Read Patrick Henry Online

Authors: Thomas S. Kidd

Patrick Henry (5 page)

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“THE INFATUATION OF NEW LIGHT”
 
The Great Awakening and the Parsons' Cause
 
 
 
 
 
O
N DECEMBER 1, 1763, twenty-seven-year-old Patrick Henry stepped into the political arena for the first time. The occasion was a lawsuit brought in Hanover County by the Reverend James Maury, who had sued to recoup salary lost because of a 1758 Virginia law—the Two Penny Act—mandating that the colony pay its Anglican clergy in cash rather than in tobacco, as it had conventionally done. The Virginia clergy protested the Two Penny Act through intermediaries in London, and the Privy Council (the king's advisers responsible for colonial affairs) overturned it in 1759. Encouraged by this royal support, several parsons sued in Virginia for back pay, because they believed that the legislature paid less in cash than the actual value of tobacco, which was rising rapidly due to repeated droughts. Young Henry served as the defense lawyer
for the parish's vestrymen, who would have to supply any extra salary the jury awarded. Remarkably, the presiding justice in Maury's case was Patrick's father, John. John agreed that the Virginia law reducing the clergy's salaries was null and void, but it was up to the jury to decide what, if any, recompense Maury was due.
Henry handled his debut at Hanover's redbrick courthouse in what would become his characteristic style. Shouldering past the matter at hand, he went straight to more profound legal issues, decrying the king's disregard for the basic rights of Virginians. Henry declared from the lawyers' bar that the Two Penny Act was indeed legitimate because it served the general interests of the people. The king had violated his sacred compact with the people when he negated a just law enacted by the legislature. Escalating the importance of the issue to unanticipated heights, Henry exclaimed that “a King, by annulling or disallowing laws of this salutary nature, from being the father of his people, degenerates into a tyrant, and forfeits all right to his subjects' obedience.” Thirteen years before the Declaration of Independence, in a defense that exhibited his already well-honed beliefs about the people's rights, Henry was defining the ultimately irreconcilable conflict between the king's power and the colonists' liberties.
The brazenness of his attack was shocking. Maury's attorney shouted that Henry had “spoken treason.” Other gentlemen observers in the crowded courtroom muttered their agreement. But Henry was undeterred. Despite his devotion to his Anglican faith, he denounced its priestly representatives, such as Maury, as “enemies of the community” because they sought personal gain at the expense of the parish. Maury himself was disgusted that this upstart “little pettyfogging attorney” would insult the Crown and the clergy in this manner, but Henry knew his true audience was a jury of Virginians. He had obviously tapped into popular resentment against the pillars and prerogatives of Anglo-American society.
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Patrick Henry was speaking to Virginians whose religious ideas and associations had been transformed over the previous twenty years by a broad and profound movement. The Great Awakening had begun to undermine the dominance of the Anglican clergy in Virginia society, as new Presbyterian and Baptist churches challenged the officially established government denomination for adherents. Now even prominent Anglican laymen such as Henry were joining the assault on traditional church power. Because of the Anglican Church's established political status, confronting its clergy had implications far greater than the payment of back salaries or even the government's support of one denomination over another. The Parsons' Cause, as it came to be known, revealed tensions in central Virginia that would soon erupt into broader conflict across the colonies.
 
