Global Information Lookup Global Information

Antinomian Controversy information


Antinomian Controversy
Anne Hutchinson at trial and John Winthrop
DateOctober 1636 (1636-10) to March 1638 (1638-03)
LocationMassachusetts Bay Colony
ParticipantsFree Grace Advocates
(sometimes called "Antinomians")
  • Anne Hutchinson
  • John Wheelwright
  • John Cotton
  • Governor Henry Vane the Younger
  • Followers of Hutchinson and Wheelwright

Magistrates
  • John Winthrop
  • Thomas Dudley
  • John Endecott
  • Others

Ministers
  • John Wilson
  • Thomas Shepard
  • Thomas Weld
  • Hugh Peter
  • John Eliot
  • Others
Outcome
  • Anne Hutchinson banished and excommunicated
  • John Wheelwright disfranchised and banished
  • Supporters disarmed, dismissed, disfranchised, or banished

The Antinomian Controversy, also known as the Free Grace Controversy, was a religious and political conflict in the Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1636 to 1638. It pitted most of the colony's ministers and magistrates against some adherents of Puritan minister John Cotton. The most notable Free Grace advocates, often called "Antinomians", were Anne Hutchinson, her brother-in-law Reverend John Wheelwright, and Massachusetts Bay Governor Henry Vane. The controversy was a theological debate concerning the "covenant of grace" and "covenant of works".

Anne Hutchinson has historically been placed at the center of the controversy, a strong-minded woman who had grown up under the religious guidance of her father Francis Marbury, an Anglican clergyman and school teacher. In England, she embraced the religious views of dynamic Puritan minister John Cotton, who became her mentor; Cotton was forced to leave England and Hutchinson followed him to New England.

In Boston, Hutchinson was influential among the settlement's women and hosted them at her house for discussions on the weekly sermons. Eventually, men were included in these gatherings, such as Governor Vane. During the meetings, Hutchinson criticized the colony's ministers, accusing them of preaching a covenant of works as opposed to the covenant of grace espoused by Reverend Cotton. The Colony's orthodox ministers held meetings with Cotton, Wheelwright, and Hutchinson in the fall of 1636. A consensus was not reached, and religious tensions mounted.

To ease the situation, the leaders called for a day of fasting and repentance on 19 January 1637. However, Cotton invited Wheelwright to speak at the Boston church during services that day, and his sermon created a furor which deepened the growing division. In March 1637, the court accused Wheelwright of contempt and sedition, but he was not sentenced. His supporters circulated a petition on his behalf, mostly people from the Boston church.

The religious controversy had immediate political ramifications. During the election of May 1637, the free grace advocates suffered two major setbacks when John Winthrop defeated Vane in the gubernatorial race, and some Boston magistrates were voted out of office for supporting Hutchinson and Wheelwright. Vane returned to England in August 1637. At the November 1637 court, Wheelwright was sentenced to banishment, and Hutchinson was brought to trial. She defended herself well against the prosecution, but she claimed on the second day of her hearing that she possessed direct personal revelation from God, and she prophesied ruin upon the colony. She was charged with contempt and sedition and banished from the colony, and her departure brought the controversy to a close. The events of 1636 to 1638 are regarded as crucial to an understanding of religion and society in the early colonial history of New England.

The idea that Hutchinson played a central role in the controversy went largely unchallenged until 2002, when Michael Winship's account portrayed Cotton, Wheelwright, and Vane as complicit with her.

and 21 Related for: Antinomian Controversy information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8153 seconds.)

Antinomian Controversy

Last Update:

The Antinomian Controversy, also known as the Free Grace Controversy, was a religious and political conflict in the Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1636...

Word Count : 10179

Antinomianism

Last Update:

critique of antinomianism and the Antinomian Controversy of the seventeenth-century Massachusetts Bay Colony. The charge of antinomianism has been levelled...

