EARL MORSE WILBUR: HISTORIAN OF UNITARIANISM
1886-1956
by Henry Wilder Foote, Author of Three Centuries
of American Hymnody
Earl Morse Wilbur
was born in Jericho, Vermont, on April 26, 1866, and he died
in Berkeley, California, on January 8, 1956. His father was
a lawyer who came from hardy Vermont pioneering stock and Earl
was reared in the austere life of the place and period. His
intellectual promise developed early and opened his way to the
University of Vermont, from which he graduated in 1886, the
youngest member of his class. The summer of that year, while
taking further studies with a view to teaching, he met W. W.
Fenn, then a student in the Harvard Divinity School who became
his life-long friend. It was on Fenn's advice that, after a
year of school teaching, he entered the Divinity School, from
which he graduated in 1890 with the degrees of A..M. and S.T.B.
His family connection had been with the orthodox Congregational
church in Jericho, and he had intended to enter the orthodox
ministry until he discovered that he had reached theological
beliefs unacceptable to that fellowship. So after graduation
he accepted an invitation to become an assistant to Rev. Thomas
L. Eliot of the Unitarian Church in Portland, Oregon. In 1892
he was ordained, and later succeeded Dr. Eliot as minister of
the church. In 1898 he married Dr. Eliot's daughter Dorothea,
and, after a year of study in Europe, moved to Meadville, Pennsylvania,
to become minister of the Independent Congregational Church
of that city where he also did some teaching in the Meadville
Theological School.
In 1904 funds were donated to establish the Pacific Unitarian
School for the Ministry, and Wilbur was asked to become its
Dean and to plan its development. He served the School in this
capacity (with the title of President after 1911) until 1931.
The task proved to be difficult and arduous, but with self-sacrificing
devotion he succeeded in creating a small but efficient seminary
primarily intended to serve Unitarian churches on the Pacific
Coast.
Soon after the School was opened he gave a course of lectures
on the rise and evolution of Unitarian doctrines. He soon discovered
the lack of any adequate historical research in this field,
and thus was led into the studies which have given him his great
reputation as the foremost authority in the development of liberal
religion. He saw the rise of Unitarianism in England and America
as only the later aspects of a much earlier widespread movement
in Hungary, Poland and other countries on the Continent of Europe,
and he proceeded to equip himself to investigate that largely
unexplored field. The long-forgotten and fragmentary records
were buried in remote and seldom visited libraries and called
for a working knowledge of nine different languages, ancient
and modern. Fortunately, after his resignation as President
of the Pacific Unitarian School for the Ministry (now called
the Starr King School for the Ministry), he was enabled by a
grant from the Guggenheim Foundation, followed by another from
the Hibbert Trustees in England, to spend three years (1931-1934)
in Europe, searching every locality where evidence could be
found and gathering a great collection of books and copies of
manuscript documents, most of them hitherto quite unknown to,
or unobtainable by scholars in the Western world.
At any time this would have been a notable contribution to
historical research but its importance was greatly enhanced
when, during and after World War II, many of the libraries which
he had explored in Poland and Hungary were destroyed or their
contents scattered, and the information which he had gathered
would, but for him, have been forever lost. These records, many
of them unique, are now in the library of the Starr King School,
which has the world's richest collection of Unitariana.
In 1925, Dr. Wilbur published his first book on the subject,
Our Unitarian Heritage, a preliminary study, which was
followed in 1945 by the first volume of his far more comprehensive
History of Unitarianism: Socinianism and its Antecedents;
the second volume, History of Unitarianism: in Transylvania,
England, and America (down to 1900), appearing in 1952.
These massive books tell the story in clear and lucid English
with the authority of a great scholar and have lasting value,
for no future writer will have access to all the resources of
which Dr. Wilbur was able to avail himself before World War
II. Their reliability is underwritten by his Bioliography, published
in Rome (Italy) in 1950, which runs to more than 60 pages and
is a monument of scholarly completeness and accuracy. Few scholars
have been able to produce works so likely to be accepted as
the final authority on the subjects with which they deal.
