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COTTON MATHER, AN AMERICAN ON PATMOS
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And I heard a great voice in heaven
saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell
with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be
with them, and be their God. And God shall wipe away all tears from
their eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor
crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things
are passed away. And he that sat upon the throne said, Behold, I
make all things new. And he said unto me, Write: for these words
are true and faithful.
Revelation 21:3-5
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Engraving
of Cotton Mather
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No American took God's command to the exiled apostle
more seriously than the Puritan theologian Cotton Mather. When God told
John to write, He may as well have addressed Mather himself. Few American
writers have been so thoroughly saturated by the Book of Revelation, and
even fewer have approached Mather's staggering literary output. Perhaps
the most voracious Bible reader our shores have ever known, Mather's views
on the end of the world were the culmination of a century of American
speculation on its destiny. These beliefs were typically distilled in
fire-ridden sermons like Theopolis Americana
and Things to Be Look'd For. His
magisterial history of America, Magnalia Christi Americana, still believed
that the great works of Christ were being enacted in the New World, even
as it condemned backsliding New Englanders who were not living up to the
saintly works of their first generation of American settlers. Nor was
Mather's interest in the end of the world limited to his public preaching:
his letter to Thomas Foxcroft exhibited here enlists Foxcroft in a Bible
study group devoted solely to the interpretation of Revelation. Mather's
restless mind even saw the workings of the devil in Asia, and the manuscript
letter from "India Christiana" sniffs out the agents of the Antichrist
in the missionary work of Catholics in, of all places, Malabar, East India.
Finally, Mather's Diaries attest to many long struggles with the devil
in his very study. These struggles and the biblical speculations to which
they gave rise had an enormous impact on American Christianity--except
for the various years Mather assigned to the end of the world, dates that
passed quietly in 1697, 1716, and again in 1736.
40. Engraving of
Cotton Mather. No date.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
41. Cotton Mather. The Diary of
Cotton Mather, 1681-[1724]. Published at the charge of the Peabody
Fund. Boston: The Society, 1911-1912.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
42. Autograph letter, signed,
from Cotton Mather to Thomas Foxcroft. 28 August 1722. 2 pp.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
43. Cotton Mather. Magnalia
Christi Americana. Or, The ecclesiastical history of New-England, from
its first planting in the year 1620 unto the year of Our Lord 1698. In
seven books, by the Reverend and learned Cotton Mather. London: Printed
for Thomas Parkhurst, at the Bible and three crowns in Cheapside, 1702.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
44. Cotton Mather. Theopolis
Americana. An essay on the golden street of the Holy City. Publishing,
a testimony against the corruptions of the market-place. With some good
hopes of better things to be yet seen in the American world. In a sermon,
to the general Assembly of the Massachusetts province in New-England,
3d. 9m. 1709. Boston: printed by B. Green. Sold by Samuel Gerrish
at his shop, 1710.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
45. Cotton Mather. Things
to Be Look'd For. Discourses on the glorious characters, with conjectures
on the speedy approaches of that state which is reserved for the church
of God in the latter dayes, together with an inculcation of several duties
which the undoubted characters and approaches of that state invite us
unto, delivered unto the Artillery company of the Massachusetts colony,
New England, at their election of officers for the year 1691. Cambridge,
Massachusetts: printed by Samuel Green & Barth. Green, for Nicholas Buttolph,
at Gutteridge's coffee-house in Boston, 1691.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
46. Autograph letter, signed, from Cotton Mather to
Dr. Bartholomaeus Ziegenbalg containing portion of manuscript of "India
Christiana" (1712). 31 December 1717.
From the Tracy W. McGregor Library of American History.
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