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Rebirth and Reform in the West

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Title: Rebirth and Reform in the West


1
Rebirth and Reform in the West
  • Jeffrey L. Richey, Ph.D.
  • GSTR 221-O Western Traditions II
  • Berea College
  • Spring 2004

2
PRELUDE TO THE RENAISSANCE
  • 1300s plague, disorder, economic recession,
    isolation
  • Latin heritage of West well-preserved, but Greek
    sources mostly lost or available only in Arabic
    translation
  • 1400s population growth, rise of city-states,
    economic recovery, new exploration
  • Renaissance rebirth of Greco-Roman traditions
    among literate urban elites, c. 1350-1550
    (especially in Italy)

3
RENAISSANCE THEMES
  • Optimism regarding human worth and potential
  • Revival of classical Greco-Roman values
  • Humanism -- Is there anything more wonderful on
    earth, our marvelous planet, than the miracle of
    man? (Sophocles)
  • Naturalism The chief good is life according to
    nature. (Zeno of Citium)
  • Skepticism -- The unexamined life is not worth
    living. (Socrates)
  • Ideal luomo universale (universal man)
  • Maximizes human potential
  • Models himself on nature
  • Subjects all to critical inquiry

4
RENAISSANCE TECHNOLOGY
  • Although Europeans use Chinese wood-block
    printing as early as 1100s, metal movable type
    invented in Germany c. 1450
  • By 1500, over one thousand printers in business
    throughout Europe, with more than ten million
    copies of books sold
  • Approximately half of all books sold are
    religious in nature
  • Other popular titles include manuals of grammar
    and law, philosophical treatises, and romances

5
GIOVANNI PICO DELLA MIRANDOLA (1463-1494)
  • Most famous Renaissance philosopher
  • Studies at Platonic Academy in Florence, Italy,
    as well as universities of Ferrara, Bologna,
    Padua, and Paris
  • Regards all philosophical and religious
    traditions as containing nuggets of universal
    truth revealed by God
  • Strongly influenced by Jewish and occult
    traditions as well as Christianity
  • His work declared heretical by Pope Innocent VIII
    in 1486

6
THE RENAISSANCE BEYOND ITALY
  • In northern Europe, Renaissance manifests itself
    as Northern Humanism
  • Like Italian Renaissance thinkers, Northern
    humanists revere Greco-Roman antiquity and
    emphasize intellectual self-cultivation
  • Other themes
  • Religious and social reform
  • Strong concern for morality
  • Focus on individual inner life
  • Key figures include
  • Desiderius Erasmus (1466-1536)
  • Thomas More (1478-1535)

7
THE REFORMATION(S)
  • By late 1400s, serious questions about doctrinal
    and institutional matters in Western Christian
    (Catholic) Church emerge, including
  • Role of human intermediaries in process of
    individual salvation
  • Training and accountability of clergy
  • Use of local languages in worship and Biblical
    translation
  • Various priests and bishops seek to reform, not
    split, the Church
  • These reformers become known as Protestants
  • Martin Luther (1483-1546) protests
    Church-mediated aids to salvation, insists on
    sola fides (faith alone) and sola scriptura
    (scripture alone)
  • Thomas Cranmer (1489-1556) protests authority
    of Pope over English Christians, insists on
    worship in English instead of Latin and use of
    English Bible
  • Jean Calvin (1509-1564) protests idea that
    humans play an active role in their salvation,
    insists on absolute power of God to save or damn

8
THE AFTERMATH OF THE REFORMATION(S)
  • 1521 With support of local rulers, Luther
    establishes evangelical (Gospel-based)
    Christian church
  • 1521-1688 Religiously-inspired warfare taking
    place somewhere in Europe
  • 1555 Peace of Augsburg (Germany) recognizes
    Protestant-Catholic split, allows rulers to
    choose subjects faith
  • 1598 Edict of Nantes (France) enforces
    toleration of Protestantism, allows Protestants
    to hold public office

9
RENAISSANCE MEN AND/OR REFORMERS
  • Many reformers are Renaissance humanists
  • Humanists favor reformers focus on inner
    spiritual life, return to ancient texts, etc.
  • Other humanists, prizing Christian unity, reject
    new churches
  • Still others are suspicious of some reformers
    opposition to visual culture (use of images in
    Christian worship, etc.)
  • Most laypeople are either too rural and/or too
    illiterate to participate in these urban,
    literate controversies

10
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