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Hosea Ballou (April 30, 1771 – June 7, 1852) was an American Universalist clergyman and theological writer. He has been called one
of the fathers of American Universalism.
Hosea Ballou was born in Richmond, New Hampshire, to a family of Huguenot origin. The family claimed to be of Anglo-Norman heritage, but this has no foundation, and due
to his ancestor being named Mathurin (Maturin) Ballou (Bellou), a French given
name not found anywhere in England, nor is any English version of the name, so
an Anglo-Norman origin is highly unlikely. The son of Maturin
Ballou, a Baptist minister, Hosea Ballou
was self-educated, and devoted himself early on to the ministry. In 1789 he
converted to Universalism,
and in 1794 became pastor of a congregation in Dana, Massachusetts. Ballou was also a high-ranking freemason, who attained the position of Junior Grand Warden of the Grand Lodge of New Hampshire in 1811.
Ballou preached at Barnard, Vermont and surrounding towns in 1801—1807; at Portsmouth, New
Hampshire in 1807—1815; at Salem, Massachusetts in 1815—1817; and, as pastor of the Second Universalist
Church of Boston, from December 1817
until his death there.
He founded and edited The Universalist Magazine (1819—later called The Trumpet),
and The Universalist Expositor (1831—later The Universalist
Quarterly Review), and wrote about
10,000 sermons as well as many hymns, essays and polemic
theological works. He is best known for Notes on the Parables (1804), A Treatise on
Atonement (1805) and Examination
of the Doctrine of a Future Retribution (1834). These works mark him as the principal American expositor
of Universalism.
Ballou married Ruth Washburn; children included Maturin Murray Ballou. He is the grand-uncle of Hosea Ballou II, the first president of Tufts University.
Ballou has been called the
"father of American Universalism," along with John Murray, who founded the first
Universalist church in America. Ballou, sometimes called an "Ultra
Universalist," differed from Murray in that he divested Universalism of
every trace of Calvinism, and opposed legalism and trinitarian views. As he wrote, "Real happiness is
cheap enough, yet how dearly we pay for its counterfeit."
Ballou
also preached that those forms of Christianity that emphasized God as wrathful
in turn hardened the hearts of their believers:
"It
is well known, and will be acknowledged by every candid person, that the human
heart is capable of becoming soft, or hard; kind, or unkind; merciful or
unmerciful, by education and habit. On this principle we contend, that the
infernal torments, which false religion has placed in the future world, and
which ministers have, with an overflowing zeal, so constantly held up to the
people, and urged with all their learning and eloquence, have tended so to
harden the hearts of the professors of this religion, that they have exercised,
toward their fellow creatures, a spirit of enmity, which but too well
corresponds with the relentless cruelty of their doctrine, and the wrath which
they have imagined to exist in our heavenly Father. By having such an example
constantly before their eyes, they have become so transformed into its image,
that, whenever they have had the power, they have actually executed a vengeance
on men and women, which evinced that the cruelty of their doctrine had overcome
the native kindness and compassion of the human heart."
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