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Transcript

Errand Into the Wilderness: Puritans, Power, and the Roots of American Exceptionalism

In this episode, we explore how the theology of the New England Puritans shaped a distinctive political imagination—one that continues to echo through American culture, governance, and foreign policy. Drawing on historian Perry Miller’s concept of an “errand into the wilderness,” the conversation reframes the Puritans not as caricatured zealots, but as idealists who believed they were participating in a divine experiment with world-historical consequences. We examine how covenant theology produced a system of collective responsibility, why dissent was treated as an existential threat, and how the Puritan mission failed in practice but survived in secularized form as American exceptionalism.

In This Episode

  • Why the Puritans saw themselves as more than religious refugees

  • What Perry Miller meant by an “errand into the wilderness”

  • The idea of America as a “city upon a hill” and the burden of being watched

  • Covenant theology and the logic of collective moral responsibility

  • How providence shaped Puritan interpretations of success, failure, and disaster

  • Why dissent was viewed as dangerous rather than merely disagreeable

  • The banishment of Roger Williams and the limits of Puritan governance

  • How the Puritan project failed—and how its moral logic endured

  • The transformation of religious mission into secular American exceptionalism

  • Echoes of Puritan moral certainty in modern politics, foreign policy, and corporate culture

  • The enduring tension between individual freedom and collective responsibility

Quotable Moments

  • “They weren’t just fleeing persecution. They believed they were on a cosmic assignment.”

  • “Dissent wasn’t disagreement—it was endangering the entire community.”

  • “The Puritan errand failed as a system, but not as an idea.”

  • “When political identity fuses with absolute moral certainty, the results are rarely sustainable.”

Why This Matters

Understanding the Puritans helps explain why Americans so often frame political conflict in moral terms, why national failure feels existential, and why appeals to destiny and responsibility recur across centuries. This episode suggests that the unresolved tensions of the Puritan experiment—between freedom and order, humility and certainty—are still very much with us.

Suggested Reading

  • Perry Miller, Errand into the Wilderness

  • Mark David Hall, Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land

  • Daniel Dreisbach and Mark David Hall, The Sacred Rights of Conscience

  • Francis Jennings, “Puritan Expansion and Indian Resistance”

Closing Reflection

If the Puritans were idealists whose convictions ultimately made their system unsustainable, what does that suggest about our own confidence in moral clarity today?

Well… that’s what I meant to say.

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