Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Joseph Addison
Joseph Addison
May 16, 2026 2:06 PM

In early eighteenth-century English coffeehouse culture, no patron was as distinguished a conversationalist or as delightful an essayist as the Oxford-educated Joseph Addison. Born on May 1, 1672, in Milston, Wiltshire, where his father was rector, Addison had a long career in English politics as mitted Whig and in which he held many offices, including Secretary of Ireland and Secretary of State. He died in London at the age of forty-seven.

The aim of Addison’s political thought, which was based on a natural law radiating from the divine will and the political equality of man, was the preservation of limited, consensual, and constitutional government and a mercial society. Addison’s religion was high-church Anglican, which gives his theological language a formality and orthodoxy many modern readers have found alien.

But Addison is remembered chiefly for his prose mastery. As Samuel Johnson wrote, “Whoever wishes to attain an English style, familiar but not coarse, and elegant but not ostentatious, must give his days and nights to the study of Addison.” Most of Addison’s essays were published in The Spectator, a popular periodical he founded with his friend Richard Steele. Addison used these light and often gently satirical essays to educate the merchants and tradesmen of the emerging English middle class–what he termed the “middle condition”–in the manners and morals needful for their stability and legitimacy in English social structure. In C. S. Lewis’s words, Addison’s essays stand firmly “on mon ground of life“ and deal ”with middle things.”

In doing so, he described the virtues required of people in mercial society. As Addison counseled, such people must possess courage to take the economic risks required for a prosperous business economy. Further, they must be diligent in the practice of their vocations, frugal in the conduct of their lives, and philanthropic in the management of their estates, and in these ways be good stewards of God’s blessings to them. And such people must be absolutely honest; in Addison’s words, “There is no man so improper to be employed in business as he who is in any degree capable of corruption.”

Sources: The Life of Joseph Addison by Peter Smithers (Oxford,1954), and Joseph Addison’s Sociable Animal by Edward A. Bloom and Lillian D. Bloom (Brown University Press, 1971).

Hero of Liberty image attribution:Godfrey Kneller [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons PD-1923

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
What turns protests into riots?
On Saturday, May 30, the riots that swept the nation after the death of George Floyd came to Grand Rapids, Michigan – the home of the Acton Institute. Vandals looted and damaged 100 businesses and destroyed seven police cars. Businesses alreadystruggling as a result of lockdownsare nowgrappling with damage and theftinflicted by looters. The National Guard was mobilized, and the city issued a 7 p.m. curfew which expired on June 2. Things became relatively quiet once these measures took...
The ‘public option’ will destroy choice
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has made it abundantly clear that he opposes the Medicare for All model of health reform favored by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Instead, Biden proposes creating a public insurance option that pete against private insurers on Obamacare's exchanges. On its face, this plan might seem sensible. Unlike Medicare for All, a public option would not abolish private insurance. It would just give people one more choice...
Straddling the border of ‘democratic’ socialism
The thin ice separating purportedly “democratic socialism” from authoritarianism is melting in Serbia. It is impossible to understand the modern political landscape of the Balkans without understanding the region’s enormous plexity. It literally has been the crossroads of East and West – the place where Western Christianity, Eastern Christianity, and Islam have collided over the course of 1,000 years, creating often-hidden fault lines that produce dramatic consequences in the present day. The Yugoslav Wars, which were so brutal they...
Humankind: a hopeless history
Humankind: A Hopeful History Rutger Bregman | Little, Brown and Co. | 2020 | 480 pages Reviewed by Josh Herring The West has described the human race as living in various stages of depravity since the Book of Genesis. This is erroneous, writes Rutger Bregman, who contends in Humankind: A Hopeful History that “most people, deep down, are pretty decent.” He frames this as a “radical idea,” and over the course of 18 chapters, he attempts to show both...
Critical theory, critiqued
Cynical Theories critiques the modern social justice movement from a politically liberal viewpoint and argues that liberalism can exist without critical theory or identity politics. As the authors state, the book is written “for the liberal to whom a just society is very important, but who can’t help noticing that the Social Justice movement does not seem to facilitate this and wants to be able make a liberal response to it with consistency and integrity.” The authors, who are...
Democratic socialism: Back to the feudal future?
The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class Joel Kotkin | Encounter Books | 2020 | 224 pages Reviewed by John Couretas California has long been regarded as a cultural bellwether, a place where America’s future gets its trial run. Look to California, the thinking goes, and you will see where the country is headed just a few years hence. After all, how can you argue with the genius of a place, a people, who gave...
The ‘public option’ will destroy choice
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has made it abundantly clear that he opposes the “Medicare for All” model of health reform favored by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. Instead, Biden proposes creating a public insurance option that pete against private insurers on the Obamacare exchanges. On its face, this plan might seem sensible. Unlike Medicare for All, a public option would not abolish private insurance. It would just give people one more...
COVID-19: the tyranny of experts
You already know the basic story of the 2020 coronavirus global pandemic, but the proper interpretation is still in flux. If we fail to discern the role of the tyranny of experts, we will miss the linchpin that turned a pandemic into a catastrophe. As a public-health problem, COVID-19 started in late 2019, when a mysterious new coronavirus infected people in Wuhan, China. Within a couple of months, it had spread to every corner of the occupied world. At...
Earthly and heavenly citizenship
Every election year, it seems our world es ever more dominated by politics. Without fail, each election is trumpeted as the most important of our lifetime. Alarms are sounded by politicians and the mass media, and the public is often consumed by polarized rhetoric, heated arguments, and far too often hatred of strangers, neighbors, or even family and friends. While the issues facing our nation are serious – from the COVID-19 pandemic to widespread racial and civic unrest –...
Challenging monopolies: the National Health Service
In March, I joined millions of others in standing outside my house and applauding the doctors and nurses serving the nation during the global COVID-19 pandemic. While many of us directed our heartfelt gratitude mendation toward the medical staff and essential workers who kept us safe from the coronavirus, the government set about praising itself. London landmarks lit up in the colours of the nation’s single-payer healthcare system, the National Health Service. It was reminiscent of the opening ceremony...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved