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Theodore Parker

Theodore Parker (August 24, 1810 – May 10, 1860) was an American transcendentalist and reforming minister of the Unitarian church. A reformer and abolitionist, his words and popular quotations would later inspire speeches by Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr.


Theodore Parker
Parker c. 1855
Born(1810-08-24)August 24, 1810
DiedMay 10, 1860(1860-05-10) (aged 49)
Florence, Italy
Alma materHarvard College, Harvard Divinity School
OccupationMinister
SpouseLydia Dodge Cabot
RelativesJohn Parker (captain) (grandfather)
ReligionUnitarianism
Signature

Early life, 1810–1829 edit

Parker was born in Lexington, Massachusetts,[1] the youngest child in a large farming family. His paternal grandfather was John Parker, the leader of the Lexington militia at the Battle of Lexington. Among his colonial Yankee ancestors were Thomas Hastings, who came from the East Anglia region of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634, and Deacon Thomas Parker, who came from England in 1635 and was one of the founders of Reading.[2][3][4]

Most of Theodore's family had died by the time he was 27,[5] probably due to tuberculosis. Out of eleven siblings, only five remained: three brothers, including Theodore, and two sisters. His mother, to whom he was emotionally close, died when he was eleven. He responded to these tragedies by refusing to lapse into what he called "the valley of tears", focusing instead on other events and demands, and by affirming "the immortality of the soul", later a benchmark of his theology.[6]

Descriptions of Parker as a teenager recall him as "raw" and rough, emotional and poetic, sincere, "arch", "roguish", volatile, witty, and quick. He excelled at academics and gained an early education through country schools and personal study. He studied long and late when farm chores allowed, teaching himself math, Latin, and other subjects. At seventeen he began teaching in local schools. He continued teaching himself and private students in advanced and specialized subjects.[7] He learned Hebrew from Joshua Seixas (son of Gershom Mendes Seixas and Hannah Manuel[8]), whom he may have baptized in a covert conversion to Christianity.[9] He also studied for a time under Convers Francis, who later preached at Parker's ordination.[10]

College and divinity school, 1830–1836 edit

In 1830, at age 19, Parker walked the ten miles from Lexington to Cambridge to apply to Harvard College. He was accepted but could not pay the tuition, so he lived and studied at home, continued to work on his father's farm, and joined his classmates only for exams. Under that program, he was able to complete three years of study in one.[11] He then took various posts as a teacher, conducting an academy from 1831 to 1834 at Watertown, Massachusetts, where his late mother's family lived. At Watertown, he met his future wife, Lydia Dodge Cabot. He announced their engagement to his father in October, 1833. Theodore and Lydia were married four years later on April 20, 1837.[12]

While at Watertown, Parker produced his first significant manuscript, The History of the Jews, which outlined his skepticism of biblical miracles and an otherwise liberal approach to the Bible.[13] These were to be themes throughout his career.

 
Caricature by Christopher Pearse Cranch depicting Parker's interest in German thinking

Parker considered a career in law, but his strong faith led him to theology. He entered the Harvard Divinity School in 1834.[14] He specialized in the study of German theology and was drawn to the ideas of Coleridge, Carlyle, and Emerson. He wrote and spoke (with varying degrees of fluency) Latin, Greek, Hebrew, and German.[15] His journal and letters show that he was acquainted with many other languages, including Chaldee, Syriac, Arabic, Coptic and Ethiopic. He completed the divinity school program quickly, in 1836, in order to marry and begin preaching without delay.[16][17]

Early home life and career, 1836–1842 edit

Parker called the late 1830s a "period of…disappointment". Citing "home; children; & a good professional sphere," he wrote in his journal that "All fail me, & all equally."[18] Increasing controversies in his career culminated in a break with orthodoxy in the early 1840s. The fallout from these events affected him deeply, and it took him a few years to land on his feet and move forward.

Marriage edit

Parker and Lydia Cabot married in 1837, but the union was rocky at first due to environmental stresses and incompatibilities, and both were saddened to have no children.[19] In 1840 he sought emotional release in the company of a neighboring woman, Anna Blake Shaw, who had a similar theology and temperament to his own, but the friendship was by all accounts not sexual. This attachment naturally increased problems at home, where he may have found it difficult to meet the emotional needs of his wife.[20]

First pastorate edit

Parker had spent 1836 visiting pulpits in the Boston area (G 80[further explanation needed]), but for family reasons accepted a pastorate at West Roxbury in 1837.[21] At first, he found the location less than stimulating and work constraining.[22] He adapted to pastoral life, however, and preached in many pulpits around Boston as a visitor. He gained a wide reputation as an earnest, effective speaker. In 1840 Harvard awarded him an honorary master's degree on the basis of his extensive learning.[23]

Parker delivered one especially popular sermon twenty-five times between 1838 and 1841. In it, he argued against the popular notion that religion could be reduced to morality. "The principle of morality is obedience to the Law of con[science]," he wrote, while religion required more: that we "feel naturally, allegiance to a superior Being: dependence on him & accountability to him." (The theme of dependence echoes Schleiermacher, an indication of the German influence on his theology.) Morality involves right acting, while religion requires love of God and regular prayer, which Parker considered essential to human life. "No feeling is more deeply planted in human nature than the tendency to adore a superior being," he preached, "to reverence him, to bow before him, to feel his presence, to pray to him for aid in times of need" and "to bless him when the heart is full of joy."[24]

Transcendentalism edit

In 1837, Parker had begun attending meetings of the group later known as the Transcendental Club. Ralph Waldo Emerson's Divinity School Address that year had been deeply arresting to him,[25] and he welcomed the opportunity to associate with Emerson, Amos Bronson Alcott, Orestes Brownson, and several others.[26] Transcendentalists such as Henry David Thoreau and Parker wrote of the world as divine, and of themselves as part of this divinity. Unlike Emerson and other Transcendentalists, however, Parker believed the movement was rooted in deeply religious ideas and did not believe it should retreat from religion. All shared a conviction that slavery should be abolished and social reforms should take root.[27]

Parker gradually introduced Transcendentalist ideas into his sermons. He tempered his radicalism with diplomacy and discretion, however. "I preach abundant heresies," he wrote to a friend, "and they all go down—for the listeners do not know how heretical they are."[28] For years he had wrestled with the factuality of the Hebrew Scriptures, and by 1837 he was wishing "some wise man would now write a book…and show up the absurdity of…the Old Testament miracles, prophecies, dreams, miraculous births, etc.'" He was hardly alone. "'What shall we do with the Old Testament?' asked fellow Unitarian James Walker in 1838. 'That question is of such frequent recurrence among laymen as well as clergymen, that any well-considered attempt to answer it, or supply the means of answering it, is almost sure of hearty welcome."[29] Questions regarding biblical realism and meaning, and the answers clergy increasingly found through the German-based higher criticism, formed the basis of liberal Christianity as it emerged and developed throughout the nineteenth century.

In 1838 Parker published his first major article, a critical review of an orthodox work written by his former professor John Gorham Palfrey. In it Parker broke for the first time with supernatural realism, as he also increasingly did in his sermons.[30] To him, Christianity was natural rather than miraculous. More and more, he praised social reform movements such as those for temperance, peace, and the abolition of slavery. In 1840 he described such movements as divinely inspired, though he added that they did not fully address the spiritual and intellectual ills of society.[31] Controversy mounted regarding these and other Transcendentalist elements in his work. So did criticism, which often saddened and distressed him.[32]

Break with Orthodoxy edit

 
Parker's statue in front of the Theodore Parker Church,[33] a Unitarian parish in West Roxbury, Massachusetts.

