The Rev. Jared Sparks by Thomas Sully shortly after his famous ordination. |
Note: The
other day the ever thought provoking Rev.
Tom Schade, who these days characterizes
himself as an Opinionator at Large, posted an interesting sermon he recently
delivered on his blog The Lively
Tradition. He had been invited to address
“The Union Service, which is a cooperative effort of 7 or 8 area UU churches,
celebrates the Baltimore Sermon of
1819. That Sermon, also called Unitarian
Christianity by William Ellery
Channing outlined the basic theological perspective of Unitarianism, as it was at that time. It was widely reprinted and
is claimed to be the second most widely pamphlet in the United States before the Civil
War, outsold only by Thomas Paine’s
Common Sense.” Like the original, Tom’s effort may turn out
to be one of the most important sermon
of a generation—ours. I urge one and all
to read and appreciate it at http://www.tomschade.com/2014/05/baltimore.html. Meanwhile, here is a some information on
the man whose ordination was the occasion
for the original.
Jared Sparks
may be best remembered for just sitting and listening to a speech. The speech was really a sermon by the Rev. William Ellery Channing given at the First
Independent Church of Baltimore on May 5, 1819 on the occasion of Spark’s
ordination and installation as minister.
The sermon, known as Unitarian
Christianity, was the final declaration of independence for what had
been called liberal Christianity from the Calvinist
orthodoxy of the New England
Standing Order. Essentially it was
the foundational document of American
Unitarianism.
Why
Channing chose far-off Baltimore and the ordination of a young man brought up
in Connecticut’s strict orthodoxy
has puzzled many. The answer may lie in
the remarkable life of Sparks himself.
Sparks
was born on May 10, 1789 in Willington,
Connecticut, a younger son of a large and struggling family with few prospects
of his own. He grew up in the post-Revolutionary period steeped in
the lore of that struggle and in the strict orthodoxy of the Congregationalists who dominated the
state religiously and politically.
Unable to support or educate young
Jared, his family sent him to live with relatives in Camden, New York when he
was six. His uncle and aunt were hardly
in better shape to tend to his needs despite his obvious natural intelligence
and eagerness to pick up any scrap of knowledge through haphazard reading and
self instruction. In his teen years he
returned to his parents and got some grammar school education where he showed a
special passion for astronomy. By age 18
he was helping support the family as carpenter and rural schoolmaster.
At age twenty he gained access to
the personal library of a local pastor and began systematic study of Latin, mathematics, and astronomy. Impressed with his progress, the pastor
arranged for his admission to Phillips
Exeter Academy on a scholarship. His
tutors and classmates began describing him as a genius and he gained his first
public reputation writing articles on education and science for local
newspapers.
Upon graduation from Phillips
Exeter, Sparks was undoubtedly expected to enroll a Yale, the bastion of Orthodoxy where he would have prepared to
dutifully join the Black Legion of
Congregationalist clergy. Instead,
Sparks surprised everyone, perhaps even himself, by opting attend arch-rival Harvard, then already in the hands of
restive theological liberals. Sparks
cast his lot with people who asked questions.
He had to drop out of school in 1812
for financial reasons. He signed on as a
private tutor of a plantation family in Havre
de Grace, Maryland. He was a witness
in May of 1813 when the town at the head of Chesapeake Bay was shelled by British
naval forces under Admiral George
Cockburn. Sparks later wrote a
memorable account of the action.
With the money he earned as a tutor,
Sparks was able to return to Harvard where he became a stand-out student
leader. He won the coveted Bowden Prize for his essay on Sir Isaac Newton, joined the Phi Beta Kappa society, and was a commencement speaker when he graduated
in 1815.
Sparks stayed at Harvard to study in
the Divinity School paying his way
as a tutor in geometry, astronomy, and natural history.
Upon graduation, he was called to
the Baltimore congregation and to his rendezvous with American religious
history. Sparks was a respected minister
and his carefully crafted sermons much admired.
He participated, as much as separation from the hub of the Unitarian
universe in Boston permitted, in the
affairs of Unitarianism. He contributed
to its vigorous press. But he was not
happy with the routine duties of a pastor and yearned for an academic or
literary career.
He resigned his pulpit and left
active ministry—although he would occasionally fill a pulpit as a guest or
supply preacher—and returned to Cambridge
in April of 1823. Back in Massachusetts he became editor of the North American Review, already
the young nation’s first and most distinguished literary magazine. Under Spark’s stewardship it further cemented
its reputation and printed not only literary criticism and poetry, but what
would today be called policy-wonk
articles about national and international events and politics.
Sparks also honed a new interest in
history and biography, particularly concentrating on the Revolutionary
period. His first book, in 1827, was a
biography of American explorer John Ledyard.
To
prepare for a planned biography of George
Washington, Sparks traveled to Mt.
Vernon to examine his papers.
Fascinated by what he found he went on a search for everything
Washington wrote, interviewing and collecting letters and materials from
survivors of the Revolution and from archives and libraries around the country. The result was the massive 12 volume The Writings of George Washington published
between 1834 and ’37. No one had ever
done anything quite like it before. It
was a revolutionary step forward in historical scholarship.
Sparks
applied editing standards of his day—correcting spelling, punctuation, and
grammar; polishing rough phrasings, and omitting passages that might embarrass
or demean the Old Hero. Modern editors
have had to re-plow Sparks’s ground to restore the original voice, warts and
all, but that would have been impossible without his original efforts.
Sparks
followed with other important books—The
Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, The
Life of Governeur Morris, The Works of Benjamin Franklin, The Library of American Biography. To gather materials for
the book on diplomacy, he became the first American to travel to Europe to examine and collect source
material there.
The books not only were essential
contributions to understanding American history, they were popular enough to
actually make money, making Sparks one of the few literary men in the country
to be able to make a comfortable living from his private scholarship and pen.
In 1839 Sparks returned to Harvard
as the McLean Professor of Ancient and
Modern History. He offered the first
course in American history at any university and abandoned the traditional
pedagogy of teaching from texts and requiring recitation by students instead
using a combination of lectures, assigned reading from various materials
including original sources, and small group discussion. This refreshing change made his classes among
the most popular with Harvard students.
Despite opposition of some
disgruntled traditionalists, Sparks was elected President of Harvard in 1849.
He instituted several campus reforms.
He personally oversaw the organization and preservation of Harvard’s own
institutional history documents, a bonanza for future historians. But Sparks hated the petty politics of
academia, the drudgery of a mountain of routine clerical work, and being
disciplinarian to notoriously rowdy Harvard students. He resigned in 1853 after only four years.
In retirement Sparks privately
tutored and mentored Harvard students and continued his historical
research. His last major book was Correspondence of the American
Revolution, Being Letters of Eminent Men to George Washington in 1853.
In 1857 he took an extended tour of Europe concentrating on museums,
libraries, and archives where the raw material of history could be found. He published articles on those travels.
Jared
Sparks died on March 14, 1866 at the age of 77.
He was honored as America’s premier historian—and the as the guy at
whose ordination William Ellery Channing spoke.
No comments:
Post a Comment