Tuesday, April 20, 2010

John Winthrop Defines the "American Dream"


John Winthrop, governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, is credited with defining what has become known as the "American dream" -- unadulterated. He set forth his idea of a religious paradise in American in his "City on a Hill" sermon, written down aboard the Arbella on his ocean voyage in 1630 under the title of "A Model of Christian Charity." Here is a link to the full text of his tract, along with the following introduction by John Beardsley:
This is Winthrop’s most famous thesis, written on board the Arbella, 1630. We love to imagine the occasion when he personally spoke this oration to some large portion of the Winthrop fleet passengers during or just before their passage.

In an age not long past, when the Puritan founders were still respected by the educational establishment, this was required reading in many courses of American history and literature. However, it was often abridged to just the first and last few paragraphs. This left the overture of the piece sounding unkind and fatalistic, and the finale rather sternly zealous. A common misrepresentation of the Puritan character.

Winthrop’s genius was logical reasoning combined with a sympathetic nature. To remove this work’s central arguments about love and relationships is to completely lose the sense of the whole. Therefore we present it here in its well-balanced entirety. The biblical quotations are as Winthrop wrote them, and remain sometimes at slight variance from the King James version. This editor has corrected the chapter and verse citations to correspond to the King James text, assuming that the modern reader will wish to conveniently refer to that most popular English version of the Bible, as the Governor lays out his argument for charity and decent human behavior in the community.

Winthrop’s intent was to prepare the people for planting a new society in a perilous environment, but his practical wisdom is timeless.
Read the whole text...

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