For a much more extensive description than appears
on this brief page,
see the works listed in the Selected
Bibliography on Puritanism.
| Definitions | Norman Grabo: "The art of Puritan devotion was
basically a method for channeling emotion into verbal structures--a poetic
method."
St. Francis de Sales: "When we think of heavenly things, not to learn but to love them, that is called to meditate: and the exercise thereof, Meditation." Thomas Hooker (1586-1647), The Soules Preparation for Christ (1632): "It is a settled exercise for two ends: first to make a further inquiry of the truth: and secondly, to make the heart affected therewith." Richard Baxter, The Saints [sic] Everlasting Rest (1650): "There is yet another way by which we may make our senses serviceable to us, and that is, by comparing the objects of sense with the objects of faith; and so forcing sense to afford us that medium, from whence we may conclude the transcendent worth of glory, by arguing from sensitive delights as from the less to the greater." According to Ann Stanford, the process of meditation involves the "vivid picturing in the imagination of a scene called the 'composition of place.' The scene may be drawn from the Old or New Testaments, the details of the life of Christ, the terrors of hell, or a more present situation. . . . . After imagining a scene, or seeing the subject of meditation before one in the fields, the meditator draws arguments from it regarding eternal truths or his own relation to God. The last step is a colloquy with God or with the creature, theoretically involving the will, in which the meditator determines to have more faith, to cease from sin, to abide by God's law, or comes to some moral discernment" ("Anne Bradstreet" 50). |
| Method | In his Spiritual
Exercises, Ignatius
Loyola recommended that the exercitant exercise in sequence three faculties
of his soul. 1. memory 2. understanding 3. will
Richard Baxter's Saints Everlasting Rest (1650) followed suit. First stage: The subject matter--the doctrine or incident--was called up by memory. The meditator and tried to get vivid, detailed apprehension of it using only memory and imagination. Second stage: The image or proposition supplied by memory is analyzed and comprehended by reason until the work of understanding was complete. Third stage: The subject then was submitted to
the will and affections, which were moved to great joy or sorrow. According
to Donald E. Stanford, "Once understood, the affections of the will (the
emotions) are aroused in this order: love, desire, hope, courage, and joy"
("Edward Taylor" 70).
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| History | The meditation tradition that began with Ignatius
Loyola became transformed for Puritans in
Richard Baxter's The Saints Everlasting Rest (1650), especially the fourth part "Directory for the getting and keeping of the Heart in heaven...Heavenly Meditation." Baxter's ideas: a. positive approach to sensible world
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| Puritan
Conception of the Mind |
In this schema, Man was seen as a "receptor"
to divine will.
A sense impression would be carried to 1. Common Sense, which identified it;
Because of Adam's misuse of his faculties, God had withdrawn his blessing from this process, causing a paralysis of the faculties and a disruption of the flow of information; thus man could no longer automatically understand God's will. Both meditation and the conversion process were attempts to "rewire" or "reconnect" this arc. |
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