Part One
SOCIAL AND HISTORICAL CONTEXT
1
An Age of Wisdom, An Age of Foolishness
The Davidians, Some Forerunners, and Our Age
ROBERT S. FOGARTY
The extent to which cultic or marginal religious groups have entered the heart of the American consciousness can be grasped only by avid viewers of Hard Copy and listeners to the daily hot-line talk shows. Such shows feed on tales of exploitation, seduction, and fraud and often feature discussions about the latest âoddâ religion. The media frenzy surrounding the Waco case reached epic proportions during the standoff, and the fallout still continues. For example, a respected and award-winning television drama, Law and Order, recently devoted a full episode to a tale about a sect leader, the bombing of a federal building by an ardent devotee, and a subsequent pact suicide by members after their leader was jailed, prosecuted, found guilty, and sentenced for brainwashing his young follower into planting an explosive device that killed her (Fogarty 1993).1 Such is the stuff of contemporary understanding.
Writing in Religious Outsiders and the Making of Americans (1986, 126), R. Laurence Moore has noted: âIn one form or another, the present charges against religious âcults,â including that of brainwashing, were hurled against every new religious group organized in this country, and usually with some measure of justification. Religious enthusiasm has always been a dangerous thing. It sometimes inspires people to do noble things. With equal frequency, it does not. The religious prophet trying to lead people in a new direction is not likely to be without blemish.â
Popular interest and concern about religious sects are nothing new. When Dickens published his Tale of Two Cities in 1859 he opened it with his now famous line: âIt was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was an age of wisdom, it was an age of foolishness,â and went on to note that âspiritual revelations were conceded to England at that favored period . . . Mrs. Southcott [a prophetess] had recently attained her five and twentieth blessed birthday, . . . a prophetic guard in the Life Guards had heralded the sublime appearance by announcing arrangements were made for the swallowing up of London and Westminsterâ (Dickens 1859, 1). Dickens thought the Southcottians âfoolishâ but worthy of a place in his grand chronicle of English social life since such groups were part of the culture, not something separate from it. Later, in his In Search of White Crows (1977), Moore argued that nineteenth-century American spiritualism should be placed at the center of the American experience from 1860 to 1900 rather than on the âtable-rappingâ margins where historians had formerly placed it (Braude 1989). Such âextremeâ or alternative groups must be seen as reflecting aspects of the universe and society they live in rather than viewed merely as a thing apart, something alien. They may be in opposition to certain trends, or they may reiterate them, but they are rarely irrelevant to mainstream concerns about values and ethics.
For the record, there has been a long history of millennial expectations, prophetic utterances, and outlandish activities that have resulted in both confrontations and destructive behavior. You pick your century and you can pick your âcrazedâ prophet. Letâs start with James Naylor, that seventeenth-century Quaker enthusiast, who thought he was Jesus Christ and rode through Bristol to the hosannas of many women. Parliament (and George Fox) took a dim view of all this and the authorities branded him with the letter âBâ (for blasphemer) as a punishment and bored a hole through his tongue. Naylorâs career can serve as a touchstone for an ongoing debate about the nature of the English Revolution and the relation of Quaker enthusiasm to the âworld turned upside downâ by Cromwellian politics. Naylor became, to quote Christopher Hill, âa black shadow across memoryâ because of his meteoric rise and fall and because of the role he played within the history of Quaker enthusiasm (Hill 1972, 206). This prophet, who had fallen under the ideas of either Boehme or the Familists, suffered from what Fox called âimaginations,â and he became a Quaker leader who had ârun out,â or exhausted himself.
Naylorâs emergence in the 1650s as a prophetic leader, his scandalous behavior, his cruel punishment, and his subsequent recanting of errors have been the subject of a long and intense historical debate. George Fox tried to put distance between Naylorâs actions and âtrueâ Quaker belief, and Naylor plays in Foxâs journal (again according to Hill) âa part only slightly greater than that of Trotsky in official Soviet histories of the Russian Revolutionâ (1970, 186). Born at Ardsley near Wakefield in 1617, he was married in 1638 and served as a soldier for the Independents under Fairfax in 1643. Between 1646 and 1651 he was a quartermaster, emerging in 1651 as a prominent Quaker preacher second only to Fox in bringing in converts to the new sect. During 1656 he preached in the west of England and while in Bristol became the center of the controversy that marked him for life. For it was in Bristol that he declared his messianic character by riding into the city on an ass in imitation of Jesusâ entry into Jerusalem. As he entered the city his supporters threw garments in his path and shouted âHoly, holy, holy Lord God of Israel.â Because of his actionsâhis âimaginationsâ to use Foxâs wordsâhe was charged with blasphemy and became a cause celebre in the heat of the revolution. Naylor defended his actions by saying that all he had done was to allow his followers to âworship the appearance of God in him, as a sign of Christâs second coming and being revealed in his Saintsâ (Fox 1890, 243).
