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STUDY OF RELIGION HANDOUT, PART II: 1860-1960s Prof. Daniel Alvarez, Florida International University The last handout covered the period from 1800-1860. There I emphasized the rise of historical criticism and theological liberalism by reviewing the work and contribution of Schleiermacher, de Wette, Strauss, Baur, Wellhausen, the great successor to de Wette in the field of Old Testament studies, and Troeltsch (the bridge between 19th and 20th century developments). I also touched on the conservative reaction of Hengstenberg, who spearheaded the conservative movement in Germany from his appointment in 1827 as Professor of Old Testament at the University of Berlin (in fact, occupying the chair left vacant by de Wette in 1819) to his death in 1866. Before I proceed to discuss post-1860 developments in greater detail, it is necessary to deal with aspects of the conservative reaction to liberalism not only in Protestant Germany, America, and England, but in the world of Roman Catholicism as well. DEVELOPMENTS IN THE UNITED STATES America was (and remains) largely a conservative nation theologically as a result of successive waves of “revivals” that have kept it squarely in the Puritan world of thought and sensibilities since 1740, the year the first “Great Awakening” began under Jonathan Edwards and George Whitefield. In fact, one can best understand the American religious experience in terms of five of these awakenings (1740-41, 1800-1830 with Charles G. Finney, 1890-1910 with Dwight L. Moody, 1950-1960 with Billy Graham, with the fifth perhaps in the making since the 1980s). The Enlightenment was felt in America only at the end of the 18 th century, during the revolutionary years, under the influence of Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Thomas Paine, Ethan Allen, and Elihu Palmer, to name the most prominent names.1 However, the New England or Edwardean theology (from Jonathan Edwards) dominanted the colonies and then the young nation arguably for an entire century until the 1840s (Nathanael Emmons, the last of the Edwardeans, died in 1840)2, and this theology was conservative, Calvinist, bible (i.e. the Bible as the inerrant word of God), and confessional (based on the great Protestant confessions of the 17th century, Lutheran and Calvinist). Whenever America has drifted too far from its Puritan roots, the awakenings have served to bring America back to the fold. The Enlightenment took hold only among 1 It is ironic that it was the Baptists, led by Isaac Backus, who influenced Madison and Jefferson in their doctrine of the separation of church and state, not only liberal Enlightenment ideas about government derived from Locke and Montesquieu (cf. Isaac Backus’ papers, collected and published by William McLoughlin, and Backus’ History of New England with Particular Reference to the Denominations of Christians Called Baptists (3 volumes, 17771796, 2nd edition, 2 volumes, 1871). Except for their liberal view about church-state relations, the Southern Baptists today have taken a sharp turn to the right in politics and religion (with the Northern Baptists representing a liberal branch of the Baptist family in the United States). 2 Although others like Samuel Miller (Princeton), Leonard Woods, Moses Stuart, Bennett Tyler, Edwards Amasa Park, and Leonard Bacon (all of or formed at Andover Theological Seminary) continued to defend a version of Edwardean theology well into the 1890s. Such was the influence of Edwards. the educated elite of New England and never among the masses of the people, a fact that continues to shape political and religious sensibilities until our day. Only when the Unitarian (followed by the more radical Transcendentalist) movement began to be felt in earnest after 1806, did Enlightenment influences, both philosophically and theologically (and of course politically), become part of the debate, and only then among the educated and the universities. The Unitarians, as the names implies, rejected the dogma of the trinity, the deity (Godhood) of Jesus of Nazareth, and insisted that the Bible be studied by the same rules that apply to any other book.3 Harvard went Unitarian early (1806-1811) but Unitarian sent their sons to Germany to study with the likes of Schleiermacher and de Wette.4 The “new wine” of the Germans was most effective with the Transcendentalists; Ralph Waldo Emerson (d. 1882) and Theodore Parker (d. 1860) in particular moved to the most critically advanced (Parker) and radical (Emerson) conceptions in America.5 Soon conservatives, aware of the linguistic, philosophical, and theological prowess of the Unitarians directly trained or influenced by German scholars, decided that to compete they themselves needed to send their young to Germany as well, but to study with the likes of Hengstenberg, 3 Cf. William Ellery Channing (d. 1842), “Unitarian Christianity” (his “Baltimore Sermon” of 1819), considered the manifesto of Unitarianism. This sermon formally started the “Unitarian Controversy” that raged in the early 1820s. The Unitarians (and Transcendentalists) were to introduce America to de Wette and other German liberals. 