In 1841, Parker laid bare his radical theological position in a sermon titled A Discourse on the Transient and Permanent in Christianity, in which he espoused his belief that the traditions of historic Christianity did not reflect the truth.[34] In so doing, he made an open break with orthodox theology. He instead argued for a type of Christian belief and worship in which the essence of Jesus's teachings remained permanent but the words, traditions, and other forms of their conveyance did not. He stressed the immediacy of God and saw the Church as a communion, looking upon Christ as the supreme expression of God. Ultimately, he rejected all miracles and revelation and saw the Bible as full of contradictions and mistakes. He retained his faith in God but suggested that people experience God intuitively and personally, and that they should center their religious beliefs on individual experience.[1]

Parker's West Roxbury church remained loyal. Sermons and media attacked him, however, when he denied Biblical miracles and the literal authority of the Bible and Jesus. Many questioned his Christianity. Nearly all the pulpits in the Boston area were closed to him,[35] and he lost friends. Parker reacted with grief and defiance.[36] He remained unwilling to concede that his views placed him beyond the outer bounds of Unitarian liberalism. After this unwilling break with the Unitarian establishment, he spent two years (1841–1843) adjusting to the reality of his newly controversial and independent career and increasing his social activism on religious grounds. He began to see himself as a prophetic religious reformer.[37]

Mature home life and career, 1843–1859 edit

 
Parker c. 1850

Parker's family life, temperament, and work steadied during the 1840s. The second half of his career revolved around antislavery, democracy, and religious social activism.

Travel to Europe edit

In 1843 and 1844, Theodore and Lydia traveled in Europe. While there his theology, career, and personal life matured and steadied. He was no longer as sensitive to criticism and bore difficulties more easily.[38] Away from extended family problems in West Roxbury, his marriage seems to have improved and become more steadily affectionate. Despite complex issues that occasionally resurfaced, he and Lydia were happier. "My wife is kind as an angel," he would write in his journal during denominational trials in 1845. His travels also seemed to stimulate a growing interest in political and social issues.[39]

Independent Boston pastorate edit

Returning to the United States, Parker found Unitarianism on the cusp of a division over his right to fellowship as a minister. His controversial 1841 sermon had created a stir that ballooned into an all-out storm in 1844 at the Church of the Disciples. The debate over the nature and degree of Parker's "infidelity" caused Unitarians to adopt a liberal creed, which they had formerly declined to do based on an inclusive principle. Their position proved too orthodox to include Parker.[40]

In January, 1845, a sizeable group of supporters gathered at Marlboro Chapel in Boston and resolved to provide Parker "a chance to be heard in Boston." Calling themselves "Friends of Theodore Parker," they hired a hall and invited him to preach there on Sunday mornings.[41] Despite misgivings, Parker accepted and preached his first sermon at the Melodeon (Boston, Massachusetts) Theater in February. Although the arrangement was temporary at first,[42] he resigned his West Roxbury pastorate in early 1846 (to the dismay of his faithful parishioners there). He elected to call his new congregation the 28th Congregational Society of Boston; after the Melodeon, Parker's congregation met in the Boston Music Hall on Winter Street, Boston.[43]

Parker's congregation grew to 2,000—then three percent of Boston's population—and included influential figures such as Louisa May Alcott, William Lloyd Garrison, Julia Ward Howe (a personal friend), and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.[44] Stanton called his sermons "soul-satisfying" when beginning her career, and she credited him with introducing her to the idea of a Heavenly Mother in the Trinity.[45] Parker was increasingly known for preaching what he and his followers identified as a type of prophetic Christian social activism.

The 28th Congregational Society, now renamed Theodore Parker Unitarian Church, located on 1851 Centre Street in West Roxbury was designated a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1985.

Reform movements and social theology edit

After 1846, Parker shifted from a focus on Transcendentalism and challenging the bounds of Unitarian theology to a focus on the gathering national divisions over slavery and the challenges of democracy. In Boston, he led the movement to combat the stricter Fugitive Slave Act, a controversial part of the Compromise of 1850. This act required law enforcement and citizens of all states—free states as well as slave states—to assist in recovering fugitive slaves. Parker called the law "a hateful statute of kidnappers" and helped organize open resistance to it. He and his followers formed the Boston Vigilance Committee, which refused to assist with the recovery of fugitive slaves and helped hide them.[46] For example, they smuggled away Ellen and William Craft when Georgian slave catchers came to Boston to arrest them. Due to such efforts, from 1850 to the onset of the American Civil War in 1861, only twice were slaves captured in Boston and transported back to the South. On both occasions, Bostonians combatted the actions with mass protests.[47]

As Parker's early biographer John White Chadwick wrote, Parker was involved with almost all of the reform movements of the time: "peace, temperance, education, the condition of women, penal legislation, prison discipline, the moral and mental destitution of the rich, the physical destitution of the poor" though none became "a dominant factor in his experience" with the exception of his antislavery views.[48] He "denounced the Mexican War and called on his fellow Bostonians in 1847 'to protest against this most infamous war,'"[49] while at the same time promoting economic expansionism and exposing racist view of Mexicans' inherent inferiority, calling them "a wretched people; wretched in their origin, history, and character".[50][51]

Yet his abolitionism became his most controversial stance.[52] He wrote the scathing To a Southern Slaveholder in 1848, as the abolition crisis was heating up, and took a strong stance against slavery[53] and advocated violating the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, a controversial part of the Compromise of 1850 which required the return of escaped slaves to their owners. Parker worked with many fugitive slaves, some of whom were among his congregation. As in the case of William and Ellen Craft,[54] he hid them in his home. Although he was indicted for his actions, he was never convicted.[35]

As a member of the Secret Six, he supported the abolitionist John Brown, whom many considered a terrorist.[55] After Brown's arrest, Parker wrote a public letter, "John Brown's Expedition Reviewed", arguing for the right of slaves to kill their masters and defending Brown's actions.[56]

Death edit

 
Parker's tomb in Florence

Following a lifetime of overwork, Parker's ill health forced his retirement in 1859. He developed tuberculosis, then without effective treatment, and departed for Florence, Italy, where he died on May 10, 1860. He sought refuge in Florence because of his friendship with Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning, Isa Blagden and Frances Power Cobbe, but died scarcely a month following his arrival. It was less than a year before the outbreak of the American Civil War.

Parker was a patient of William Wesselhoeft, who practiced homeopathy. Wesselhoeft gave the oration at Parker's funeral.[57] He is buried in the English Cemetery in Florence.[58] When Frederick Douglass visited Florence, he went first from the railroad station to Parker's tomb.[59]

Parker's headstone by Joel Tanner Hart was later replaced by one by William Wetmore Story. Other Unitarians buried in the English Cemetery include Thomas Southwood Smith and Richard Hildreth. The British writer Fanny Trollope, also buried here, wrote the first anti-slavery novel and Hildreth wrote the second. Both books were used by Harriet Beecher Stowe for her antislavery novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852).