Worshiping signs and symbols and having millenarian expectations (Naylor would sadly learn) was not, in Cromwellâs day, a passive activity. Narrowly he escaped the death penalty. His punishment was a strong signal given by the authorities that they would no longer tolerate Quaker enthusiasm. Both the event and the sentence shocked Fox and he began, from that point forward, to exert greater control over the believers. For over three centuries a pictorial hagiography surrounded James Naylor as he was portrayed by admirers as the âQuaker Jesus,â a benign and humble man (his earliest portrait is, in fact, a direct copy of Rembrandtâs âA Bearded Manâ), and by his detractors as a false prophet akin to Sabbati Sevi. In a 1661 edition of Ephraim Paggitâs Heresiography, an account of how âHereticks and Sectaries Sprang Upp in these latter times . . . ,â he appears along with other eminent âsectariesâ like the Jesuits and Seekers. Naylor was both an early Quaker martyr and an apostate from the true Quaker spirit (Paggitt 1661).
Or consider another British martyr, the Shaker mystic Ann Lee, who came to the United States on the eve of the American Revolution. The Shakers were reported to be acting as spies for the British crown when they first came to America; Mother Ann Lee was presumed to be deranged because of her visions, her assertions of spiritual line and authority. On the Ohio frontier the Shakers were mobbed because some believed they kidnaped children. When one looks at charges brought against them by former members, one finds a catalog of willful acts of deception, fraud, coercion, and wrongdoing. Furthermore, Stephen Stein, a modern historian of Shakerism, believes that testimony against them by dissidents may actually have contained some truths rather than a mere list of calumnies.2 One apostate, Valentine Rathbun, noted in 1780 that the Shakers were âEuropeans,â dangers to the state, duplicitous in their recruiting practices, going so far as to gather around any potential convert and âtouch him here and there, and give him a sly cross, and in a very loving way, put their hands on his head and then begin to preach the doctrine to himâ (Stein 1993, 16). Not quite âflirty fishing,â as practiced by a contemporary group, the Children of God (now called The Family), but clearly directed at creating an aura of intimacy.
The famous mobbing of the Shakers at Union Village, Ohio, in 1810 had been preceded by a campaign against them depicting them as murderers, wolves in sheepâs clothes who âcastrated all their males, . . . stripped and danced naked in the night meetings, blew out the candles and went into promiscuous debauchâ (Stein 1993, 77) (possibly true at least on one occasion, but not a widespread practice). When the mobs appeared at Union Village they usually came to take away a female relative or a child brought into the Shaker âfamilyâ (their term) by a parent. In 1800 fifty citizens of New Lebanon submitted a petition to the New York State legislature on behalf of the young people in the Shaker community because the Shakers âthreatened them, kept them in ignorance,â and treated them like chattel slaves, while Pleasant Hill, Kentucky, was visited by a mob in 1825 to free a teenage girl from âbondage.â For Americans in the first two decades of the nineteenth century, the abolishment of white servitude was a major issue. In the late 1830s and early 1840s, the Shakers experienced a âspiritual revivalâ coinciding with the first great wave of spiritualism that swept through America and, in fact, they invited the famous and wildly popular Fox sisters to visit them in the 1850s. On the eve of the Civil War, there were Shaker communities charged with harboring sympathetic attitudes toward blacks by their Southern neighbors and, in effect, asked to choose sides. Although opposed to slavery in principle, the communities in Kentucky walked a fine line and compromised their beliefs on some occasionsâsuch as at Pleasant Hill, where they established a separate black family. The Shakers were, in a sense, at the heart of the first phase of the American industrial revolution, utilizing labor-saving devices at every turn. Shaker furniture was sold to average Americans who needed chairs for their parlors, not to museum directors in pursuit of beautiful objects. Mother Ann Leeâs theology found a place on the American frontier and a distinguished place in religious history.
For a community closer to David Koresh and the Branch Davidians both in spirit and theology one has only to turn to the history of Benjamin Purnell, an illiterate itinerant preacher, who founded the âHouse of Davidâ at Benton Harbor, Michigan, in 1903 to establish an âin-gatheringâ of the elect 144,000 who were preparing for the end. Purnell was a lecher extraordinaire who seduced and attacked young women, amassing a fortune for himself and bringing in converts from England and Australia. For most Americans the âHouse of Davidâ is an obscure reference, and even those who remember it think of the group as some odd semiprofessional baseball and basketball team with a vaguely Jewish background (actually quite Protestant, English, and Southcottian) who wore beards. Yet it is the most obvious parallel to the Davidic group, since Purnell was a âcorrupter,â did establish a separate kingdom, and viewed the outside world with considerable hostility. When the state of Michigan (in the form of the state police) moved in on himâafter over twenty years of surveillanceâhis community of about 700 people not only hid him in an attic room over a number of years, but flocked to his defense in court, claiming he was the Shiloh, or Jesus Christ in spiritual form.
