Pastoral Letter excerpted from “Good Fetch’d Out of Evil”

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From the collections of PVMA • Digital image © Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Assoc. • Image use information


About this item

It proved difficult for New England Puritans to sustain the pitch of spiritual emotion and zeal Calvinism demanded in the absence of the religious persecution in which that faith had been forged. Colonial conflicts with the French and Indigneous people provided a new source for Puritan martyrs and a new literary genre: the captivity narrative. The Reverend Cotton Mather (1662-1727) of Boston collected and published three of these narratives in 1706 under the title, Good Fetch’d Out of Evil. Among these documents was “A Pastoral Letter” by the Reverend John Williams (1664-1729) of Deerfield, Massachusetts. French and Native American attackers took Williams to Canada, along with over one hundred other residents following a raid on the town in 1704. Williams wrote this letter to a group of freed captives returning to New England. He admonished his parishioners to use their ordeal to strengthen their faith.

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Details

Item typeBooks
Booklet – Sermon
AuthorWilliams, Reverend John
PublisherBenjamin Green
Date1706
PlaceDeerfield, Massachusetts; Boston, Massachusetts
TopicCaptives, Captivity
Religion, Church, Meetings & Revivals
EraColonial settlement, 1620–1762
EventDeerfield Raid. February 29, 1704
MaterialPaper
Process/FormatPrinting
Dimension detailsProcess Material: printed paper, ink Height: 5.75 in Width: 3.75 in
Catalog #L99.016
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Williams, Reverend John. [Pastoral Letter excerpted from “Good Fetch’d Out of Evil”.] Benjamin Green, 1706. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, American Centuries. https://americancenturies.org/collection/l99-016/. Accessed on December 3, 2024.

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