American Revolutionary period
Considered a leading orator of the "pulpit of the American Revolution." Backus published a sermon in 1773 that articulated his desire for religious liberty and aBackus's support of the American Revolution
Glazier notes that Isaac Backus underwent an abrupt transformation from a critic of the Massachusetts State Legislature in 1774 to a stanch supporter of the American revolution in 1775. Prior to 1775, Backus had threatened to take up the issue of religious freedom with the Crown. In a famous letter to John Adams on Jan 19, 1774, Backus wrote: ''"I hope, sir, that you will give proof both to the Court and to the world, that you regard the religious, as well as the civil rights of your countrymen; that so large number of a peaceable people, and so hearty friends to their country as any in the land, may not be forced to carry their complaints before those who would be glad to hear that the legislature of the Massachusetts deny to their fellow servants that liberty which they so earnestly insist upon for themselves."'' Adams never responded directly to Backus's letter, but he made a number of disparaging comments about Backus in his journal. Adams later expressed his opinion that it would "be easier to change the working of the solar system than to change the Massachusetts church tax." Backus's veiled reference to George III above may have been a response to his learning of a successful petition by an Ashfield Church in 1771. Ashfield Baptists experienced difficulties beginning in 1765 when, due to the language regarding taxes in the Act of Incorporation of the Town of Ashfield, they were required to pay church taxes. According to Chileab Smith, the General Court in 1768 “impowered our oppressors to gather money of us or sell our lands for the payment of their minister, and the finishing of their meeting house.” Baptist properties were auctioned by the Town in 1770. The Baptists sent a petition to King George III. In July 1771, the king responded. He indicated that the “was pleased with the advice of his Privy Council to declare his Disallowance of the said Act.” Lands were restored to the plaintiffs. A similar case in South Carolina was reported to IB by Francis Pelot in a letter of Oct 3, 1770. There is little evidence for Baptist support of the American Revolution prior to 1775. Of course, it would have made little political sense for any Baptist to publicly advocate American Independence before that date. Once war was declared, Backus (and many other Baptists) chose to support the Revolution. Backus quickly adapted his sermons to the needs of the times. On Sunday, April 23,1775, following the battles of Concord and Lexington, he chose as his text 1 Chronicles 12:32: "And if the children of Issachar, which were men that had understanding of the times, to know what Israel ought to do; the heads of them were two hundred; and all their brethren were at their commandment." Baptist ministers became major supporters of the Revolutionary cause. Of the twenty-one Chaplains in George Washington's army, six Chaplains were Baptists. Isaac Backus remained a staunch supporter of American Independence for the rest of his life. In 1778, Backus authored a historically important work entitled ''Government and Liberty Described and Ecclesiastical Tyranny Exposed'' of which a copy is held by theBackus and the Warren Association
Today, Backus is best-known for his three-volume religious history of New England. But his activities on behalf of the Warren Association are equally significant. In 1769, James Manning -- pastor of the church in Warren and president of Rhode Island College ow Brown University-- established an organization called the Warren Association to address church/state grievances: "''Whereas complaints of oppressions, occasioned by a non-conformity to the religious establishment in New England, have been brought to this Association, and whereas the laws obtained for preventing and redressing such oppressions have, upon trial, been found insufficient (either through defect in the laws themselves, or iniquity in the execution thereof); and whereas humble remonstrances and petitions have not been duly regarded, but the same oppressive measures continued: This is to inform all the oppressed Baptists in New England that the Association of Warren, (in conjunction with the Western or Philadelphia Association) is determined to seek remedy for their brethren where a speedy and effectual one may be had. In order to pursue this resolution by petition and memorial, the following gentlemen are appointed to receive well attested grievances, to be by them transmitted to the Rev. Samuel Stillman of Boston; namely, Rev. Hezekiah Smith of Haverhill, Rev. Isaac Backus of Middleborough, Mr. Richard Montague of Sunderland, Rev. Joseph Meacham of Enfield, and Rev. Thomas Whitman of Groton in Connecticut.''" With great reluctance, Isaac Backus accepted Manning's offer to serve as a representative on the Grievance Committee. He ended up serving as Grievance Committee Clerk and served longer than any other Association member. As Clerk, Backus was required to file and respond to all WA letters and reports. Backus's WA work took a great deal of his time. Between 1770-1774, the WA received an average of twelve letters and six reports each month. Backus made copies of all letters and reports and sent them to at least four other members of the Grievance Committee. Warren Association membership was voluntary. The Warren Association served only in an advisory capacity. They lacked authority to deny church membership or to dismiss pastors (e. g. Levi Maxcy's letter of September 4, 1772 was not addressed by the Grievance Committee because it was considered beyond their jurisdiction). Annual report letters were brief (one page; single-sided), well-written; in good literary style, on heavy paper; and feature excellent penmanship. Reports were signed by both the church's Clerk (who actually wrote the report) and the church's pastor (who approved it in the name of the church). WA reports follow a standard format: The first paragraph is a flowery (King James English) "Greetings" highlighting ways God had blessed their church during the past year. The second paragraph gives membership numbers; baptisms, deaths, transfers, and dismissals. The third paragraph details current church difficulties – leadership struggles and dismissals. Backus's WA files constitute one of the most complete records of church affairs in eighteenth century New England. Glazier suggests that the most important document in the Yale collection is Chileab Smith's account of the persecution of the Baptists in Ashfield, Massachusetts. Backus's work for the Warren Association boosted his professional reputation. He was subsequently appointed a Trustee of Rhode Island College, represented Baptist interests to the Massachusetts State Legislature, and he represented Baptist interests to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.During the ratification debate
Backus served as a delegate from Middleborough to theMany appear to be much concerned about it rohibition of religious tests but nothing is more evident, both in reason, and in the holy scriptures, than that religion is ever a matter between God and individuals; and therefore no man or men can impose any religious test, without invading the essential prerogatives of our Lord Jesus Christ. Ministers first assumed this power under the Christian name; and then Constantine approved of the practice, when he adopted the profession of Christianity, as an engine of state policy. And let the history of all nations be searched, from that day to this, and it will appear that the imposing of religious tests hath been the greatest engine of tyranny in the world.In the same speech Backus also praised the constitution for giving the federal government the power to tax and eventually (after twenty years) regulate or abolish the slave trade. He voted in favor of ratification.
