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Henry Alline (pronounced Allen) (June 14, 1748 – February 2, 1784) was a minister, evangelist, and writer who became known as "the Apostle of Nova Scotia." Born at
Newport, Rhode Island Newport is an American seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, and northeast of New Yor ...
. He became a
New England Planter The New England Planters were settlers from the New England colonies who responded to invitations by the lieutenant governor (and subsequently governor) of Nova Scotia, Charles Lawrence, to settle lands left vacant by the Bay of Fundy Campaign (1 ...
and served as an itinerant preacher throughout Maritime Canada and Northeastern
New England New England is a region comprising six states in the Northeastern United States: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. It is bordered by the state of New York to the west and by the Canadian provinces ...
from 1776 to 1784. His ministry coincided with the
Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious revival during the early 19th century in the United States. The Second Great Awakening, which spread religion through revivals and emotional preaching, sparked a number of reform movements. R ...
, and he became the leader of the New Light movement in the Maritimes. Later in life, he caught the attention of renowned theologian
John Wesley John Wesley (; 2 March 1791) was an English cleric, theologian, and evangelist who was a leader of a revival movement within the Church of England known as Methodism. The societies he founded became the dominant form of the independent Meth ...
. Alline is
Canada Canada is a country in North America. Its ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, covering over , making it the world's second-largest country by to ...
's most prolific 18th-century writer. His journal is considered a classic of North American spiritualism, and he is Canada's first great Protestant and one of its most important theological writers. He died at 35 and is buried at
North Hampton, New Hampshire North Hampton is a town in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 4,538 at the 2020 census. While the majority of the town is inland, North Hampton includes a part of New Hampshire's limited Atlantic seacoast. Histor ...
.


Historical context

The early 1740s to 1784 was a period struggle for hegemony of North America by Britain, significant religious upheaval in northeastern North America, and ultimately revolution in the Thirteen Colonies.


War and revolution

Just prior to Alline's birth, the
War of the Austrian Succession The War of the Austrian Succession () was a European conflict that took place between 1740 and 1748. Fought primarily in Central Europe, the Austrian Netherlands, Italy, the Atlantic and Mediterranean, related conflicts included King George ...
had just come to a close with the signing of the
Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle (1748) The 1748 Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, sometimes called the Treaty of Aachen, ended the War of the Austrian Succession, following a congress assembled on 24 April 1748 at the Free Imperial City of Aachen. The two main antagonists in the war, B ...
. Northeastern North America had been pulled into the conflict by
King George's War King George's War (1744–1748) is the name given to the military operations in North America that formed part of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748). It was the third of the four French and Indian Wars. It took place primarily in t ...
and achieved a significant victory with the capture of the
Fortress of Louisbourg The Fortress of Louisbourg (french: Forteresse de Louisbourg) is a National Historic Site and the location of a one-quarter partial reconstruction of an 18th-century French fortress at Louisbourg on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Its two siege ...
in 1745, only to have it returned to France during treaty negotiations, to the chagrin of New England. Over the next seven years, an uneasy peace rested between Britain and France. By the mid-1750s, conflict broke out again resulting in the
Seven Years' War The Seven Years' War (1756–1763) was a global conflict that involved most of the European Great Powers, and was fought primarily in Europe, the Americas, and Asia-Pacific. Other concurrent conflicts include the French and Indian War (1754 ...
. Nova Scotia's population was decimated by the
expulsion of the Acadians The Expulsion of the Acadians, also known as the Great Upheaval, the Great Expulsion, the Great Deportation, and the Deportation of the Acadians (french: Le Grand Dérangement or ), was the forced removal, by the British, of the Acadian peo ...
. With the removal of the common enemy, France, a North American paradigm shift occurred in the political relationship between the British metropole and its New World colonies. The deteriorating relationship, in due course, resulted in the
American Declaration of Independence The United States Declaration of Independence, formally The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen States of America, is the pronouncement and founding document adopted by the Second Continental Congress meeting at Pennsylvania State House ( ...
and the American Revolutionary War.