Legacy and honors edit

  • Unitarian Universalists honor Theodore Parker as "a canonical figure—the model of a prophetic minister in the American Unitarian tradition."[5][60]
  • The church in West Roxbury where Parker held his first pastorate (1837–1846) was renamed Theodore Parker Unitarian Universalist Church in 1962. It retains this name today.
  • Frances P. Cobbe collected and published Parker's writings in 14 volumes.
  • According to Unitarian clergyman John White Chadwick, Parker made common use of the phrase, "A democracy—of all the people, by all the people, for all the people" in his letters and writing.[61] It appears publicly in a speech by Parker at an 1850 anti-slavery convention.[62] William H. Herndon, Lincoln's law partner, witnessed Parker use the phrase in a July 4, 1858 address and claimed to have given Lincoln a copy, which Lincoln later used in formulating his Gettysburg Address.[62] (Parker himself might have developed his phrase from John Wycliffe's prologue to the first English translation of the Bible.)[63]
  • Parker predicted the inevitable success of the abolitionist cause this way:

    I do not pretend to understand the moral universe; the arc is a long one, my eye reaches but little ways; I cannot calculate the curve and complete the figure by the experience of sight; I can divine it by conscience. And from what I see I am sure it bends towards justice.[64]

    A century later, Martin Luther King Jr. would paraphrase these words in a number of his speeches and sermons, including: a prepared statement he read in 1956 following the conclusion of the Montgomery bus boycott;[65] his speech "How Long, Not Long", delivered in March 1965, when the last of the Selma to Montgomery marches reached the Alabama State Capitol;[66] "Where Do We Go From Here?", delivered in August 1967 to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference;[67][68] and his "Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution" sermon, delivered in March 1968 at the National Cathedral.[69] In each instance, King's paraphrase included the words "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice".[66][68][69]
  • In 1963, Betty Friedan's influential best seller, The Feminine Mystique, believed to have sparked the 1960s and 70s women's movement, bore the following 1853 epigraph from Theodore Parker:

    The domestic function of the woman does not exhaust her powers... To make one half of the human race consume its energies in the functions of housekeeper, wife and mother is a monstrous waste of the most precious material God ever made.

    Eight months after the publication of Friedan's book, Kurt Vonnegut uses the same quote in his short story "Lovers Anonymous", first published in the October issue of Redbook magazine and reprinted in Vonnegut's 1999 collection Bagombo Snuff Box.
  • The beige rug chosen for President Barack Obama's remodeled Oval Office in August 2010, was bordered by five quotations, two of which (by Lincoln and King) are inspired by the writings of Parker, as noted above.[70]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Hankins (2004), p. 143
  2. ^ Buckminster, Lydia N.H., The Hastings Memorial, A Genealogical Account of the Descendants of Thomas Hastings of Watertown, Mass. from 1634 to 1864. Boston: Samuel G. Drake Publisher (an undated NEHGS photoduplicate of the 1866 edition), 30.
  3. ^ Parker, Theodore, John Parker of Lexington and his Descendants, Showing his Earlier Ancestry in America from Dea. Thomas Parker of Reading, Mass. from 1635 to 1893, pp. 15–16, 21–30, 34–36, 468–470, Press of Charles Hamilton, Worcester, MA, 1893.
  4. ^ Parker, Augustus G., Parker in America, 1630–1910, pp. 5, 27, 49, 53–54, 154, Niagara Frontier Publishing Co., Buffalo, NY, 1911.
  5. ^ a b Dean Grodzins. . Unitarian Universalist Historical Society. Archived from the original on 2012-05-30.
  6. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 27–28 Theodore's sisters Rebecca, Ruth, and Hannah all died before he was five; by the time he was eleven, his grandmother and loved mother had also died. His brother John and two remaining sisters, Emily, Mary, and Lydia, died while he was a young man.
  7. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 20–21
  8. ^ Flatow, Alisa M.; Anflick, Adina, eds. (2019). "Guide to the Papers of the Seixas Family, undated, 1746–1911, 1926, 1939". New York: Center for Jewish History, American Jewish Historical Society. *P-60. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
  9. ^ Shalom Goldman, God's Sacred Tongue: Hebrew & the American Imagination (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2004), 187. Also see Shalom Goldman, "James/Joshua Seixas (1802–1874): Jewish Apostasy and Christian Hebraism in Early Nineteenth-Century America", Jewish History 7:1 (1993), 65–88.
  10. ^ Gura, Philip F. American Transcendentalism: A History. New York: Hill and Wang, 2007: 117. ISBN 0-8090-3477-8.
  11. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 22
  12. ^ For Parker's time in Watertown and engagement, see Grodzins, American Heretic, 36; an earlier and more poetic account is in Henry Steele Commager, Theodore Parker: Yankee Crusader (Boston: Unitarian Universalist Association, 1947), 23. For marriage, see Grodzins (2002), p. 87
  13. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 31, 391. For an account written by a contemporary describing Parker's time and writings at Watertown, including A History of the Jews, see Octavius Brooks Frothingham, Theodore Parker: A Biography (New York: G.P. Putnam, 1880), 39.
  14. ^ Hankins, Barry. The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2004: 143. ISBN 0-313-31848-4
  15. ^ For his lack of speaking fluency in French and German, despite translating thousands of pages in writing, see Grodzins (2002), p. 381.
  16. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 39
  17. ^ Commager, Theodore Parker, 23-24.
  18. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 118
  19. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 91–102 sketches out the initial difficulties of their marriage. Also see the journal entry reprinted as the figure "Marital strife" in Grodzins (2002), p. 294, and taken from the Theodore Parker Papers, bMS 101, Harvard Divinity School Library of Harvard Divinity School, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  20. ^ For his relationship with Shaw, see Grodzins (2002), p. 177; for the relationship with his wife, see Grodzins (2002), pp. 100–102.
  21. ^ . March 13, 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-03-13.
  22. ^ For pulpit touring, see Grodzins (2002), p. 80; for his initial response to West Roxbury, see Grodzins (2002), p. 89.
  23. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 175
  24. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 145
  25. ^ Gary J. Dorrien, The Making of American Liberal Theology: Imagining Progressive Religion, 1805-1900, 77. Dorrien writes that Emerson's Harvard address "had a formative and catalyzing effect" on Parker.
  26. ^ Buell, Lawrence. Emerson. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2003: 32–33. ISBN 0-674-01139-2
  27. ^ Hankins, The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists, 28; 105; 143. On 105, Hankins notes that Parker was a Transcendentalist antislavery advocate and considered "perhaps the most important theologian the movement produced."
  28. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 148
  29. ^ Shalom Goldman, God's Sacred Tongue, 187.
  30. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 156
  31. ^ Grodzins, American Heretic, 205.
  32. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 184 records one such experience of criticism, after which he "went weeping through the streets."
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Established as a Calvinist Protestant church, the congregation adopted a conservative Unitarian theology in the 1830s and followed its minister, Theodore Parker, to a more liberal position in the 1840s. When the First Parish of West Roxbury merged with the Unitarian Church of Roslindale in 1962, the congregation decided to name their new community in memory of Theodore Parker.
  34. ^ Parker, Theodore (19 May 1841). A DISCOURSE OF THE TRANSIENT AND PERMANENT IN CHRISTIANITY. PREACHED AT THE ORDINATION OF MR. CHARLES C. SHACKFORD, IN THE HAWES PLACE CHURCH IN BOSTON. Electronic Texts in American Studies.; alternate digitization at archive.org
  35. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Parker, Theodore" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 830.
  36. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 307, 361
  37. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 344 shows his first open support for Temperance activism; Grodzins (2002), p. 340 notes that "For Parker, the ideal religious reformer was the solitary, heroic prophet. He was starting to see himself in this role."
  38. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 370. In Grodzins (2002), pp. 401–402 Grodzins write that in Europe, "Parker's temperament grew steadier. The extraordinary sensitivity to rebuff, the intense 'agony of spirit,' seemed to disappear. Before his trip to Europe, he burst easily and often into tears; afterward, he almost never did so. He later would confront controversies far more severe, opponents far more dangerous, than any he had faced in 1841, 1842, and 1843; but none would so deeply affect him."
  39. ^ For "kind as an angel," see Grodzins (2002), p. 414. For renewed affection between the Parkers during and after their European trip, despite ongoing marital issues, see Grodzins (2002), pp. 387–401. For more interest in political and social issues, see Grodzins (2002), p. 403.
  40. ^ Grodzins (2002), pp. 412, 431
  41. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 457
  42. ^ Grodzins (2002), p. 460
  43. ^ On his resignation in West Roxbury and choosing a name for his new congregation, see Grodzins (2002), p. 476. Also see Grodzins. "Theodore Parker". Unitarian Universalist Historical Society. The Boston Music Hall became the Orpheum Theater, with addresses at 6 ½ Hamilton Place and 413-415 Washington Street. “Orpheum Theater,” BOS.1769, Massachusetts Cultural Resources Information System (MACRIS), http://mhc-macris.net/Details.aspx?MhcId=BOS.1769.
  44. ^ On the size of Parker's Melodean congregation, see Grodzins (2002), pp. 477, 491.
  45. ^ Kathi Kern, Mrs. Stanton's Bible (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001). For "soul-satisfying," see 45. For "Heavenly Mother," see 165.
  46. ^ Buescher, John. Keep Your Top Eye Open. Teachinghistory.org Accessed 2 June 2011.
  47. ^ Potter, David Morris., and Don E. Fehrenbacher. The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861, New York: Harper & Row, 1976
  48. ^ Gura, Philip F. American Transcendentalism: A History. New York: Hill and Wang, 2007: 248. ISBN 0-8090-3477-8
  49. ^ Polner, Murray (2010-03-01) Left Behind 2010-12-17 at the Wayback Machine, The American Conservative
  50. ^ Zinn, H. (2015). A People's History of the United States: 1492-Present. Harper Perennial modern classics. Taylor & Francis. p. 157. ISBN 978-1-317-32530-7. Retrieved 2017-09-18.
  51. ^ Parker, T.; Cobbe, F.P. (1863). The Collected Works of Theodore Parker: Discourses of politics. The Collected Works of Theodore Parker: Minister of the Twenty-eighth Congregational Society at Boston, U.S. : Containing His Theological, Polemical, and Critical Writings, Sermons, Speeches, and Addresses, and Literary Miscellanies. publisher not identified. p. 23. Retrieved 2017-09-18.
  52. ^ Paul E. Teed (2001). "A Brave Man's Child: Theodore Parker and the Memory of the American Revolution". www.wsc.ma.edu (Summer 2001 issue). Theodore Parker's 1845 pilgrimage to Lexington was a defining moment in the career of one of New England's most influential antislavery activists. Occurring as it did in the very midst of the national crisis over Texas annexation, Parker's mystical connection with the memory of his illustrious revolutionary ancestor emerged as the bedrock of his identity as an abolitionist.
    "While other abolitionists frequently claimed the revolutionary tradition for their cause, Parker's antislavery vision also rested upon a deep sense of filial obligation to the revolutionaries themselves.
  53. ^ James Kendall Hosmer, ed. (1910). . Boston: American Unitarian Association. Archived from the original on 2008-07-04 – via Antislavery Literature Project. First collected edition of the antislavery writings and speeches of abolitionist Theodore Parker
  54. ^ Charles Stephen (25 August 2002). . Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.
  55. ^ Gradert, Kenyon. Puritan Spirits and the Abolitionist Imagination, pp16-7, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 2020. ISBN 978-0-226-69402-3.
  56. ^ "John Brown's Expedition Reviewed"
  57. ^ "William Wesselhoeft (1794-1858) - Pioneers of homeopathy by T. L. Bradford". homeoint.org.
  58. ^ Official guidebook written by Pastore Luigi Santini, published by the Administration of the Cimitero agli Allori in 1981. "American Tombs in Florence's English Cemetery".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  59. ^ Douglass, Frederick. Life and Times of Frederick Douglass, 1893. NY: Library of America, reprint, 1994:1015
  60. ^ For more on UUism claiming Parker as a founding figure, see Daniel McKanan, "Unitarianism, Universalism, and Unitarian Universalism," Religion Compass 7/1 (2013), 15–24.
  61. ^ Shaw, Albert (1901). "A Letter from Mr. John White Chadwick". The American Monthly Review of Reviews. p. 336. Retrieved 17 Aug 2022.
  62. ^ a b Theodore Parker (29 May 1850). "The American Idea:" speech at N.E. Anti-Slavery Convention, Boston". Bartleby.com. A democracy,—that is a government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people; of course, a government of the principles of eternal justice, the unchanging law of God; for shortness' sake I will call it the idea of Freedom.
  63. ^ Wikiquote:John Wycliffe
  64. ^ Manker-Seale, Susan (2006-01-15). . Archived from the original on 2007-08-11. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  65. ^ King, Martin Luther Jr. (25 March 1965). "Statement on Ending the Bus Boycott (statement for Montgomery Improvement Association)". The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford University. Retrieved 23 February 2017. There have been moments when roaring waters of disappointment poured upon us in staggering torrents. We can remember days when unfavorable court decisions came upon us like tidal waves, leaving us treading in the deep and confused waters of despair. But amid all of this we have kept going with the faith that as we struggle, God struggles with us, and that the arc of the moral universe, although long, is bending toward justice.
  66. ^ a b King, Martin Luther Jr. (25 March 1965). "Our God is Marching On!". The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford University. Retrieved 23 February 2017. How long? Not long, because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. (Yes, sir)
  67. ^ Anna Leon-Guerrero; Kristine Zentgraf (21 November 2008). Contemporary Readings in Social Problems. SAGE Publications. p. 24. ISBN 978-1-4129-6530-9.
  68. ^ a b King, Martin Luther Jr. (16 August 1967). . The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford University. Archived from the original on 24 February 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2017. Let us realize that the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.
  69. ^ a b King, Martin Luther Jr. (31 March 1968). . The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute, Stanford University. Archived from the original on 24 February 2017. Retrieved 23 February 2017. We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.
  70. ^ Stiehm, Jamie (2010-09-04). "Oval Office rug gets history wrong". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-09-04.

