Article contents
Nature, History and the Search for Order: The Boyle Lectures, 1730–1785*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2016
Extract
History supplanted nature as the most important apologetical language among English polemical divines during the mid-eighteenth century, but not for the reasons usually adduced. The triumph of history over nature owed everything to the power of orthodox patronage and to nature’s demonstrable apologetical efficacy, and nothing to natural theology’s supposed failure sufficiently to prove God’s existence. Put another way, by the late 1720s orthodox apologists had come to believe that the popular argument from design in nature applied equally to history. Moreover, the argument from design in history appears to have been an apologetical strategy which accorded more closely with the disposition of an increasingly orthodox episcopate during the mid-century period. Little evidences the mid-century historical turn — a shift either missed or ignored by most historians — more clearly than the second generation (1730–1785) of the Boyle lectures, a series of public sermons founded by Robert Boyle in order to defend Christianity from the attacks of unbelievers. For whereas the first generation of lecturers founded their defences of Christianity on natural theology, the second built on Christianity’s historical record.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Studies in Church History , Volume 46: God’s Bounty? The Churches and the Natural World , 2010 , pp. 276 - 292
- Copyright
- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2010
Footnotes
I wish to thank William Gibson, Scott Mandelbrote, Johannes Wienand, Stephen Snobelen, Melanie Barber and Clare Brown, as well as the Editors of Studies in Church History, for help in the preparation of this paper.
References
1 Newton, Thomas, Dissertations on the Prophecies, 9th edn, 2 vols (London, 1793), 1: 298.Google Scholar For a complete list of the Boyle lecturers from 1730 to 1785, see the appendix to this paper.
2 Ibid. 2: 413.
3 Ibid. 1: 219.
4 Ibid., prefatory dedication.
5 Ibid. 2: 414.
6 Ibid.
7 But see Ingram, Robert G., ‘“The Weight of Historical Evidence”: Conyers Middleton and the Eighteenth-Century Miracles Debate’, in Gibson, William and Cornwall, Robert, eds, Politics, Religion and Dissent, 1660–1832 (Aldershot Google Scholar, forthcoming); Walsham, Alexandra, ‘The Reformation and “The Disenchantment of the World” Reassessed’, HistJ 51 (2008), 497–528.Google Scholar
8 For a succinct overview of apologetics during the era, see Stewart, M. A., ‘Revealed Religion: The British Debate’ and idem, ‘Arguments for the Existence of God: The British Debate’, in Haakonssen, Knud, ed., The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Philosophy, 2 vols (Cambridge, 2006), 2: 683–709, 710–30.Google Scholar
9 Wilde, Christopher, ‘Hutchinsonianism, Natural Philosophy, and Religious Controversy in Eighteenth-Century England’, History of Science 18 (1980), 1–24 Google Scholar; Cantor, Geoffrey N., ‘Revelation and the Cyclical Cosmos of John Hutchinson’, in Jordanova, Ludmilla and Porter, Roy, eds, Images of the Earth: Essays in the History of Environmental Sciences (Chalfont St Giles, 1979), 3–22.Google Scholar
10 Jacob, Margaret, ‘Christianity and the Newtonian Worldview’, in Lindberg, David C. and Numbers, Ronald L., eds, God and Nature (Berkeley, CA, 1986), 238–55, at 253.Google Scholar
11 Ibid. 243 (emphasis mine). Jacob, Margaret C., The Newtonians and the English Revolution, 1689–1720 (Ithaca, NY, 1976)Google Scholar, esp. 143–200, is the locus classicus for her case regarding the character and aims of the early Boyle lectures. Cf. Geoffrey Holmes, ‘Science, Reason and Religion in the Age of Newton’, British Journal for the History of Science II (1978), 164–71;John Gascoigne,’From Bentley to the Victorians: The Rise and Fall of British Newtonian Natural Theology’, Science in Context 2 (1988), 219–56, at 224–25.
12 Cf. Katz, David S., God’s Last Words: Reading the English Bible from the Reformation to Fundamentalism (New Haven, CT, 2004), esp. 74–211;Google Scholar Pocock, J. G. A., ‘History and Enlightenment: A View of Their History’, Modern Intellectual History 5 (2008), 83–96 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Champion, Justin, Republican Learning: John Toland and the Crisis of Christian Culture, 1696–1722 (Manchester, 2003)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Levine, Joseph M., ‘Deists and Anglicans: The Ancient Wisdom and Idea of Progress’, in Lund, Roger, ed., The Margins of Orthodoxy: Heterodox Writing and Cultural Response, 1660–1750 (Cambridge, 1995), 219–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 Mandelbrote, Scott, ‘The Uses of Natural Theology in Seventeenth-Century England’, Science in Context 20 (2007), 451–80 Google Scholar; Gascoigne,’Bentley to the Victorians’, 219–56.
