of religion and his Christology, but with a .difference: the imitation of Christ by the believerhe told his readersmight lead to a direct experience of the Holy Spirit. For if a Christian shared the Savior's humility, if in response to afflictions he became more like Christ, he might find that his conformity will ''strangely fetch in a Light from Heaven . . .; a Light which will Revive you, Comfort you, Direct you; and not with meer Influences of Reason, but [Give me Leave to say it!] in the way of a Vital Touch , fill you with Pleasures that cannot be uttered; with Joys unspeakable and full of Glory. " 37
|
Mather did not repeat this suggestion in print for almost fifteen years and he does not seem to have developed it in the sermons he gave every week in Boston, and which remain unpublished. There was no reason for his colleagues to notice the comment; the bulk of his preaching in these years on the Spirit dealt with its operations which enabled believers to accept the MAXIMS OF PIETY. And in these manifestations, the light it gave presumably revealed nothing new to men, but rather confirmed one's fear of God, acceptance of Christ's mediation, and love of neighbors, tenets which were all part of the traditional gospel. Nothing Cotton Mather said in these sermons would have aroused his grandfather Richardthere was no hint that the Holy Spirit operated immediately and directly in the believer. Rather, all of Cotton Mather's comments, though emotional and concentrated on the passions, were quite tame; they portrayed the Spirit under Christ's tutelage affecting the faculties of man in a rational and logical manner. 38
|
But while Mather was publicly describing the Holy Spirit working in these orthodox ways, he was privately learning a great deal more from it. His Diary in the years around 1715 is filled with claims that God had given him extraordinary knowledge of the coming Kingdom. 39 This informationconveyed in rapturous interviews in the dead of nightdid apparently go beyond Scripture, at least in the knowledge Mather claimed of the return of Christ. But as enthusiastic as these encounters left him, he never quite fell into Antinomian frenzy. And yet he must have come close in the last five years of his life. At this time he publicly repented of his old views of the Quakers, saying to them in Vital Christianity 40 that "God has raised you
|
|