IN THE 1740S, THE GREAT AWAKENING began rumbling through Virginia. The series of revivals of religion surged across Britain, the European continent, and the American colonies, centering on New England, but touching all areas of the Atlantic seaboard and intensifying in the South through the 1750s and 1760s. In 1743, brash revivalists began preaching in Hanover County, much to the disgust of Patrick Henry's uncle and namesake, the Anglican rector of St. Paul's Parish. These evangelical preachers reviled the Anglicans and their tax-supported church, suggesting that they taught a lukewarm gospel. For the revivalists, religiosity and morality were not enough for Christians: instead, they focused on the experience of personal conversion, or being “born again.” Some of the new preachers even hinted that certain of the Anglican parsons had never truly put their faith in Jesus for salvation. Pastor Patrick Henry thought that the evangelicals only whipped crowds into a religious frenzy, reporting that they screamed at their congregations that they all were “damn'd double damn'd, whose [souls] are in hell, though they are alive on earth, lumps of hellfire, incarnate devils, 1000 times
worse than devils.” An alarmed Pastor Henry envisioned these wild preachers shouting and beating their pulpits until their frightened audience fell into convulsions. The Virginia government should stop these dangerous men, he declared. The Henry family was caught in the middle of the first major uprising against traditional authorities in colonial America.
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Though Pastor Henry loathed the new preachers, the evangelicals had an entirely different effect on Patrick Henry's mother, Sarah. Despite the fact that her husband was a vestryman at St. Paul's, Sarah found Presbyterian pastor Samuel Davies's preaching irresistible, and she joined his maverick congregation. Henry family tradition holds that Sarah would take twelve-year-old Patrick to Davies's meetings, demanding that he repeat the biblical text and essence of the sermon to her afterward. Although Patrick Henry never left the Anglican Church and apparently never experienced the gut-wrenching conversion these dissenters idealized, he was profoundly influenced by Pastor Davies's sermons, his moral exhortations, and his focus on the rights and responsibilities of the individual Christian.
The evangelicals may have influenced Henry's style of living, too. As an adult, he undoubtedly lived in a more austere manner than other planters, such as his half-brother John Syme and Thomas Jefferson, both of whom became mired in debt thanks largely to their taste for luxury. More than the average planter, Henry struggled with the fear of debt and financial dependency—a fear fostered partly by the evangelicals' insistence that the elite gentry were “tutored in debauchery,” as one critic put it.
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Henry later insisted that Davies was not only the best preacher he had encountered, but also the “greatest orator he ever heard.” The evangelical preachers employed emotional appeals delivered in a language deeply familiar to the people: the idiom of the Bible. Pastors such as Davies affirmed religious experiences of common Virginians; they did not need book learning to know God. Davies
even took his gospel message to the slaves, a group typically neglected by the Anglican establishment. Anglicans emphasized the people's duty to attend the church's services, but the evangelical “dissenters” emphasized that the people should have a right to pursue their own spiritual happiness, regardless of what the authorities told them. This challenge to religious authority prepared the way for the crisis with Britain that began in the 1760s. Because of the Great Awakening, evangelical Americans already had plenty of experience in standing up to the state.
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We cannot understand Patrick Henry without acknowledging the Great Awakening's effect on him. The passion and power of the revivals shaped Henry's speaking style, which in turn accounted for much of his political influence. Henry's early unfortunate experiences with farming and shopkeeping helped him understand that to achieve success, he required a public stage. Davies gave him a master class in the art of verbal persuasion, and Henry would implement that art in the world of law, politics, and revolution.
The Great Awakening taught Henry a vital lesson in individual rights and state power. The religious revival, and the Anglican backlash against it, helped Henry understand the extent of the state's persecution of dissenting Christians and the need to end it. But Henry remained torn by the implications of the evangelical uprising in Virginia. Though the revivalists tutored Henry in his populist style of resistance, he never fully shed the Anglican commitment to state-supported religion. The Great Awakening helped prepare Henry for his revolt against British authority, but two decades later, he could not accept the consequences of that revolt when it challenged
any
state support for churches.
Virginia was not imbued with a specific religious mission, as were the Puritan colonies of Massachusetts and Connecticut, but the Chesapeake colony's founders still placed Christianity at the symbolic center of their venture. When the Virginia Company was
