|

 |
News
Release |
 |
| |
For Immediate Release - Monday,
July 15, 2002 |
|
CSI Professor recognized for Historical Study
of America
College
of Staten Island (CSI) Professor Jonathan D. Sassi was recently
awarded the Ralph D. Gray Prize for the best article published in
the Journal of the Early Republic for the year 2001.
The Journal of the Early Republic is published by the Society
for Historians of the Early American Republic (SHEAR) at Purdue
University, which was established in 1977 as a nonprofit
organization of professional and avocational historians interested
in the encouragement of studies in the history of the United States
during the period of the Early Republic.
The selection committee consisted of Gary Kornblith, chair; Lacy K.
Ford Jr.; and Joanne Pope Melish, and commended Sassi's article,
"The First Party Competition and Southern New England's Public
Christianity," for offering both a nuanced interpretation of the
impact of party politics on New England religious culture between
1800 and 1815, and a fresh explanation of the rise of
Protestant-based reform movements soon afterward.
Sassi's article covers the period between the Revolution and Civil
War, known as the Early Republic. It focuses on the "descendants of
the Puritans, who were still pursuing the ideal of a godly society
in the new American era after the Revolution," summates Sassi. The
material in his article is relevant today, because "it discusses the
origin of reform movements like the abolitionist movement,
nationalism, and our national identity."
His article looks at the effect that the first period of political
party competition had on religious and social life in New England,
carefully integrating intellectual and political analyses of sermons
and other clerical writings while explicating the obstacles and
opportunities presented to New England ministers by the Jeffersonian
challenge to Federalist leadership at national and state levels of
government.
The Congregational clergy known as the "Standing Order" were the
most significant factor in the civil, religious, and cultural
affairs of most New England communities but found, to their dismay
and alarm, that they could no longer rely on civil magistrates to
promote Christian morality as they understood it, while dissenting
ministers from this ecclesiastical establishment adopted
Democratic-Republican ideas and rhetoric in their campaign for the
disestablishment of the Congregational Church.
As the crisis of authority deepened, Standing Order clerics lost
faith in the nation's divine mission, but they also developed a
brilliant evangelical strategy for winning back the hearts, minds,
and souls of New Englanders. Out of the Standing Order's
conservative concerns came the upsurge of religious revivalism and
social reform movements that transformed New England much more
dramatically than disestablishment per se during the 1820s and
1830s.
"Sassi tells this complex and fascinating story with greater
precision and clarity than earlier authors in an article that is at
once analytically sophisticated, well situated in the relevant
historiography, and blessedly free of jargon," comments Professor
Michael A. Morrison, coeditor of the Journal of the Early Republic.
Sassi's most recent book, A Republic of Righteousness: The Public
Christianity of the Post-Revolutionary New England Clergy,
published in 2001 and available from by Oxford University Press,
argues that New England clergymen furthered the vitality of early
republican culture through the application of their corporate ethic
to public issues, fostering American identity, nationalism, and
civil religion.

Inquiries
concerning membership in SHEAR, or institutional subscriptions to
the Journal should be addressed to: Editor, Journal of the Early
Republic, Purdue University, 1358 University Hall, West Lafayette,
IN 47907-1358.
###
Absract of The Impact of the First Party
Competition upon the Southern New England Clergy's Public
Christianity by Jonathan D. Sassi
During the first fifteen years of the nineteenth
century, political polarization and conflict wrought a profound
change upon the southern New England clergy's public Christianity.
Clergymen across the denominational spectrum transformed the ways
they linked religious belief and life in society. For most ministers
of the Congregational Standing Order, Jefferson's election and the
rise of the Democratic-Republican Party inaugurated a period of
drastic reevaluation. They became frustrated with the inaction of
Federalist politicians, repudiated their providential reading of
revolutionary American history, and spiraled into apocalyptic
nightmares of impending doom by 1812. But their response to the
first party contest did not stand alone. Even within the Standing
Order a few moderates and Republicans bolted from the leading camp.
Religious dissenters meanwhile embraced the Jeffersonians. Not only
did the Democratic-Republicans give dissenters electoral allies, but
also the dissenters' critique of the establishment became more
mainstream, as they added popular Jeffersonian rhetoric to their
sectarian complaints. By joining with others who detested the
Standing Order's political preaching, dissenters were able to weaken
or even bring down the establishment. Because of these changes, the
Congregational ministry had to conceive new strategies if it still
wanted to connect Christianity and society. Moving outside the
establishment, it emphasized the socially sanctifying role of the
evangelical churches acting on their communities. These changes in
ideology, catalyzed by the polarization and acrimony of
partisanship, prepared the way for the denominational realignments
and reform initiatives of the 1820s. |
 |
CSI Experts
|
 |
Need an expert?
CSI Faculty consists of professors with
recognized expertise in a variety of disciplines: urban history,
psychology, applied mathematics, political science, gender and
women's studies, education, ecology, evolutionary biology,
accounting, marketing, finance,
international business and
the arts.
Research faculty and staff at CSI are authorities on polymers,
engineered materials and biopolymers, neuroscience and
developmental disabilities, as well as environmental health issues.
|
 |
 |
|