Works cited edit

Further reading edit

  • Bowden, Henry Warner. "Parker, Theodore" in American National Biography Online 2000
  • Chadwick, John White. "Theodore Parker: Preacher and Reformer." Boston: Houghton and Mifflin, 1901. Early biography memorializing Parker.
  • Commager, Henry Steele. Theodore Parker (1947), first scholarly biography excerpt and text search
  • Commager, Henry Steele. "The Dilemma of Theodore Parker," New England Quarterly (1933) 6#2 pp 257–277. in JSTOR
  • Dirks, John Edward. The Critical Theology of Theodore Parker (1948) online 2011-10-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • Fellman, Michael. "Theodore Parker and the Abolitionist Role in the 1850s," Journal of American History (1974) 61#3 pp 666–684. in JSTOR
  • Grodzins, Dean. American Heretic: Theodore Parker and Transcendentalism. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002. Highly acclaimed, award-winning 2014-10-02 at the Wayback Machine scholarly biography. Examines new evidence and reassesses conclusions of earlier biographies.
  • Kraller, Anna-Lisa. 2016. "Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God": Theodore Parker's proverbial fight for the Ideal American Society. (Supplement Series to Proverbium: Yearbook of International Proverb Scholarship 37.) Burlington, VT: University of Vermont.
  • Smith, John Frederick (1885). "Parker, Theodore" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XVIII (9th ed.).
  • White, Peter. "Reason and Intuition in the Theology of Theodore Parker," Journal of Religious History, (1980) 11#1 pp 111–120.

Primary sources edit

  • Commager, Henry Steele, ed. Theodore Parker: An Anthology (1960)
  • Octavius Brooks Frothingham, Theodore Parker: A Biography (New York: G.P. Putnam, 1880), 39. Early attempt to memorialize Parker. Most conclusions, methods, and evidence have been superseded, but a valuable early record written by a contemporary.