Earl Wilbur's ability was recognized by his alma mater, the
University of Vermont, as early as 1910, when it conferred on
him the honorary degree of Doctor of Divinity, and the Starr
King School gave him an honorary S.T.D. near the end of his
career. But though recognition of his outstanding scholarship
was widespread, he remained the most modest and unassuming of
men, pleasing in manner, gentle and lovable, though firm in
his convictions. From his youth he was a lover of the mountains,
a mountain-climber and camper until late middle age. He made
frequent trips to the Atlantic seaboard and generally contrived
to revisit Jericho. His last visit was that of April, 1955,
when, on the 89th anniversary of his birth, he read a delightful
paper of personal reminiscence at the Visitation Day meeting
of the Alumni of the Harvard Divinity School, who turned their
dinner into a birthday party in his honor. His death in his
90th year leaves all who knew him with heartfelt gratitude for
a character so honorable and a life so rich in fruition.
From the Unitarian Yearbook 1957-58
THE COSTLY HERITAGE OF RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
By Henry Wilder Foote
A History of Unitarianism: Socinianism and Its Antecedents.
By Earl Morse Wilbur. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
In this notable
volume, those who have looked forward to the publication of
Dr. Wilbur's historical researches will find their highest expectations
more than fulfilled. The ripe fruit of forty years of indefatigable
labor, it fills a hitherto empty place in the story of the Reformation.
The same author's book, 0ur Unitarian Heritage (1925)
a much briefer preliminary study for the present volume, has
been the only book in English on the subject based on original
research. The two German studies of Socinianism are a century
old and far less adequate in their treatment of the Reformation
movement from which modern Unitarianism traces its roots.
This volume deals only with the earlier stages of Unitarianism;
first, with the scattered and, for the most part, obscure individuals
who began early in the sixteenth century to question the dogma
of the Trinity, of whom Servetus was the most notable; then,
with the work of the great leader Socinus, under whom arose
a group of churches in Poland definitely Unitarian in theology,
though the movement was long known by the name of its leader,
or was called "Arien." A second volume, now in preparation,
will give account of Unitarianism in Hungary, England, and this
country.
It is a piece of rare good fortune that Dr.
Wilbur has been able to complete this volume, not only because
no other living man is so competent to cover this field, but because
he had opportunity between the first and second World Wars to
spend thee years in Europe carrying on his researches and collecting
materials in libraries, especially in Poland, many of which have
since been scattered or utterly destroyed. Had his work been postponed
but a few years, it could not have been done so thoroughly, if,
indeed, at all.
The impressive scholarship of the book is indicated by the
fact that his studies involved a working acquaintance with thirteen
different languages, by the meticulous accuracy of his footnotes,
and by the amazing detail with which he traces the activities
of little-known individuals, many of whom were driven from pillar
to post to escape persecution and who had excellent reasons
for covering up their tracks. Needless to say, the book is fully
indexed, complete with cross references, and has a "Pronouncing
Table" of proper names, invaluable as a guide to the pronounciation
of Polish. But the book is no mere dry-as-dust record of forgotten
men and outworn controversies. Here is a vividly written and
often moving story of the terrible and long-drawn out struggle
for freedom of religion and of utterances, for toleration of
diverse beliefs; and for the exercise of reason in the examination
of the Bible and the traditional dogmas of the Catholic, the
Lutheran, and the Reformed Churches. While the beliefs of the
early anti-Trinitarians were very different from those held
by any modern Unitarians they exhibit the struggles of devoted
souls to free themselves from the bondage to ancient dogmas
in which the human mind was entangled in the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, together with their principles of freedom, of toleration,
of the use of reason, and of Christianity as a way of life rather
than a prescribed system of thought that led hy devious ways
across four centuries to the liberty in which we rejoice.
 |
| Dr.
Wilbur's contemporary succesor at the Starr King School
for the Ministry, Dr. Rebecca Parker, President |
It is hoped that his monument of scholarship will be read not
only by scholar but by many Unitarians, both lay and ministerial.
The story is a tragic one, of men hunted for daring to question
accepted beliefs -- wanderers and exiles, some of them suffering
martyrdom. Particularly tragic is the account of the crushing
out of the Socinian churches in Poland bv the Catholic reaction.
That the Polish Socinians were notable alike for their scholarly
books and for their exemplary adherence to high standards of
conduct was of no avail in an age in which heresy was the worst
of crimes. In some aspects of their theology, and especially
in their teachings about wealth, war and the relations of the
individual to the state, they anticipated by more than a century
the principles of the early English Quakers, and by more than
three centuries those of many modern idealists.
