John Bovee Dods

John Bovee Dods
John Bovee Dods, c. 1850
Born(1795-09-26)September 26, 1795
DiedMarch 21, 1872(1872-03-21) (aged 76)

John Bovee Dods (26 September 1795 – 21 March 1872) was a philosopher, spiritualist, mesmerist, and early psychologist.

In 1809, as a young teenager, Dods had a waking vision of his recently deceased father, who gave him a message from the spirit world. In 1824, as a newly appointed Congregationalist pastor in Levant, Maine, his house was visited by other ghostly relatives, and his family became plagued by poltergeist style phenomena. Although his family had to move and his neighbors came to consider the house haunted, Dods considered the phenomena a divine blessing. What he learned about the spirit world from his relatives' ghosts converted him to Christian universalism.[1]

In 1830, Dods spent 10 weeks in Richmond, Virginia organizing Unitarians and Universalists into a single church, The First Unitarian Universalist Church of Richmond. This is believed to have been the first instance of the 2 faiths combining together into one organization, presaging the formation of the Unitarian Universalist Association by 130 years.[2] However, due to a tremendous outcry from Richmond's mainline Christians, the church was forced to change its name after Dods had left to First Independent Christian Church in 1833. The same church group continues today as First Unitarian Universalist Church of Richmond.[3] As Dods did not accept the offer to be pastor of the church, he instead recommended John Budd Pitkin.

In 1840, Dods began preparing a book about his spiritual visions, but in the course of his writing, he learned about a new technique called mesmerism. He began experimenting with mesmerizing his acquaintances and discovered he was able to induce spiritual visions easily. He therefore became convinced that his earlier visions had been manufactured by his mind, and abandoned his book. For the next 15 years he practiced mesmerism as a type of psychiatric therapy, believing it to have no relation to religion.[4]

Moving to Brooklyn for his psychiatric practice, Dods became well known as a debunker of early Spiritualism, and published a book claiming to give a medical explanation for spiritualist phenomena. In 1855 he again had a vision of a host of dead relatives who, in his account, gave him accurate information about their deaths and illnesses in his family. He wrote that he tried to explain this as a naturalistic phenomenon but only had more and more visions, and was deluged with questions about his personal experiences when he tried to defend his views in public. From 1856 he became a practicing spiritualist.[5] He moved to Massachusetts where he preached, wrote, and founded a school.[2]

As a result of the public questioning, Dods began to theorize that mesmerism put humans in touch with the divine. His resulting theology was in some ways was a precursor of New Thought theories.[6] Dods became one of the more well known mesmerists in New England, along with others such as La Roy Sunderland, Joseph Rodes Buchanan, and Phineas Parkhurst Quimby.[7][6][8]

Before the revelation of his Spiritualism, Dods had been a prolific writer. He published works such as Twenty-Four Short Sermons on the Doctrine of Universal Salvation (1832), Thirty Sermons (1840), Six Lectures on the Philosophy of Mesmerism (1849), The Philosophy of Electrical Psychology (1850), Immortality Triumphant (1852), and Spirit Manifestations: Examined and Explained (1854).[9]

  1. ^ Buescher, John B. (John Benedict) (2004). The other side of salvation : spiritualism and the nineteenth-century religious experience. Boston: Skinner House Books. pp. 3–5. ISBN 978-1-55896-448-8.
  2. ^ a b George H. Gibson, "The Unitarian-Universalist Church of Richmond," in The Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 74, No. 3, July, 1966. JSTOR 4247223
  3. ^ "The Little Church of Council Chamber Hill and the Conflicts of Belief in a Southern Community," Pat Vaughan, First Unitarian Universalist Church of Richmond, 2015
  4. ^ Newton, Alonzo. "John Bovee Dods' Experiences". New-England Spiritualist. No. March 15, 1856.
  5. ^ Buescher, John B. (John Benedict) (2004). The other side of salvation : spiritualism and the nineteenth-century religious experience. Boston : Skinner House Books. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-55896-448-8.
  6. ^ a b Albanese, Catherine L. (2007). A republic of mind and spirit: a cultural history of American metaphysical religion. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 202–204. ISBN 978-0-300-11089-0.
  7. ^ Taves, Ann (1999). Fits, trances, & visions: experiencing religion and explaining experience from Wesley to James. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-691-02876-7.
  8. ^ Peel, Robert (1966). Mary Baker Eddy: the years of discovery. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. pp. 153–154.
  9. ^ "Dods, John Bovee 1795-1872". worldcat.org.