Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen
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Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen
Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen I (1691 – c. 1747) was a Dutch-American minister, theologian and the progenitor of the Frelinghuysen family in the United States of America. Frelinghuysen's is most remembered for his religious contributions in the Raritan Valley during the beginnings of the First Great Awakening. Several of his descendants became influential theologians and politicians throughout American history.
Birth and emigrationHe was born in 1691 in Lingen, Emsland, now a part of Germany, to Johannes Henrich Frelinghaus, a Minister, and to Anna Margaretha Brüggemann Freylinghausen (1657-1728). Frelinghuysen was graduated from the University of Lingen and was ordained as a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church in 1715. For a short time he was a minister in Belgium. In January 1720, he and Jacobus Schuurman, a friend, emigrated to the Province of New Jersey, a British colony in North America. MarriageHe married Eva Terhune (c. 1696-c. 1750), daughter of Jan Terhune and Margrietje van Sicklen of Flatlands, Long Island and had seven children:
All five sons became ministers and both daughters married ministers. Frelinghuysen served as minister to several of the Reformed Dutch Churches (congregations at Raritan, New Brunswick, Six-Mile Run, Three-Mile Run, and North Branch) in the Raritan River valley of New Jersey which he served until his death in 1747 or 1748. The Encyclopedia of New Jersey states:
First Great AwakeningFrelinghuysen served as a precursor to the First Great Awakening where his evangelistic contributions culminated in a regional awakening within the Middle Colonies. His ministry was greatly assisted through the efforts of Gilbert Tennent and George Whitefield. He sought to evangelize the Raritan Valley through Reformed pietism, that also owed much to the theological thought of the Puritans as well. Utilizing this theological thought, he employed a three-pronged evangelistic strategy. His chosen evangelistic strategies were preaching, church discipline, and a contextualization of the Dutch Reformed ecclesiastical practices. His preaching aimed to convict people of the need to examine their lives in order to ascertain the validity of their salvation. In contrast to the staid orthodoxy of many of the Presbyterians and much of the New York Dutch Reformed Clergy, Frelinghuysen?s evangelistic preaching penetrated the raw frontier of early eighteenth-century life of New Jersey. He attempted to ingrain within the listener a deep conviction of sin. Frelinghuysen evangelized the New Jersey Colony by using a blunt preaching style which classified his audiences into two basic categories: regenerate and unregenerate. One individual?s response to the awakener was offered in the following apt summary: ?We welcomed him with joy and love, in the hope that his service would be for our edification. But alas! to our great sorrow, we, soon, and increasingly found that the result was very different. His denunciations uttered against all of us from the pulpit . . . and on all occasions, to the effect that we were all unconverted . . . were severe and bitter.?[2] Church discipline was also utilized to awaken the dormant New Jersey congregations to the realization that some of its parishioners did not meet the scriptural standards of salvation. They were therefore frequently prevented from participating in the sacrament of the Lord?s Supper. For Frelinghuysen, ?fencing the table,? or preventing people from full participation in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, not only purified the sacrament but it also alerted his parishioners to the stringent need for holy living. Church discipline was a reinforcement of his pietism, for it caused individuals to inspect their lives for holy living. If they failed to see either their sinful hearts or if they could not point to righteous acts of fruit demonstrating salvation, they stood in need of conversion. Consequently, Frelinghuysen stressed that a person?s experience of conversion was accompanied by distinguishing outward behaviors which proved them to be recipients of the new birth. Few acts incited such anger for the Colonial citizens as did Frelinghuysen?s ?fencing the table.? Lastly, Frelinghuysen's efforts to reach beyond the Colonial church, he rooted his ministry in the Reformation concept that the church would continuously reform, or ecclesia semper reformada. As he adjusted to the Middle Colonies, Frelinghuysen believed the Colonial church was compelled to change for its survival. Faced with a different context from the Netherlands, the result was an Americanizing movement led by Frelinghuysen?s arrival to the Colonies in 1720. In place of conformity to Dutch traditions of language, style, and liturgy, that were designed for the Netherlands, Frelinghuysen conceived of a church that was not restrained by the formalism prescribed by the Classis of Amsterdam. Though the records for Frelinghuysen?s four churches have remained nearly absent from contemporary church historians, some accounts of the evangelistic results experienced during his ministry remain extant. In 1726, Frelinghuysen admitted thirty-eight new converts to his four churches while an additional sixteen converts were added in 1729 and again in 1734. An additional fifty members were added in 1739 while another twenty-two people were verified as regenerate and able to participate in communion in 1741 in the New Brunswick church. In sum, 180 new converts in the Raritan and New Brunswick churches alone. Such numbers of converts may pale in comparison to the throngs of people who responded to the itinerant evangelist, George Whitefield; yet, these numbers mark a sizeable proportional increase in the churches themselves.[2] Notably, none other than Jonathan Edwards credited Frelinghuysen with the beginning of the awakening in New Jersey upon his discussion with Gilbert Tennent:
DeathHe died in 1747 or 1748 in Franklin Township, Somerset County, New Jersey and was buried at Elm Ridge Cemetery, North Brunswick, New Jersey. He was originally buried without a tombstone, and when it was decided to place a stone on his grave in 1884, it could not be determined where his body was interred.[4] A cenotaph was placed in the front of the cemetery, which now is the back of the cemetery at the treeline.
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