It is well for us to realize the great price in suffering paid
for religious freedom; to understand that controversies long
outdated were once desperate battlegrounds for that freedom;
and that we are the spiritual heirs of a priceless treasure.
We all owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Wilbur for this invaluable
book, written so vividly and with such final authority that
no later student will feel it necessary to cover the same ground
again. We shall look forward with eager anticipation to his
second volume, recounting the later stages of the Unitarian
movement.
The Christian Register, August 1945
TORTURE, BLOODSHED AND SUFFERING
by Duncan Howlett
It was the reviewer's privilege to visit Dr. Wilbur in
his home a few years ago, just as the present volume was
being completed, and to sit in his study and talk with him,
surrounded by the extraordinary array of volumes which Dr.
Wilbur has accumulated in his work and travels. He has assembled
by far the best library of European Unitariana anywhere
to be found, and the Unitarian churches owe him a vast debt
of gratitude for this fact alone.
 |
| The
Wilbur collection of rare books at the Starr King School
for the Ministry |
One of the most striking things about Dr. Wilbur's study
is the typewriter which sits in the middle of his desk at
the center of the room. Obviously old, mounted in a wooden
frame, it looks more nearly like a small organ console than
anything else. Those who have read Dr. Wilbur's typed manuscripts
know that it writes Polish as well as English, French as
well as German, with all the proper accents, circumflexes,
umlauts, cedillas and other markings.
Flowing from the mind of Dr. Wilbur, through his fingers
and out onto the sheets in his typewriter, have come thousands
of pages, as a result of which Unitarians now know their
own history as they never otherwise could have done.
He shows great perceptivity in this choice,
for the reader will be amazed to discover how similar are
the movements characterized by freedom, reason and tolerance,
though they may spring up under widely different circumstances
in widely separated places all across the centuries.
This is another reason why the best of Dr. Wilbur's writing
concerns the earlier history of Unitarianism. By the time
we reach the 18th century, the area within which freedom,
reason and tolerance are already operating has become too
wide for a single scholar to treat in a volume or two. This
is particularly true of one who has taken the time to master
the earlier movements in Transylvania, Poland, Switzerland,
Germany, Italy and elsewhere.
The Christian Register, January 1953
|
THE AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION
presents
The Fifth Annual Unitarian Award
in Recognition of Distinguished Service
to the Cause of Liberal Religion
to
EARL MORSE WILBUR D.D., S.T.D.
Parish minister, teacher, scholar, historian, author,
to whose painstaking research the liberal religious movement
throughout the Western World is lastingly indebted.
Earl Morse Wilbur's service to the Unitarian cause spanned
the American Continent from New England to Oregon and
California, thus giving him initially a thorough knowledge
of the liberal religious movement in his own country.
As dean of the Pacific Unitarian School for the Ministry,
which his vision and persistence organized, he gathered
the most complete library of Unitarian historical material
to be found anywhere. His studies led him to master the
languages of the countries in which Unitarianism arose
in the sixteenth century so that he was able to search
out, over a period of three years in Poland and Transylvania,
the little known history of the early development of Unitarian
thought and organization.
With tireless patience and scrupulous study he has embodied
in a monumental History of Unitarianism the results
of his life long devotion. These volumes are definitive.
By means of them, we and all future adherents of the Liberal
Religious Movement will know and understand whence we
came, who the scholars and oft-times martyrs were who
wrought our free religious tradition for us, and draw
inspiration to carry forward this noble heritage.
Earl Morse Wilbur's labors will also have a far wider
significance in an age that struggles to create a free
world, since the conclusion of his studies is that he
has traced the history of a movement characterized by
'complete mental freedom in religionthe unrestricted
use of reason in religionand generous tolerance
of differing religious views.'
The Unitarians of the United States and Canada, together
with their fellow liberals in many lands, unite in recognizing
their obligation to one who has devoted his gifts of mind
and spirit throughout the long day of his life, that they
might be joint heirs with the free souls of the four centuries
of the modern world.
|
How the History Came to be
Written by Earl Morse Wilbur (Proceedings of the Unitarian
Historical Society, Volume 9, Part 1, 1951)
|