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From Seeker to Finder: A Study in Seventeenth-Century English Spiritualism Before The Quakers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
The period of the Civil Wars and Commonwealth in England was one of the most momentous epochs in British history. For small groups of people the decade of the 1640's inaugurated a New Age—an age in which the Holy Spirit reigned triumphant. Such believers reached the zenith of Puritan “spiritualism,” or that movement which placed the greatest emphasis upon the Third Person of the Trinity.
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- Copyright © American Society of Church History 1948
References
1 For first pointing out to me a difference between “mystics” and “spirituahsta” I am indebted to Professor Joachim Wach, of the University of Chicago.
2 Saltmarsh, John, Sparkles of Glory…, (London: Giles Calvert, 1647), 292.Google Scholar
3 In Sparkles of Glory, 289 ff.; Groanes For Liberty, (London: Giles Calvert, 1646), 22–23Google Scholar; and Smoke in the Temple (London: Giles Calvert, 1646), 7–13,Google Scholar Saltmarsh presented the views of Presbyterians, Independents, Baptists, and Seekers.
4 Edwards, Thomas, Gangranna … (London: Ralph Smith, 1646), II, 13–14.Google Scholar
5 One of the finest examples of a Seeker who maintained that position throughout his lifetime was Roger Williams, founder of Rhode Island. When in 1672 the Rhode Islander was questioned why he did not employ nor follow ordinances, he gave a Seeker answer that he was in rebellion against the present administration of God's visible Kingdom—that is, against the existing church organizations and practices (Williams, , George Fox Digg'd Out of His Burrowes …) [Boston: John Foster, 1676], 65)Google Scholar. But the whole tenor of his tracts proves that he upheld a visible church asserting definitely that false Christians were those opposed to “the visible kingdome, and so to visible Christ Jesus in point of his kingdonie, church and worship” (Williams, , The Bloody Tenent Yet Mare Bloody … [London: Giles Calvert, 1652], 60.Google Scholar He denounced the Familists for confounding heaven and earth together in matters of ordinances and worship (Ibid., 61) and the Quakers for giving a spiritual meaning to the Scriptures (George Fox Digg'd Out of His Burrowes, 44, 95).
6 The basis for this title comes from a letter written by Cromwell to Bridget Ireton, his daughter, in which he declared that being a Seeker was next best to being “a happy finder” (Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, edited by Wilbur Cortez Abbott [Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1937–1947], I, 416)Google Scholar. The spiritualists themselves never used the term.
7 There were two Thomas Colliers living in England in the 1640's, both of whom were preachers and writers of tracts and who have been identified falsely by later writers. One was a Particular Close-Communion Baptist (cf. Collier, , A Discourse On the True Gospel Blessedness In the New Covenant [London: Henry Hills, 1659], 41, 112Google Scholar for proof of his belief in immersion, 121 for proof of his belief in close-communion, and 31 for proof of his belief in election); the other was a Finder who gave spiritual emphases to ordinances, to the Scriptures, to the church, and to the state (cf. in particular, Collier, , General Epistle to the Universall Church of the First Born [London: Giles Calvert, 1648]Google Scholar, as proof of Finder influences).
8 There are several current spellings for the chaplain's name. The publications of the Finder's works bear the spelling Erberie, which shortened would be Erbery. One cannot see the justification for the abbreviated form, Erbury.
9 Saltmarsh, , The Opening of Master Prynnes New Book … (London: Giles Calvert, 1646), 28;Google ScholarErbery, William, The Testimony … (London: Giles Calvert, 1658), 244;Google Scholar and Collier, Thomas, A Discovery of the New Creation … (London: Giles Calvert, 1647), 12.Google Scholar
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16 Roman Catholics and conservative Protestants of course believed in the visible church forming an invisible union with the heavenly church. But the Finders tried to spiritualize even the visible church on earth, and here differed from their contemporaries. Cf. Collier, , The Marrow of Christianity (London: Giles Calvert, 1647), 63;Google ScholarDell, , The Way of True Peace and Unity … (London: Giles Calvert, 1649), 19.Google Scholar
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26 Ibid., 1–21; Dell, The Tryall of Spirits Both in Teachers and Hearers, 29; Erbery, The Testimony, 48–59; Saltmarsh, End of One Controversie, 115.
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29 Cf. works listed in n. 1, above.
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37 Buchan, John wan the first great biographer of Cromwell to note the “mystical” character of his writings. Oliver Cromwell (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1934).Google Scholar
38 Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, I, 416.
39 Ibid., II, 236.
40 Ibid., IV, 273.
41 Ibid.
42 Erbery, , The Testimony, 149.Google Scholar
43 Writings and Speeches of Oliver Cromwell, IV, 272.Google Scholar
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54 Elizabeth Hooton received a very brief notice in Fox's account of 1647. From that version, one is uncertain whether Fox received inspiration from Elizabeth Hooton, or she from him.
55 Fox, , A Journal, I, 74.Google Scholar
56 Ibid., 71.
57 Ibid.
58 Ibid., 72.
59 Ibid., 90–91.
60 Ibid., 91.
61 Wonderful Predictions Declared In A Message⃜ (London; Robert Ibbitson, 1648).Google Scholar
62 Nuttall, Geoffrey T., The Holy Spirit In Puritan Faith and Experience (Oxford, England: Basil Blackwell, 1946), 83.Google Scholar
63 Ibid., 13.
64 Fox, , A Journal, I, 81.Google Scholar
65 Ibid., 105.
66 The Quaker historian, Braithwaite, William C., admits the advanced position of these “Seekers” when he says: “I have called them Seekers, but the name is hardly emphatic enough, for they had already found the light” ((The Beginnings of Quakerism) [London: Macmillan and Company, 1012], 60)Google Scholar. What could these “Seekers” have been but Finders!
67 Fox, , Works (Philadelphia: Marcus Gould, 1831), III, 34.Google Scholar
68 Ibid., 35–37.
69 Ibid., 37.
70 Ibid., 76.
71 Ibid., 35, 55.
72 Ibid., 35.
73 Collier, , A Looking-Glasse for the Quakers, 4–5.Google Scholar
74 Ibid., 5.
75 Fox, , Works, III, 78.Google Scholar
76 Fox, , A Journal, xvii, xviii.Google Scholar
77 Fox, , Works, III, 43, 75, 78.Google Scholar
78 Ibid., 50. With Fox the term “light” was synonymous with Holy Spirit. Thus, the “children of light” were those who acknowledged the Holy Spirit, while the “children of darkness” were those who did not.
79 Dell, , The Crucified and Quickened Christian, 40.Google Scholar
80 Cf. Emmott, Elizabeth Braithwaite, A Short History of Quakerism (London: Macmillan Co., 1923), chap. xii.Google Scholar
81 Saltmarsh, , Sparkles of Glory, 228–29.Google Scholar
82 Matthews, , Calamy Revised, 161;Google ScholarErbery, , The Testimony, 43–47.Google Scholar
83 Fox, , A Journal, xiv.Google Scholar
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