THE CLASH OF ISSUES Screwtape, an important official in his Satanic Majesty's "Lowerarchy," in C. S. Lewis's little classic, said of Puritanism: ". . . the value we have given to that word is one of the really solid triumphs of the last hundred years. By it we rescue annually thousands of humans from temperance, chastity, and sobriety of life." -- The Screwtape Letters
A recent historian of Puritan Massachusetts concludes: "No truthful historian will withhold from New England the credit due her for her part in the creation and moulding of the nation. . . . But most of the contributions were made after the fall of the Puritan oligarchy, and the men to whom the chief credit is due were not its supporters, but, on the contrary, those who rebelled against it." -- T. J. WERTENBAKER: The Puritan Oligarchy
An historian sympathetic to the Puritans disagrees: ". . . the story of the intellectual life of New England in the seventeenth century is not merely that of a people bravely and successfully endeavoring to keep up the standards of civiliza- tion in the New World; it is one of the principal approaches to the social and intellectual history of the United States." -- SAMUEL E. MORISON: The Puritan Pronaos
A philosopher attempts a balanced judgment: "The puritan's harsh insistence on the pre-eminent impor- tance of salvation was suited to the exigencies of reform, or of revolution, or of migration and settlement. . . . It was not so good a gospel to live by over long periods of normal relaxa- tion. Like all policies adapted to times of emergency, it cur- tailed liberty and impoverished the content of life." -- RALPH BARTON PERRY: Puritanism and Democracy
No doubt for many of us, as Longfellow said: ". . . The stern old puritanical character rises above the com- mon level of life; it has a breezy air about its summits, but they are bleak and forbidding." |