ABSTRACT

The study is an intellectual and comparative history of French, Spanish, and English missions to the native peoples of America in the seventeenth century, c. 1610–1690. It shows that missions are ideal case studies to properly understand the relationship between religion and politics in early modern Catholic and Calvinist thought.

The book aims to analyse the intellectual roots of fundamental ideas in Catholic and Calvinist missionary writings—among others idolatry, conversion, civility, and police—by examining the classical, Augustinian, neo-thomist, reformed Protestant, and contemporary European influences on their writings. Missionaries’ insistence on the necessity of reform, emphasising an experiential, practical vision of Christianity, led them to elaborate conversion strategies that encompassed not only religious, but also political and social changes. It was at the margins of empire that the essentials of Calvinist and Catholic soteriologies and political thought could be enacted and crystallised. By a careful analysis of these missiologies, the study thus argues that missionaries’ common strategies—habituation, segregation, social and political regulations—stem from a shared intellectual heritage, classical, humanist, and above all concerned with the Erasmian ideal of a reformation of manners.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

A Comparative History of Religious Processes

chapter |25 pages

Custom as Ethos and Habituation

Native Paganism and Idolatry

chapter |25 pages

Conversion

Will, Grace, and Good Works

chapter |41 pages

Native Nomadic Lifestyles

Civility, Law, and Godly Government

chapter |24 pages

Assimilation versus Segregation

Two Competing Missiologies

chapter |19 pages

Community Building

Commonwealth and Christian Missions

chapter |14 pages

Conflict

Rejection of European Political and Religious Authority

chapter |20 pages

Conclusion

Reformation of Manners