4 In 1806 the Unitarian Henry Ware, Sr. (d. 1845), was appointed to teach theology at Harvard, where he was later succeeded by his son, Henry Ware, Jr.; Andrews Norton (d. 1853), another Unitarian and New Testament scholar, also joined the faculty shortly thereafter. In 1825 New England was shaken by the “Unitarian defection,” when hundreds (125 to be exact) of Congregational (Trinitarian) churches became Unitarian overnight. Andrews Norton wrote a famous critique of Trinitarianism in 1819, expanded into a book in 1833, A Statement of Reasons Against the Trinitarians; and Henry Ware, Sr., carried on a lengthy debate, in the form of letters, with Leonard Woods (of the newly founded Andover Seminary) in the early 1820s; and Moses Stuart (Andover) and Samuel Miller (Princeton) also wrote “letters” against the Unitarians in the same period. How well prepared by German scholarship were the likes of Buckminster, Everett, Norton, and then Parker, all Unitarians and the first three professors at Harvard, can be appreciated from Jerry W. Brown, The Rise of Biblical Criticism in America: 1800-1870 (1969). 5 Cf. Ralph Waldo Emerson, “Divinity School Address” (1838), and Theodore Parker, “The Transient and the Permanent in Christianity (1841), both in H. Shelton Smith, et al., editors, American Christianity: A Historical Interpretation with Representative Documents (1963), Volume 2. In 1842 Parker pubished A Discourse of Matters Pertaining to Religion, which is significant by, among other things, how deeply the influence of the German historical criticism of de Wette and Strauss can be felt in its pages. In the same year he published his (much expanded and not always accurate) translation of de Wette’s Introduction to the Canonical Scriptures of the Old Testament. It can be said with justice that the Unitarians and Transcendentalists not only introduced German historical criticism to America fifty years before America was ready to receive it, but that they understood the implications of this criticism for Christian theology and for the phenomenom of religion, now understood (at least by Emerson) in a comparative or history of religions sense. 2 Tholuck, Neander, who competed with the liberals on their terms. Charles Hodge, professor at Princeton Theological Seminary from the 1820s until his death in 1878, pursued studies at Berlin, but was naturally drawn to Hengstenberg and his circle.6 One can think of the Charles Hodge as the Hengstenberg of the United States, although Hodge is more oriented to the biblicism (Bible=inerrant Word of God) of 17th century orthodoxy (as classically represented by Francis Turretin in his Institutes of Elenctic Theology, a work whose translation Hodge himself comissioned, and on which Hodge is clearly dependent—and from which he quotes liberally—in his Systematic Theology, published in the 1870s). Revivalism and the Princeton theology effectively delayed the acceptance of liberal and higher critical (historical-critical) views in the United States until the 1890s. DEVELOPMENTS IN ENGLAND, GERMANY, AND THE CONTINENT Although England had been at the forefront of theological radicalism and criticism since the 1660s and particularly during the first half of the 18th century, it went into a long period of hybernation from the 1750s until literally the 1860s. In the works of John Toland (Christianity not Mysterious, 1696), Matthew Tindal (Christianity as Old as Creation, 1730); and in the numerous works of Anthony Collins (Discourse on Free Thinking, 1724), Thomas Woolston (Discourses on the Miracles of our Savior, 1727-30), Thomas Morgan (The Moral Philosopher, 173840), and Thomas Chubb (A Discourse Concerning Reason, 1731), the Deist movement launched an all-out assault on traditional or orthodox Christianity. Miracles, the historicity of the Biblical narratives, Moses’ authorship of the Torah, the birth narratives of Jesus and his supernatural birth, were sharply criticized; contradictions and discrepancies pointed out, challenging the inerrancy of the Bible, often with sarcasm and bitter ridicule. But despite some brilliant insights and specific criticisms that anticipated the systematic work of German critics like de Wette, Strauss, and Baur, their criticisms were too piecemeal and lacked the comprehensive grasp of the issues that were to distinguish the work of the German critics of the 19th century. More importantly, the British Deists did not work with the original languages, and hence their work does not have the academic rigor of the German critics. Compared with the latter, their work has an amateurish, dilettante flavor that dramatically exposed its limitations and weaknesses.7 The critique arising out of the Enlightenment became more radical as it sought to relativize Christianity (and religion in general) and assimilate it to the mythologies of the ancients, as we find in Fontenelle’s History of the Oracles (1686) and Origin of the Fables (169099, published in 1724). Pierre Bayle’s Critical Historical Dictionary (1696-97, 5th edition, 1740), Baron D’Holbach, Helvetius, Condillac, la Mettrie, Voltaire , Buffon, N. A. Boulanger, 6 It is clear from perusing Hodge’s monumental Systematic Theology (1871-73) and his Commentary on Romans (1835; revised and enlarged, 1866) that Hodge is keenly aware of liberals views. The same can be said about his younger contemporaries, William G. T. Shedd (Dogmatic Theology, 1889) and Hodge’s own son and successor, A. A. Hodge (Outlines of Theology, 1878). Modern-day evangelicals, with notable exceptions, do not have the same grasp of the issues raised by Schleiermacher, et al., as did Hodge, Shedd, and the younger Hodge, a point made brilliantly by Mark Noll in The Scandal of the Evangelical Mind and David F. Wells in No Place for Truth, both published in 1994. 