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William Ellery Channing

William Ellery Channing (April 7, 1780 – October 2, 1842) was the foremost Unitarian preacher in the United States in the early nineteenth century and, along with Andrews Norton (1786–1853), one of Unitarianism's leading theologians. Channing was known for his articulate and impassioned sermons and public speeches, and as a prominent thinker in the liberal theology of the day. His religion and thought were among the chief influences on the New England Transcendentalists although he never countenanced their views, which he saw as extreme. His espousal of the developing philosophy and theology of Unitarianism was displayed especially in his "Baltimore Sermon"[1] of May 5, 1819, given at the ordination of the theologian and educator Jared Sparks (1789–1866) as the first minister of the newly organized First Independent Church of Baltimore.

William Ellery Channing
Born(1780-04-07)7 April 1780
Died2 October 1842(1842-10-02) (aged 62)
Resting placeMount Auburn Cemetery Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
EducationHarvard University
OccupationUnitarian preacher
Parent(s)William Channing
Lucy Ellery
RelativesWilliam Ellery (grandfather)
William Francis Channing (son)
William Ellery Channing (nephew)
William Henry Channing (nephew)
Signature
Reverend William Ellery Channing by Gilbert Charles Stuart, c. 1815. Oil on canvas. Housed at De Young Museum.

Life and work edit

Early life edit

Channing, the son of William Channing and Lucy Ellery, was born April 7, 1780, in Newport, Rhode Island. He was a grandson of William Ellery (1727–1820), a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, Deputy Governor of Rhode Island, Chief Justice, and influential citizen. As a child, he was cared for by the formerly enslaved woman Duchess Quamino, who later influenced his views on abolitionism.[2] He became a New England liberal, rejecting the Calvinist doctrines of total depravity and divine election.

Channing enrolled at Harvard College at a troubled time, particularly because of the recent French Revolution. He later wrote of these years:

College was never in a worse state than when I entered it. Society was passing through a most critical stage. The French Revolution had diseased the imagination and unsettled the understanding of men everywhere. The old foundations of social order, loyalty, tradition, habit, reverence for antiquity, were everywhere shaken, if not subverted. The authority of the past was gone.[3]

Graduating first in his class in 1798, he was elected commencement speaker though he was prohibited by the Harvard College faculty from mentioning the Revolution and other political subjects in his address.[3]

As Theologian edit

In opposition to traditional American Calvinist orthodoxy, Channing preferred a gentle, loving relationship with God. He opposed Reformed Christianity for

... proclaiming a God who is to be dreaded. We are told to love and imitate God, but also that God does things we would consider most cruel in any human parent, "were he to bring his children into life totally depraved and then to pursue them with endless punishment"

— Channing 1957: 56.[4]

Channing's inner struggle continued through two years during which he lived in Richmond, Virginia, working as a tutor for David Meade Randolph. He came to his definitive faith only through much spiritual turmoil and difficulty. Channing was called as pastor of the Federal Street Church in Boston in 1803, where he remained for the rest of his life. He lived through the increasing tension between religious liberals and conservatives and took a moderate position, rejecting the extremes of both groups. In 1809 he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[5]

In 1815, Channing engaged in a noted controversy on the principles of Unitarianism with Samuel Worcester, (1770–1821).[6] A review of a pamphlet on American Unitarianism (American Unitarianism; or a Brief History of the Progress and Present State of the Unitarian Churches of America), attributed to Jeremiah Evarts, was published in The Panoplist in June 1815. Channing objected to the way Unitarians in the United States were portrayed in the review. Worcester replied to this objection, and an exchange of pamphlets followed.[7]

