Title: Great Christian Influencers of Society
1Great Christian Influencers of Society
2Great Christian Influencers of Society
3Constantine and the Rise of the State Church
-
- Coronation of Constantine at York (Britain)
upon his fathers death in 306.
4Constantine and the Rise of the State Church
- Turning Point --
-
- The Battle of Milvian Bridge against Maxentius
in 312
5Constantine and the Rise of the State Church
- The Aftermath of Constantines Conversion
- The Edict of Milan in 313.
- Increasing privilege for Christianity.
- Prohibition of pagan worship in 341.
6Constantine and the Rise of the State Church
- Major Changes in Christianity in the Fourth
Century -- - Close intertwining of Church and State affairs.
- Alliance of the Church with military might.
- Rapid expansion of the Church.
- Increasing superficiality in peoples adherence
to the faith. - Flowering of theological thought, debate, and
writing.
7Constantines Legacy
- The Birth of a Dream
- That an entire empire would bow before Christ.
- That a Church-State structure would bring people
into contact to God. - That this structure would enable people to cling
to God in the midst of the chaos of Late
Antiquity and the Middle Ages. - But was this an appropriate dream?
8Great Christian Influencers of Society
- Catherine of Siena
- (ca. 1347-1380)
9Great Christian Influencers of Society
- William Wilberforce
- (1759-1833)
10London in the 1780s
- The industrial revolution
- The vast casino
- The slave trade
11Wilberforces Life
- 1780 The young MP
- 1785 Evangelical conversion
- The surprising ministry
- 1787 The beginnings of activism
- 1807 The abolition of the slave trade
- 1833 The abolition of slavery throughout the
British Empire
12The Turning Point 1787
- Has God saved me only to rescue my own soul
from hell? I cannot accept that. I cannot be
content with the comfort of life at Palace Yard
and the stimulating debates of Parliament. If
Christianity is true and meaningful, it must go
deeper than that. It must not only save but also
serve. It must bring Gods compassion to the
oppressed as well as oppose the oppressors. - Almighty God has set before me two great
objectives The abolition of the slave trade and
the reformation of manners. -
- --Summarized/quoted from Wilberforces diary
13The Opposition
- The Earl of Abingdon
- Humanity is a private feeling, not a public
principle to act upon. - Lord Melbourne
- Things have come to a pretty pass when religion
is allowed to invade public life. - James Boswell
14The Long Battle
- Defeats in Parliament in 1789 and 1791
- Organization of a public boycott of slave-grown
sugar in 1792 300,000 people took part. - In 1792, Parliament passed a motion for the
gradual abolition of the slave trade. - In 1796, a bill to abolish the slave trade was
defeated by only four votes. - The abolitionist bill was finally passed in the
House of Lords on Feb. 4, 1807. In Commons, the
bill passed overwhelmingly on Feb. 22.
15Wilberforces Legacy
- A Christianity which enters public life
- Authentication of the calling of Christians to
secular careers - An extraordinary example of perseverance
- A pattern of evangelicals who care deeply about
their societies
16Great Christian Influencers of Society
- George Washington Carver
- (ca. 1861-1943)
17Great Christian Influencers of Society
18African Tribal Society
- Faith is integrated into all aspects of life.
- An anthropocentric view of Being
- God (originator and sustainer of humanity)
- Spirits (concerned with human destiny)
- Humanity
- Animals, plants, events, and objects (part of the
human environment)
19African Tribal Society
- A non-linear view of Time
- Past and present, with little view of the future
- Two tenses Sasa (from the immediate past to the
very near future) and Zamani (from the distant
past to the immediate past) - Immortality comes through descendants who will
remember a person, thus keeping him in Sasa time,
rather than allowing him to recede into Zamani.
20The Gospel and African Society
- Trying to adapt to the African mindset, but going
too far - A great deal of syncretism and relativism
- Frequently, universalism rather than
evangelicalism - Weakening of biblical authority in order to
stress indigenous religion - As a result, a grave threat to the vast harvest
of souls brought in through 150 years of
evangelism in Africa
21The Life of Byang Kato
- He was born in Sabruzo, Nigeria in 1936.
- He was destined to be a fetish priest.
- He was converted to Christianity at age 12.
- He studied in Nigeria, England, and America.
- He was elected as General Secretary of two
African evangelical groups. - He was chosen as vice-president of the World
Evangelical Fellowship. - He died in an accident in 1975.
22Kato and African Christianity
- Biblical Christianity is Africas only hope
- Adhere to the basic presuppositions of historic
Christianity. - Allow Christianity to judge African culture.
- Train leaders in the Scriptures, Greek, and
Hebrew. - Study non-Christian African religions.
- Make doctrinal agreement the basis of fellowship.
- Guard against syncretism and universalism.
23Questions Regarding Kato
- To what degree is the gospel a universal message,
and to what degree is it a cultural message? - How can we guard against over-adapting the
message? - How can we guard against under-adapting the
message?
24Great Christian Influencers of Society
25Great Christian Influencers of Society