Timothy Dwight
by Dr. Stephen Fox, Washington UBF
"For Ezra had devoted himself to the study and observance of the Law of
the
Lord, and to teaching its decrees and laws in Israel.'' --- Ezra 7:10
Introduction
God used George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards powerfully in their day. As
the influence of the first great awakening waned, other challenges faced the
infant nation of America. God, it seems, had called America to be a city on a
hill.
Yet, during the period of the revolution and the two decades after, America
faced
deep spiritual struggles. The war brought hardships, economic chaos, and
uncertainty which resulted in a kind of moral chaos as well. The expansion
west
had begun, and the frountier life led to a situation somewhat like that of
Israel, ``In
that day Israel had no king. Each man did what was right in his own eyes.
Many feared that such moral malfunction would spread back into the entire
nation, destroying the piety of the established communities. New England, the
intellectual fountainhead in America, faced a more subtle foe. The French
Rationalist movement, espoused by the leaders of the French revolution and
carried like disease in the soldiers of that country who supported America's
cause,
began to spread rapidly through the people and the intellectual leadership of
the
nation. Such thinking taught that the Scripture was mere fable, that divine
revelation was non-existent, and that human reason was the sole judge of
right
and wrong. The philosophy exalted man and ignored God. It proclaimed the
innate goodness of man, while inviting lawlessness, and tempted the same men
it
exalted into debasing self-indulgence and sin. In the face of these
challenges,
God did not abandon New England. God raised up Timothy Dwight as the
intellectual, and faithful leader of the second series of revivals in New
England.
The revivals began, in part, at Yale college where God used Dwight to bring
about
the conversion of perhaps more than half of the student body of Yale. These
were the men who would lead New England spiritually and in some cases
socially
for decades to come. We, of course, in this day face a very similar situation
as
Dwight and the church of his day. The universities, that is, the foundry of
leadership in our society, is largely given over to secular humanism, the
exaltation
of man above God, and to spiritual apathy among the students. A nation
boasting
such and educational foundation will never become or remain a light of the
gospel to all nations. In fact, as we hear loudly proclaimed from many
distant
shores, America is exporting not light, but darkness. Yet, through repentance
and faith, God will use this very generation to stand in the place of
leadership, to
be salt and light among our own pears, and those who will come after us so
that
the university, and thus the leadership of America may be filled with the
vision of
God to be a city on a hill, a lamp that will not be hidden. We must study
Dwight to
learn how God used him to turn a spiritually bankrupt university into a city
on a
hill, and a light to New England and the world.
Who was Timothy Dwight?
On May 14th, 1752, Mary Edwards Dwight gave birth to her first child,
Timothy. George Washington then was twenty years old; Francois Voltair was
fifty-eight, and Thomas Jefferson was nine years old. Timothy would spend
most
of his life in the halls of academia and began his teaching career early.
Once,
when Timothy did not show up for dinner, his worried parents searched
earnestly, only to find him safe and sound under an apple tree with a group
of
Native Americans gathered around him. He was teaching them to recite the ---
no
doubt, Calvinist --- catechism. He explained to his mother that he had met
them on
the street and had asked them if they would like to hear about God and
religion.
They went to the orchard to begin, and he had forgotten the time, that was
all.
Except that\dots he was four years old.
Timothy was educated both at home and in schools. From age four to six he
learned classic literature at a school and secretly taught himself Latin. The
school
closed when he was six, and his mother took over his studies until he was
eleven. Under his mother's direction he studied geography, history, and
grammar. He had already studied the biblical histories, and proceeded then to
study Josephus, Hookes history of Rome, histories of Greece and England, etc.
At the age of eleven his parents sent him to live with Reverend Enoch
Huntington
under whom he continued his study of Latin and Greek. Such was the extent of
his secondary education. What most classical scholars study at the
universities,
Timothy had finished by the modern sixth grade. It makes me wonder, ``What
did
I do in grade school?''
