Scottish missions and religious enlightenment in Colonial America: the SSPCK in transatlantic context
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Authors
Roberson, Rusty
Abstract
In recent years, the relationship between religion and Enlightenment, traditionally
cast in opposition to one another, has received increasing reconsideration. Scholars
now recognise that even orthodox religion played a central role within the
Enlightenment project. This development has marked a paradigm shift in Atlantic
world and Enlightenment historiography. However, while the relationship between
religion and Enlightenment has been greatly clarified, there remain major gaps in our
understanding of the nature and parameters of this relationship.
This thesis contributes to the understanding of religion’s function within
Enlightenment thought and practice through a case study of the colonial missionary
work of the Society in Scotland for Propagating Christian Knowledge (SSPCK).
Using primary sources such as institutional records, sermons, journals, diaries and
letters, it examines evangelism within the framework of the Enlightenment. The
study demonstrates first how both the founders of the SSPCK and the Society’s most
fervent advocates of missionary work in the colonies were simultaneously the
foremost leaders of the British and American Enlightenment. It then traces the
implications of this religious Enlightenment dynamic, illuminating not only the
ambitions of the Society’s leadership but also certain contours of intimate encounters
between Native Americans, Native Christians and white missionaries. As the
SSPCK’s missionary endeavours demonstrate, the relationship between evangelism
and Enlightenment not only changed all individuals and institutions involved. It also
transformed the very landscape of British Protestant religion. This assessment points
to the overarching conclusion that the Enlightenment shaped the very foundation of
modern missions. In the process, however, British Atlantic Protestants of many
different varieties wove the discourse of the Enlightenment into the tapestry of their
understanding of evangelism as a primary means of identity formation, both
personally and institutionally. Historiographically, this research forces a
reexamination of the nuances of the religious Enlightenment. It also problematizes
the static (albeit dominant) interpretation of evangelicalism by observing its
emergence in light of the broader conditions of British Atlantic Protestantism.
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