Notwithstanding his moderate position, Channing later became the primary spokesman and interpreter of Unitarianism, after sixteen years at Boston's Federal Street Church. He was invited to come south again to Maryland to preach the ordination sermon of the future noted educator and theologian Jared Sparks (1789–1866), the first minister (1819–1823) called to the newly organized congregation (1817) in Baltimore known as the First Independent Church of Baltimore (located at West Franklin and North Charles Streets, in a landmark two-year-old structure designed by noted French émigré architect J. Maximilian M. Godefroy), later known, after a merger with Second Universalist Church in 1935, as the First Unitarian Church of Baltimore (Unitarian and Universalist), which was forever after known as "The Baltimore Sermon".[1] The sermon, or address, was given on Wednesday, May 5, 1819, and was entitled "Unitarian Christianity". In it, he explicated the distinctive tenets of the developing Unitarian movement, one of which was the rejection of the Trinity. Other important tenets were the belief in human goodness and the subjection of theological ideas to the light of reason. (The anniversary of the address is celebrated and observed annually by the Maryland churches of the Unitarian Universalist Association and its Joseph Priestley District as "Union Sunday", with occasional ecumenical guests from other Christian bodies.)

In 1828, he gave another famous ordination sermon, entitled "Likeness to God". The idea of the human potential to be like God, which Channing advocated as grounded firmly in scripture, was seen as heretical by the Calvinist religious establishment of his day. It is in this address that Channing first advocated the possibility for revelation through reason rather than solely from Scripture. American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who "took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world."[8]

Even at the end of his life he adhered to the non-Socinian belief in the preexistence of Christ:

I have always inclined to the doctrine of the preexistence of Christ, though am not insensible to the weight of your objections

— Boston, March 31, 1832[9]

Later years edit

In later years, Channing addressed the topic of slavery although he was never an ardent abolitionist. Channing wrote a book in 1835 entitled Slavery.[10] Channing has, however, been described as a romantic racist.[11] He held a common American belief about the inferiority of African people and slaves and held a belief that once freed, Africans would need overseers. The overseers (largely former slave masters) were necessary because the slaves would lapse into laziness. Furthermore, he did not join the abolitionist movement because he did not agree with their way of conducting themselves, and he felt that voluntary associations limited a person's autonomy. Therefore, he often chose to remain separate from organizations and reform movements. This middle position characterized his attitude about most questions although his eloquence and strong influence on the religious world incurred the enmity of many extremists. Channing had an enormous influence over the religious (and social) life of New England, and America, in the nineteenth century.

Toward the end of his life, Channing embraced immediate abolitionism. His evolving view of abolitionism was fostered by the success of British abolition in the British West Indies in 1834 and the absence of the expected social and economic upheaval in the post-emancipated Caribbean.

In 1837, Channing published a pamphlet, in the form of an open letter to Senator Henry Clay, opposing the annexation of Texas, arguing that the revolution there was "criminal."[12]

Channing wrote extensively about the emerging new national literature of the United States, saying that national literature is "the expression of a nation's mind in writing", and "the concentration of intellect for the purpose of spreading itself abroad and multiplying its energy".[13]

Death edit

Channing died in Old Bennington, Vermont, where a cenotaph is placed in his memory. He is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.[14]

Legacy edit

Legacy
 
Statue in Touro Park
 
Channing Memorial Church

Image gallery edit

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b "William Ellery Channing 1819 Speech". Unitarian Christianity. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
  2. ^ Mendelsohn, Jack (1971). Channing: The Reluctant Radical. Little, Brown & Co. p. 209. ISBN 0-933-840-28-4.
  3. ^ a b Broaddus, Dorothy C. Genteel Rhetoric: Writing High Culture in Nineteenth-Century Boston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina, 1999: 22. ISBN 1-57003-244-0.
  4. ^ Channing, William Ellery. "The Moral Argument Against Calvinism". pp. 39–59 in Unitarian Christianity and Other Essays. Edited by Irving H. Bartlett. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill; 1957 [1820]. Cited in Finlan, Stephen. "Jesus in Atonement Theories". In The Blackwell Companion to Jesus. Edited by Delbert Burkett. London: Blackwell; 2010: 21.
  5. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter C" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved September 9, 2016.
  6. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1889). "Worcester, Noah, clergyman" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
  7. ^ Harris Elwood Starr (1936). "Worcester, Samuel". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
  8. ^ John Lachs and Robert Talisse (2007). American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 310. ISBN 978-0415939263.
  9. ^ Memoir of William Ellery Channing: with extracts from his correspondence, Volume 2 p. 416
  10. ^ SLAVERY
  11. ^ Black Abolitionism: A Quest for Human Dignity, Beverly Eileen Mitchell, pp. 133–38
  12. ^ Channing, William Ellery (1837). A letter to the Hon. Henry Clay, on the annexation of Texas to the United States. Boston: James Munroe and Company. pp. 7–10. Retrieved 26 February 2021.
  13. ^ Remarks on National Literature
  14. ^ Mount Auburn Cemetery
  15. ^ Channing Home (1913). Report (1913). Boston. pp. 3–4. Retrieved 6 January 2024.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  16. ^ Channing Memorial Church

