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Modern Period. CH 511. Industrial Age – 19 th Century. Mass movements of people seeking employment in industrial centers Mass immigration to North America Traditional extended family gives way to emphasis on nuclear family
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Modern Period CH 511
Industrial Age – 19th Century • Mass movements of people seeking employment in industrial centers • Mass immigration to North America • Traditional extended family gives way to emphasis on nuclear family • Sense of progress; future possibilities seemed limitless; progress a “structure of the universe”
Darwin’s On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection (1859)
Schleiermacher’s Theology • Son of a Reformed minister, though tutored by Moravians; hence Pietism was a significant influence • With Schleiermacher we see the end of all attempts to base religion on reason; profoundly influenced by Romanticism • Religion is not a form of knowledge (as both rationalists and orthodox held), nor a system of morality (as Kant implied); rather religion was grounded in Gefuhl(inadequately translated as “feeling”) – the profound awareness of the existence of the One on whom all existence depends; the feeling of “dependence”
Schleiermacher’s Theology • The feeling of dependence takes a specific form in each religious community; for Protestants, two specific historical moments: (1) Jesus and his impact on the disciples; (2) the Reformation • Function of theology is to explore and expound the implications that feeling on three levels: the self, its relation with the world, and its relation with God • Schleiermacher is appropriately called the “father of liberalism”
Hegel • Started out in theology, but later decided that theology was too narrow a field of inquiry; necessary to try to understand not only religion but the whole of reality • In search for a unifying theory or “theory of everything” (if you will); • Grounded his search in the affirmation that reason is everything (“What is rational exists, and what exists is rational.”) • Reason is not static, but rather dynamic and processive • Pose an idea Examine the idea so as to surpass it or deny it in favor of another idea Reach a third idea that includes whatever there was of value in the two previous ideas
Hegelian philosophy Thesis vs. Antithesis = Synthesis
Hegel • Hegel built an impressive system that included the entirety of history as the “thought of the Spirit” • Hegel was convinced that Christianity was the “absolute religion” – summing up the entire process of human religious development • The central theme of religion is the relationship between God and humanity, which reaches its apex in the incarnation; Similarly the Trinity is the culmination of the idea of God, for it affirms the dynamic nature of the ultimate reality (dialectic of the Trinity, consisting of three “movements”
Kierkegaard • Born into a strict Danish Lutheran home • Kant’s critique of rationalism left a third option, different from those followed by Schleiermacher and Hegel • Kant’s pure reason can neither prove nor disprove the existence of God; but faith knows God directly • The basis for Christianity is not its reasonableness, nor its place of honor in a system such as Hegel’s, nor even the feeling of absolute dependence; rather Christianity is a matter of faith in God who revelation comes to us in the Scriptures and in Jesus Christ • True faith is not an easy matter; always a matter of “risk,” requiring the denial of self and of all the joys of the faithless
Kierkegaard – Founder of Existentialism • The greatest enemy of Christianity was Christendom (“What we call ‘Christianity’ is simply ‘playing at being Christians.’”) • In order to be truly Christian, one must become aware of the cost of faith and pay the price; true Christianity has to do with a person’s very existence, and not merely with the intellect • Existence – actual, painful, human existence – is prior to essence, and more important than it; Existence is the constant struggle to become • In placing existence at the heart of matters, one is forced to abandon every other system, and even all hope for a consistent system; Reality may be a “system” for God, but it could never be seen as such from the perspective of one in the midst of existence
Christianity in relation to History • Hermann Samuel Reimarus (1694-1768) • The question of the “Historical Jesus” • F.C. Baur (1792-1860) • Applied Hegel’s scheme to development of doctrine in the NT • Adolph von Harnack (1851-1930) • Development of dogma as the progressive abandonment of the faith of the early church (SHIFT: teachings of Jesus teachings about Jesus) • Albrecht Ritschl (1822-1889) • Critical of Schleiermacher’s subjectivity; religion was neither a matter of rational knowledge nor of subjective freedom, but of practical life • Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965) • Suggested that the quests of the nineteenth-century man had not found “Jesus” as much as it had found its own image
Geographic Expansion • Colonial expansion of European nations in the 19th century • Napoleonic Wars ironically turned Britain into a major naval power and turned her attention towards the colonial holdings of its enemies • Colonial expansion coincided with the industrial revolution • Technological advances required industrial production, which in turn required more resources, greater capital and wider markets
Neo-colonialism of Latin America • United States, Britain, and France competed for control of new markets
The “White Man’s Burden” • Colonizers were convinced that their enterprises were justified on the benefits the colonized would receive • God had placed the benefits of western civilization and Christian faith in the hands of Europeans and North Americans in order to share them with the rest of the world • Benefits included: industrialization, capitalism, democracy and Christianity • “Mixed blessing”
Missionary Enterprises • William Carey (1761-1834) – “Father of Modern Missions”
Missionary Societies • Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (SPCK) – 1698 • Society for the Propagation of the Gospel (SPG) – 1701 • Moravians, early Methodists (18th century) • Baptist Missionary Society – 1782 (W. Carey) • London Missionary Society – 1795 (Methodists, Presbyterians, and Congregationalists) • The Church Missionary Society – 1799 (Evangelical Anglicans) • British and Foreign Bible Society (1804)
The Ecumenical Movement • Primary Factor: people of different confessions were living side-by-side (e.g. the United States) • Common causes across denominational lines: abolitionism, temperance, fundamentalism, liberalism, eschatology • Anti-denominational sentiments (e.g. Disciples of Christ) • Overseas missions made cooperation mandatory
Ecumenical endeavors • Federal Council of Church (1908) • World Missionary Conference in Edinburgh, Scotland (1910) • Faith and Order Movement (1910) • World Council of Churches (1948)
Conflict between Fundamentalism and Liberalism • Scopes “Monkey Trial” of 1925 • Clarence Darrow and William Jennings Bryan
J. Gresham Machen (1881-1937) • Founder: Westminster Theological Seminary (1929) • Founder “Orthodox Presbyterian Church” (1936)
Ku Klux Klan • Resurgence in the 1920s
Temperance Movement • 18th Amendment (1919)
The Great Depression (1929-1942) • Christian “Socialism” • Only sharpened the differences between liberalism and fundamentalism • Ended by the Second World War
Other 20th Century Movements • Liberation Theology • Charismatic movement (1960, 1967) • Women’s ordination (from 1950s) • Feminist & Womenist Theology • Neo-Fundamentalism (from 1970s)
Cool to be “post” • Post-Modern? • Post-Evangelical? • Post-Liberal? • Post-Denominational?