Title: The Emergence of Modern Protestantism 1725 1850
1The Emergence of Modern Protestantism1725 - 1850
Lecture 1 Introduction, Review and Preview
Dr. Dave Doughty
2The 5th class in a twenty-year course!
- 1992 (or was it 1993?)
- The Spreading Flame (33 to 456 AD)
- 1996 (postponed from 1995)
- The Church in the Middle Ages (500 to 1350 AD)
- 2000
- The Reformation (1350 1611)
- 2004
- The Expansion and Decline of Protestant
Christianity (1607 1730)
3Review of 1607 - 1730
- In In 1607 the first group of 104 settlers land
at Jamestown - 1610 Arminius and the Remonstrants
- 1618 - Synod of Dort
- 1611 KJV
- Kepler (1571-1630)
- What voice has the heaven, what voice have the
stars, to praise God as man does? Unless, when
they supply man with cause to praise God, they
themselves are said to praise God. - Galileo (1564-1642)
- In disputes about natural phenomena one must
begin not with the authority of Scriptural
passages but with sensory experience and
necessary demonstrations. For the Holy Scripture
and nature derive equally from the Godhead, the
former as the dictation of the Holy Spirit, and
the latter as the most obedient executrix of
Gods orders. Moreover, to accommodate the
understanding of the common people, it is
appropriate for Scripture to say many things that
are different (in appearance and in regard to the
literal meaning of the words) from the absolute
truth.
4Review Puritans and Pilgrims
- 3 types of Puritans (Puritans, Presbyterians,
Independents) - 2 types of Independents (Separatists Pilgrims,
Non-separatists Massachusetts Bay Colony) - Pilgrims Arrive in US (1620)
- 1629 Charles Dissolves Parliament
- Puritans Arrive in US(1630)
5Review- Descartes (1596-1650)
- Philosophy
- Everything is to be doubted revelations,
concepts about God, the world of values, physical
things, opinions.
6Review - Descartes
- Proof for the existence of God.
- 1. I have an idea of God, a perfect being.
- 2. There must be as much reality or perfection in
the cause of any thing as in the effect. - This applies not only to the existence of ideas,
but also to the reality of what they represent.
Not only must the existence of the idea be
explained, but also what it represents. - 3. The idea of God represents something so
perfect that I could not have been the cause of
this idea. - Therefore, God must exist as the only possible
cause of the perfection found in my idea of Him.
7The Problem with Descartes
- He elevates reason
- His reasoning is not as previous philosophers
and theologians requires mathematical style
proof - He elevates doubt
- Doubt becomes the primary virtue
- Doubt is the path to knowledge
- Belief in God becomes formal
- Like a mathematical proof
- How do you love a mathematical proof?
- If doubt and reason are the priority, what
happens to miracles?
8Review Pascal (1623-1662)
- A Devout Christian
- I cannot forgive Descartes. In all his
philosophy he would have been quite willing to
dispense with God. But he had to make Him give a
fillip to set the world in motion beyond this,
he has no further need of God . - Men despise religion they hate it and fear it
is true. To remedy this, we must begin by showing
that religion is not contrary to reason that it
is venerable, to inspire respect for it then we
must make it lovable, to make good men hope it is
true finally, we must prove it is true.
9Review Pascal
- The Christian religion, then, teaches men these
two truths that there is a God whom men can
know, and that there is a corruption in their
nature which renders them unworthy of Him. It is
equally important to men to know both these
points and it is equally dangerous for man to
know God without knowing his own wretchedness,
and to know his own wretchedness without knowing
the Redeemer who can free him from it. The
knowledge of only one of these points gives rise
either to the pride of philosophers, who have
known God, and not their own wretchedness, or to
the despair of atheists, who know their own
wretchedness, but not the Redeemer. - What reason have they for saying that we cannot
rise from the dead? What is more difficult, to be
born or to rise again that what has never been
should be, or that what has been should be again?
Is it more difficult to come into existence than
to return to it? Habit makes the one appear easy
to us want of habit makes the other impossible.
A popular way of thinking!
10Review the 17th Century America
- 1636 Roger Williams Leaves Mass. Bay Colony
Rhode Island - 1638 Anne Hutchinson banished from Mass. Bay
Colony - 1641 New York Public worship for Dutch Reformed
and NE Calvinists (others in private) - 1646 George Fox, Inner Light, and the Quakers
- Arrive in Massachusetts Bay in 1656 (some hanged)
- 1648 Puritans, the Visible Church and Baptism
- 1690 Maryland Church of England (originally
Catholic)
11Review the 17th Century UK
- 1643 Charles I forced out of London
- Puritans take over
- 1643 - 1649 Westminster Assembly
- Mostly Presbyterian Puritans
- 1649 Charles I beheaded
- 1658 Cromwell dies
- 1660 Charles II followed by James II in 1672
- Tries to remake England into Catholic country
- 1685 The Killing Time (The Wigtown Martyrs)
- 1688 The Glorious Revolution (William and Mary)
- 1689 Acts of Toleration (more or less all
protestants)
12Review Bunyan, Milton, Newton
- 1660 John Bunyan arrested for Puritan views
- Holy City Pilgrims Progress
- Milton
- Paradise Lost 1667
- Here we may reign secure and in my choice
- To reign is worth ambition, though in hell
- Better to reign in hell than serve in heaven.
