suggestions on this article.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

References

1 Strictly speaking, the various terms are not interchangeable—they describe different phases of the New England Theology. But authors often use the terms loosely and periodization is inexact.

2 Oliver Wendell Holmes, “The Deacon’s Masterpiece: or the Wonderful ‘One-Hoss-Shay’,” in John Hollander, ed., American Poetry. The Nineteenth Century: Freneau to Whitman (New York, 1993), 560–63.

3 Herbert Wallace Schneider quoted in Douglas A. Sweeney, “Edwards and His Mantle: The Historiography of the New England Theology,” New England Quarterly 71/1 (1998), 97–119, at 106.

4 Joseph A. Conforti, Samuel Hopkins and the New Divinity Movement: Calvinism, the Congregational Ministry, and Reform in New England between the Great Awakenings (Grand Rapids, 1981), 3; Allen C. Guelzo, Edwards on the Will: A Century of Theological Debate (Middletown, 1989), 137; and Bruce Kuklick, “Jonathan Edwards and American Philosophy,” in Nathan O. Hatch and Harry Stout, eds., Jonathan Edwards and the American Experience (Oxford, 1988), 246–59, at 257.

5 Apart from those already mentioned, see especially Bruce Kuklick, Churchmen and Philosophers: From Jonathan Edwards to John Dewey (New Haven, 1985); William Breitenbach, “Unregenerate Doings: Selflessness and Selfishness in New Divinity Theology” American Quarterly 34/5 (1982), 479–502; Breitenbach, “Piety and Moralism: Edwards and the New Divinity,” in Hatch and Stout, Jonathan Edwards and the American Experience, 177–204; James Hoopes, “Philosophy of Mind and Self in New Divinity Theology,” Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 22/2 (1986), 189–216; David W. Kling, A Field of Divine Wonders: The New Divinity and Village Revivals in Northwestern Connecticut, 1792–1822 (University Park, 1993); Mark Valeri, Law and Providence in Joseph Bellamy’s New England: The Origins of the New Divinity in Revolutionary America (Oxford, 1994); Genevieve Mccoy, “The Women of the ABCFM Oregon Mission and the Conflicted Language of Calvinism,” Church History 64/1 (1995), 62–82; and John R. Fitzmier, New England’s Moral Legislator: Timothy Dwight, 1752–1817 (Bloomington, 1998). In 1988, Kuklick edited for Garland Publishing a massive series of reprints consisting principally of the writings of the New England theologians, Religious Thought of the 18th and 19th Centuries: A Thirty-Two Volume Set Reprinting the Works of Leading American Theologians from Jonathan Edwards to John Dewey, and Including Recent Dissertations, now unfortunately, if tellingly, out of print.

6 Sweeney, “Edwards and His Mantle,” 117. See also Douglas A. Sweeney, Nathaniel Taylor, New Haven Theology, and the Legacy of Jonathan Edwards (Oxford, 2002).

7 Mark Noll, America’s God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln (Oxford, 2005).

8 Catherine Brekus, Sarah Osborn’s World: The Rise of Evangelical Christianity in Early America (New Haven, 2013).

9 Douglas A. Sweeney and Allen C. Guelzo, eds., The New England Theology: From Jonathan Edwards to Edwards Amasa Park (Ada, 2006); and Douglas A. Sweeney and Oliver D. Crisp, eds., After Jonathan Edwards: The Courses of the New England Theology (Oxford, 2012). By my reckoning, Brekus’s work of 2013 is the most recent single-authored book devoted exclusively to the New England Theology.

10 On Park see Joseph A. Conforti and Charles Phillips, “Edwards Amasa Park: The Last Edwardsian,” in Crisp and Sweeney, After Jonathan Edwards, 151–61. On Park’s significance for the creation and reception of “the New England Theology,” and for the most recent major historiographical overview of the New England Theology generally, see Sweeney, “Edwards and His Mantle.”

11 Edwards Amasa Park, “New England Theology; with Comments on a Third Article in the Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, Relating to a Convention Sermon,” Bibliotheca Sacra 9/33 (1852), 170–220, at 174.

12 Joseph Conforti, “Edwards A. Park and the Creation of the New England Theology, 1840–1870,” in Stephen J. Stein, ed., Jonathan Edwards’s Writings: Text, Context, Interpretation (Bloomington, 1996), 193–207, at 194.

13 Park, “New England Theology,” 175.

14 George Nye Boardman, A History of New England Theology (New York, 1899), 10. Boardman delineated Edwardsianism into four “phases”: “Edwardeanism, Hopkinsianism, Emmonsism and Taylorism,” all of which were founded upon Edwards’s thought.