Further reading edit

  • Amy Kittelstrom, The Religion of Democracy: Seven Liberals and the American Moral Tradition. New York: Penguin, 2015.
  • Prescott Browning Wintersteen, Christology in American Unitarianism: An Anthology of Outstanding Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Unitarian Theologians, with Commentary. Boston: The Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship, 1977.

External links edit

william, ellery, channing, this, article, about, unitarian, theologian, transcendentalist, poet, poet, april, 1780, october, 1842, foremost, unitarian, preacher, united, states, early, nineteenth, century, along, with, andrews, norton, 1786, 1853, unitarianism. This article is about the Unitarian theologian For the Transcendentalist poet see William Ellery Channing poet William Ellery Channing April 7 1780 October 2 1842 was the foremost Unitarian preacher in the United States in the early nineteenth century and along with Andrews Norton 1786 1853 one of Unitarianism s leading theologians Channing was known for his articulate and impassioned sermons and public speeches and as a prominent thinker in the liberal theology of the day His religion and thought were among the chief influences on the New England Transcendentalists although he never countenanced their views which he saw as extreme His espousal of the developing philosophy and theology of Unitarianism was displayed especially in his Baltimore Sermon 1 of May 5 1819 given at the ordination of the theologian and educator Jared Sparks 1789 1866 as the first minister of the newly organized First Independent Church of Baltimore William Ellery ChanningBorn 1780 04 07 7 April 1780Newport Rhode Island U S Died2 October 1842 1842 10 02 aged 62 Old Bennington Vermont U S Resting placeMount Auburn Cemetery Cambridge Massachusetts U S EducationHarvard UniversityOccupationUnitarian preacherParent s William ChanningLucy ElleryRelativesWilliam Ellery grandfather William Francis Channing son William Ellery Channing nephew William Henry Channing nephew Signature Reverend William Ellery Channing by Gilbert Charles Stuart c 1815 Oil on canvas Housed at De Young Museum Contents 1 Life and work 1 1 Early life 1 2 As Theologian 1 3 Later years 1 4 Death 2 Legacy 3 Image gallery 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and work editEarly life edit Channing the son of William Channing and Lucy Ellery was born April 7 1780 in Newport Rhode Island He was a grandson of William Ellery 1727 1820 a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence Deputy Governor of Rhode Island Chief Justice and influential citizen As a child he was cared for by the formerly enslaved woman Duchess Quamino who later influenced his views on abolitionism 2 He became a New England liberal rejecting the Calvinist doctrines of total depravity and divine election Channing enrolled at Harvard College at a troubled time particularly because of the recent French Revolution He later wrote of these years College was never in a worse state than when I entered it Society was passing through a most critical stage The French Revolution had diseased the imagination and unsettled the understanding of men everywhere The old foundations of social order loyalty tradition habit reverence for antiquity were everywhere shaken if not subverted The authority of the past was gone 3 Graduating first in his class in 1798 he was elected commencement speaker though he was prohibited by the Harvard College faculty from mentioning the Revolution and other political subjects in his address 3 As Theologian edit In opposition to traditional American Calvinist orthodoxy Channing preferred a gentle loving relationship with God He opposed Reformed Christianity for proclaiming a God who is to be dreaded We are told to love and imitate God but also that God does things we would consider most cruel in any human parent were he to bring his children into life totally depraved and then to pursue them with endless punishment Channing 1957 56 4 Channing s inner struggle continued through two years during which he lived in Richmond Virginia working as a tutor for David Meade Randolph He came to his definitive faith only through much spiritual turmoil and difficulty Channing was called as pastor of the Federal Street Church in Boston in 1803 where he remained for the rest of his life He lived through the increasing tension between religious liberals and conservatives and took a moderate position rejecting the extremes of both groups In 1809 he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 5 In 1815 Channing engaged in a noted controversy on the principles of Unitarianism with Samuel Worcester 1770 1821 6 A review of a pamphlet on American Unitarianism American Unitarianism or a Brief History of the Progress and Present State of the Unitarian