The First American Evangelical: A Short Life of Cotton Mather (Library of Religious Biography (LRB))

The First American Evangelical: A Short Life of Cotton Mather (Library of Religious Biography (LRB))

by RickKennedy (Author)

Synopsis

Cotton Mather (1663-1728) was America's most famous pastor and scholar at the beginning of the eighteenth century. People today generally associate him with the infamous Salem witch trials, but that picture has mostly come down to us from one unreliable, antagonistic source.

This biography by Rick Kennedy, based largely on new research by an international team of scholars, corrects misconceptions of Cotton Mather and focuses on the way he tried to promote, socially and intellectually, a biblical lifestyle. As older Puritan hopes in New England were giving way to a broader and shallower Protestantism, Mather led a populist, Bible-oriented movement that embraced the new century -- the beginning of a dynamic evangelical tradition that eventually became a major force in American culture.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 176
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
Published: 30 May 2015

ISBN 10: 0802872115
ISBN 13: 9780802872111

Media Reviews
Douglas A. Sweeney
author of The American Evangelical Story: A History of the Movement
Cotton Mather is widely seen as a moralistic hypocrite, a one-dimensional bad guy we moderns love to hate. But in this lively new biography, he takes on flesh and blood and, more importantly, a heart. ... This courageous little book offers readers a better feel for Mather's vibrant, quirky, learned, evangelical spirituality than anything before.
Margaret Bendroth
author of The Spiritual Practice of Remembering
Few historical figures have been as misunderstood as Cotton Mather, roundly dismissed in our own time as the ultimate Puritan killjoy. Rick Kennedy's richly textured account reminds us why Mather still matters why we should care about, maybe even embrace, this complex man who made such an indelible impact on our religious world today.
George M. Marsden
author of A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards
Mather's life is one of the most fascinating in all of American history. Rick Kennedy has done a fine job in providing a sympathetic, engaging, and yet brief account of such a many-sided and influential personality.
Reiner Smolinski
general editor of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana America's First Bible Commentary
In this charming biography, Cotton Mather emerges as the grandfather of American evangelicalism, who valiantly guided his community through troubled times. Kennedy enables us to look into the heart and soul of this Puritan pastor who adapted New England's old-time religion to the needs of a new age. This is a fresh and perceptive introduction to Mather's complex life.
World Magazine
The author humbly avoids a judgmental tone toward Mather or the Puritans. He does not indulge in chronological snobbery and assume the tone of moral superiority typical of many other historians. Instead, Kennedy sets Mather in a historical context and highlights his strengths and weaknesses accordingly. . . . [He] tries to capture the evangelical heart of Mather, as a bridge builder from the Puritan era to the next wave of the Holy Spirit in the Great Awakening led by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.

Themelios
An engaging and insightful introduction.

The Catholic Historical Review
Rick Kennedy's lively take on Cotton Mather's extraordinary life is very welcome. . . . Not your grandfather's Mather.

Douglas A. Sweeney
author ofThe American Evangelical Story: A History of the Movement
Cotton Mather is widely seen as a moralistic hypocrite, a one-dimensional bad guy we moderns love to hate. But in this lively new biography, he takes on flesh and blood and, more importantly, a heart. ... This courageous little book offers readers a better feel for Mather's vibrant, quirky, learned, evangelical spirituality than anything before.

Margaret Bendroth
author ofThe Spiritual Practice of Remembering
Few historical figures have been as misunderstood as Cotton Mather, roundly dismissed in our own time as the ultimate Puritan killjoy. Rick Kennedy's richly textured account reminds us why Mather still matters why we should care about, maybe even embrace, this complex man who made such an indelible impact on our religious world today.

George M. Marsden
author ofA Short Life of Jonathan Edwards
Mather's life is one of the most fascinating in all of American history. Rick Kennedy has done a fine job in providing a sympathetic, engaging, and yet brief account of such a many-sided and influential personality.

Reiner Smolinski
general editor of Cotton Mather'sBiblia Americana America's First Bible Commentary
In this charming biography, Cotton Mather emerges as the grandfather of American evangelicalism, who valiantly guided his community through troubled times. Kennedy enables us to look into the heart and soul of this Puritan pastor who adapted New England's old-time religion to the needs of a new age. This is a fresh and perceptive introduction to Mather's complex life.