Religious upheaval

Almost coinciding with these aforementioned periods of war was the rise of the First and Second Great Awakening religious revivals. The
First Great Awakening The First Great Awakening (sometimes Great Awakening) or the Evangelical Revival was a series of Christian revivals that swept Britain and its thirteen North American colonies in the 1730s and 1740s. The revival movement permanently affecte ...
period occurred over the 20 years ending in 1750. With its initial roots in England it spread to and flourished in the Thirteen Colonies. Evangelical ministers came to the fore with their sermons and teachings that elicited an emotional response, rather than intellectual. Church gatherings became more participatory and moved to a development of more-democratic churches. The Awakening, although then affecting a broad cross section of American society, had its greatest influence on church leaders, the educated and the elite. It is thought the democratizing ways of the movement influenced the populace and led them eventually to throw off their colonial shackles. As a result of the hard times of the 1760s and the early 1770s, the settlers found it difficult to put their religious life on an organized institutional basis, and since it cost money to build churches and pay ministers, the settlers were hard pressed to meet such obligations. The
Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening was a Protestant religious revival during the early 19th century in the United States. The Second Great Awakening, which spread religion through revivals and emotional preaching, sparked a number of reform movements. R ...
began in the last quarter of the 18th century, but its influence was still felt into the 1840s. (Many churches, including the
LDS Church The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, informally known as the LDS Church or Mormon Church, is a nontrinitarian Christian church that considers itself to be the restoration of the original church founded by Jesus Christ. The c ...
, developed in the later part of that period and still exist.) The second period of evangelicalism heavily influenced the middle and lower levels of society. The movement generally advocated that the individual must have a direct relationship with God and that all people can be saved. For people living in New England, that was counter to their
Calvinism Calvinism (also called the Reformed Tradition, Reformed Protestantism, Reformed Christianity, or simply Reformed) is a major branch of Protestantism that follows the theological tradition and forms of Christian practice set down by John C ...
whose idea is that only a preordained elected few would be saved. The Awakening's new ideas caused the new born faithful (New Lights) to shun vices and evil pastimes to live more personally in the Christian ethic.


Early life

He was born in Newport, Rhode Island, the second child of eight, to William Alline and Rebeccah Clark. There, he lived and attended school until the age of twelve. By his own account, he was an advanced student. His religious education began by receiving instruction at school, in the church, and at home. At about the age of eight he appears to have had his first religious experience but was then not fully aware of its nature. The event placed him in a state of terror and drove him to seek out a fuller understanding of Christian theology. After the deportation of the Acadians, Nova Scotia's fine farmlands in the
Bay of Fundy The Bay of Fundy (french: Baie de Fundy) is a bay between the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, with a small portion touching the U.S. state of Maine. It is an arm of the Gulf of Maine. Its extremely high tidal range is t ...
region remained empty, and in an effort to repopulate the country, the British government offered the recently-vacated lands in grant to Protestants who wished to move to the colony. William Alline took up the offer, arrived in the fall of 1760, and took up his land grant in Falmouth, Nova Scotia. With his family's move, Henry's formal education came to an end. Life in the new land was hard and uncertain. He had left behind a vibrant town and warm comfortable home to replace it with a tent and food shortages. The new Planter townships lacked churches, schools, and other infrastructure familiar in the towns that they had left behind in New England. The townships remained isolated and connected to the outside world only by narrow paths through the forest and ships along the coast. For the first few years, as Britain and France remained at war, threats of attack by France's allies, the
Mi'kmaq The Mi'kmaq (also ''Mi'gmaq'', ''Lnu'', ''Miꞌkmaw'' or ''Miꞌgmaw''; ; ) are a First Nations people of the Northeastern Woodlands, indigenous to the areas of Canada's Atlantic Provinces and the Gaspé Peninsula of Quebec as well as the no ...
, remained a possibility. The government in Halifax also soon began to break its promises. The Planters had initially been promised that their township governance model would be allowed in the new colony, but it was soon overturned for a centralized governance model, based in Halifax. That created a minor crisis but was overshadowed by the need to build new homes and farms to support the Planters' families. Town assemblies of a sort continued until 1770, when they were finally forbidden because of the sympathetic position emanating from the gatherings for the rebels to the south. Now a young man, Alline is likely to have participated in the assemblies. That was one of the factors that would lead the Planters to question where their loyalties lay: to the British or to their brethren in the Thirteen Colonies. Alline appears to have been a product of his time over until 1776. He lived and worked on the family farm. As his siblings came to maturity they moved to their own farms, but he stayed on, supported his parents, and never married. As the second of only two sons, that was his obligation. In his journal, he reported participating in the favourite pastime of the youths of the day of frolicking, which included dancing, partying, and drinking. Alline admitted to being one of the ringleaders of the raucous activities. Despite his leadership in the frolicks, he wrestled with his participation and felt it was perhaps a debauched life and contrary to finding a path to a more godly life: "I felt guilty as ever, and sometimes could not close my eyes for hours after I had got home to my bed, on account of the guilt I had contracted the evening before. O what snares were these frolicks and young company to my soul, and had God not been more merciful to me than I was to myself, they would have proved my fatal and irrevocable ruin." Alline's second religious experience came when he was about 20. He experienced a vision of being "surrounded by an uncommon light; it seemed like a blaze of fire; I thought it out shone the sun at noon day...." He further noted, "The first conception I had was that the great day of judgment was come...." The vision remained over him for some time; "when I lifted my eyes, I saw, to my unspeakable satisfaction, that it was not what I expected: the day was not really come, therefore I had an opportunity of repentance...." Despite his second religious experience, he continued to backslide into his old ways but all the time continued to struggle with his predicament. Although Alline's formal education came to an end at the age of 12, his thirst for knowledge clearly continued. He was self-taught, and when he could find texts, he studied them thoroughly. His reading was extensive and included works by William Law, John Fletcher, Edward Young, John Milton, Alexander Pope, John Pomfret, Isaac Watts, Martin Luther, John Bunyan, John Edwards, Increase and Samuel Mather, and perhaps even Jacob Boehme. His studies had brought him to a point that he "had read, studied and disputed too much, that I had acquired a great theory of religion...." At 28 he had his third religious experience, the one that would turn his life around and propel him into his evangelical ministry. Unlike the previous experiences, which instilled terror within his soul, thie new experience felt that "his redeeming love broke into my soul with repeated scriptures with such power, that my whole soul seemed to be melted down with love". He now became committed to preaching the gospel.