7 Cf. William Baird, History of New Testament Research (Volume One), 39-57. 3 Condorcet, (supported by David Hume’s Natural History of Religion [1757]and his devastating Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion [1779]), and Charles François Dupuis’ Origins of all the Cults (1795), continued their assault on religion and Christianity from an empiricist (Locke and Hume) and materialist point of view (cf. Frank E. Manuel, The Eighteenth Century Confronts the Gods [1959] and R. R. Palmer, Catholics and Unbelievers in 18th Century France [1939], Peter Gay, The Enlightenment [2 volumes, 1969], and Ernst Cassirer, The Philosophy of the Enlightenment [1932]). The dramatist Gotthold Ephraim Lessing’s (d. 1781) Theological Writings (edited by Chadwick, 1957) in particular, The Education of the Human Race, and Nathan the Wise, as well Hermann Samuel Reimarus’s (d. 1768) Wolfenbüttel Fragments, published by Lessing between 1774 and 1778, proved to be prophetic of things to come in the 19th century. Reimarus, influenced by the Pantheism and anti-supernaturalism of Spinoza (d. 1677), charged Christianity with fraud (body of Jesus was stolen by the disciples, who fabricated the story of the resurrection); and deception, when history itself proved that Christianity was based on a falsehood: the second coming of Christ was predicted to take place at the time of the apostles, not centuries or millennia later at some indefinite future. After this period of intense criticism, the torch is passed to Germany. England in the second half of the 18th century is now in the grip of its own “Great Awakening,” led by John Wesley, his brothers, and a host of itinerant “Methodist” preachers that brought a reinvigorated “Pietism”8 back into the mainstream of British life and competed with Enlightenment ideas for the heart, if not the mind, of the nation. By the 1830s however, deep dissatisfaction with the Anglican (Church of England) Via Media (“middle way” between the extremes of Protestantism and Roman Catholicism, articulated by the Elizabethan theologians such as John Jewel and Richard Hooker in the late 1500s) led some theologians at Oxford to question the very foundations of the English religious establishment. The most prominent critic of the Church was the priest John Henry Newman (d. 1890), who in “Tract 90” of Tracts for the Times (from which the movement derived its name, “Tractarians”) essentially assimilated to and interpreted the doctrines of the Anglican Church in terms most consistent with Catholic dogma, the beliefs of the Christian Church in the first five or six centuries (or, as Newman put it, the 39 Articles of the Church of England, the doctrinal standard of the Church since the time of Queen Elizabeth [d. 1604], can or should be read in the most Catholic of senses). The publication of the tracts was suppressed by the university and Newman converted to Roman Catholicism in 1845, concluding a distinguished career as a Protestant (or at least, non-Catholic) theologian and church historian. In 1878 he was made Cardinal, a distinction that has since become almost part of his name. Newman felt that Roman Catholicism is the only effective antidote and corrective to liberalism (both theological and political) and the corrosive effects of the Enlightenment, a move in which he was followed in America by Orestes Brownson (d. 1876), a former Unitarian-TranscendentalistPresbyterian-Agnostic who for similar reasons converted to Catholicism.9 Two prominent 8 One must not ignore that Wesley’s convesion experience in 1738 had taken place at a Moravian Brethren meeting (the same group that influenced Schleiermacher’s initiation into religious experience). 9 In our century, Newman’s trajectory to Rome has been followed by Ronald Knox, among others. Newman’s story of his conversion can be read in his Apologia Pro Vita Sua 4 Catholic intellectuals in France, Joseph de Maistre (d. 1821) and (Félicité Robert de) Lamennais (d. 1854), articulated similar visions of a Western world united under the banner and authority of the Catholic Church and the Pope in particular as the only hope for the world (a position known in the literature as Ultramontanism, “beyond the alps,” toward Rome). Neo-Pietism in Germany under Hengstenberg, Revivalism and the Princeton theology in America, and a resurgent Roman Catholicism as the only hope against the forces of infidelity (historical criticism, the Enlightenment, political liberalism, democratic movements, separation of church and state, freedom of the press, religion, academic freedom) together provided a formidable front against everything that Schleiermacher, et al. had worked for since the turn of the century. It is no surprise therefore that the triumph of liberalism came late, and it came only to the universities, seminaries, and the intellectual elite in the main urban centers of Europe and England, and the Northeast in the United States. The increasing conservatism (and ultramontanism) of the Roman Catholic Church evident in these developments reached their apogee and climax in the first Vatican council of 1871, which reasserted the Tridentine faith (Council of Trent); at this council the dogma of Papal