External links edit

  • Works by Theodore Parker at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Theodore Parker at Internet Archive
  • Directory of Theodore Parker biographies, works and articles at Transcendentalists
  • The Collected Works of Theodore Parker: Sermons. Prayers (1879)
  • Review by Parker of David Strauss's Life of Jesus from The Christian Examiner (April 1840)
  • "Primitive Christianity" from The Dial (January 1842)
  • Theodore Parker Church in West Roxbury, Massachusetts
  • The Life and Writings of Theodore Parker (1865) by Albert Réville
  • "The Good Boy; or, Is Christ Necessary?" by Caleb Crain, a review of American Heretic: Theodore Parker and Transcendentalism by Dean Grodzins
  • Listings of The Centenary Edition of the Works of Theodore Parker in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School
  • Listings of The Papers of Theodore Parker in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School
  • Descendants of Thomas Hastings website
  • City of Boston, Boston Landmarks Commission, Theodore Parker Unitarian Church Study Report
  • Daguerreotype of Parker c. 1843

theodore, parker, other, individuals, named, disambiguation, august, 1810, 1860, american, transcendentalist, reforming, minister, unitarian, church, reformer, abolitionist, words, popular, quotations, would, later, inspire, speeches, abraham, lincoln, martin,. For other individuals named Theodore Parker see Theodore Parker disambiguation Theodore Parker August 24 1810 May 10 1860 was an American transcendentalist and reforming minister of the Unitarian church A reformer and abolitionist his words and popular quotations would later inspire speeches by Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King Jr The ReverendTheodore ParkerParker c 1855Born 1810 08 24 August 24 1810Lexington Massachusetts U S DiedMay 10 1860 1860 05 10 aged 49 Florence ItalyAlma materHarvard College Harvard Divinity SchoolOccupationMinisterSpouseLydia Dodge CabotRelativesJohn Parker captain grandfather ReligionUnitarianismSignature Contents 1 Early life 1810 1829 2 College and divinity school 1830 1836 3 Early home life and career 1836 1842 3 1 Marriage 3 2 First pastorate 3 3 Transcendentalism 3 4 Break with Orthodoxy 4 Mature home life and career 1843 1859 4 1 Travel to Europe 4 2 Independent Boston pastorate 4 3 Reform movements and social theology 5 Death 6 Legacy and honors 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Works cited 9 Further reading 9 1 Primary sources 10 External linksEarly life 1810 1829 editParker was born in Lexington Massachusetts 1 the youngest child in a large farming family His paternal grandfather was John Parker the leader of the Lexington militia at the Battle of Lexington Among his colonial Yankee ancestors were Thomas Hastings who came from the East Anglia region of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634 and Deacon Thomas Parker who came from England in 1635 and was one of the founders of Reading 2 3 4 Most of Theodore s family had died by the time he was 27 5 probably due to tuberculosis Out of eleven siblings only five remained three brothers including Theodore and two sisters His mother to whom he was emotionally close died when he was eleven He responded to these tragedies by refusing to lapse into what he called the valley of tears focusing instead on other events and demands and by affirming the immortality of the soul later a benchmark of his theology 6 Descriptions of Parker as a teenager recall him as raw and rough emotional and poetic sincere arch roguish volatile witty and quick He excelled at academics and gained an early education through country schools and personal study He studied long and late when farm chores allowed teaching himself math Latin and other subjects At seventeen he began teaching in local schools He continued teaching himself and private students in advanced and specialized subjects 7 He learned Hebrew from Joshua Seixas son of Gershom Mendes Seixas and Hannah Manuel 8 whom he may have baptized in a covert conversion to Christianity 9 He also studied for a time under Convers Francis who later preached at Parker s ordination 10 College and divinity school 1830 1836 editIn 1830 at age 19 Parker walked the ten miles from Lexington to Cambridge to apply to Harvard College He was accepted but could not pay the tuition so he lived and studied at home continued to work on his father s farm and joined his classmates only for exams Under that program he was able to complete three years of study in one 11 He then took various posts as a teacher conducting an academy from 1831 to 1834 at Watertown Massachusetts where his late mother s family lived At Watertown he met his future wife Lydia Dodge Cabot He announced their engagement to his father in October 1833 Theodore and Lydia were married four years later on April 20 1837 12 While at Watertown Parker produced his first significant manuscript The History of the Jews which outlined his skepticism of biblical miracles and an otherwise liberal approach to the Bible 13 These were to be themes throughout his career nbsp Caricature by Christopher Pearse Cranch depicting Parker s interest in German thinkingParker considered a career in law but his strong faith led him to theology He entered the Harvard Divinity School in 1834 14 He specialized in the study of German theology and was drawn to the ideas of Coleridge Carlyle and Emerson He wrote and spoke with varying degrees of fluency Latin Greek Hebrew and German 15 His journal and letters show that he was acquainted with many other languages including Chaldee Syriac Arabic Coptic and Ethiopic He completed the divinity school program quickly in 1836 in order to marry and begin preaching without delay 16 17 Early home life and career 1836 1842 editParker called the late 1830s a period of disappointment Citing home children amp a good professional sphere he wrote in his journal that All fail me amp all equally 18 Increasing controversies in his career culminated in a break with orthodoxy in the early 1840s The fallout from these events affected him deeply and it took him a few years to land on his feet and move forward Marriage edit Parker and Lydia Cabot married in 1837 but the union was rocky at first due to environmental stresses and incompatibilities and both were saddened to have no children 19 In 1840 he sought emotional release in the company of a neighboring woman Anna Blake Shaw who had a similar theology and temperament to his own but the friendship was by all accounts not sexual This attachment naturally increased problems at home where he may have found it difficult to meet the emotional needs of his wife 20 First pastorate edit Parker had spent 1836 visiting pulpits in the Boston area G 80 further explanation needed but for family reasons accepted a pastorate at West Roxbury in 1837 21 At first he found the location less than stimulating and work constraining 22 He adapted to pastoral life however and preached in many pulpits around Boston as a visitor He gained a wide reputation as an earnest effective speaker In 1840 Harvard awarded him an honorary master s degree on the basis of his extensive learning 23 Parker delivered one especially popular sermon twenty five times between 1838 and 1841 In it he argued against the popular notion that religion could be reduced to morality The principle of morality is obedience to the Law of con science he wrote while religion required more that we feel naturally allegiance to a superior Being dependence on him amp accountability to him The theme of dependence echoes Schleiermacher an indication of the German influence on his theology Morality involves right acting while religion requires love of God and regular prayer which Parker considered essential to human life No feeling is more deeply planted in human nature than the tendency to adore a superior being he preached to reverence him to bow before him to feel his presence to pray to him for aid in times of need and to bless him when the heart is full of joy 24 Transcendentalism edit In 1837 Parker had begun attending meetings of the group later known as the Transcendental Club Ralph Waldo Emerson s Divinity School Address that year had been deeply arresting to him 25 and he welcomed the opportunity to associate with Emerson Amos Bronson Alcott Orestes Brownson and several others 26 Transcendentalists such as Henry David Thoreau and Parker wrote of the world as divine and of themselves as part of this divinity Unlike Emerson and other Transcendentalists however Parker believed the movement was rooted in deeply religious ideas and did not believe it should retreat from religion All shared a conviction that slavery should be abolished and social reforms should take root 27 Parker gradually introduced Transcendentalist ideas into his sermons He tempered his radicalism with diplomacy and discretion however I preach abundant heresies he wrote to a friend and they all go down for the listeners do not know how heretical they are 28 For years he had wrestled with the factuality of the Hebrew Scriptures and by 1837 he was wishing some wise man would now write a book and show up the absurdity of the Old Testament miracles prophecies dreams miraculous births