Ministry

Alline immediately revealed his rebirth experience to his parents, which they initially welcomed. With his announcement of his need and desire to spread the gospel, he came into conflict with them. Alline's parents were then in the sunset of their lives and depended on Henry's management of the family farm for their welfare. More importantly, however, they and Alline recognized that under the traditional Congregational churches, only appropriately-educated and ordained ministers were eligible to preach. That weighed heavily on Alline, who in short order attempted to sail to New England to seek the appropriate education and training. However, it was on the eve of the American Revolution, and the violent convulsions that began to occur in New England precluded his departure from Nova Scotia. Despite his misgivings he began preaching in Falmouth, particularly after his neighbors heard that he had become a New Light and sought his advice and asked him to lead them in prayer. That again brought him at odds with his parents, who were known to walk out of churches in which he began to preach. In 1776 he began preaching at Newport, the township adjacent to Falmouth. His reputation as a gifted spiritual speaker spread, and soon, crowds were flocking to Falmouth to hear him. The same year, both Falmouth and Newport formed churches with his assistance, were anti-Calvinist in nature and generally rejected, traditional Congregationalism. By 1777, Alline finally broke from his parents to pursue his evangelical ministry on a full-time basis. In 1778 the Horton and Cornwallis Townships sought his assistance to establish a Baptist church, which became the first Baptist Church in Canada. The following year, the church, along with the Falmouth and Newport New Light churches, ordained him. That act removed one of Alline's perceived impediments to his right to preach. Despite Alline's assistance in establishing the Horton/Cornwallis Baptist Church, a dispute concerning the proper mode of baptism denied him the fellowship. Until 1783, Alline travelled extensively throughout the Planter-settled areas of Nova Scotia, the Saint John River Valley, and the Chignecto area. His effort to reach the people was Herculean by travelling mostly by foot and at times on horseback to reach every possible hamlet. His ministry was hugely successful and drew the attention and grudging admiration of even those who opposed him like Simeon Perkins of Liverpool, who stated, "Never did I behold Such an Appearance of the Spirit of God moving upon the people.... Since the time of the Great Religious Stir in New England many years ago." By 1783, even Alline's opponents acknowledged that the whole colony outside of Halifax had come under his revivalist influence. Despite his success, he was not accepted by all those he encountered. Opposition rose against him from those who thought he was a destabilizing factor to the day's social order: primarily government representatives in Halifax and the Anglican clergy that was fully integrated into the governmental power structure. Ministers of various other Protestant sects also opposed him on theological grounds, the New Light's jettisoning of an educated and "properly"-ordained ministry, and assuredly the loss of parishioners that eroded both tithing flows and the clergy's status in their community's hierarchy. A significant result of the revival was that it stimulated much more frequent contact among settlements, as Alline travelled to places that none had gone before. Throughout that time, Alline established seven additional churches and composed his many hymns, pamphlets, sermons, personal journal, and two major theological works. The frantic pace that Alline imposed upon himself weakened his health and allowed the rapid advance of
tuberculosis Tuberculosis (TB) is an infectious disease usually caused by '' Mycobacterium tuberculosis'' (MTB) bacteria. Tuberculosis generally affects the lungs, but it can also affect other parts of the body. Most infections show no symptoms, ...
. Even so, he decided to travel to New England in 1783 to spread his New Light ideas to his former brethren. His ministry there lasted until he finally succumbed to his illness in February 1784.


