meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The History of the Christian Church

136-Push Back

The History of the Christian Church

sanctorum.us

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.6790 Ratings

🗓️ 7 August 2016

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The title of this episode is Push-BackAs we move to wind up this season of CS, we’ve entered into the modern era in our review of Church history and the emergence of Theological Liberalism. Some historians regard the French Revolution as a turning point in the social development of Europe and Western Civilization. The Revolution was in many ways, a result of the Enlightenment, and a harbinger of things to come in the Modern and Post-Modern Eras.At the risk of being simplistic, for convenience sake, let’s set the history of Western Civilization into these eras of Church History.First is the Roman Era, when Christianity was officially opposed and persecuted. That was followed by the Constantinian Era, when the Faith was at first tolerated, then institutionalized. With the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West, Europe entered the Middle Ages and the Church was led by Rome in the West, Constantinople in the East.The Middle Ages ended with the Renaissance which swiftly split into two streams, the Reformation and the Enlightenment. While many Europeans broke from the hegemony of the Roman Church to launch Protestant movements, others went further and broke from religious faith altogether in an exaltation of reason. They purposefully stepped away from spirituality toward hard-boiled materialism.This gave birth to the Modern Era, marked by an ongoing tension between Materialistic Rationalism and Philosophical Theism that birthed an entire rainbow of intellectual and faith options.Carrying on this over-simplified review from where our CS episodes have been, the Modern Era then turned into the Post-Modern Era with a full-flowering and widespread academic acceptance of the radical skepticism birthed during the Enlightenment. The promises of the perfection of the human race through technology promised in the Modern Era were shattered by two World Wars and repeated cases of genocide in the 20th and 21st Cs. Post-Moderns traded in the bright Modernist expectation of an emerging Golden Age for a dystopian vision of technology-run-amuck, controlled by madmen and tyrants. In a classic post-modern proverb, the author George Orwell said, “If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face – forever.”In our last episode, we embarked on a foray into the roots of Theological Liberalism. The themes of the new era were found in the motto of the French Revolution: “Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.”Liberty was conceived as individual freedom in both the political and economic realms. Liberalism originally referred to this idea of personal liberty in regard to economics and politics. It’s come to mean something very different. Libertarian connects better with the original idea of liberalism than the modern term “liberalism.”In the early 19th C, liberals promoted the political rights of the middle class. They advocated suffrage and middle-class influence through representative government. In economics, liberals agitated for a laissez faire marketplace where individual enterprise rather than class determined one’s wealth.Equality, second term in the French Revolution’s trio, stood for individual rights regardless of legacy. If liberty was a predominantly middle-class virtue, equality appealed to rural peasants, the urban working class, and the universally disenfranchised. While the middle class and hold-over nobility advocated a laissez-faire economy, the working class began to agitate for equality through a rival philosophy called socialism. Workers inveighed for equality either through the long route of evolution within a democratic system or the shorter path of revolution via Marxism.Fraternity, the third idea in the trinity, was the Enlightenment reaction against all the war and turmoil that marked European history till then; especially the trauma that had rocked the continent through endless political, economic, and religious struggle. Fraternity represented a sense of brotherhood

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

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

0:16.1

This episode is titled, Why So Critical?

0:20.4

Two episodes back, we introduced the themes that would eventually lead to theological liberalism.

0:26.0

And then in the last episode, we talked a bit about how the church, and mostly the Roman Catholic Church, pushed back against those themes.

0:34.2

In this episode, we're going to go further into the birth of liberalism.

0:38.3

The 20th century was unkind to theological liberalism, with its shining vision of the universal

0:44.7

brotherhood of man under the universal fatherhood of God. Yet, many mainline Protestant denominations

0:51.3

still hold solidarity with classic liberalism.

0:55.6

It was Professor Sidney Alstrom's view that liberals had provoked as much controversy in

1:00.1

the 19th century as the reformers had in the 16th.

1:05.0

The reason for that controversy lay in their objective, stated by one of its premier advocates

1:10.0

and popularizers, Harry Emerson Foszik.

1:13.2

In his autobiography, The Living of These Days, the influential pastor of the famous Riverside Church

1:19.1

in New York City said that the aim of liberal theology was to make it possible, quote,

1:26.7

to be both an intelligent modern

1:28.8

and a serious Christian, unquote. Liberals hope to address a problem maybe as old as the faith

1:35.4

itself, and that is, how can Christians reconcile their faith to the intellectual climate of

1:40.7

their time without compromising the essentials of the gospel. By the evaluation of

1:46.5

modern evangelicals, liberalism failed in that quest precisely because they did compromise those

1:52.8

essentials in their desire to be relevant among their unbelieving peers. Richard Newbauer

1:59.4

expressed the irony of theological liberalism when he said that in it,

2:03.7

quote, a God without wrath brought forth men without sin into a kingdom without judgment through

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from sanctorum.us, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of sanctorum.us and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.