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The History of the Christian Church

135-Liberal

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 31 July 2016

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The title of this episode of CS is Liberal.The term “modern” as it relates to the story of history, has been treated differently by dozens of authors, historians, and sociologists. Generally speaking, Modernization is the process by which agricultural and rural traditions morph into an industrial, technological, and urban milieu that tends to be democratic, pluralistic, socialist, and/or individualistic.In the minds of many, the process of modernization is evidence of the validity of evolution. The idea is that evolution not only applies to the increasing complexity and adaptation of biological life, it also applies sociologically to civilization and human systems. They too are evolving. So, progress is good; a sign of societal evolution.But critics of modernization decry the abuses it often creates. Not all modern innovations are beneficial. The increased emphasis on individual rights can weaken a person’s sense of belonging to and identity in a family and community. It weakens loyalty to valuable traditions and customs. Modernization builds new weapons that may encourage their inventors to assume they’re superior, then use them to subjugate and dominate those they deem inferior, appropriating their land and resources.Modernization is often linked to a creeping secularization, a turning away from theistic religion. Periodic revivals are viewed as just momentary blips in societal evolution; temporary distractions in progress toward the realization of the Enlightenment dream of a totally secular society.It was during the 19th C that the rationalist ideas of the Enlightenment finally moved out of the halls of academia to settle in as the status quo for European society. Christians found themselves caught up in a world of mind-numbing change. Their cherished beliefs were assailed by hostile critics. Authors like Marx and Nietzsche attacked the Christian Faith from a base in Darwin’s popular new theory.In an attempt to accommodate Faith and Reason, Ludwig Feuerbach, author of The Essence of Christianity, published in 1841, reduced the idea of God to that of a man. He said God is really just the projection of specific human qualities raised to the level of perfection.In 1855, Ludwig Büchner suggested that science dispensed with the need for supernaturalism. A materialist, he was one of the first to say that the advent of modern science meant there was no longer a need to explain phenomena by appealing to the miraculous or some ethereal spiritual realm. No such realm existed, except in the minds of those who refused to accept what science proved. He said, “The power of spirits and gods dissolve in the hands of science.”During the last half of the 19th C, Frederic Nietzsche made the case for atheism. Son of a Lutheran pastor, Nietzsche received an education in theology and philology at the Universities of Bonn and Leipzig.An amateur musician, Nietzsche became friends with composer Richard Wagner, who like Nietzsche, admired the atheist Schopenhauer.In Nietzsche’s philosophy, we see the fruit of something we looked at in an earlier episode. The rationalist emphasis on reason divorced from faith leads ultimately to irrationality because it claims omniscience. By saying there IS no realm but the material realm, it closes itself off to even the possibility of a non-material realm. Yet the process of reason leads inevitably and inexorably to the conclusion there MUST be a realm of being, a category of existence beyond, apart from the material realm of nature.So Nietzsche embraced what has to be called non-rational ideas as the source for creativity, what he called “true living,” and art. An early indication his mind was fracturing, he identified as a follower of Dionysus, god of sexual debauchery and drunkenness. It’s no surprise he indicted Christianity as promoting all that which was weak. He hated its emphasis on humility and its acceptance of the role of guilt in aiming to better people by

Transcript

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0:00.0

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

0:16.3

The title of this episode of Communio Sintorum is liberal.

0:20.9

The term modern, as it relates to the story of history,

0:23.9

has been treated differently by dozens of authors, historians, and sociologists.

0:28.7

Generally speaking, modernization is the process by which agricultural and rural traditions

0:34.5

morph into an industrial, technological, and urban milieu that tends to be

0:40.0

democratic, pluralistic, socialist, and or individualistic. In the minds of many, the process of

0:46.7

modernization is evidence of the validity of evolution. The idea that evolution not only applies to

0:53.6

the increasing complexity and adaptation of

0:56.3

biological life, it also applies sociologically to civilization and human systems. They too are

1:03.3

evolving. So progress is good. It's a sign of societal evolution. But critics of modernization

1:10.8

decry the abuses it often creates. Not all modern

1:15.2

innovations are beneficial. The increased emphasis on individual rights can weaken a person's sense

1:21.4

of belonging to an identity in a family or community. It weakens loyalty to valuable traditions and customs.

1:30.1

Modernization builds new weapons that may encourage their inventors to assume they're superior

1:35.4

and then use them to subjugate and dominate those they deem inferior, appropriating their

1:41.0

land and resources. Modernization is often linked to a creeping secularization,

1:47.0

a turning away from theistic religion.

1:49.0

Periodic revivals are viewed as just momentary blips and societal evolution,

1:54.0

temporary distractions and progress toward the realization of the Enlightenment dream

1:59.0

of a totally secular society.

2:02.8

It was during the 19th century that the rationalist ideas of the Enlightenment

...

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