14 Porter, Roy, The Creation of the Modern World (New York, 2000), 96—129 Google Scholar; Gascoigne,’Bentley to the Victorians’, 228–30.
15 Harrison, Peter, ‘Voluntarism and Early Modern Science’, History of Science 40 (2002), 63–89.Google Scholar
16 Shaw, Jane, Miracles in Enlightenment England (New Haven, CT, 2006), esp. 144–73 Google Scholar; Harrison, Peter, ‘Miracles, Early Modern Science and Rational Religion’, ChH 75 (2006), 493–510 Google Scholar; Hitchin, Neil W., ‘The Evidence of Things Seen: Georgian Churchmen and Biblical Prophecy’, in Taithe, Bertrand and Thornton, Tim, eds, Prophecy:The Power of Inspired Language in History, 1300–2000 (Stroud, 1997), 119–39.Google Scholar
17 Hunt, John, Religious Thought in England from the Reformation to the End of the Last Century, 3 vols (London, 1873), 3: 121–24, 283–85, 334–36.Google Scholar
18 Taylor, S.J. C., ‘“The Fac Totum in Ecclesiastical Affairs”? The Duke of Newcastle and the Crown’s Ecclesiastical Patronage’, Albion 24. (1992), 409–33.Google Scholar
19 Maddison, Robert E., The Life of the Honourable Robert Boyle (London, 1969), 257–82.Google Scholar
20 The Works of Robert Boyle, 5 vols (London, 1744), 5: 43 Google Scholar. Cf. Wojcik, Jan W., Robert Boyle and the Limits of Reason (Cambridge, 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For the context, see Marshall, John, ‘Some Intellectual Consequences of the English Revolution’, European Legacy 5 (2000), 515–30 Google Scholar; Hunter, Michael, ‘Science and Heterodoxy:An Early Modern Problem Reconsidered’, in Lindberg, David C. and Westman, Robert C., eds, Reappraisals of the Scientific Revolution (Cambridge, 1990), 437–60.Google Scholar
21 Newton, Isaac, Four Letters from Sir Isaac Newton to Doctor Bentley. Containing Some Arguments in Proof of a Deity (London, 1756)Google Scholar, 1. Cf. Snobelen, Stephen D., ‘“God of gods, and Lord of lords”: The Theology of Isaac Newton’s General Scholium to the Principia’, Osiris 16 (2001), 169–208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
22 Pyle, Andrew, ‘Introduction’, in A Defence of Natural and Revealed Religion: Being an Abridgement of the Sermons preached at the Lecture founded by Robert Boyle, ed. Burnet, Gilbert, 4 vols (Bristol, 2000), 1: x–liii Google Scholar. Cf. Jacob, , The Newtonians and the English Revolution, 162–200 Google Scholar; Dahm, John J., ‘Science and Apologetics in the early Boyle Lectures’, ChH 39 (1970), 172–86.Google Scholar
23 McGrath, Alister, ‘A Blast from the Past? The Boyle Lectures and Natural Theology’, Science and Christian Belief 17 (2005), 25—33 Google Scholar; Pyle,’Introduction’, esp. 1.
24 Guerlac, Henry and Jacob, Margaret C., ‘Bentley, Newton and Providence: The Boyle Lectures Once More’, JHI 30 (1969), 307–18 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Of the initial trustees, only Tenison was a cleric.
25 London, LPL, MS 2958, fols 20–21: Nominations to Boyle Trustees, 18 December 1711; Newton, Dissertations, 1: 287–88 n. 1. Of Tenison’s appointees, Gibson, Trimnell, Kennett and Bradford were all clerics, and all would serve as bishops in the Church of England.
26 MS 2958, fols 23–25: Nominations of Boyle Trustees, 21 March 1750. See also Newton, Dissertations, 1: 288 n. 1. At the time of their appointment, Sherlock, Benson and Secker all sat on the episcopal bench.
27 London, LPL, Secker Papers, vol. 4, fol. 273: Thomas Seeker’s nominations of Boyle Trustees, 1765. See also ibid. fol. 272: Seeker to Drummond, 1 August 1765. Drummond, Newcombe and Cornwallis were all bishops at the time of their appointment.