- Paradise Regained 1671
- Newton
- Principia 1687
- Christ gave himself for me. Gal. 220
13Review Locke (1632-1704)
- Two Treatises of Government - 1689
- Men have natural rights to life liberty and
property. - Government established by consent of the governed
to secure these natural rights - The will of the majority must rule
- When that will is not carried out, the people
have the right of revolution - The legislative and executive functions should be
carefully discriminated - The legislative function is superior
- Government should not be coercive in matters of
faith
14Review Locke
- Reasonableness of Christianity - 1695
- Scriptures contain a message beyond the power of
unaided reason to attain, attested by miracles - That message cannot be contrary to reason
- A miracle could not attest anything essentially
unreasonable - It was enough to acknowledge Jesus as the
Messiah, and practise the moral virtues which he
proclaimed, which are in fundamental accord with
the dictates of a reason which is hardly
distinguishable from enlightened common sense.
15Review Presbyterians in America
- Various Presbyterians migrated to America
- English Puritans of Presbyterian persuasion
- Welch Presbyterians
- Scottish immigrants (non-Cameronian)
- Hugenots, also reformed Dutch, Germ., Switz.
- Scattered and isolated
- Most in middle, some in NE, some in south
- 1706 the first inter-colonial presbytery formed
- Independent of any old-world synod
- to meet yearly or oftenerto consult the most
proper measure for advancing religion and
propagating Christianity - 1716 Synod of Philadelphia with three
presbyteries
16Summary of Presbyterianism
- 1729 - Adopted Westminster standards as
confession - In 1743 there are two Presbyterian churches in
Scotland - Church of Scotland
- Reformed Presbyterian Church of Scotland
(Cameronians or Covenanters) - In 1743 there are two Presbyterian churches in
America - Philadelphia Synod
- Reformed Presbyterian Church in America
17Review Deism
- Locke is the Key (Reasonableness!)
- Five articles (from 1624)
- Belief in the existence of a single supreme God
- Humanity's duty to revere God
- Linkage of worship with practical morality
- God will forgive us if we repent and abandon our
sins - Good works will be rewarded (and punishment for
evil) both in life and after death - Toland Christianity not Mysterious (1696)
- I hope to make it appear, that the Use of
Reason is not so dangerous in Religion as it is
commonly represented
18John and Charles Wesley
- Go to Oxford in 1720s
- Holy Club
- 1735 Head to Georgia
- John - My chief motive is the hope of saving my
own soul. I hope to learn the true sense of the
Gospel of Christ by preaching it to the heathen."
19John and Charles Wesley
- May 20-21, 1738 Charles had a conversion
experience - At midnight I gave myself to Christ assured I
was safe, whether sleeping or waking. I had the
continual experience of His power to overcome all
temptation, and confessed, with joy and surprise,
that He was able to do exceedingly abundantly for
me, above what I can ask or think. - "...Reason cannot produce faith. Although it is
always consistent with reason, yet reason cannot
produce faith, in the scriptural sense of the
word. Faith, according to Scripture, is 'an
evidence,' or conviction, 'of things not seen.'
20End of Review
21This Class Emergence of Modern Protestantism
- Mostly focused on U.S. Church History
- Because the most interesting church history
developments were here in the colonies - Mostly focused on Continental Philosophers
- Because the most interesting philosophical
developments were happening in Europe
22Coming Topics
- Why Religious Freedom in the U.S.?
- Religious Beliefs of the Founding Fathers
- Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, John Adams, Sam
Adams, James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas
Paine, John Jay - The New (Christian?, Protestant?) Nation
- Deism in the 18th Century
- Unitarianism
- Universalism
23More Coming Topics
- French Revolution and Napolean
- William Carey and the Missions Movement
- Second Great Awakening
- Mormonism
- Public Schools in the U.S.
- Darwinism
- Slavery
24More (and deeper?) topics
- The Philosophers
- Voltaire (1694-1778)
- Hume (1711-1776)
- Paley (1743-1805)
- Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
- Schleirmacher (1768-1834)
- Hegel (1770-1831)
25Today Why Religious Freedom Here?
26Religion in European Countries
- England Anglican
- Germany Lutheran
- Scandinavia Lutheran
- Switzerland - Reformed
- Scotland - Reformed
- France Catholic
- Spain Catholic
- All the dominant groups believed in and demanded
religious uniformity within their civil
commonwealth enforced by the civil power.
27Religion In America
- Initially mostly Protestant, many varieties,
initially highly separated (they expected to
reproduce what they had known back home). - Puritans and Pilgrims in Mass., Dutch Reformed in
NY, Swedes on the Delaware, Anglicans on the
James. - What is amazing is that in America, between 1607
and 1787 these groups all came to live in peace
with one another, unlike what happened elsewhere! - Why?
28Why Religious Freedom in America?
- In The Lively Experiment, Sidney Mead
postulates that the immense space available in
the new world had much to do with it. - When Roger Williams was banished to Rhode Island,
Cotton Mather wrote, The Jurisdiction (whence a
man is banished) is but small, and the Country
round about it large and fruitful where a man
may make his choice of variety of more pleasant,
and profitable seats, then he leaveth behinde
him. In which respect, Banishment in this
countrey is not counted so much a confinement, as
an enlargement.
29The Banishment Problem
- The Bay Puritans, in the attempt to protect
their own religious absolutism, might banish such
dissidents as Anne Hutchinson, Roger Williams,
the Quakers and the Baptists. But they could
neither keep them from establishing themselves in
neighboring colonies, nor hide the attractive
example of their freedom from the citizens of
Massachusetts.
30Other Factors
- First religious multiplicity the sheer volume
of different beliefs meant it was hard for any
one group to enforce its will on the others. - Second Voluntaryism the idea that spiritual
leaders had to seek and to hold the consent and
the confidence of the faithful if they are to be
effective. Various organizations were in constant
competition with each other. - Third England the motherland interfered
periodically to disallow death penalty type of
sanctions.
31Next Week
- The Great Awakening Edwards Whitefield and
Franklin