THOMAS POTTER:
A FRIEND TO STRANGERS AND OFTEN A STRANGER TO US TODAY
Rev. Dr. John C. Morgan
Rev. Dr. John C. Morgan,
a writer whose book on pietist Universalism, The Devotional Heart, was
published by Skinner House Books. John lives with his family in
Reading, PA,
and serves as minister to the Berks County UU congregation He is being
assisted in his research by Don Carter, Carolyn Maher, Nelson Simonson,
Swarthmore College Library
and Connecticut College.
It could be argued that nowhere in Universalist history are we
given
such a story of faith as that of Thomas Potter, an illiterate farmer
who
built a chapel in l760 in the New Jersey woods for a Universalist
preacher.
Although we say we don't believe in miracles, the meeting of Rev. John
Murray, fleeing England to lose himself in the new world, and Potter,
sure
that God had sent this preacher of Universalism to give a sermon in his
chapel, is about as close to a "miracle" as any in the Bible. I might
use
the word "synchronicity" to describe this meeting. ("Synchronicity" was
first
coined by Carl Jung to describe meaningful events that did not seem to
follow
the laws of cause and effect). Who was Thomas Potter and why was he a
Universalist many years before the "parent of American Universalism,"
Rev.
John Murray, arrived on his doorstep from England, by accident or
Providence, depending on your theological point of view?
We know something about Potter from what he said to John
Murray, as
reported in Murray's autobiography. (For more on this, see the
displays in
the Heritage Room, and the brochure "The Story of Thomas Potter and
John
Murray." What we know about Potter from Universalist historians,
chiefly
Tufts University professor Russell E. Miller, is that he was an
unlettered
mystic who had carved an estate out of the pine wilderness of New
Jersey and
built a meeting house for itinerant preachers. Miller suggests that
Potter
was a fourth-generation Quaker who became affiliated with the Baptists
after
establishing himself in what is now Ocean County, NJ, the current site
of
Murray Grove Retreat and Conference Center. Among the Baptists with
whom
Potter associated, were a group called the Rogerines, or Quaker
Baptists,
followers of one John Rogers of Rhode Island. This sect held to the
view of
Universal salvation, or, that in the end of time, all creation would be
restored or "saved." It is highly probable, too, that this
Quaker/Baptist
sect had conversed with kindred Universalist spirits in the Ephrata
Cloister
of Pennsylvania, a group with whom another early proponent of
Universalism,
Dr. George de Benneville (l703-l793) had many conversations. The
interesting proposal to make, therefore, might be that Rev. John
Murray,
honored as the "parent of Universalism in America," was more a family
member
than originator, and the family with German, not English
roots--Pietists with
a conviction of Universalism, settlers from Rhode Island and
Pennsylvania.
As our research continues, some new light is being thrown on
this
earliest of Universalist believers. Thomas Potter was born December
l8, l689
in Monmouth, New Jersey. His parents were Ephraim Potter and Sarah
Brown,
from whom he inherited the land. (The whole area initially had been
part of
the land purchased by Quaker William Penn from Native Americans).
Potter
probably had contact in l744 with missionaries from the Ephrata
Cloister in
Pennsylvania, Universalists themselves, and founded by a German Baptist
named
Conrad Weisel. Although no references have been found yet to connect
Potter
with de Benneville, we do know that de Benneville went on missionary
journeys
with the people from the Cloister, and it would not be surprising had
he gone
and visited Potter. Talk about synchronicities!
It seems Potter was strongly influenced by both Baptists and Quakers.
The
original meetinghouse, Murray reports, was built very much like a
Quaker
meetinghouse--pews and no high pulpit, but one of crude lumber and
lower,
closer to the congregants. The chapel was left to John Murray after
Potter
died; the will, dated May 11, l777, stipulates that the church should
be open
to all denominations for the worship of God. In l809 the lot was sold
to
Methodists for $120. In l84l, a new chapel was built for $703.70, and
had a
circuit riding Methodist minister for services. (Interesting, too,
because we
know that John Murray was influenced by the founders of Methodism, John
and
Charles Wesley).
Some of the words Murray uses to describe Potter are ones worth
pondering today as we wonder what remains of the Universalist faith we
have
inherited, but often forgotten:
...He had unbounded benevolence,
...was a friend to strangers
...and a feeling, faithful man
...whose hospitable doors were open to everyone,
...and whose heart was devoted to God....
The Story of Thomas Potter and John Murray
The Murray Grove Story
|