28 On orthodoxy, see Ingram, Robert G., Religion, Reform and Modernity in the Eighteenth Century:Thomas Secker and the Church of England (Wbodbridge, 2007), 11–14.Google Scholar
29 See, e.g., Secker Papers, vol. 4, fols 267, 272: Nicholls to Secker, 20 November 1755; Secker to Drummond, 1 August 1765.
30 On Gibsons theological views and his patronage of orthodox clerics, see Taylor, S.J. C., ‘“Dr. Codex” and the Whig “Pope”: GibsonEdmund, Bishop of Lincoln and London, 1716–1748’, in Davis, Richard W., ed., Lords of Parliament: Studies, 1714–1914 (Stanford, CA, 1995), 9–27 Google Scholar. Sherlock published two of the most influential orthodox defences of miracles and prophecies during the eighteenth century: for an examination of his orthodox polemics, see Carpenter, Edward, Thomas Sherlock 1678–1761 (London, 1936), 294–322 Google Scholar. For the stable of prominent orthodox polemicists nurtured by Secker, see Ingram, Religion, Reform, and Modernity, esp. 71–113 Google Scholar. For Drummond, and Cornwallis, , see ODNB, s.n. ‘Drummond, Robert Hay (1711–1776)’ and ‘Cornwallis, Frederick (1713–1783)’.Google Scholar
31 The average Boyle lecturer (1730–85) graduated from Cambridge, served as a royal chaplain, embraced orthodoxy, and was firmly ensconced within the clerical establishment. Cf. Mandelbrote, Scott, ‘Eighteenth-Century Reactions to Newton’s Anti-Trinitarianism’, in Force, James E. and Hutton, Sarah, eds, Newton and Newtonianism: New Studies, International Archives of the History of Ideas 188 (Dordrecht, 2004), 93—112, at 101–03 CrossRefGoogle Scholar for the composition of those who delivered the Lady Moyer’s lectures, another prestigious forum for promoting orthodoxy. Only two of the second-generation Boyle lecturers (John Jortin and Ralph Heathcote) would not have counted themselves among the orthodox: see, e.g., Jortin, John, Remarks on Ecclesiastical History, 5 vols (London, 1751–73), 1, esp. xi–xxxii Google Scholar; Nichols, John, Literary Anecdotes of the Eighteenth Century, 9 vols (London, 1812—16), 3: 531—44 Google Scholar: ‘Memoir of Rev. Dr. Ralph Heathcote’. Nevertheless, both Jortin and Heathcote gave lectures which defended the historical facts of Christianity, and Jortin owed his nomination to the Boyle lecturership to Thomas Sherlock’s lobbying: Jortin, John, Tracts, philological, critical, and miscellaneous, 2 vols (London, 1790), 1: x.Google Scholar
32 Heathcote, Ralph, A Discourse Upon the Being of God (London, 1763), 26.Google Scholar
33 Heathcote, Ralph, The Use of Reason Asserted in Matters of Religion (London, 1756)Google Scholar. Cf. Aston, Nigel, ‘From Personality to Party: The Creation and Transmission of Hutchinsonianism, c. 1725–1750’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 35 (2004), 625–44 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Fear of fideism was common among the Boyle lecturers: Biscoe, Pochard, The History of the Acts of the Holy Apostles, 2 vols (London, 1742), 1: 4 Google Scholar; Jortin, , Ecclesiastical History, 1: 89 Google Scholar; Owen, Henry, The intent and Propriety of the Scripture Miracles, 2 vols (London, 1773), 1: 5 Google Scholar. On Bayle’s fideism, see Popkin, Richard H., History of Scepticism: From Savonarola to Bayle (Oxford, 2003), 283–302.Google Scholar
34 Heathcote, Use of Reason, 5.
35 Berriman, William, The Gradual Revelation of the Gospel, 2 vols (London, 1733), 1: 8–9.Google Scholar
36 Ibid. 23.
37 Ibid. 23–27. See also Stebbing, Henry, Christianity Justified upon the Scripture Foundation (London, 1750), 22–54, 289–90 Google Scholar; Owen, Intent and Propriety, 1: 28–30.
38 Worthington, William, The Evidence of Christianity Deduced From Facts, 2 vols (London, 1769), 1: 6–7 Google Scholar. See also idem, An Impartial Enquiry Into The Case of the Gospel Demoniacks (London, 1777), 2–5.Google Scholar
39 Worthington, Evidence of Christianity, 1: 14.
40 Ibid. 9.
41 Ibid. 12–13.
42 Ibid. 26–27.
43 See Biscoe, Acts of the Apostles, 1: 11; 2: 466–67, 540–41, 563–65; Stebbing, Christianity Justified, 255–56; Heathcote, Use of Reason, 16, 25–34; Owen, Intent and Propriety, 9.