Timothy entered Yale at thirteen, graduated four years later, continued at
Yale
for graduate study, and was later hired as a Tutor at the college. During his
time
as a tutor, Dwight's pursuit of knowledge reached a fever pitch. He stopped
exercising in the interest of reserving more time for his studies. He slept
four
hours a night, and began to begrudge even the time he spent eating. In order
to
maintain his mental edge, he limited himself to twelve mouthfuls of
vegetables for
dinner. After about a year of this, his body gave up the fight and collapsed.
He
suffered for several months in sickness, at one point near death, and almost
lost
the use of his eyes. From this point until the end of his life he could read
only
with severe pain and headaches. He needed the services of an amanuensis to
write. That means he dictated everything to another writer. Although at first
it
seems a tragedy, the importance of this development in his life cannot, I
think,
be underestimated. Dwight was now a fabulous scholar, who could not read.
This turned his interest to people. Rather than reading, he talked to people,
he
listened and probed through his questions. Rather than disappearing into the
study in order to meditate on the complications of contemporary theology, he
met
farmers and talked about gardens and politics. Through this long ordeal of
his
near fatal illness, and through the all but complete loss of his eyes, Dwight
began
to connect his unmatchable intellect to the practical spiritual needs of his
contemporaries. He knew the fear of death, he knew the concerns and passions
of the generation God had called him to serve. Dr. Dwight returned to Yale,
continuing to serve as a Tutor until the death of the then Yale President,
Dr.
Daggett. At that time the students petitioned for Timothy, then age
twenty-five,
to be made president. He suppressed the petition. Instead, he joined the
First
Connecticut Brigade of the Continental Army. He served for approximately one
year, never carried a rifle, serving instead as Chaplain. Although he served
for
only one year, it was from this experience that he drew countless of his
illustrations, examples, and insight into the character and plight of man.
The war
revealed the character of men in hardship and fear. The presence of death
brought the theology of his early years near to the practical needs of men.
This
training, combined with his earlier sickness, secured Dwight's role as a
shepherd,
rather than as a metaphysical Calvinist theologian. Such a man, God would use
greatly.
Timothy left the Continental Army for grievous reasons. His parents and
family
were suspected of sympathizing with the British. In order to avoid the
conflict,
Dwight's father had decided to buy land near the Mississippi river and
resettle.
He traveled in advance of the family, died in Mississippi, and two of his
sons,
Timothy's brothers, had virtually walked across Georgia to reach safety.
Thus,
Timothy, as the eldest, retired from the Army to take care of his mother, and
the
two farms. When the farms, and the war, had settled to a reasonable degree
Dwight accepted a call to pastor a community in Greenfield Hill. He began in
1783. His time at Greenfield Hill may be characterized by three aspects:
Pastoring the church, Teaching at an academy he established, and speaking and
writing against Deism. He kept this position until 1795 at which time he
accepted
the call to Yale. Although an able pastor for the entire community, Dwight's
true
joy seems to have been teaching. Both at Northhampton and at Greenfield Hill
he
established schools. Against the current of the times, Dwight spoke strongly
for
the education of women along with men, and not in any reduced fashion. Having
been educated himself at the feet of his mother, he knew the influence such
women had on the development of their children. Although many women were
educated in fashion, romance novels, and in proper etiquette, Dwight thought
it
ruined them by teaching them only to dream of a world they would never
inhabit.
He claimed that such education focused not on who one is, but rather on who
one appeared to be. Such a person, he thought, might make a good dancer, or
frolicker, but never a good wife. Instead he thought women should be educated
in
earnestness and seriousness so that they might more deeply know the gospel
and
struggle together with their husbands to raise godly households. In this
sense,
Dwight was about 150 years ahead of his time. While preaching and teaching at
Greenfield Hill, Dwight recognized the battle at hand. In 1794 he published
``A
Discourse on the Genuineness and Authenticity of the New Testament'' as a
defense
against the French Deistic influence which had spread rapidly through the
young
colonies. In 1795 God called, through the Yale Corporation, Dwight to the
presidency of Yale.
