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The History of the Christian Church

127-Then Away

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6 • 790 Ratings

🗓️ 22 May 2016

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this 127th episode of CS, titled “Then Away,” we give a brief account of the rise of Theological Liberalism.In the previous episodes, we charted the revivals that marked the 18th and 19th centuries. Social transformation is a mark of such revivals. But not all those engaged in the betterment of society were motivated by a passion to serve God by serving their fellow Man. At the same time that revival swept though many churches, others stood aloof and held back from being carried away into what they deemed as “religious fanaticism.”As Enlightenment ideas moved into and through the religious community, some theologians shifted to accommodate what had become the darling ideas of academia. Instead of becoming outright agnostics, they sought to wed rationalism with theology and arrived at an amalgam we’ll call Theological Liberalism.Not to be outdone by Revivalists transforming culture through the power of The Gospel and a conviction they were to be salt and light in a dark and decaying world, Liberalism developed what came to be called The Social Gospel; a faith that emphasized doing as much, if not more than, believing.The name most associated with the Social Gospel is Walter Rauschenbusch. He began pastoring a Baptist church in New York in 1886. It was there that he came face to face with the desperate condition of the poor.  He joined the faculty of Colgate-Rochester Theological Seminary, where over the course of 10 years he wrote 3 books that were hugely influential in promoting the Social Gospel.Someone might say at this point >> You’ve used that phrase a couple of times now. What’s ‘The Social Gospel’?”The Social Gospel was a movement among Protestant denominations in the early 20th century, mainly in the United States and Canada, but a limited expression in Europe. It addressed social problems with Christian ethics. Its main targets were issues of social justice like poverty, addiction, crime, racism, pollution, child labor, and war. Advocates of the Social Gospel sought to implement that line in the Lord’s Prayer that says, “Your Kingdom Come, Your will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven.”Advocates of the Social Gospel were usually post-millennialists who believed the Second Coming would not occur unless humanity rid itself of injustice and vice. The leaders of the movement were largely connected to the liberal wing of the Progressive Movement.The Social Gospel movement peaked in the early 20th century. It began to decline due to the trauma brought about by WWI, when the ideals of the movement were so badly abused by world events. A couple of under-pinnings of theological liberalism are the Brotherhood of Man and the innate goodness of human beings. WWI conspired to prove the lie to both assumptions and create doubt in the minds of millions that humans are good or could be a brotherhood.Though Rauschenbusch’s early theology included a belief in original sin and the need for personal salvation, by the time he’d written his last tome, he regarded sin as an impersonal social ill and taught that reform would arrive with the demise of capitalism, the advance of socialism, and the establishment of the Kingdom of God by human effort. His views were accepted by such prominent spokesmen as Shailer Matthews and Shirley Jackson Case of the University of Chicago.Rauschenbusch’s impact was combined with other developments in liberalism during the 19th century. Unitarianism had made deep inroads into mainline denominations under the leadership of William Ellery Channing and Theodore Parker. Channing’s sermon “Unitarian Christianity” in 1819, deserves credit for launching the Unitarianism movement.Another influential figure of the 19th C was Horace Bushnell. He published Christian Nurture in 1847, arguing that a child ought to grow up in covenant with God, never knowing he was anything but a Christian. This was contrary to the Pietist emphasis on having a datable conversion experien

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the history of the Christian Church, Season 1 with Lance Rolston.

0:15.6

In this 127th episode of Community Sanktorum, which is titled Then Away, we give a brief account of the rise of theological liberalism.

0:24.3

Now, I usually leave this for the end of an episode, but I'm going to deposit it here at the beginning this time.

0:29.7

Donations to CS are appreciated to keep the site up. We had to make a minimum donation amount of $5 because our site was getting hammered by fraudsters

0:38.4

making $1 donations to see if stolen credit card numbers were still good. Now I get charged for

0:45.1

every transaction and many of those accounts had been canceled and so I ended up having to pay

0:50.3

several hundred dollars in fees. Yeah, bummer. We've since installed some safeguards,

0:55.7

but also found that upping the minimum donation amount to $5 pretty much ended the issue of fraud.

1:02.0

And many things ahead of time for your support. In the previous episodes, we charted the revivals

1:07.9

that mark the 18th and 19th centuries.

1:13.9

Social transformation is a mark of such revivals.

1:17.5

But not all those engaged in the betterment of society were motivated by a passion to serve God by serving their fellow man.

1:22.1

At the same time that revivals swept through many churches,

1:25.6

others stood aloof and held back from being carried away

1:28.9

into what they deemed as religious fanaticism. As Enlightenment ideas moved into and through

1:35.3

the religious community, some theologians shifted to accommodate what had become the darling

1:40.7

ideas of academia. Instead of becoming outright agnostics, they sought to wed

1:46.4

rationalism with theology and arrived at an amalgam that we're going to call theological liberalism.

1:52.4

Not to be outdone by revivalists transforming culture through the power of the gospel and a

1:57.6

conviction that they were to be salt and light in a dark and decaying world,

2:01.5

liberalism developed what came to be called the social gospel, a faith that emphasized doing

2:07.5

as much, if not more, than believing. The name most associated with the social gospel is Walter

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