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CHARLES CHAUNCY (1592-1672)

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 19 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES CHAUNCY (1592-1672)  , president of Harvard College, was born at Yardley-Bury, Hertfordshire, England, in November 1592, and was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, of which he became a
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fellow . He was in turn vicar at
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Ware, Hertfordshire (1627–1633), and at Marston St Lawrence, Northamptonshire (1633–1637) . Refusing to observe the ecclesiastical regulations of Archbishop Laud, he was brought before the court of high commission in 1629, and again in 1634, when, for opposing the placing of a
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rail around the communion table, he was suspended and imprisoned . His formal recantation in
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February 1637 caused him lasting self-reproach and humiliation . In 1637 he emigrated to
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America, and from 1638 until 1641 was an associate pastor at Plymouth, where, however, his advocacy of the
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baptism of infants by immersion caused dissatisfaction . He was the pastor at Scituate, Massachusetts, from 1641 until 1654, and from 1654 until his
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death was president of Harvard College, as the successor of the first president Henry
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Dunster (c . 1612–1659) . He died on the 19th of February 1672 . By his sermons and his writings he exerted a
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great influence in colonial Massachusetts, and according to Mather was " a most incomparable scholar." His writings include: The Plain
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Doctrine of the
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Justification of a Sinner in the Sight of
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God (1659) and Antisynodalia Scripta Americana (1662) . His son, Isaac Chauncy (1632-1712), who removed to England, was a voluminous writer on theological subjects . There are
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biographical sketches of President Chauncy in Cotton Mather's Magnalia Christi Americana (
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London, 1702), and in W . C .

Fowler's Memorials of the Chauncys, including President Chauncy (Boston, 1858) . President Chauncy's great-grandson, CHARLES CHAUNCY (1705—1787), a prominent
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American theologian, was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 1st of
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January 1705, and graduated at Harvard in 1721 . In 1727 he was chosen as the colleague of Thomas Foxcroft (1697—1769) in the pastorate of the First Church of Boston, continuing as pastor of this church until his death . At the time of the " Great Awakening " of 1740—1743 and afterwards, Chauncy was the leader of the so-called " Old
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Light " party in New England, which strongly condemned the Whitefieldian revival as an outbreak of emotional extravagance . His views were ably presented in his sermon
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Enthusiasm and in his Seasonable Thoughts on the State of Religions in New England (1743), written in answer to Jonathan Edwards's Some Thoughts Concerning the
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Present Revival of Religion in New England (1742) . He also took a leading
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part in opposition to the projected establishment of an
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Anglican Episcopate in America, and before and during the American War of Independence he ardently sup-ported the whig or patriot party . Theologically he has been classed as a precursor of the New England Unitarians . He died in Boston on the loth of February 1787 . His publications include: Compleat View of Episcopacy, as Exhibited in the Fathers of the Christian Church, until the close of the Second Century (1771); Salvation of All Men, Illustrated and Vindicated as a Scripture Doctrine (1782); The Mystery Hid from Ages and Generations made manifest by the Gospel-Revelation (1783); and Five
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Dissertations on the Fall and its Consequences (1785) . See P . L . Ford's privately printed Bibliotheca Chaunciana (
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Brooklyn, N .

Y., 1884) ; and Williston

Walker's Ten 7Vew England Leaders (New York, 1901) .

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