Dissertations, Theses, and Capstone Projects

Date of Degree

9-2024

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Ph.D.

Program

History

Advisor

David Waldstreicher

Committee Members

John Dixon

Sarah Covington

Jonathan Sassi

Subject Categories

Christianity | European History | History of Religion | Intellectual History | Jewish Studies | Legal History | Political History | United States History

Keywords

political Hebraism, biblical reception, Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts Bay, Puritanism, Scripture

Abstract

This dissertation argues that the Old Testament flourished in both Puritan political theory and political practice. Part I, consisting of the first three chapters, traces the intellectual history of Mosaic law through a chronological and regional structure. Chapter 1 begins in the Elizabethan era, when Puritans used the Old Testament to challenge the status quo of church and state. Chapter 2 continues the narrative through early Stuart and Interregnum England, positing that Plymouth Colony drew deeply on Hebraic sources for a variety of political issues. Chapter 3 turns to Massachusetts, focusing on the evolution of political Hebraism in the colony through the career of clergyman John Cotton, whose school of thought had a broad influence throughout the Atlantic world.

Part II, the final three chapters, proceeds thematically by considering case studies of Hebraic political practice in Puritan New England. Chapter 4 considers the enforcement of Sabbath laws, tracing the development of Sabbatarian doctrine from Elizabethan England through its transmission to New England, where colonists uniquely emphasized its judicially binding nature. Chapter 5 examines Puritan prosecution of adultery laws, showing how attempts to resurrect the Mosaic death penalty for adultery radically departed from medieval Catholic and early modern English precedent. Finally, Chapter 6 addresses foreign policy on the North American continent, demonstrating that New England Puritans invoked Israelite models of military law and diplomacy in navigating relations with neighboring natives and French Canadians. Puritan political Hebraism confronted a variety of challenges, including theological difficulties, interpretive ambiguities, and practical issues. Studying both the theory and practice of this endeavor sheds new light on the nature of early New England.

This work is embargoed and will be available for download on Wednesday, September 30, 2026

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