Word Count : 10320

History of the Puritans in North America

Last Update:

expressed by Nathaniel Ward in The Simple Cobbler of Agawam: "all Familists, Antinomians, Anabaptists, and other Enthusiasts shall have free Liberty to keep away...

Word Count : 7147

Martin Luther

Last Update:

Against the Antinomians, and his book On the Councils and the Church from the same year. In his theses and disputations against the antinomians, Luther reviews...

Word Count : 19001

Anne Hutchinson

Last Update:

advisor, religious reformer, and an important participant in the Antinomian Controversy which shook the infant Massachusetts Bay Colony from 1636 to 1638...

Word Count : 12230

Mary Dyer

Last Update:

most members of Boston's church, they soon became involved in the Antinomian Controversy, a theological crisis lasting from 1636 to 1638. Mary and William...

Word Count : 10319

William Coddington

Last Update:

the Reverend John Cotton, and was caught up in the events of the Antinomian Controversy from 1636 to 1638. The Reverend John Wheelwright and Anne Hutchinson...

Word Count : 5478

Lordship salvation controversy

Last Update:

similar controversy was caused by the Neonomianism of Richard Baxter, to which Lordship salvation has been compared. The Antinomian controversy is the...

Word Count : 1634

Sola fide

Last Update:

multiple controversies such as the Antinomian Controversy, the Majoristic controversy, the Marrow Controversy, and the Lordship salvation controversy. According...

Word Count : 16704

John Wheelwright

Last Update:

for being banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Antinomian Controversy, and for subsequently establishing the town of Exeter, New Hampshire...

Word Count : 7395

Lordship salvation

Last Update:

inconsistent with salvation by faith alone. Marrow Controversy Neonomianism Antinomian controversy "Lordship Salvation". Ligonier Ministries. Retrieved...

Word Count : 794

Monstrous birth

Last Update:

(Spring 1985). "'Such Monstrous Births': A Neglected Aspect of the Antinomian Controversy". Renaissance Quarterly. 38 (1): 85–106. doi:10.2307/2861332. JSTOR 2861332...

Word Count : 1329

Marrow Controversy

Last Update:

the Marrow Controversy. Scottish Church History Society. pp. 112–134. Retrieved 25 August 2018. "The Whole Christ: Legalism, Antinomianism, and Gospel...

Word Count : 1199

Congregationalism in the United States

Last Update:

Harvard University was founded in 1636. In the aftermath of the Antinomian Controversy (1636–1638), ministers realized the need for greater communication...

Word Count : 6727

Christian existentialism

Last Update:

An Introduction (Eugene: Wipf and Stock) ISBN 978-1-5326-6840-1 Antinomian controversy Atheistic existentialism Christian anarchism Christian existential...

Word Count : 1698

John Coggeshall

Last Update:

supporter of Anne Hutchinson, who was at the centre of the growing Antinomian Controversy. Also supporting her initially were the Reverend John Cotton and...

Word Count : 1745

Rhode Island

Last Update:

Hutchinson (1591–1643) – early settler of Newport, the catalyst of the Antinomian Controversy H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937) – author Oliver Hazard Perry (1785–1819)...

Word Count : 15405

History of Boston

Last Update:

religious ideas, and exiled or punished dissenters. During the Antinomian Controversy of 1636 to 1638 religious dissident leader Anne Hutchinson and Puritan...

Word Count : 11279

Francis Marbury

Last Update:

Massachusetts Bay Colony who had a leading role in the colony's Antinomian Controversy. Francis Marbury, born in London and baptised on 27 October 1555...

Word Count : 3527

Philip Melanchthon

Last Update:

this subject and in the Antinomian Controversy of 1537 Melanchthon was in harmony with Luther. Melanchthon faced controversies over the Interims and the...

Word Count : 7404

John Winthrop

Last Update:

rift is commonly called the Antinomian Controversy, and it significantly divided the colony; Winthrop saw the Antinomian beliefs as a particularly unpleasant...

Word Count : 8731

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net