World Magazine
The author humbly avoids a judgmental tone toward Mather or the Puritans. He does not indulge in chronological snobbery and assume the tone of moral superiority typical of many other historians. Instead, Kennedy sets Mather in a historical context and highlights his strengths and weaknesses accordingly. . . . [He] tries to capture the evangelical heart of Mather, as a bridge builder from the Puritan era to the next wave of the Holy Spirit in the Great Awakening led by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.
Themelios
-An engaging and insightful introduction.-

The Catholic Historical Review
-Rick Kennedy's lively take on Cotton Mather's extraordinary life is very welcome. . . . Not your grandfather's Mather.-

Douglas A. Sweeney
-- author of The American Evangelical Story: A History of the Movement
-Cotton Mather is widely seen as a moralistic hypocrite, a one-dimensional bad guy we moderns love to hate. But in this lively new biography, he takes on flesh and blood and, more importantly, a heart. . . . This courageous little book offers readers a better feel for Mather's vibrant, quirky, learned, evangelical spirituality than anything before.-

Margaret Bendroth
-- author of The Spiritual Practice of Remembering
-Few historical figures have been as misunderstood as Cotton Mather, roundly dismissed in our own time as the ultimate Puritan killjoy. Rick Kennedy's richly textured account reminds us why Mather still matters -- why we should care about, maybe even embrace, this complex man who made such an indelible impact on our religious world today.-

George M. Marsden
-- author of A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards
-Mather's life is one of the most fascinating in all of American history. Rick Kennedy has done a fine job in providing a sympathetic, engaging, and yet brief account of such a many-sided and influential personality.-

Reiner Smolinski
-- general editor of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana -- America's First Bible Commentary
-In this charming biography, Cotton Mather emerges as the grandfather of American evangelicalism, who valiantly guided his community through troubled times. Kennedy enables us to look into the heart and soul of this Puritan pastor who adapted New England's old-time religion to the needs of a new age. This is a fresh and perceptive introduction to Mather's complex life.-

World Magazine
-The author humbly avoids a judgmental tone toward Mather or the Puritans. He does not indulge in chronological snobbery and assume the tone of moral superiority typical of many other historians. Instead, Kennedy sets Mather in a historical context and highlights his strengths and weaknesses accordingly. . . . [He] tries to capture the evangelical heart of Mather, as a bridge builder from the Puritan era to the next wave of the Holy Spirit in the Great Awakening led by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.-
Themelios
An engaging and insightful introduction.

Kenneth Minkema in The Catholic Historical Review
Rick Kennedy's lively take on Cotton Mather's extraordinary life is very welcome. . . . Not your grandfather's Mather.

Presbyterian Outlook
Kennedy has written a sympathetic and insightful introduction to a generally unfairly maligned and undervalued figure in American history.

Douglas A. Sweeney
-- author of The American Evangelical Story: A History of the Movement
Cotton Mather is widely seen as a moralistic hypocrite, a one-dimensional bad guy we moderns love to hate. But in this lively new biography, he takes on flesh and blood and, more importantly, a heart. . . . This courageous little book offers readers a better feel for Mather's vibrant, quirky, learned, evangelical spirituality than anything before.

Margaret Bendroth
-- author of The Spiritual Practice of Remembering
Few historical figures have been as misunderstood as Cotton Mather, roundly dismissed in our own time as the ultimate Puritan killjoy. Rick Kennedy's richly textured account reminds us why Mather still matters -- why we should care about, maybe even embrace, this complex man who made such an indelible impact on our religious world today.

George M. Marsden
-- author of A Short Life of Jonathan Edwards
Mather's life is one of the most fascinating in all of American history. Rick Kennedy has done a fine job in providing a sympathetic, engaging, and yet brief account of such a many-sided and influential personality.

Reiner Smolinski
-- general editor of Cotton Mather's Biblia Americana -- America's First Bible Commentary
In this charming biography, Cotton Mather emerges as the grandfather of American evangelicalism, who valiantly guided his community through troubled times. Kennedy enables us to look into the heart and soul of this Puritan pastor who adapted New England's old-time religion to the needs of a new age. This is a fresh and perceptive introduction to Mather's complex life.

World Magazine
The author humbly avoids a judgmental tone toward Mather or the Puritans. He does not indulge in chronological snobbery and assume the tone of moral superiority typical of many other historians. Instead, Kennedy sets Mather in a historical context and highlights his strengths and weaknesses accordingly. . . . [He] tries to capture the evangelical heart of Mather, as a bridge builder from the Puritan era to the next wave of the Holy Spirit in the Great Awakening led by Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield.
Author Bio
Rick Kennedy is Professor of History at Point Loma Nazarene University, San Diego, California, and the author of Jesus, History, and Mt. Darwin: An Academic Excursion and various books and articles on the history of colonial New England.