etc He was hardly alone What shall we do with the Old Testament asked fellow Unitarian James Walker in 1838 That question is of such frequent recurrence among laymen as well as clergymen that any well considered attempt to answer it or supply the means of answering it is almost sure of hearty welcome 29 Questions regarding biblical realism and meaning and the answers clergy increasingly found through the German based higher criticism formed the basis of liberal Christianity as it emerged and developed throughout the nineteenth century In 1838 Parker published his first major article a critical review of an orthodox work written by his former professor John Gorham Palfrey In it Parker broke for the first time with supernatural realism as he also increasingly did in his sermons 30 To him Christianity was natural rather than miraculous More and more he praised social reform movements such as those for temperance peace and the abolition of slavery In 1840 he described such movements as divinely inspired though he added that they did not fully address the spiritual and intellectual ills of society 31 Controversy mounted regarding these and other Transcendentalist elements in his work So did criticism which often saddened and distressed him 32 Break with Orthodoxy edit nbsp Parker s statue in front of the Theodore Parker Church 33 a Unitarian parish in West Roxbury Massachusetts In 1841 Parker laid bare his radical theological position in a sermon titled A Discourse on the Transient and Permanent in Christianity in which he espoused his belief that the traditions of historic Christianity did not reflect the truth 34 In so doing he made an open break with orthodox theology He instead argued for a type of Christian belief and worship in which the essence of Jesus s teachings remained permanent but the words traditions and other forms of their conveyance did not He stressed the immediacy of God and saw the Church as a communion looking upon Christ as the supreme expression of God Ultimately he rejected all miracles and revelation and saw the Bible as full of contradictions and mistakes He retained his faith in God but suggested that people experience God intuitively and personally and that they should center their religious beliefs on individual experience 1 Parker s West Roxbury church remained loyal Sermons and media attacked him however when he denied Biblical miracles and the literal authority of the Bible and Jesus Many questioned his Christianity Nearly all the pulpits in the Boston area were closed to him 35 and he lost friends Parker reacted with grief and defiance 36 He remained unwilling to concede that his views placed him beyond the outer bounds of Unitarian liberalism After this unwilling break with the Unitarian establishment he spent two years 1841 1843 adjusting to the reality of his newly controversial and independent career and increasing his social activism on religious grounds He began to see himself as a prophetic religious reformer 37 Mature home life and career 1843 1859 edit nbsp Parker c 1850Parker s family life temperament and work steadied during the 1840s The second half of his career revolved around antislavery democracy and religious social activism Travel to Europe edit In 1843 and 1844 Theodore and Lydia traveled in Europe While there his theology career and personal life matured and steadied He was no longer as sensitive to criticism and bore difficulties more easily 38 Away from extended family problems in West Roxbury his marriage seems to have improved and become more steadily affectionate Despite complex issues that occasionally resurfaced he and Lydia were happier My wife is kind as an angel he would write in his journal during denominational trials in 1845 His travels also seemed to stimulate a growing interest in political and social issues 39 Independent Boston pastorate edit Returning to the United States Parker found Unitarianism on the cusp of a division over his right to fellowship as a minister His controversial 1841 sermon had created a stir that ballooned into an all out storm in 1844 at the Church of the Disciples The debate over the nature and degree of Parker s infidelity caused Unitarians to adopt a liberal creed which they had formerly declined to do based on an inclusive principle Their position proved too orthodox to include Parker 40 In January 1845 a sizeable group of supporters gathered at Marlboro Chapel in Boston and resolved to provide Parker a chance to be heard in Boston Calling themselves Friends of Theodore Parker they hired a hall and invited him to preach there on Sunday mornings 41 Despite misgivings Parker accepted and preached his first sermon at the Melodeon Boston Massachusetts Theater in February Although the arrangement was temporary at first 42 he resigned his West Roxbury pastorate in early 1846 to the dismay of his faithful parishioners there He elected to call his new congregation the 28th Congregational Society of Boston after the Melodeon Parker s congregation met in the Boston Music Hall on Winter Street Boston 43 Parker s congregation grew to 2 000 then three percent of Boston s population and included influential figures such as Louisa May Alcott William Lloyd Garrison Julia Ward Howe a personal friend and Elizabeth Cady Stanton 44 Stanton called his sermons soul satisfying when beginning her career and she credited him with introducing her to the idea of a Heavenly Mother in the Trinity 45 Parker was increasingly known for preaching what he and his followers identified as a type of prophetic Christian social activism The 28th Congregational Society now renamed Theodore Parker Unitarian Church located on 1851 Centre Street in West Roxbury was designated a Boston Landmark by the Boston Landmarks Commission in 1985 Reform movements and social theology edit After 1846 Parker shifted from a focus on Transcendentalism and challenging the bounds of Unitarian theology to a focus on the gathering national divisions over slavery and the challenges of democracy In Boston he led the movement to combat the stricter Fugitive Slave Act a controversial part of the Compromise of 1850 This act required law enforcement and citizens of all states free states as well as slave states to assist in recovering fugitive slaves Parker called the law a hateful statute of kidnappers and helped organize open resistance to it He and his followers formed the Boston Vigilance Committee which refused to assist with the recovery of fugitive slaves and helped hide them 46 For example they smuggled away Ellen and William Craft when Georgian slave catchers came to Boston to arrest them Due to such efforts from 1850 to the onset of the American Civil War in 1861 only twice were slaves captured in Boston and transported back to the South On both occasions Bostonians combatted the actions with mass protests 47 As Parker s early biographer John White Chadwick wrote Parker was involved with almost all of the reform movements of the time peace temperance education the condition of women penal legislation prison discipline the moral and mental destitution of the rich the physical destitution of the poor though none became a dominant factor in his experience with the exception of his antislavery views 48 He denounced the Mexican War and called on his fellow Bostonians in 1847 to protest against this most infamous war 49 while at the same time promoting economic expansionism and exposing racist view of Mexicans inherent inferiority calling them a wretched people wretched in their origin history and character 50 51 Yet his abolitionism became his most controversial stance 52 He wrote the scathing To a Southern Slaveholder in 1848 as the abolition crisis was heating up and took a strong stance against slavery 53 and advocated violating the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 a controversial part of the Compromise of 1850 which required the return of escaped slaves to their owners Parker worked with many fugitive slaves some of whom were among his congregation As in the case of William and Ellen Craft 54 he hid them in his home Although he was indicted for his actions he was never convicted 35 As a member of the Secret Six he supported the abolitionist John Brown whom many considered a terrorist 55 After Brown s arrest Parker wrote a public letter John Brown s Expedition Reviewed arguing for the right of slaves to kill their masters and defending Brown s actions 56 Death edit nbsp Parker s tomb in FlorenceFollowing a lifetime of overwork Parker s ill health forced his retirement in 1859 He developed tuberculosis then without effective treatment and departed for Florence Italy where he died on May 10 1860 He sought refuge in Florence because of his friendship with Elizabeth Barrett and Robert Browning Isa Blagden and Frances Power Cobbe but died scarcely a month following his arrival It was less than a year before the outbreak of the American Civil War Parker was a patient of William Wesselhoeft who practiced homeopathy Wesselhoeft gave the oration at Parker s funeral 57 He is buried in the English Cemetery in Florence 58 When Frederick Douglass visited Florence he went first from the railroad station to Parker s tomb 59 Parker s headstone by Joel Tanner Hart was later