44 Stebbing, Christianity Justified, 261.
45 Jortin, Ecclesiastical History, 1: 84.
46 Heathcote, Use of Reason, 33.
47 Owen, Intent and Propriety, 1: 5.
48 Apthorp, East, Letters on the prevalence of Christianity (London, 1779), vi.Google Scholar
49 Jortin, , Ecclesiastical History, I: xii Google Scholar. Cf. Pocock, J. G. A., Barbarism and Religion, 4 vols (Cambridge, 1999–2006)Google Scholar, which explores the perceived corruption of Christianity by philosophy in some detail; idem,’History and Enlightenment’, 83–96, states his thesis succinctly.
50 Biscoe, Acts of the Apostles, 1: 26.
51 Ibid. 39.
52 Stebbing, Christianity Justified, 280–90; Owen, Intent and Propriety, 33.
53 Twells, Leonard, Twenty-Four Sermons, 2 vols (London, 1742), 1: 3, 86.Google Scholar
54 Cf. Shaw, , Miracles Google Scholar; Walsham, Alexandra, ‘Miracles in Post-Reformation England’, in Cooper, Kate and Gregory, Jeremy, eds, Signs, Wonders, Miracles: Representations of Divine Power in the Life of the Church, SCH 41 (Woodbridge, 2005), 273–306.Google Scholar
55 Jortin, Ecclesiastical History, I: xi.
56 Ibid. 258–67.
57 London, LPL, Sion Arc. L40.2/E34 (2): Manuscript notes for eleven of Joseph Roper’s Boyle lectures, 1744–45, unpaginated, is the lone Boyle lecture to confront, even briefly, the inscrutability of the mechanics of Providence.
58 Clark, J. C. D., ‘Providence, Predestination and Progress; Or, Did the Enlightenment Fail?’, Albion 35 (2003), 559–89 Google Scholar; Ingram, Robert G., ‘“The Trembling Earth is God’s Herald”: Earthquakes, Religious and Public Life in Britain during the 1750s’, in Braun, Theodore E. D. and Radner, John B., eds, The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755: Representations and Reactions (Oxford, 2005), 97–115.Google Scholar
59 Ingram, Robert G., ‘William Warburton, Divine Action and Enlightened Christianity’, in Gibson, William and Ingram, Robert, eds, Religious Identities in Britain, 1660-1832 (Aldershot, 2005), 97–118.Google Scholar
60 Snobelen, Stephen D., ‘“The mystery of this restitution of all things”: Isaac Newton on the Return of the Jews’, Force, James E. and Popkin, Richard H., eds, The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Dordrecht, 2001), 95–118.Google Scholar
61 Owen, Intent and Propriety, 36.
62 Newton, Dissertations, 1: 397–98 (emphasis mine).
63 Secker Papers, vol. 4, fol. 268: Samuel Nicolls to Thomas Seeker, 5 May 1758. Neither Wienand nor Nicholls list a lecturer for the years 1733—35.
64 Roper could not complete his course of lecturers because he died in March 1746: John, and Venn, J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, 10 vols (Cambridge, 1922–58), Part 1, 3: 486 Google Scholar. For manuscript notes for eleven of them, see Sion Arc. L40.2/E34 (2).
65 Secker Papers, vol. 4, fol. 267: Nicolls to Seeker, 20 November 1755; London Evening Post, no. 3923 (19 December 1752). Neither Wienand nor Nicholls list a lecturer for the years 1753–55.
66 Newton, Dissertations, 1: 288–89.
67 Though he published only two of his lectures, Heathcote, pace Wienand and Nicholls, preached the full course of twenty-four Boyle lectures: Literary Anecdotes, 2: 538.
68 Literary Anecdotes, 3: 96, 99 note that Apthorp’s Letters on the prevalence of Christianity earned him an immediate D.D. and a subsequent nomination to present the Boyle lectures. They also intimate that Apthorp reworked his volume as his Boyle lectures for the years 1781–85. Certainly, his understanding of Christian history and his critical method did not change between 1779 and the publication of his Discourses on prophecy: read in the chapel of Lincoln’s-Inn, at the lecture founded by the Right Reverend William Warburton, 2 vols (London, 1786). As such, for the purposes of this paper, the general historical principles which Apthorp spelled out in the initial chapters to Letters on the prevalence of Christianity are taken to reflect accurately the theoretical foundation for his subsequent Boyle lectures.
- 1
- Cited by