Thomas Allen (nonconformist) explained

Thomas Allen or Allyn (1608 in Norwich – 21 September 1673) was an East Anglian nonconformist minister and divine who preached during the 1640s in Charlestown, Massachusetts, but returned to England during the Commonwealth and was ejected after the Restoration.[1] He was the author of various published works.[2]

Life

Allen was the son of John Allen, a Norwich dyer. He was educated in Norwich and at Caius College, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1625 and was scholar 1625-29, taking B.A. in 1627/28 and M.A. in 1631. Having received license and holy orders at Norwich in March 1633/34, he became minister[3] of the parish church of St. Edmund's at Norwich, 1633-38.[4] But he was too pronouncedly evangelical and outspoken. Bishop Matthew Wren silenced him in 1636, together with William Bridge and others, for refusing to read The Book of Sports.

To New England

In 1638[5] Allen passed over as a fugitive to New England. Admitted to the church of Boston on 11 January 1638/39, on 9 June following, at his own request and that of the church of Charlestown, he was dismissed from Boston, and was admitted to Charlestown on 22 December 1639 (O.S.). Then, or soon afterwards, he became Teacher, as the fellow-worker of Zechariah Symmes, pastor of Charlestown.[6] In this capacity he succeeded John Harvard, who had died in September 1638 little more than a year after arriving in Charlestown. He is supposed to have married Harvard's widow, Anne, for he acted as administrator in the execution of Harvard's estate and paid his bequests. His recorded children were Mary (1639/40), Sarah (1641), Elizabeth (1643) and Mercy (1646), of whom only Mary survived infancy, and a son, Thomas.[7] On 3 May 1639 Allen received the large grant of 500 acres of land from the General Court, "in regard to Mr. Harvard's gift".[8]

Cotton Mather observed that he "approved himself a pious and painful minister of the Gospel at Charlestown", where he remained Teacher until 1651. In his first years in New England he witnessed the foundation of the town of Woburn. The texts of his sermons, not least his series upon the words of St John the Baptist in the closing verses of St John's Gospel, chapter 3, concern the doctrine of Justification by Faith. During this time also he conceived and developed his best-known work, A Chaine of Scripture Chronologie, which constructed a chronology of the history of the world, in seven periods down to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in 3968 Anno Mundi.[9] Although not published until 1659 in London, the Epistle to Allen's book by William Greenhill (as quoted by Cotton Mather) states: "This work having had its conception in a remote corner of the world, it was latent in his closet, the greatest part of seven years... and it had still been suppressed, had not the author been pressed, and charged with hiding of a talent in a napkin, by... [Mr. John Cotton]." (John Cotton died in 1652[10]). Greenhill remarks that its author, wearied with controversy, was glad to leave others to "dispute" while he should "compute": like (he says with a flourish), malle se computare quam disputare.[11] By his own introduction Allen acknowledged that he owed much to other scholars, but declined to share their names with his readers.[12] However, a copy preserved in the New England Library (Thomas Prince Collection, Boston Public Library) has the names of the authorities from whom he quoted written in his own hand.[13]

Return to Old England

Allen's wife Anne died in or soon after 1651. In that year he returned to Norwich in Old England, where he found a ministry as "preacher of the city" in St. George's parish. (He was not the rector of St. George's, Norwich.) On his return he wrote a letter (dated 8 November 1651 from Norwich) affirming the missionary work of John Eliot and Thomas Mayhew, jnr., as they had themselves told him of it, in preaching the gospel among the Native Americans. Allen had not had the strength to follow that calling himself.[14]

In England Allen remarried, to the widow of Robert Sedgwick.[15] He was pastor of the congregational church in Norwich from 1657, but was ejected following the Act of Uniformity 1662. After this he preached there whenever opportunity arose. John Cromwell succeeded him as pastor, and Cromwell's successor, Martin Fynch, who knew Allen, gave a character of him in his preface dated 1674 to a volume of Allen's sermons. He calls him a "burning and shining light":

"he was an excellent preacher, plain and powerful in his doctrine, and though he was a learned man, yet he preached without all ostentation, he did not confound his hearers with obscure terms and fantastical expressions, but endeavoured to set forth the Truths of God in the most plain and convincing way to the consciences of men... Another thing that I would mention of this worthy man was his marvellous condescension in private discourses to his brethren in the ministry, who were much inferiour to him in age and gifts, not standing on his own great worth, never exalting himself, but preferring them above himself, hearing their judgements in any matter with as great reverence and respect as if they had been his superiors. Surely his humility was extraordinary, and a notable example to all that knew him."
Fynch added:
"As he was a Scribe instructed to the Kingdom of God in all points of the doctrine of religion, so he was expert in all questions about Church-discipline above many; for which he had been much advantaged by living so long in New-England, and having there such intimate acquaintance with those famous men Mr Bulkly, Mr Hooker, Mr Cotton, Mr Shephard, and others there, who lived in his heart when they were dead, and he delighted to speak, and to relate some remarkable passages of them."[16]

Thomas Allen died on 21 September 1673. Fynch published a volume of his sermons in 1676, and a further collection in 1683.