replaced by one by William Wetmore Story Other Unitarians buried in the English Cemetery include Thomas Southwood Smith and Richard Hildreth The British writer Fanny Trollope also buried here wrote the first anti slavery novel and Hildreth wrote the second Both books were used by Harriet Beecher Stowe for her antislavery novel Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 Legacy and honors editUnitarian Universalists honor Theodore Parker as a canonical figure the model of a prophetic minister in the American Unitarian tradition 5 60 The church in West Roxbury where Parker held his first pastorate 1837 1846 was renamed Theodore Parker Unitarian Universalist Church in 1962 It retains this name today Frances P Cobbe collected and published Parker s writings in 14 volumes According to Unitarian clergyman John White Chadwick Parker made common use of the phrase A democracy of all the people by all the people for all the people in his letters and writing 61 It appears publicly in a speech by Parker at an 1850 anti slavery convention 62 William H Herndon Lincoln s law partner witnessed Parker use the phrase in a July 4 1858 address and claimed to have given Lincoln a copy which Lincoln later used in formulating his Gettysburg Address 62 Parker himself might have developed his phrase from John Wycliffe s prologue to the first English translation of the Bible 63 Parker predicted the inevitable success of the abolitionist cause this way I do not pretend to understand the moral universe the arc is a long one my eye reaches but little ways I cannot calculate the curve and complete the figure by the experience of sight I can divine it by conscience And from what I see I am sure it bends towards justice 64 A century later Martin Luther King Jr would paraphrase these words in a number of his speeches and sermons including a prepared statement he read in 1956 following the conclusion of the Montgomery bus boycott 65 his speech How Long Not Long delivered in March 1965 when the last of the Selma to Montgomery marches reached the Alabama State Capitol 66 Where Do We Go From Here delivered in August 1967 to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference 67 68 and his Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution sermon delivered in March 1968 at the National Cathedral 69 In each instance King s paraphrase included the words The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice 66 68 69 In 1963 Betty Friedan s influential best seller The Feminine Mystique believed to have sparked the 1960s and 70s women s movement bore the following 1853 epigraph from Theodore Parker The domestic function of the woman does not exhaust her powers To make one half of the human race consume its energies in the functions of housekeeper wife and mother is a monstrous waste of the most precious material God ever made Eight months after the publication of Friedan s book Kurt Vonnegut uses the same quote in his short story Lovers Anonymous first published in the October issue of Redbook magazine and reprinted in Vonnegut s 1999 collection Bagombo Snuff Box The beige rug chosen for President Barack Obama s remodeled Oval Office in August 2010 was bordered by five quotations two of which by Lincoln and King are inspired by the writings of Parker as noted above 70 See also editAmerican Unitarian Association Jennie Collins social reformer inspired by Parker List of opponents of slaveryReferences editCitations edit a b Hankins 2004 p 143 Buckminster Lydia N H The Hastings Memorial A Genealogical Account of the Descendants of Thomas Hastings of Watertown Mass from 1634 to 1864 Boston Samuel G Drake Publisher an undated NEHGS photoduplicate of the 1866 edition 30 Parker Theodore John Parker of Lexington and his Descendants Showing his Earlier Ancestry in America from Dea Thomas Parker of Reading Mass from 1635 to 1893 pp 15 16 21 30 34 36 468 470 Press of Charles Hamilton Worcester MA 1893 Parker Augustus G Parker in America 1630 1910 pp 5 27 49 53 54 154 Niagara Frontier Publishing Co Buffalo NY 1911 a b Dean Grodzins Theodore Parker Unitarian Universalist Historical Society Archived from the original on 2012 05 30 Grodzins 2002 pp 27 28 Theodore s sisters Rebecca Ruth and Hannah all died before he was five by the time he was eleven his grandmother and loved mother had also died His brother John and two remaining sisters Emily Mary and Lydia died while he was a young man Grodzins 2002 pp 20 21 Flatow Alisa M Anflick Adina eds 2019 Guide to the Papers of the Seixas Family undated 1746 1911 1926 1939 New York Center for Jewish History American Jewish Historical Society P 60 Retrieved 17 April 2019 Shalom Goldman God s Sacred Tongue Hebrew amp the American Imagination Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2004 187 Also see Shalom Goldman James Joshua Seixas 1802 1874 Jewish Apostasy and Christian Hebraism in Early Nineteenth Century America Jewish History 7 1 1993 65 88 Gura Philip F American Transcendentalism A History New York Hill and Wang 2007 117 ISBN 0 8090 3477 8 Grodzins 2002 p 22 For Parker s time in Watertown and engagement see Grodzins American Heretic 36 an earlier and more poetic account is in Henry Steele Commager Theodore Parker Yankee Crusader Boston Unitarian Universalist Association 1947 23 For marriage see Grodzins 2002 p 87 Grodzins 2002 pp 31 391 For an account written by a contemporary describing Parker s time and writings at Watertown including A History of the Jews see Octavius Brooks Frothingham Theodore Parker A Biography New York G P Putnam 1880 39 Hankins Barry The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 2004 143 ISBN 0 313 31848 4 For his lack of speaking fluency in French and German despite translating thousands of pages in writing see Grodzins 2002 p 381 Grodzins 2002 p 39 Commager Theodore Parker 23 24 Grodzins 2002 p 118 Grodzins 2002 pp 91 102 sketches out the initial difficulties of their marriage Also see the journal entry reprinted as the figure Marital strife in Grodzins 2002 p 294 and taken from the Theodore Parker Papers bMS 101 Harvard Divinity School Library of Harvard Divinity School Cambridge Massachusetts For his relationship with Shaw see Grodzins 2002 p 177 for the relationship with his wife see Grodzins 2002 pp 100 102 Our History Theodore Parker Church March 13 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 03 13 For pulpit touring see Grodzins 2002 p 80 for his initial response to West Roxbury see Grodzins 2002 p 89 Grodzins 2002 p 175 Grodzins 2002 p 145 Gary J Dorrien The Making of American Liberal Theology Imagining Progressive Religion 1805 1900 77 Dorrien writes that Emerson s Harvard address had a formative and catalyzing effect on Parker Buell Lawrence Emerson Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2003 32 33 ISBN 0 674 01139 2 Hankins The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists 28 105 143 On 105 Hankins notes that Parker was a Transcendentalist antislavery advocate and considered perhaps the most important theologian the movement produced Grodzins 2002 p 148 Shalom Goldman God s Sacred Tongue 187 Grodzins 2002 p 156 Grodzins American Heretic 205 Grodzins 2002 p 184 records one such experience of criticism after which he went weeping through the streets History of the Theodore Parker Church Archived from the original on 2008 05 09 Established as a Calvinist Protestant church the congregation adopted a conservative Unitarian theology in the 1830s and followed its minister Theodore Parker to a more liberal position in the 1840s When the First Parish of West Roxbury merged with the Unitarian Church of Roslindale in 1962 the congregation decided to name their new community in memory of Theodore Parker Parker Theodore 19 May 1841 A DISCOURSE OF THE TRANSIENT AND PERMANENT IN CHRISTIANITY PREACHED AT THE ORDINATION OF MR CHARLES C SHACKFORD IN THE HAWES PLACE CHURCH IN BOSTON Electronic Texts in American Studies alternate digitization at archive org a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Parker Theodore Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 830 Grodzins 2002 pp 307 361 Grodzins 2002 p 344 shows his first open support for Temperance activism Grodzins 2002 p 340 notes that For Parker the ideal religious reformer was the solitary heroic prophet He was starting to see himself in this role Grodzins 2002 p 370 In Grodzins 2002 pp 401 402 Grodzins write that in Europe Parker s temperament grew steadier The extraordinary sensitivity to rebuff the intense agony of spirit seemed to disappear Before his trip to Europe he burst easily and often into tears afterward he almost never did so He later would confront controversies far more severe opponents far more dangerous than any he had faced in 1841 1842 and 1843 but none would so deeply affect him For kind as an angel see Grodzins 2002 p 414 For renewed affection between the Parkers during and after their European trip despite ongoing marital issues see Grodzins 2002 pp 387 401 For more interest in political and social issues see Grodzins 2002 p 403 Grodzins 2002 pp 412 431 Grodzins 2002 p 457 Grodzins 2002 p 460 On his resignation in West Roxbury and choosing a name for his new congregation see Grodzins 2002 p 476 Also see Grodzins Theodore Parker