John Winthrop’s “City Upon A Hill”, described the mission and vision to start a “New England”, which became known as the United States of America. John Winthrop believed a perfect society could exist in a perfect city where everyone worshiped and worked together in harmony. He envisioned a community so closely woven together that everyone was equally important to the future of the city. A city where a purer form of Christianity would exist, which would provide a moral and religious show for the rest of the world to see. Quoting the New Testament, (Matthew 5:14) John Winthrop warned the people they would be totally exposed for the entire world to see, as a “city upon a hill.”
Not everyone agreed with John Winthrop’s vision. Thomas Jefferson, for example, did not have the same view as Winthrop. Jefferson looked at Winthrop’s views as radically idealistic and knew he was up against enormous odds. Thomas Jefferson and John Winthrop came from very different backgrounds. Jefferson was considered to be a Deist and believed “God created the world, but pretty much left it up to man to create the world he lives in.” (Mayhall, 2005) Jefferson viewed cities to be evil and full of greed. Thomas Jefferson felt that cities were breeding grounds for plagues and diseases and would likely cause epidemics.
Winthrop encouraged others that “this land was to be a model society of Christian love meaning they should care for each other as they cared for themselves and, more specifically, there should be no poor among them.” (Holland, 2002) It was surprising to learn that Winthrop felt the natives had not made good use of their land on which they lived, and as long as the Puritans gave those that remained “sufficient for their use” they felt they can lawfully take the rest. In this situation, I feel the very thing Winthrop seeked to destroy in others, greed, in order to make his perfect city, is how he was portraying himself.
The Essay on Religious Freedom Williams Winthrop City
Tate Hamilton Dr. BeckenbaughHistory 201 September 30, 2002 Religious Freedoms or Lack There Of Religious freedom can be viewed in different ways depending on the person or persons seeking the freedom. One group may search for the freedom to practice their own religion, such as the pilgrims and the puritans. However others may view religious freedom as the right to openly practice any religion, a ...
John Winthrop’s vision to create a perfect “City Upon A Hill” at the beginning of the 19th century, has made a lasting impression on American values and a vision I feel accurately portrayed American cities. A lasting impression such that “nearly every major political candidate has invoked Winthrop’s words. The list of those on record of doing so includes Abraham Lincoln, John Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Michael Dukakis and Bill Clinton.” (Sawyer, 2004) Frances Bremer, author of “John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father” thinks the Puritan “would be very disturbed” at the twist given to his metaphor. Bremer says most upsetting would be the way the idea has been taken from a passive one using America as an example to an active one of America carrying its values into other countries.
References
Mayhall, CW. Kaplan University Instructor. May 25, 2005.
Holland, Matthew S. Thomas Jefferson on the Moral Foundations of Individual Rights. Brigham Young University: World Family Policy Forum, 2002
American Passages. English Settler’s Views of Native Americans. http://www.learner.org/amerpass/unit03/context_activ-2.html. May 26, 2005
Sawyer, Paul S. The City on the Hill. http://www.firstparish.org/sermons/2004-08-08.html. May 26, 2005
Bremer, Frances. John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father
New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.