Death

Alline fell mortally ill the last week of January 1784 while he was preaching at North Hampton, New Hampshire. The Reverend David McClure, a Calvinist minister, and his family took him into their home and provided him with whatever comforts they could extend to a dying man. On February 2, he died of complications arising from tuberculosis. McClure and his Church arranged for Alline's burial in their own church burying ground. The epitaph they had cut into his tombstone reads, "He was a burning and shining Light, and was justly esteemed the apostle of Nova Scotia."


Theology

Alline's New Light ideas moved away from but did not fully abandon its Congregationalist antecedents. Although he was anti-Calvinist on many points, he sought a renewal of the belief by returning it to the early church. Congregationalism had by the early 18th century become the established religion of New England, enjoyed its position and perks within society, and generally hardened its position with regard to the preordained few. It "had lost its lay orientation and spiritual radicalism." The church needed to be returned to the people and so Alline moved to find the church's earlier purer form. He rejected the power structures in the church, its idea of predestination, and many of its traditions and ceremonial practices. He may have been "the first North American evangelical to argue the case against predestination." The new teaching revealed that all people have free will and so can be reborn into a personal relationship with God. He portrayed an eternally-loving God, who was waiting for those chose to take the right path. Those ideas were heavily influenced by earlier writers such as William Law. Alline wrote and espoused many sound ideas, but others moved into the realm of mysticism, and some were simply convoluted. He taught that the souls of all humankind are emanations from the same spirit and that the spirits and the angels had lived in a paradise with God. Furthermore, Adam and Eve existed as one combined spirit. It was after the fall from heaven that Adam and humanity took on corporeal form and, as a group, participated in original sin. He further stated that all time (past, present, and future), occur instantaneously and that at the time of judgement, all will remember their participation in the act of original sin.
John Wesley John Wesley (; 2 March 1791) was an English cleric, theologian, and evangelist who was a leader of a revival movement within the Church of England known as Methodism. The societies he founded became the dominant form of the independent Meth ...
was sent Alline's 'Two Mites Cast into the Offering of God, for the Benefit of Mankind' by the Nova Scotia Methodist leader
William Black William is a male given name of Germanic origin.Hanks, Hardcastle and Hodges, ''Oxford Dictionary of First Names'', Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, , p. 276. It became very popular in the English language after the Norman conquest of Eng ...
. Wesley concluded that Alline theology contained both "gold and dross" and, with respect to Alline's last section of 'Mites' dealing with metaphysical mysticism, "is very far from being a man of sound understanding; but he has been dabbling in Mystical writers, in matters which are too high for him, far above his comprehension. I dare not waste my time upon such miserable jargon." Some of the success of Alline's theology clearly arose from his charismatic personality and oratorical gift, which drew people to his cause. He was also able to speak to the Planter populace's spiritual and political lives. The Planters had fallen into a melancholy by their isolation on a colonial frontier and their marginalization in the conflict arising in Nova Scotia's sister colonies. Their Calvinism was based on a fear of God and damnation, which could only create anxiety for most believers, as they would never achieve salvation since only the few were preordained to achieve reunion with God. Few preachers were available to the Planters. Alline's very own township had not been able to attract a minister into its midst. The lack of guidance must have left the Planters in a spiritual vacuum. The troubles in the Thirteen Colonies further compounded the Planters confusion and fellings of aimlessness and left them in an awkward position with respect to both their former neighbours in New England and with the British authorities in Halifax. With Alline's theology based on the eternal love of God and the ability of all people, male or female, high- or low-born, to achieve salvation, a path forward was perhaps available. That new radical idea instilled in the Planters a new feeling of identity and security. It pointed the way out of their spiritual malaise and showed them a path to achieve a nonconformist loyalty to the British authority but still be viewed by their New England neighbours as standing apart from the British. By default, they had found a neutrality of sorts and also began the process of creating a Maritime identity.


