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The years following the Great Awakening in New England saw a great
theological struggle between proponents of Calvinism and the
champions of Christian liberty, setting the stage for American
Unitarianism. The adherents of Christian liberty, who were branded
Arminians by their opponents, were contending for the liberty of
the mind and the soul to pursue truth and salvation free from prior
restraint. The Arminian movement took shape as a major,
quasi-denominational force in New England under the guidance of
particular clergymen, most notably Ebenezer Gay, minister of the
First Parish in Hingham, Massachusetts, from 1718 to 1787. Despite
his ubiquitous presence in the history of Arminianism, however, Gay
has been a historical enigma. Robert J. Wilson's purpose in this
biography is to trace Gay's long and fascinating intellectual
odyssey against the evolving social, political, and economic life
of eighteenth-century Hingham as well as the religious history of
the coastal region between Boston and Plymouth.
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