Churches of America attributed to Jeremiah Evarts was published in The Panoplist in June 1815 Channing objected to the way Unitarians in the United States were portrayed in the review Worcester replied to this objection and an exchange of pamphlets followed 7 Notwithstanding his moderate position Channing later became the primary spokesman and interpreter of Unitarianism after sixteen years at Boston s Federal Street Church He was invited to come south again to Maryland to preach the ordination sermon of the future noted educator and theologian Jared Sparks 1789 1866 the first minister 1819 1823 called to the newly organized congregation 1817 in Baltimore known as the First Independent Church of Baltimore located at West Franklin and North Charles Streets in a landmark two year old structure designed by noted French emigre architect J Maximilian M Godefroy later known after a merger with Second Universalist Church in 1935 as the First Unitarian Church of Baltimore Unitarian and Universalist which was forever after known as The Baltimore Sermon 1 The sermon or address was given on Wednesday May 5 1819 and was entitled Unitarian Christianity In it he explicated the distinctive tenets of the developing Unitarian movement one of which was the rejection of the Trinity Other important tenets were the belief in human goodness and the subjection of theological ideas to the light of reason The anniversary of the address is celebrated and observed annually by the Maryland churches of the Unitarian Universalist Association and its Joseph Priestley District as Union Sunday with occasional ecumenical guests from other Christian bodies In 1828 he gave another famous ordination sermon entitled Likeness to God The idea of the human potential to be like God which Channing advocated as grounded firmly in scripture was seen as heretical by the Calvinist religious establishment of his day It is in this address that Channing first advocated the possibility for revelation through reason rather than solely from Scripture American Philosophy An Encyclopedia classes him as one of several figures who took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world 8 Even at the end of his life he adhered to the non Socinian belief in the preexistence of Christ I have always inclined to the doctrine of the preexistence of Christ though am not insensible to the weight of your objections Boston March 31 1832 9 Later years edit In later years Channing addressed the topic of slavery although he was never an ardent abolitionist Channing wrote a book in 1835 entitled Slavery 10 Channing has however been described as a romantic racist 11 He held a common American belief about the inferiority of African people and slaves and held a belief that once freed Africans would need overseers The overseers largely former slave masters were necessary because the slaves would lapse into laziness Furthermore he did not join the abolitionist movement because he did not agree with their way of conducting themselves and he felt that voluntary associations limited a person s autonomy Therefore he often chose to remain separate from organizations and reform movements This middle position characterized his attitude about most questions although his eloquence and strong influence on the religious world incurred the enmity of many extremists Channing had an enormous influence over the religious and social life of New England and America in the nineteenth century Toward the end of his life Channing embraced immediate abolitionism His evolving view of abolitionism was fostered by the success of British abolition in the British West Indies in 1834 and the absence of the expected social and economic upheaval in the post emancipated Caribbean In 1837 Channing published a pamphlet in the form of an open letter to Senator Henry Clay opposing the annexation of Texas arguing that the revolution there was criminal 12 Channing wrote extensively about the emerging new national literature of the United States saying that national literature is the expression of a nation s mind in writing and the concentration of intellect for the purpose of spreading itself abroad and multiplying its energy 13 Death edit Channing died in Old Bennington Vermont where a cenotaph is placed in his memory He is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery Cambridge Massachusetts 14 Legacy editLegacy nbsp Statue in Touro Park nbsp Statue in Boston Public Garden nbsp Channing Memorial Church nbsp Grave at Mount Auburn Cemetery Named in his honor the Channing Home was founded by Harriet Ryan Albee in 1857 in the vestry of Channing s Federal Street Church 15 In 1880 a young Unitarian minister in Newport Charles Timothy Brooks published a biography William Ellery Channing A Centennial Memory The Channing Memorial Church 16 was built