Backus on Slavery
There is no record of Isaac Backus himself owning slaves, although his brother Elijah owned slaves and Isaac may have utilized slave labor. Isaac Backus failed to condemn African slavery in any of his earlier published writings. His friends and members of his extended family did own slaves. In eighteenth-century Norwich, it would have been common to hold African slaves as well as White indentured servants. Backus's understanding of slavery included any form of bondage. It also encompassed any practice or institutional form that reduced individual freedom of choice which Backus compares to pedobaptism (infant baptism). For Backus, infant baptism was a form of slavery since the infant had little choice in the matter. Slavery, for Backus, is rooted in humanity's attraction to evil and the inability to resist sin. "All" are slaves. Backus was well aware that his redefinition of "slavery" was controversial (e. g. his speech to the 1788 Massachusetts Ratification Convention equating slavery, circumcision, and pedobaptism was given immediately following an intense floor debate on taxing the African slave trade). Glazier suggests that Backus's ideas regarding slavery may have been influenced by his friendship with Stephen Hopkins (1707-1785). Hopkins -- who served as governor of Rhode Island, chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, first Chancellor of Providence College, and a signer of the Declaration of Independence -- was an abolitionist, a sometime Quaker, a slaveholder, a slave trader, and a privateer. Stephen Hopkins owned at least seven slaves who are named in two wills: Adam, Bonner, Fibbo, Primus, Priamus, Prince and St. Jago. For multiple decades, Hopkins had resisted pressure and threats of expulsion from his Quaker 'brethren' to free his slaves. See Cherry Fletcher Bamberg and Donald R. Hopkins, "The Slaves of Gov. Stephen Hopkins," New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 33 (2012): 11–27. Like Backus, Hopkins was a self-made man with little formal education. As noted, Hopkins worked closely with Backus in the founding of Brown University, and he was Backus's most politically powerful and legally astute friend. It might, therefore, have been expedient for Backus to avoid condemning slavery. Backus did not speak out against slavery until well after Stephen Hopkins's death. Backus traveled widely in the South and supported Baptist churches in the region. These churches sought his advice in their disputes with other Separatist churches and their struggles with Anglicanism. While Africans may not have been eligible for full membership in these Southern churches (they were eligible for membership in Backus's Middleborough church), Backus does not give a full account of racial compositions of the churches he visited. He does mention preaching to African American congregations. When Backus published his famous pamphlet "Godliness Excludes Slavery" in 1785, slavery was a topic of intense national debate. In "Godliness Excludes Slavery" – which was primarily circulated among Baptists in Virginia and North Carolina – Backus addressed slavery as a "spiritual issue." He equated African slavery to being a "slave to one's sinful nature." He never addressed the "moral issue" of owning slaves. Isaac Backus did not openly condemn slavery until 1797. This was unconscionable. While not condemning slavery, Backus did oppose the African slave trade. As a delegate from Middleborough to the Massachusetts convention that ratified the United States Constitution in 1788, Backus voted to ratify the Constitution which gave the federal government power to tax and (after twenty years) to regulate or abolish the slave trade.References
Further reading
* Allison, William Henry. "Isaac Backus." ''Dictionary of American Biography. Vol I.'', p. 471. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1928, 1943. * * * * * * *''The Diary of Isaac Backus''. William G. McLoughlin, ed. 3 vol. Providence: Brown University Press, 1979. *Glazier, Stephen D. "Jonathan Edwards and Isaac Backus on Freedom of the Will," Unpublished STM Thesis, Yale Divinity School, 2021. *Glazier, Stephen D. "Isaac Backus Archives at Special Collections, Yale Divinity School, Box 9, 1771-1774" Draft of May 10, 2021." DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.24190.92487 *Grenz, Stanley J. "Church and State: The Legacy of Isaac Backus." ''Center Journal 2'' (Spring 1983): 73–94. *"Isaac Backus: Eighteenth Century Light on the Contemporary School Prayer Issue." ''Perspectives in Religious Studies'' 13 (Winter, 1986): 35–45. *"Isaac Backus and Religious Liberty." ''Foundations'' 22 (October/December 1979): 352–360. *''Isaac Backus, Puritan and Baptist: His Place in History, His Thought, and Their Implications for Modern Baptist Theology''. Macon, GA:External links