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Originally published in 1887, The Pioneer Preacher is a lively
account of a Congregationalist minister's attempts to lead a
sin-free existence on the American frontier. Sherlock Bristol
(1815-1906) was a California gold miner, wagon train captain,
Wisconsin farmer, Idaho rancher, Indian fighter, abolitionist, and
Oberlin-trained clergyman. While serving a series of churches in
the East, he periodically cured himself of "nervous disorders" by
journeying out West. He only broke the Sabbath once---during an
Indian attack! Reflecting in his memoirs the exploits of Daniel
Boone and Davy Crockett, Bristol delights in recounting his
adventures, ecclesiastical or otherwise. He vividly recalls his
redemption in the wilderness where he enjoyed having "little
opportunity for reading books or mental exercise, and an abundance
of calls for muscular employment." Greatly influenced by the
evangelist Charles G. Finney at Oberlin, Bristol tried to teach
miners and frontiersmen the principles of revivalism,
postmillennialism, and perfectionism. In The Pioneer Preacher he
shares his own disputatious views on abolition, American Indians,
temperance, and other issues of his day.
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