Linford Fisher’s The Indian Great Awakening is an examination of Native American engagement with Christianity in the colonial era. Set in what is now known as southeastern New England, Fisher looks at the years 1700-1820 to understand “the fullest possible context of local colonial interactions and the broader, transatlantic tugs of imperial power” (8). Fisher argues that the First Great Awakening (1730s-1770s) was NOT the first (nor last) attempt to universally convert Native Americans to Christianity. Instead, Fisher points out that between King Philip’s War (1675-1678) and the First Great Awakening, missionary work by the English/Americans continued at a slow pace. While the revivals from the Awakening did indeed prompt an increase in predominantly white church affiliation among Indigenous groups, it was not consistently sustained. As the revivals eventually came to a close, many either created their own ‘Separate Indian’ congregations or disaffiliated from Christianity entirely.
Native American sovereignty is a major theme of this book. Despite efforts of colonizers to erase traditional practices of Indigenous peoples' culture, Indigenous peoples still attempted to continue such practices. For example, Fisher explores the ways in which Native Americans took on Christianity in the promptly named Chapter 5 “Separating”. This chapter addresses Samuel Ashpo, Samson Occom and Samuel Niles, each Indian Separatist ministers who created churches out of the broader colonial Separate Churches, New Light Baptist. Their churches acted as a sanctuary for Christian Natives who needed to not only escape discrimination still prevalent amongst white churches, but also wanted worship God their own way. These churches offered “a more free-flowing, spirit-led worship experience” (110). By spotlighting these autonomous developments, Fisher creates a more Indigenous approach to their use of Christianity.
As religion and education go hand in hand, conversations at the pulpit sometimes shifted to the schooling of young Indigenous children. Parents were in favor of Native school teachers because they demonstrated suspicion towards white instructors. For example, in 1765 the Narragansetts from Rhode Island grew suspicious of Edward Deake, a white teacher sent to ‘educate’ the tribe. They felt that Deake planned to use his position as a ploy to steal their land (153). Suspicions by Natives of whites were often justified, as colonizers tried to acculturate Natives. John Sergeant and Eleazar Wheelock, for example, wanted to remove Native children from their families and educate them miles away. However, some students did not receive education. Instead, they were sent out to be servants of the white families in the towns they lived in. Others would escape their mistreatment and return home.
Although the author covers a lot of ground, this book is not without a few flaws. He indicates under the assumption that “Native interactions with Christian practices and ideas… tended to be more practical and provisional” (8). What about the Native Americans who had a genuine epiphanic experience with Christianity and connected with it? It feels like he is underestimating the power of Christian belief. For all, working with missionaries wasn't a quid pro quo. Furthermore, it would’ve been interesting if Fisher dedicated a page or two on how views and practices of intermarriage, specifically with Black individuals, possibly evolved across generational lines throughout the eighteenth century. As indicated on page 167, intermarriage between Black and Native communities was generally accepted in the seventeenth century “because of the relative isolation of many Indian communities [and] the small numbers of blacks in New England.” This became a major issue in the eighteenth, but is not expanded upon by Fisher.
Despite these few shortcomings, Fisher accomplishes his overall purpose of explaining how Native Americans did not fully convert into Christianity and those that did often blended their own traditions into Christian beliefs establishing their own churches. By doing so, Fisher highlights Native American agency as impetus for historical change, a paradigm which is often left out from many histories. This book is a great contribution to the study of religion, colonial history, and New England Native Americans.