The origins of the House of David can be found in the obscure mists of late eighteenth-century England, when figures like Richard Brothers appeared on the scene to promote the cause of a Polish count, Tadeusz Grabianka, who would, according to his promoters âconquer Palestine at the head of the Polish armies, transfer his capital to Jerusalem, and extend his sway, till every king surrender his crown to him. But first, since the old Israel was apostate, he had to gather a new tribe whom he grouped into twelve tribes with old Biblical namesâ (Roth 1933, 20). Among the new messiahâs supporters was Jacob Duche, former chaplain to the Continental Congress, a major salon figure and a religious enthusiast. Although the Polish count failed to gain an audience, his admirer Richard Brothers did so, particularly after the publication of his 1794 tract âA Revealed Knowledge of the Prophecies and Times, Wrote under the Direction of God by the Man Who Will Be Revealed to the Hebrews As Their Prince.â Popularly known as âMadâ Brothers (a former lieutenant in the British Navy), he issued another pamphlet to the powerfulâand madâking of England: âThe Lord commands me to say to you, George III King of England, that immediately upon my being revealed to the Hebrews as their Prince, and to all nations as their Governor, your crown must be delivered up to me, that your power and authority may ceaseâ (Roth 1933, 31).
With that proclamation Brothers became a threat and was duly questioned by the Privy Council and committed to an asylum in Islington. Yet he commanded a certain respect in some circles, with Nathaniel Halhead, M.P. and author of The Grammar of the Bengal Language, his major backer. Thomas Foley of Jesus College, Cambridge, and John Finlayson, a wealthy Scottish lawyer, were both converts to the beliefs of this âPrince of the Hebrews.â Others, of course, ridiculed him, as did the famous engraver James Gillray, who depicted him, in 1795, carrying a âbundle of the electâ in a bag over his shoulders and leading a pack of Semites to the âGates of Jerusalem.â
While Brothers was still under care, the cult of Joanna Southcott took hold. Southcott was an illiterate domestic who in 1792 began (when she was forty-two) receiving and transcribing messages about her special prophetic role. In 1802 she came to London from Exeter with her box of prophecies and a belief that she was, according to Clarke Garrett (1975, 221), âthe woman promised in Revelation to free the world from the burden of sin and to give the faithful the assurance that they would be preserved after the Second Coming.â She began to travel about and âsealâ her followers by giving them little slips of paper. On each slip there was a circle with the following words inside: âThe sealed of the Lord, the elect and precious, manâs redemption to inherit the tree of life, to be made heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ.â By 1807 she had sealed 14,000 out of a possible 144,000. Her supporters grew in numbers and included former followers of Brothers and a new group of admirers (many wealthy) who saw in her the fulfillment of the scriptures. The apogee of her fame came in 1814 when she announced that in her sixty-fifth year she was going to give birth to the Shiloh, or Jesus Christ. Newspapers attacked this âdeluded virginâ while her admirers presented her with a crib made of satinwood and gold. In Southcottian chapels, a new hymn (to the tune of âRule Britanniaâ) was sung: âRule King Shiloh! King Shiloh, Rule Alone with Glory Crowned on Davidâs Throne.â She married a steward of the Earl of Darnley after spurning other suitors and the event came to a tragic end when she announced that her pregnancy had been âall delusion.â Some of her faithful refused to accept her statement and instead spread the word that she was indeed the âWoman of the Sunâ foretold in the book of Revelation and that the divine child had been taken up into heaven to escape the dragon. She died shortly after that, though a terse notice of her death stated that she was dead âto all appearances.â The refusal to accept the death of a prophet is found throughout human history, and David Koreshâs death (confirmed through the identification of dental remains) was questioned by some followers.
The Southcottian mantle fell on no single figure, but there were many eager to take it up over the years and to become her aborted Shiloh child. The line of prophets from Southcott to Benjamin Purnell included the megalomaniac George Turner, who demanded a palace from his followers; and the hunchbacked John Wroe, who had himself publicly circumcised in 1824 and had his followers adhere to the Mosaic Law and wear special garments. In 1827 he was acquitted of a rape charge, but later three members confessed to having practiced âidiotic indecenciesâ with him. Wroe traveled to America on four occasions and visited Australia four times in the belief that it was an important spot for the coming millennium. âChristian Israeliteâ communities were established in England, Australia, and the United States. John Wroe may have been, as one detractor commented, âhalf saint, half satyr,â but he did head a religious body of believers molded from an evolving historical tradition with certain recurring characteristics such as prophetic prerogatives and power (sexual and social), separation from the world, and continuous biblical exegesis as a way to truth. This broad religious triangular trade continued to flourish between the countries, with the Mormonsâas outlined in John F. C. Harrisonâs The Second Coming: Popular Millenarianism, 1750â1850âreaping the largest body of travelers. In all of these cases there was a social critique of the broader society as being corrupt, an emphasis on the incoming kingdom and the ingathering work that would save the righteous remnant, and a growing sense of the need to both convert and bring members into a special community of saints.
Benjamin Purnell was, like David Koresh, marginally educated, yet it did not prevent him from issuing numerous pamphlets, memorizing large sections of the Bible, preparing a place for the elect 144,000, and writing that âthe mysterious mysteries must be unsealed and revealed to them; and they must gather for the work and fulfill the scripturesâ (Roth 1933, 31). He was the Ishi-husband, the creator husband, the seventh messenger who had come...