University of Virginia Library

When the Massachusetts General Court burned down, it was viewed in the colony as an expression of divine displeasure, and the colonies' ministers were invited to preach sermons calling on the people to repent of the sins that had provoked the Lord. At the time, New England was nearing the end of what contemporaries knew as “The Great Inflation.” After decades of moderate inflation, New England's entry into King George's War had involved all New England, and Massachusetts in particular, in expensive military expeditions. When these expeditions were financed by printing money, the price level doubled in just three years time. The inflation was a great hardship on those whose money incomes were fixed. Among those most affected were the colonies' ministers. Appleton used his sermon as an opportunity to denounce the injustice that had befallen victims of the inflation. His sermon gives a rare glimpse of how religious beliefs helped set the stage for the currency reform adopted the following year. Only the portion of Appleton's sermon dealing with the inflation is reproduced here.