15 Frank Hugh Foster, A Genetic History of the New England Theology (Chicago, 1907).

16 Joseph Haroutunian, Piety versus Moralism: The Passing of New England Theology from Edwards to Taylor (1932) (Eugene, 2006), xxii.

17 Perry Miller, Jonathan Edwards (1949) (Lincoln, 2005), 147, 183.

18 Sidney E. Mead, Nathaniel William Taylor, 1786–1858: A Connecticut Liberal (Chicago, 1942), vii–viii.

19 Conforti, Samuel Hopkins, vii.

20 Ibid., 74, 39, 6.

21 Kuklick, Churchmen and Philosophers, 43.

22 Also notable is Kuklick’s much more sympathetic view of Nathaniel William Taylor, whom he saw not as a theological liberal à la Mead, but as a brilliant latter-day exponent of Edwards’s thought. See Kuklick, Churchmen and Philosophers, 107.

23 Breitenbach, “Piety and Moralism,” 178–9.

24 Breitenbach, “Unregenerate Doings,” 500–2.

25 Guelzo, Edwards on the Will, 209.

26 Kling, A Field of Divine Wonders.

27 Valeri, Law and Providence, 5.

28 Sweeney, “Edwards and His Mantle,” 117.

29 Sweeney, Nathaniel Taylor.

30 Charles L. Cohen, “The Post-Puritan Paradigm of Early American History,” William and Mary Quarterly 54/4 (1997), 695–722, at 696–7.

31 Thomas A. Tweed, Religion in the Lands That Became America: A New History (New Haven, 2025), 1.

32 Paul E. Johnson, A Shopkeeper’s Millennium: Society and Revivals in Rochester, New York, 1815–1837 (1978) (New York, 2004). In Johnson’s words, “Evangelicalism was a middle-class solution to problems of class, legitimacy, and order generated in the early stages of manufacturing.” Ibid., 138.

33 E.g. Kathryn Gin Lum, Heathen: Religion and Race in American History (Cambridge, 2022).

34 Leonard I. Sweet, “Wise as Serpents, Innocent as Doves: The New Evangelical Historiography,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 56/3 (1988), 397–416, at 397. See also Douglas A. Sweeney, “The Essential Evangelicalism Dialectic: The Historiography of the Early Neo-evangelical Movement and the Observer-Participant Dilemma,” Church History 60/1 (199), pp. 70–84.

35 D. G. Hart, Deconstructing Evangelicalism: Conservative Protestantism in the Age of Billy Graham (Grand Rapids, 2004). “Just as those believers who think of themselves as evangelical might be better off if they relinquished the label,” Hart contended, “so academics might produce better scholarship on American religion if they ceased relying ironically on categories supplied by the owners of the evangelical construction company.” Ibid., 32.

36 Linford D. Fisher, “Evangelicals and Unevangelicals: The Contested History of a Word, 1500–1950,” Religion and American Culture: A Journal of Interpretation 26/2 (2016), 184–226, at 198.

37 David W. Bebbington, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (London, 1989), 2–3, original emphasis.

38 Kristin Kobes Du Mez, Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Fractured a Faith and Corrupted a Nation (New York, 2020), 5–7.

39 Sutton, “History and Historiography on American Evangelicalism,” 38, original emphasis, 55–6. Jon Butler, “Born-Again History?”, transcript of a paper delivered at the 1992 meeting of the American Historical Association. My thanks to the author for sharing the transcript with me.

40 D. G. Hart, “Before the Young, Restless, and Reformed: Edwards’s Appeal to Post-World War II Evangelicals,” in Crisp and Sweeney, After Jonathan Edwards, 237–53, at 238.

41 Mark A. Noll, The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind (1994) (Grand Rapids, 2022), 3, 34, 76, 80–81, original emphasis.

42 Noll and several of his colleagues took a step in the direction of bringing Edwards home to evangelicals when Wheaton College hosted a conference in 1984 entitled Jonathan Edwards and the American Experience, which resulted in one of the most important collections on Edwards of the post-Miller generation: Hatch and Stout, Jonathan Edwards and the American Experience.

43 Mark A. Noll, America’s God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln (Oxford, 2005), 208, 444.

44 George Marsden, Jonathan Edwards: A Life (New Haven, 2003), 4, 495, 502.

45 George Marsden, An Infinite Fountain of Light: Jonathan Edwards for the Twenty-First Century (Downers Grove, 2023). Marsden suggests that Edwards can help contemporaries to sort out the differences between “evangelical successes and evangelical aberrations” (e.g. the populism instantiated by Whitefield). Following Edwards, Marsden says, teaches us that “we should not reject the whole evangelical tradition just because it sometimes leads to false teachings and scandals.” Ibid., 91, 100.

46 Kenneth P. Minkema, “Jonathan Edwards in the Twentieth Century,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 47/4 (2004), 677–8. Minkema also ascribes the boom in scholarship on the New Divinity that I have described as the revisionist wave to the renaissance of Edwards scholarship. Ibid., 659–87, at 671, original emphasis.

47 Importantly, these scholars were one only one—if probably the most prominent—strand of the new evangelical historiography. Donald W. Dayton, among others, long criticized the Reformed/Calvinist bias of these historians, contending for a more Arminian and Methodist-holiness reading of early evangelicalism. See e.g. Donald W. Dayton, Discovering an Evangelical Heritage (New York, 1976). See also Sweeney, “The Essential Evangelicalism Dialectic.”

48 Douglas A. Sweeney, “Evangelical Tradition in America,” in Stephen J. Stein, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Jonathan Edwards (Cambridge, 2006), 217–38, at 217. He also noted that “evangelicals now produce the bulk of scholarship on Edwards’s theological activity.” Ibid., 229–30. This forms a contrast to Noll’s contention of only a decade prior that it was secular academics, rather than evangelicals, who had secured a monopoly on Edwards. It is worth noting that Sweeney is also, beyond his work on the New England theologians, a leading figure in the Edwards industry; see, inter alia, his Edwards the Exegete: Biblical Interpretation and Anglo-Protestant Culture on the Edge of the Enlightenment (New York, 2016).

49 Butler, “Born-Again History?”, and Bruce Kuklick, “On Critical History,” in Bruce Kuklick and D. G. Hart, eds., Religious Advocacy and American History (Grand Rapids, 1997), 54–64. An open question is why the evangelical historiography triumphed to the extent it did over the objections of historians like Butler and Kuklick. One possible reason is the general secularization of the American academy toward the end of the twentieth century; with fewer scholars willing to take religion seriously, the field was left open for evangelical interpretations to dominate. I am indebted to David Hollinger for this point.

50 See Philip F. Gura, Jonathan Edwards: America’s Evangelical (New York, 2005).

51 Sweeney, “Evangelicalism in America,” 217, 226, added emphasis. At the time he published this essay, Sweeney claimed that “the scores of evangelical groups who claim, study, revere, or propagate Edwards remain terra incognita to the academic community,” a point that is still largely valid despite the sources cited in this article. Ibid., 229.

52 Brekus, Sarah Osborn’s World, 5.

53 These data were gathered from the Proquest Dissertation Database as of June 2025.

54 Horace Bushnell, The Character of Jesus: Forbidding His Possible Classification with Men (New York, 1861). The tract was excerpted from a longer book, Nature and the Supernatural, as Together Constituting the One System of God (New York, 1858), Ch. 10. See also Bushnell’s The Vicarious Sacrifice, Grounded in Principles of Universal Obligation (New York, 1866), a far more extensive treatment of Christ’s work on the cross than Edwards ever penned.

55 Boardman, New England Theology, 299.

56 See H. Richard Niebuhr, “The Anachronism of Jonathan Edwards,” in William Stacy Johnson, ed., Theology, History, and Culture (New Haven, 1996), 123–33.

57 Marilynne Robinson, “Jonathan Edwards in a New Light,” Humanities 23/6 (2014), at www.neh.gov/humanities/2014/novemberdecember/feature/jonathan-edwards-in-new-light-remembered-preaching-fire-and (accessed June 2025).

58 See the essays collected in Harry G. Frankfurt, The Importance of What We Care About (Cambridge, 1998).

59 See Part Three of Derek Parfit, Reasons and Persons (Oxford, 1984), 199–347.

60 Nathanael Emmons, The Works of Nathanael Emmons, D.D., Third Pastor of the Church in Franklin, Mass. With a Memoir of His Life, ed. Jacob Ide, 6 vols. (Boston, 1860–1863), 3: 103–14; and the appendix to John Smalley’s Sermons, on Various Subjects Doctrinal and Practical; Together with an Appendix, Containing Brief Remarks on Certain Late Innovations in Divinity (Middletown, 1814), 399–426.

61 Samuel Hopkins, The Works of Samuel Hopkins, D.D., First Pastor of the Church in Great Barrington, Mass., Afterward Pastor of the First Congregational Church in Newport, R.I., with a Memoir of His Life and Character, vol. 2, ed. Edwards A. Park (Boston, 1854), 102–66; and Stephen West, An Inquiry into the Ground and Import of Infant Baptism: Interspersed with Arguments in Support of the Doctrine (Stockbridge, 1794).