incorporated in 1606, King James I proclaimed that the new colony would help spread the Christian gospel to the original people of North America, those who “as yet live in darkness and miserable ignorance of the true knowledge and worship of God.” As England's “defender of the faith,” the king commanded that the gospel be supported in Virginia by the Anglican Church. The colony's laws shielded orthodox belief and practice, with harsh punishments for sins such as Sabbath-breaking and heresy. According to colonial statute, blasphemers would have a thick needle thrust through their tongues.
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Although these laws largely went unenforced, Virginians in the 1600s took it as a tenet of government that their colony was officially Anglican and that preachers from other Christian denominations should not just remain legally disadvantaged, but be banned as well. Laws passed in the mid-seventeenth century explicitly codified the colony's hostility toward Puritans, Quakers, and Baptists. A law in the early 1660s threatened fines against the Baptists, who, “out of the new-fangled conceits of their own heretical inventions, refuse to have their children baptized.” Virginia authorities mandated respect for traditional Anglican Church practices, such as infant baptism. Likewise, no person could preach, baptize, or marry people without having been ordained by an Anglican bishop.
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The 1689 Act of Toleration in England, passed as one of the repercussions of the Glorious Revolution that safeguarded Protestant possession of the throne, alleviated some of the discrimination against dissenters. Nevertheless, the act emphasized “toleration,” not acceptance. It committed England (and presumably the colonies) to tolerating dissenters' existence, but it did not require the government to extend them full freedom of religion. The first non-Anglican who qualified to preach in Virginia under the Toleration Act was Francis Makemie, a Presbyterian pastor who successfully applied for a pastoral license in 1699. However, toleration for
Makemie and other non-Anglican clerics did not include the right to do whatever they wished. Dissenters had to apply for official permission to preach or set up new congregations. They could not publicly criticize the Anglican establishment. Most important, preachers and their congregants still had to pay taxes to support the Anglican Church, regardless of whether they financially supported their own minister.
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The grudging toleration the act afforded would suffice until evangelicals began to challenge the Anglican Church in the 1740s. As their numbers grew, they became a potent force, and their religious passion matched their awareness of their political oppression. The First Great Awakening had begun in 1734 in Northampton, Massachusetts, in the parish of the great evangelical leader Jonathan Edwards, who reported that his sleepy Puritan town had experienced a “glorious alteration,” with hundreds of new converts feeling their hearts overwhelmed with vital faith. Those attending his packed services were “in tears while the word was preached; some weeping with sorrow and distress, others with joy and love,” he declared. Although the colonies had seen episodes of religious excitement in previous years, never before had churches witnessed so many people experience conversion at one time. The height of the Awakening came in 1740–1743, centered in New England, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
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In Virginia, the evangelical uprising first manifested itself in the Henrys' own Hanover County, in 1739, when Patrick Henry was just three years old. A devout bricklayer there named Samuel Morris, frustrated with the lack of spiritual fervor in the Anglican Church, began publicly reciting the sermons of the era's great itinerant Anglican preacher, George Whitefield. According to Presbyterian minister David Rice, who was born in Hanover three years before Patrick Henry (and who by virtue of his religious denomination was not an entirely objective observer of the Anglican Church), the state of religious faith and practice in Hanover
County before the Great Awakening was “extremely low and discouraging. The established clergy were many of them notoriously profligate in their lives, and very few of them preached, or appeared to understand, the Gospel of Christ.” Whatever the state of the clergy in those years, it was clear that many people in Hanover County were ready for the vivid new message of the evangelicals.
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George Whitefield had recently captivated both Britain and America with his passionate rhetoric and outdoor services, where tens of thousands would gather to hear him preach. Even though Whitefield was an Anglican parson, he cooperated with evangelical believers in all denominations, much to the consternation of many of his Anglican superiors. Whitefield came to Williamsburg in 1739. Although his Hanover County admirer, Samuel Morris, failed to see the great revivalist in person, he seized upon the growing excitement of the Great Awakening and began setting up religious meetings apart from the Anglican Church. Virginia authorities repeatedly fined Morris for holding separate meetings, but he would not stop. Moreover, by 1743, he was encouraging Presbyterian evangelists from New Jersey and Pennsylvania to visit Hanover County. These preachers had trained at Neshaminy, Pennsylvania's “Log College,” an evangelical seminary and forerunner to the College of New Jersey (in Princeton).

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