in Newport Rhode Island in 1880 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of his birth A bronze statue of Channing by William Clark Noble was erected in 1892 in Newport s Touro Park across from the Channing Memorial Church A bronze statue of Channing by Herbert Adams was erected in 1903 on the edge of the Boston Public Garden at Arlington St and Boylston St It stands across the street from the Arlington Street Church that he served and from the Federal Street Church A portrait of him also hangs in the foyer of the First Unitarian Church of Baltimore Unitarian and Universalist at North Charles and West Franklin Streets in Baltimore Maryland along with the aforementioned Union Sunday annual commemoration services in May citation needed Channing School an independent day school for girls at Highgate Hill in Highgate North London originally founded in 1885 for the daughters of Unitarian ministers was named after him Channing had a profound impact on the Transcendentalism movement though he never officially subscribed to its views However two of Channing s nephews Ellery Channing 1818 1901 and William Henry Channing 1810 1884 became prominent members of the movement citation needed Image gallery edit nbsp Portrait of Channing by Henry Cheever Pratt 1857 nbsp Portrait of Channing by Washington Allston 1811 nbsp 1930 photo of No 83 Mt Vernon Street Boston Channing s home c 1835 1842 nbsp Plaque outside of No 83 Mt Vernon Street BostonSee also editFederal Street Church Boston William Francis Channing his sonFootnotes edit a b William Ellery Channing 1819 Speech Unitarian Christianity Retrieved 25 July 2023 Mendelsohn Jack 1971 Channing The Reluctant Radical Little Brown amp Co p 209 ISBN 0 933 840 28 4 a b Broaddus Dorothy C Genteel Rhetoric Writing High Culture in Nineteenth Century Boston Columbia South Carolina University of South Carolina 1999 22 ISBN 1 57003 244 0 Channing William Ellery The Moral Argument Against Calvinism pp 39 59 in Unitarian Christianity and Other Essays Edited by Irving H Bartlett Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill 1957 1820 Cited in Finlan Stephen Jesus in Atonement Theories In The Blackwell Companion to Jesus Edited by Delbert Burkett London Blackwell 2010 21 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter C PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved September 9 2016 Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1889 Worcester Noah clergyman Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Harris Elwood Starr 1936 Worcester Samuel Dictionary of American Biography New York Charles Scribner s Sons John Lachs and Robert Talisse 2007 American Philosophy An Encyclopedia Routledge p 310 ISBN 978 0415939263 Memoir of William Ellery Channing with extracts from his correspondence Volume 2 p 416 SLAVERY Black Abolitionism A Quest for Human Dignity Beverly Eileen Mitchell pp 133 38 Channing William Ellery 1837 A letter to the Hon Henry Clay on the annexation of Texas to the United States Boston James Munroe and Company pp 7 10 Retrieved 26 February 2021 Remarks on National Literature Mount Auburn Cemetery Channing Home 1913 Report 1913 Boston pp 3 4 Retrieved 6 January 2024 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Channing Memorial ChurchFurther reading editAmy Kittelstrom The Religion of Democracy Seven Liberals and the American Moral Tradition New York Penguin 2015 Prescott Browning Wintersteen Christology in American Unitarianism An Anthology of Outstanding Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Unitarian Theologians with Commentary Boston The Unitarian Universalist Christian Fellowship 1977 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Ellery Channing nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to William Ellery Channing nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about William Ellery Channing Channing biography at the Unitarian Universalist Association Channing Memorial Church in Newport Rhode Island First Unitarian Church of Baltimore Unitarian and Universalist Works by William Ellery Channing at Project Gutenberg Works by or about William Ellery Channing at Internet Archive Making of America e texts of Channing s collected works Online works by Channing Archived 2005 10 23 at the Wayback Machine including Self Culture and Likeness to God The personal papers including manuscripts of William Ellery Channing along with papers related to his work at Federal Street Church now known as Arlington Street Church are in the Harvard Divinity School Library at Harvard Divinity School in Cambridge Massachusetts Portrait at National Portrait Gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Ellery Channing amp oldid 1218617810, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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