He preached to Parliament on important occasions: in 1649 after the surrender of Drogheda and Waterford,[7] in 1651 after the battle of Worcester. His sermons, widely allusive,[8] were considered opaque: David Masson quotes a contemporary opinion:
Of Sterry's preaching, already notoriously obscure, Sir Benjamin Rudyard had said that "it was too high for this world and too low for the other" […][9]
Literary historian Vivian de Sola Pinto observes that Sterry "had exactly the qualities that Puritans like Bunyan lacked: intellectual freedom, flexibility of mind, imagination, tolerance and loving-kindness."[13] Sterry "united with this tenderness a wide culture, a true humanist's delight in learning and a love of beauty in all its manifestations."[13]
He is commemorated by a stained glass window in the chapel of Emmanuel College,[14] which has an archive of unpublished writings.
Robin Parry summarizes: "In many ways Sterry is an anomaly—a Puritan who was a lover of the arts and poetry, a Platonist who was a theological determinist, a deeply rational mystic, and a Calvinist universalist."[28]
The following excerpt exemplifies Sterry's thought and style quite well:
The divine love covers all things with the divine loveliness and beauty of the universal harmony, which is the righteousness of God in Christ, the first, the fairest image of the invisible God, in which every other image of God stands, as in the original, the all-comprehending glory.[29]
The Spirit Convincing of Sinne, fast sermon for Parliament, 26 November 1645
England's Deliverance from the Northern Presbytery, Compared with its Deliverance from the Roman Papacy (1652) sermon on the Battle of Worcester
Way of God with his people in these nations, sermon for Parliament 5 November 1656
Free Grace Exalted (1670)
A Discourse of the Freedom of the Will (1675)
The Rise, Race, and Royalty of the Kingdom of God in the Soul (1683)
The Appearance of God to Man in the Gospel (1710)
References
F. J. Powicke, "Peter Sterry: A Puritan Mystic." Primitive Methodist Quarterly Review 47 (1905): 617–25.
Vivian de Sola Pinto (1968) Peter Sterry, Platonist and Puritan, 1613–1672;: A biographical and critical study with passages selected from his writings
V. de Sola Pinto, Peter Sterry and His Unpublished Writings, The Review of English Studies, Vol. 6, No. 24 (Oct. 1930), pp. 385–407
Nabil I. Matar (1994), Peter Sterry: Select Writings
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the Comenian Circle: Education and Eschatology in Restoration Nonconformity," The Journal of the United Reformed Church History Society, 5 (1994): 183–192.
Matar, "Aristotelian Tragedy in the Theology of Peter Sterry," Literature and Theology, 6 (1992): 310–20.
Matar, "'Oyle of Joy': The Early Prose of Peter Sterry," Philological Quarterly, 71 (1992): 31–46.
Matar, "John Donne, Peter Sterry and the ars moriendi," Exploration in Renaissance Culture, 17 (1991): 55–71.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the Puritan Defense of Ovid in Restoration England," Studies in Philology, 88 (1991): 110–121.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the 'Paradise Within': A Study of the Emmanuel College Letters," Restoration, 13 (1989): 76–85.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and Jacob Boehme," Notes and Queries, 231 (1986): 33–36.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the First English Poem on the Druids," National Library of Wales Journal, 24 (1985): 222–243.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the Ranters," Notes and Queries, 227 (1982): 504–506.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and the 'lovely Society' at West Sheen," Notes and Queries, 227 (1982): 45–46,
Matar, "Peter Sterry, the Millennium and Oliver Cromwell," The Journal of the United Reformed Church History Society, 2 (1982): 334–343.
Matar, "A Note on George Herbert and Peter Sterry," George Herbert Journal, 5 (1982): 71–75.
Matar, "Peter Sterry and Morgan Llwyd," The Journal of the United Reformed Church History Society, 2 (1981): 275–279.
Matar, "The Peter Sterry MSS at Emmanuel College, Cambridge," Transactions of the Cambridge Bibliographical Society, 8 (1981): 42–56. With P. J.Croft.
^Reverend Peter Sterry, a chaplain to Oliver Cromwell, regularly used pagan mythology, especially Ovid, in his sermons and was known to carry Aquinas, Boehme, Shakespeare and Ovid with him when he traveled."A Visit to the Spirit in Prison: Resurrecting Sarah Blackborow". Archived from the original on 26 May 2005. Retrieved 6 July 2007.
^Pinto, Peter Sterry, Platonist and Puritan (1934), 103-104. "Like Origen he refuses to believe in the doctrine of eternal damnation... Sterry's hell is a place not of damnation but of education and regeneration."
^Parry, A Larger Hope? (Vol. 2), 291. In the quoted excerpt, Sterry warns, "The Lord gave [Böhme] his Spirit by measure, leaving much darkness mingled with his light. They that read him had need come to him well instructed in the mystery of Christ...others will be perverted by him."
^Richard Popkin, Pimlico History of Western Philosophy, p. 366.
^Peter Sterry, John Tillinghast and John Rogers concurred in Archer's opinion that 1656 or 1666 were likely dates for the commencement of the Reign of the Saints.PDFArchived 18 May 2006 at the Wayback Machine, p.2; Hill, Milton, p. 283, p. 301.
^Peter Sterry, A Discourse of the Freedom of the Will (1675), preface, as cited in Vivian de Sola Pinto, Peter Sterry, Platonist and Puritan (1934), p. 131 (excerpt 1), with slightly modernized spelling, punctuation, and syntax.
External links
Media related to Peter Sterry at Wikimedia Commons