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The Thomistic Institute

Greed in Christian Societies | Professor Brad Gregory

The Thomistic Institute

The Thomistic Institute

Christianity, Society & Culture, Catholic Intellectual Tradition, Catholic, Philosophy, Religion & Spirituality, Thomism, Catholicism

4.8729 Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2024

⏱️ 88 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This lecture was given on October 19th, 2023, at the University of Oregon. For more information on upcoming events, visit us at thomisticinstitute.org/upcoming-events About the Speaker: Brad S. Gregory is Professor of History and Dorothy G. Griffin Collegiate Chair at the University of Notre Dame, where he has taught since 2003, and where he is also the Director of the Notre Dame Institute for Advanced Study. From 1996-2003 he taught at Stanford University, where he received early tenure in 2001. He specializes in the history of Christianity in Europe during the Reformation era and on the long-term influence of the Reformation era on the modern world. He has given invited lectures at many of the most prestigious universities in North America, as well as in England, Scotland, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Germany, Belgium, The Netherlands, Spain, Italy, Israel, Taiwan, Australia, and New Zealand. Before teaching at Stanford, he earned his Ph.D. in history at Princeton University and was a Junior Fellow in the Harvard Society of Fellows; he also has two degrees in philosophy from the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium. His first book, Salvation at Stake: Christian Martyrdom in Early Modern Europe (Harvard, 1999) received six book awards. Professor Gregory was the recipient of two teaching awards at Stanford and has received three more at Notre Dame. In 2005, he was named the inaugural winner of the first annual Hiett Prize in the Humanities, a $50,000 award from the Dallas Institute of Humanities and Culture given to the outstanding midcareer humanities scholar in the United States. His most recent book is entitled The Unintended Reformation: How a Religious Revolution Secularized Society (Belknap, 2012), which received two book awards. His forthcoming book is entitled Rebel in the Ranks: Martin Luther, the Reformation, and the Conflicts that Continue to Shape Our World (Harper, 2017).

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Tomistic Institute podcast.

0:06.2

Our mission is to promote the Catholic intellectual tradition in the university, the church, and the wider public square.

0:13.1

The lectures on this podcast are organized by university students at Tomistic Institute chapters around the world.

0:19.5

To learn more and to attend these events, visit us at

0:22.6

to mystic institute.org.

0:28.6

Very good to be here.

0:29.6

I want to make sure that I also thank Brianna for introducing me

0:33.6

and the Temistic Institute for the invitation.

0:36.6

I've been asked to say something about greed in Christian societies.

0:40.3

I'm a historian, so I'm going to do that historically.

0:43.3

I also wanted to give a little more specificity and focus to the topic,

0:49.3

and so I have a title, the title for the lecture is, is greed still a sin?

0:55.0

Averous, acquisitiveness, and the history of Christianity.

1:00.0

I'm doing it from a historical perspective not only because I am a historian,

1:06.0

but because for all of us, whether we have an interest in history or not, we are all creatures situated

1:13.6

in time. We're temporal beings. The past is always what has given rise to the present.

1:20.6

The present is the product of the past for every human being who has ever lived in whatever part of the world,

1:25.6

in whatever period he or she has lived. It follows follows that if we want to understand the present and its institutions and practices,

1:33.3

its attitudes and assumptions, we have to look to the past to see where the world that we know today,

1:41.3

how we experience it today today where it came from.

1:45.0

We want to know how things got to be the way that they are today.

1:48.0

We have no choice but to look to the past.

...

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