Reclaiming Yale College
Of all of Dwight's accomplishments, the most important, in terms of the
spiritual history of America, is his defense of Christianity against French
infidelity,
and his attack directly upon the doctrines of atheism, deism, and
Unitarianism.
Through his sermons and publications, Dwight provided a light for the mind of
the
general populace. But through his influence upon the students and professors
of
Yale he profoundly guided the intellectual leadership of New England for
decades
after his death. Yale was to be the final testing ground of forty-three years
of shepherd
training. Here Dwight would bring to bear his razor sharp mind, broad
education,
and practical understanding of humanity on the guiding and discipline of
twenty-two
classes of Yale graduates. When Dwight arrived at Yale, the moral and
scholarly atmosphere of the school was, to say the least, in a valley.
Membership
in the college church hovered near, well, near zero. Most undergraduates
avowed themselves skeptics. One of the students of that day later wrote,
``intemperance, profanity, and gambling were common; yea, and also
licentiousness.'' Some of the students had taken to calling each other not by
their
given names, but rather by the names of Voltaire, D'Alembert, Diderot, and of
other French and English infidels. The campus supported not one but two
societies dedicated to the reading and distribution of literature by deist
Tom
Paine. One might think that in such an atmosphere of ``reason'' and of
worship of
the exalted human nature order and self-discipline might have also been
prominent
on campus. As with the French revolution, however, such talk in its practical
application degenerated into pleasure seeking, and gratification of the true
nature
of humanity. Once, near the end of his term, when the previous president of
Yale
had brought a visitor to the chapel for an assembly, he, being late, found
the
students yelling, whooping, carousing, and generally out of control. The
president forced his way to the podium and wore himself out shouting and
pounding on the stage with his cane until the cane splintered. It was some
time
before order was restored. The guest, I'm sure, was not very impressed with
the
men of such a fine institution as Yale. Into such a mess rode Timothy Dwight.
In that time, the President not only ran the college, but also taught the
Senior
class. In Dwight's case, he was also the professor of Divinity. Part of the
senior
curriculum was a discussion class consisting of debates on such questions as
capital punishment (an old college staple) foreign immigration (things
haven't
changed much) Ought religious tests be required of Civil Officers? Do
specters
appear? Is a lie ever justifiable? Is man advancing to a state of
Perfectibility?
Now, Yale's laws of that day stated,
"If any Scholar shall deny the Holy
Scriptures, or any part thereof, to be of divine authority; or shall
assert and
endeaveour to propagate among the Students any error or heresy subverting
the
foundations of the Christioan religion, and shall persist therein, after
admonitino,
he shall be dismissed.''
In spite of this, most Yale men scoffed at the idea of
divine revelation. For Dwight's first disputation class he requested a list
of
questions from the seniors. He would then choose from among the questions the
one he thought most suitable for debate. Even though it was outlawed, the
Seniors included the question, ``Are the Scriptures of the Old and New
Testament
the word of God?'' It was clearly a test of the new President. Dwight met the
challenge head on. He chose that very question and told the seniors to do
their
best. He would not assume that any of the opinions expressed were their own.
He did require, however, that they treat the subject with the respect it
deserved.
All of the seniors chose to answer the question negatively. After all of the
students had spoken, Dwight began to critique their arguments, slowly and
methodically showing the class how weak the deist arguments really were. He
then proceeded to answer the question positively in the affirmative, and not
only so
but also preached incessantly on the subject for six months in the chapel,
and
delivered additional lectures on the subject of Evidences of Divine
Revelation.
The next year only one freshman was a professing Christian, none of the
sophomores (typical), one of the junior class, but of the senior class eight
to ten.
Dwight's influence had begun.