Writings

As editor:

As author:

References

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. E. Calamy, ed. S. Palmer, The Nonconformist's Memorial, 2nd Edition, 3 vols (Button and Son and T. Hurst, London 1803), III, pp. 11-12 (Google).
  2. M.R. Bell, 'Allen, Thomas (1608-1673), clergyman and ejected minister', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
  3. Not rector: Clergy of the Church of England database shows Edmund Wythe installed as rector in 1633, CCEd Appointment Record ID: 229083.
  4. Venn, Alumni Cantabrigienses Part I vol. 1 (Cambridge University Press, 1922), p. 19 (Internet Archive
  5. For chronology, see S. Sewall, 'Congregational Churches and Ministers in Middlesex County, Ms.: Appendix (continued)', in The American Quarterly Register XIII (August 1840), pp. 37-57, at p. 44 (Google).
  6. J.A. Vinton, The Symmes Memorial: A Biographical Sketch of Rev. Zechariah Symmes (David Clapp & Son, Boston 1873), pp. 1-17, at p. 5.
  7. J. Savage, A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, 4 Vols. (Little, Brown & Co., Boston 1860), I, pp. 36-37 (Internet Archive).
  8. R. Frothingham, The History of Charlestown, Massachusetts (Charles C. Little & James Brown, Boston 1845), p. 75, note 4 (Internet Archive).
  9. P.W. Jackson, The Chronologers' Quest: Episodes in the Search for the Age of the Earth (Cambridge University Press 2006), p. 18 (Google).
  10. It is unclear whether the identification of Mr Allen's Jehoiadah as John Cotton is in Greenhill's words or Mather's.
  11. Quoted in extenso in C. Mather, 'The Life of Mr Thomas Allen', in Magnalia Christi Americana: Or, The Ecclesiastical History of New England (Book III Chapter II), First American Edition, 2 Vols (Silas Andrus, Boston 1820), I, pp. 537-38 (Google).
  12. 'Cracking the foundations: Biblical criticism and the Newtonian synthesis', in D.S. Katz,God's Last Words: Reading the English Bible from the Reformation to Fundamentalism (Yale University Press, New Haven and London 2004), pp. 74-115, at pp. 78-79 (Google).
  13. W. Allen, An American Biographical and Historical Dictionary, 2nd Edition (William Hyde & Co., Boston 1832), p. 19 (Google).
  14. 'Letter of Thomas Allen', in Henry Whitfield, Strength out of Weakness. Or, A Glorious Manifestation of the Further Progresse of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New-England (London: Printed by M. Symmons for John Blague and Samuel Howes and are to be sold that their Shop in Popes Head Alley, 1652). Reprint for Joseph Sabin, New York 1865, pp. 54-57 (Hathi Trust).
  15. Frothingham, The History of Charlestown, Massachusetts, pp. 133-34, note 2 (Internet Archive).
  16. Fynch, 'To the reader', in The Way of the Spirit in Bringing Souls to Christ (1676), pp. 11-16 (Google).
  17. Full text at Umich/eebo (Reserved - Login only). Thomas Allen's Epistle is cited in Jonathan Mitchell's 'Preface to the Christian Reader' in Propositions concerning the subject of baptism and consociation of churches, collected and confirmed out of the word of God, by a synod of elders and messengers of the churches in Massachusetts-Colony in New England. Assembled at Boston, ... in the year 1662 (Printed by S.G. [i.e., Samuel Green] for Hezekiah Usher at Boston in New-England, Cambridge Mass., 1662). Page view at Internet Archive (open).
  18. T. Allen, A Chain of Scripture Chronology: from the Creation of the World to the Death of Jesus Christ. In VII. periods. Viz. from the Creation to the Flood. Flood to the promise. Promise to the Law. Law to the Temple. Temple to the captivity in Babylon. Captivity to the return. Return to the death of Christ (London : Printed by Tho. Roycroft, and are to be sold by Francis Tyton at the Three Daggers in Fleetstreet, and Nath. Ekins at the Gun in Pauls Church-yard, 1659).
  19. Full view (page views) at Google. (open). Full text at Umich/eebo (Reserved - Login only).
  20. The Way of the Spirit (London 1676), at pp. 221-278 (Google).
  21. The Call of Christ unto Thirsty Sinners, to come to him and drink of the waters of life. As it was preached by that holy man of God, and faithful servant of Christ, Mr. Thomas Allen, late Pastor of a church in the city of Norwich, and sometimes teacher of the church of Christ at Charlestown in New-England. (Boston, in N.E.: Re-printed by T. Green, for Nicholas Buttolph, 1705). Full text at Umich/evans tcp (open).
  22. The Glory of Christ Set Forth in several sermons from John III. 34, 35, 36 and V. 25 : and The Necessity of Faith in order to pleasing God, from Hebrews XI.6. by Mr. Thomas Allen, late pastor of a church in the city of Norwich (London: Printed by A.M. and R.R. for Edward Giles, bookseller in Norwich, near the Market-place, 1683). Text at Umich/eebo (Reserved - Login only).
  23. F. Sypher, 'The "Dayly Obseruation" of an Impassioned Puritan: A Seventeenth Century Shorthand Diary Attributed to Deputy-Governor Francis Willoughby of Massachusetts', Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society New Series 91 (1981), pp. 92-107, at pp. 93-95.