Thomas Shepard

Thomas Shepard (1605-1649) was an American Puritan minister and a significant figure in early colonial New England.

Shepard was raised in England. His devout mother died when he was four and he lived a difficult life under his stepmother. His father died when he reached ten, at which point he lived with his grandparents and later an older brother, whom he held in high and grateful regard. A schoolmaster ignited in him a scholarly interest, which ultimately led to entry into Emmanuel College in Cambridge University at the age of fifteen. He accounts in his autobiography that he lived a dissatisfied and dissolute life, which led him to pray out in a nearby field, at which point he underwent the beginnings of a conversion experience.

He become a minister whose sermons and Puritan ways drew the ire of Church of England Archbishop William Laud, and he was forbidden to preach. Following the death of his eldest son, he left England in 1635 with wife and younger son on a difficult voyage for Massachusetts in colonial America. His wife died thereafter, as did his second wife and further children, though he framed these experiences, if not without difficulty, into the perspective of his theology.

Shepard was regarded as one of the foremost Puritan ministers of his day, esteemed in the company of individuals like Increase Mather and John Cotton. He took special interest in Puritan ministry to the Massachusetts Native Americans. His written legacy includes an autobiography and numerous sermons, which in some measure of contrast with others of his day, tended to accent God as an accessible and welcoming figure in the individual life. Today a plaque at Harvard University records, in the words of Cotton Mather, that it was in consideration of the salutary effect of Shepard's ministry that the College ultimately came to be placed in "Newtowne", known today as Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Print references

  • God's Plot: Puritan Spirituality in Thomas Shepard's Cambridge (McGiffert, Ed.) ISBN 0870239260
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