Unitarian Universalist Historical Society The Boston Music Hall became the Orpheum Theater with addresses at 6 Hamilton Place and 413 415 Washington Street Orpheum Theater BOS 1769 Massachusetts Cultural Resources Information System MACRIS http mhc macris net Details aspx MhcId BOS 1769 On the size of Parker s Melodean congregation see Grodzins 2002 pp 477 491 Kathi Kern Mrs Stanton s Bible Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 2001 For soul satisfying see 45 For Heavenly Mother see 165 Buescher John Keep Your Top Eye Open Teachinghistory org Accessed 2 June 2011 Potter David Morris and Don E Fehrenbacher The Impending Crisis 1848 1861 New York Harper amp Row 1976 Gura Philip F American Transcendentalism A History New York Hill and Wang 2007 248 ISBN 0 8090 3477 8 Polner Murray 2010 03 01 Left Behind Archived 2010 12 17 at the Wayback Machine The American Conservative Zinn H 2015 A People s History of the United States 1492 Present Harper Perennial modern classics Taylor amp Francis p 157 ISBN 978 1 317 32530 7 Retrieved 2017 09 18 Parker T Cobbe F P 1863 The Collected Works of Theodore Parker Discourses of politics The Collected Works of Theodore Parker Minister of the Twenty eighth Congregational Society at Boston U S Containing His Theological Polemical and Critical Writings Sermons Speeches and Addresses and Literary Miscellanies publisher not identified p 23 Retrieved 2017 09 18 Paul E Teed 2001 A Brave Man s Child Theodore Parker and the Memory of the American Revolution www wsc ma edu Summer 2001 issue Theodore Parker s 1845 pilgrimage to Lexington was a defining moment in the career of one of New England s most influential antislavery activists Occurring as it did in the very midst of the national crisis over Texas annexation Parker s mystical connection with the memory of his illustrious revolutionary ancestor emerged as the bedrock of his identity as an abolitionist While other abolitionists frequently claimed the revolutionary tradition for their cause Parker s antislavery vision also rested upon a deep sense of filial obligation to the revolutionaries themselves James Kendall Hosmer ed 1910 The Slave Power Boston American Unitarian Association Archived from the original on 2008 07 04 via Antislavery Literature Project First collected edition of the antislavery writings and speeches of abolitionist Theodore Parker Charles Stephen 25 August 2002 Theodore Parker Slavery and the Troubled Conscience of the Unitarians Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Gradert Kenyon Puritan Spirits and the Abolitionist Imagination pp16 7 University of Chicago Press Chicago and London 2020 ISBN 978 0 226 69402 3 John Brown s Expedition Reviewed William Wesselhoeft 1794 1858 Pioneers of homeopathy by T L Bradford homeoint org Official guidebook written by Pastore Luigi Santini published by the Administration of the Cimitero agli Allori in 1981 American Tombs in Florence s English Cemetery a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Douglass Frederick Life and Times of Frederick Douglass 1893 NY Library of America reprint 1994 1015 For more on UUism claiming Parker as a founding figure see Daniel McKanan Unitarianism Universalism and Unitarian Universalism Religion Compass 7 1 2013 15 24 Shaw Albert 1901 A Letter from Mr John White Chadwick The American Monthly Review of Reviews p 336 Retrieved 17 Aug 2022 a b Theodore Parker 29 May 1850 The American Idea speech at N E Anti Slavery Convention Boston Bartleby com A democracy that is a government of all the people by all the people for all the people of course a government of the principles of eternal justice the unchanging law of God for shortness sake I will call it the idea of Freedom Wikiquote John Wycliffe Manker Seale Susan 2006 01 15 The Moral Arc of the Universe Bending Toward Justice Archived from the original on 2007 08 11 Retrieved 2008 02 29 King Martin Luther Jr 25 March 1965 Statement on Ending the Bus Boycott statement for Montgomery Improvement Association The Martin Luther King Jr Research and Education Institute Stanford University Retrieved 23 February 2017 There have been moments when roaring waters of disappointment poured upon us in staggering torrents We can remember days when unfavorable court decisions came upon us like tidal waves leaving us treading in the deep and confused waters of despair But amid all of this we have kept going with the faith that as we struggle God struggles with us and that the arc of the moral universe although long is bending toward justice a b King Martin Luther Jr 25 March 1965 Our God is Marching On The Martin Luther King Jr Research and Education Institute Stanford University Retrieved 23 February 2017 How long Not long because the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice Yes sir Anna Leon Guerrero Kristine Zentgraf 21 November 2008 Contemporary Readings in Social Problems SAGE Publications p 24 ISBN 978 1 4129 6530 9 a b King Martin Luther Jr 16 August 1967 Where Do We Go From Here Delivered at the 11th Annual SCLC Convention The Martin Luther King Jr Research and Education Institute Stanford University Archived from the original on 24 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 Let us realize that the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice a b King Martin Luther Jr 31 March 1968 Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolution Sermond delivered at the national Cathedral The Martin Luther King Jr Research and Education Institute Stanford University Archived from the original on 24 February 2017 Retrieved 23 February 2017 We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice Stiehm Jamie 2010 09 04 Oval Office rug gets history wrong The Washington Post Retrieved 2010 09 04 Works cited edit Grodzins Dean 2002 American Heretic Theodore Parker and Transcendentalism Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press Hankins Barry 2004 The Second Great Awakening and the Transcendentalists Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 31848 1 Further reading editBowden Henry Warner Parker Theodore in American National Biography Online 2000 Chadwick John White Theodore Parker Preacher and Reformer Boston Houghton and Mifflin 1901 Early biography memorializing Parker Commager Henry Steele Theodore Parker 1947 first scholarly biography excerpt and text search Commager Henry Steele The Dilemma of Theodore Parker New England Quarterly 1933 6 2 pp 257 277 in JSTOR Dirks John Edward The Critical Theology of Theodore Parker 1948 online Archived 2011 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Fellman Michael Theodore Parker and the Abolitionist Role in the 1850s Journal of American History 1974 61 3 pp 666 684 in JSTOR Grodzins Dean American Heretic Theodore Parker and Transcendentalism Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2002 Highly acclaimed award winning Archived 2014 10 02 at the Wayback Machine scholarly biography Examines new evidence and reassesses conclusions of earlier biographies Kraller Anna Lisa 2016 Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God Theodore Parker s proverbial fight for the Ideal American Society Supplement Series to Proverbium Yearbook of International Proverb Scholarship 37 Burlington VT University of Vermont Smith John Frederick 1885 Parker Theodore Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XVIII 9th ed White Peter Reason and Intuition in the Theology of Theodore Parker Journal of Religious History 1980 11 1 pp 111 120 Primary sources edit Commager Henry Steele ed Theodore Parker An Anthology 1960 Octavius Brooks Frothingham Theodore Parker A Biography New York G P Putnam 1880 39 Early attempt to memorialize Parker Most conclusions methods and evidence have been superseded but a valuable early record written by a contemporary External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Theodore Parker nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Theodore Parker nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Theodore Parker Works by Theodore Parker at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Theodore Parker at Internet Archive Directory of Theodore Parker biographies works and articles at Transcendentalists The Collected Works of Theodore Parker Sermons Prayers 1879 Review by Parker of David Strauss s Life of Jesus from The Christian Examiner April 1840 Primitive Christianity from The Dial January 1842 Theodore Parker Church in West Roxbury Massachusetts The Life and Writings of Theodore Parker 1865 by Albert Reville The Good Boy or Is Christ Necessary by Caleb Crain a review of American Heretic Theodore Parker and Transcendentalism by Dean Grodzins Listings of The Centenary Edition of the Works of Theodore Parker in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School Listings of The Papers of Theodore Parker in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School Descendants of Thomas Hastings website City of Boston Boston Landmarks Commission Theodore Parker Unitarian Church Study Report Daguerreotype of Parker c 1843 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theodore Parker amp oldid 1181221000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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