Legacy

Though Alline made many converts to his religious, ideas the Allinites splintered into many competing Newlight sects after his death, such as Pansonites, Chipmanites, Kinsmanites, Blackites, Welshites, Hammonites, Palmerites, Brookites, Pearlyites, and Burpeites, and a few even turned to the
Anabaptism Anabaptism (from Neo-Latin , from the Greek : 're-' and 'baptism', german: Täufer, earlier also )Since the middle of the 20th century, the German-speaking world no longer uses the term (translation: "Re-baptizers"), considering it biased. ...
. Most of the sects disappeared as quickly as they appeared, with the followers eventually merging with Wesleyan or Congregationalist churches or helping to establish two major Baptist denominations in the Maritime region. That legacy has made the region the Baptist bastion of Canada. In America, his theology was a key generative factor in the birth of New England's
Free Will Baptist Free Will Baptists are a group of General Baptist denominations of Christianity that teach free grace, free salvation and free will. The movement can be traced back to the 1600s with the development of General Baptism in England. Its formal est ...
churches. Alline is Canada's most prolific 18th-century writer, publishing 487 hymns and spiritual songs, three sermons, many pamphlets, and two major theological works: ''Two Mites Cast into the Offering of God, for the Benefit of Mankind'' and ''A Court for the Trial of the Anti-Traditionalist'' Hi
Journal
was published posthumously and has now taken its place as one of the classics of North American spiritualism and Christian mysticism. Gordon Stewart has written that in spite of being voluminous, Alline's journal is of limited utility since "his profuse and repetitive style often becomes little more than a list of the places he visited and a continual restatement of his spiritual travails.". By contrast, Jamie S. Scott argues that the travels recounted in the journal reflect the travails of the author's spiritual journey: "Embracing both psychological and theological readings," Scott writes, "The Life and Journal testifies to a lifelong struggle to transform both personal and public conditions of despair into conditions of harmony and hope."Scott, Jamie S. “‘Travels of My Soul’: Henry Alline’s Autobiography.” Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d’études canadiennes 18.2 (Summer, 1983), p. 90. DOI: 10.3138/jcs.18.2.70.


See also

* Rev.
Freeborn Garrettson Freeborn Garrettson (August 15, 1752 – September 26, 1827) was an American clergyman, and one of the first American-born Methodist preachers. He entered the Methodist ministry in 1775 and travelled extensively to evangelize in several states. ...
* Rev. John Payzant


Further reading


''Henry Alline: Problems of Approach and Reading the Hymns as Poetry.''
by Thomas Vincent, Department of English, Royal Military College, Kingston. * Stewart, Gordon.
Documents Relating to the Great Awakening in Nova Scotia, 1760-1791
'. Toronto: Champlain Society Publications, 1982. * Scott, Jamie S. “‘Travels of My Soul’: Henry Alline’s Autobiography.” Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue d’études canadiennes 18.2 (Summer, 1983), pp. 70-90. DOI: 10.3138/jcs.18.2.70


References


Bibliography

* * * * * *


External links


The Life and Journal of the Rev. Mr. Henry Alline
Boston: Gilbert & Dean, 1806. * } * * Julian, John (June, 1907). A Dictionary of Hymnology. London: John Murray *

{{DEFAULTSORT:Allen, Henry 1748 births 1784 deaths Congregationalist writers Canadian Congregationalist ministers Canadian evangelicals New England Planters who settled in Nova Scotia