From the class of graduate theology majors Dwight chose several to train as
staff officers in order to help preserve the faith of students who had
escaped the
net of infidelity. After seven years of such preaching, a revival broke out
on
campus. Of 230 students, one third were converted. Thirty of these entered
the
ministry. Others were prominent in New England life. One of Dwight's
disciples
later wrote,
"Dwight, through the blessing of God, changed the college from a
sink of moral and spiritual pollution into a residence not only of science
and
literature, but of morality and religion, a nursery of piety and virtue, a
fountain
whence has issued streams to make glad the city of God.''
Such a change could
not be accomplished by preaching alone. Dwight's attitude toward the students
was one of paternal concern.
When dealing with miscreant students, Dwight would call the young man to his
office. There he received an earnest and genuine discussion of the imprudence
of
his actions. I think it must have been quite like receiving an entire sermon
directed specifically and personally to you. On one occasion, a student had
become so distressed by the thought of his salvation eluding him, that a
student
went, late in the evening, to find Dr. Dwight. Dwight came to the student's
room
and recited with him, for some time, the invitations of the gospel, and then
prayed
for him. ``A sweet serenity'' overcame him and later turned to full joy as he
found
confidence of his salvation in Christ. Another student, so shaken by a
professor's
correction that he imagined that he could see his corpse and coffin before
him
and hell ready to receive him, went to see Dr. Dwight personally. He also
received
at first calmness, and later confidence in Christ.
Timothy Dwight provided for the spiritual life of the students not only
through his
personal concern and example, but also through the environment he fostered
among the faculty. As the sciences grew in importance at the universities of
America, Dwight convinced the corporation of Yale to support a professor of
Chemistry. Dwight also convinced them to hire for the position Benjamin
Silliman,
then a tutor at Yale and preparing for entrance to the Connecticut bar as a
lawyer. He had virtually zero knowledge of Chemistry. Dwight chose him for
his
character and for the potential Dwight saw in him. Another example is the
establishment of the professor of Medical studies. The corporation had
nominated Nathan Smith, a man of unquestioned ability and national esteem.
Dwight refused to accept his nomination because he had fallen under the
influence of Deism while studying in England. Dwight would have nothing of
Deism or Infidelity among his professors. Later, after a sincere and genuine
conversion and recantation of his previous beliefs, Smith was reconsidered
for the
position, and readily accepted.
Dwight fought hard against the influence of Deism at Yale and in New England
for the rest of his life. As the university grew, however, he and others
realized the
need for specialized training for the ministers coming up through the ranks.
They
rightly considered that the ministers should be trained more thoroughly than
even
lawyers and physicians because the importance of their work and influence was
eternal, rather than temporal. Moreover, Harvard had been lost to the
Unitarian
influence as early as 1805 when the overseers of Harvard appointed a
Unitarian
to the Professor of Divinity. The next year they elected as president of
Harvard a
man with strong inclinations toward the idea. This election caused no small
alarm
among the Christian denominations. Such concerns led to the founding of
Andover Seminary. The founding board consulted Dwight on the appointment of
faculty, and the curriculum, and the overall plan of the seminary. Eventually
they
asked him to serve on the governing board. So it was that Dwight's influence
spread from Yale to the first theological seminary in America. Through
Dwight,
God raised up generations of ministers and shepherds for the New England
people. He preserved the intellectual leadership of the country for his work
to
raise up America as a blessing to many nations. We, of course, are
responsible
for this generation. We must have a vision for God to use our prayers and
studies to raise up professors and even college presidents in order to
reclaim the
university as a place of hallowed ground. Let us pray for the third great
awakening to begin in the campuses of the East Coast as did the second.
Bibliography
- DeWolfe Howe, "Classic Shades,'' Little, Brown, & Co., Boston. 1928.
- Charles E. Cuningham, "Timothy Dwight,'' The MacMillan Co., New York.
1942.
- Peter Marshall and David Manuel, ``From Sea to Shining Sea,'' Fleming
Revell Co., Tarrytown, NY. 1986.