infallibility, despite opposition by eminent Catholics, such as Newman, Lord Acton, and the church historians Karl Hefele, and Joseph Dollinger, was defined and made an official dogma of the Church. These developments were followed by Pious X’s encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis condemning “modernism” in 1907 (and by the “Oath against Modernism” in 1910, making the papal encyclical binding for every Catholic teacher or cleric, and the rejection of Modernism in any and every form mandatory), which culminated with the excommunication of the modernist theologians Alfred Loisy (French) and George Tyrrell (British). It was not until the 1940s under Pius XII that the Church allowed Catholic scholars to study the Bible using the tools of historical criticism now commonplace in the liberal Protestant world. In a move quite progressive for its time, the Church also allowed at the acceptance of Darwin’s theory of evolution, provided that it was also accepted that God had at some point in the evolutionary process put souls into two individuals who became the progenitors of the human race. It was not until Vatican II that the Church self-consciously opened itself to “modern world,” including ecumenism and a new, highly advanced stance toward Judaism, 10 Protestantism (Protestant are now recognized as Christians and “separated brothers”), and the world religions. With the papacy of John Paul II (1978-present) the interpretation of Vatican II is in question by many conservative Catholic theologians, who read the document in its most “conservative” (or as I have put it, “Vatican I-Trent”) sense.11 (1864), and Brownson’s in The Convert (1857), Knox’s in A Spiritual Aeneid, being an account of journey to the Catholic faith (1918). 10 Now officially declaring that the Jews are not responsible for the death of Jesus, and considering Judaism as a “parallel covenant” that is not abolished by the Christian covenant in Jesus Christ (quoting Paul that the gifts and covenants of God are “irrevocable”). How long this reading of Vatican II will last is not clear, anymore than what many interpreters of the documents take to be a quite liberal and inclusive views toward the great non-Christian religions. 11 The openness to the modern world advocated, at least on one reading, by Vatican II encouraged a number of Catholic theologians in Europe and America to explore Biblical 5 Only with the publication in 1860 of Essays and Reviews, a collection of papers by eminent Anglican theologians and university professors that expressed sympathy for German critical views, did things begin to loosen up a bit in England. But the essays caused a furor, quite a reflection of the state of religion and theology in England (the Essays were published in the United States by the Unitarian Frederick Henry Hedge of Harvard), despite the fact that, as sympathetic German reviewers noted, it is quite moderate, if not timid, in its assessments and conclusions. In 1889 another collection of essays, Lux Mundi, and the scandal caused by Bishop Colenso,12 who in a multi-volume and ponderous work on the Pentateuch and the Book of Joshua, published between 1862 and 1879, pretty much confirmed for the English-speaking world the most devastating conclusions of the German Biblical critics, again caused tremors in the evangelical world to a degree that it prepared both England and America for the reception and final acceptance (again, in academic circles almost exclusively) of German historical criticism.13 The work of Essays and Reviews and Lux and dogmatic themes with the freedom, creativity, and critical spirit of their liberal Protestant colleagues, and strongly reminiscent of the work of Loisy and Tyrrell in the late 19th and early 20th century. Although theologically conservative, in Latin America Gustavo Gutierrez (Peru), Jon Sobrino (Colombia), Leonardo Boff (Brazil), Juan Luis Segundo (Uruguay), and Enrique Dussel (Mexico), among others, articulated a “liberation theology,” strongl influenced by Marx’s critique of capitalism, for Latin America and the Third World that has shaken the Catholic world. In Europe, Hans Küng, Karl Rahner, Edward Schillebecxk, among others, pushed the limits of Ecumenism, openness to the world religions, theological reflection, and critical history. And in America, both male and female Catholic theologians, such as Rosemary Ruether, Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza, and Mary Daly proferred compelling feminist interpretations of Christianity (Ruether and Fiorenza in particular), and John Dominic Crossan, in his acclaimed The Historical Jesus (1991) critical analysis of the historical Jesus that have dramatically expanded the horizons of Catholic theology. But since the papacy of John Paul II, the ascendancy of conservatives like Joseph Ratzinger (who succeeded John Paul II as Benedict XVI) and Opus Dei, the banishment of Küng, Schillebecxk, and Boff, and the reaffirmation of the traditional view of the status of women in the church, these developments are in jeopardy. It remains to be seen how far Pope Francis can push what appears to be quite a liberal agenda that has raised eyebrows both in the among many churchmen and lay people. It is clear, however, that post-Vatican II Catholicism infused Roman Catholicism with a new spirit and attitude that led to greater collegiality between Catholic and Protestant theologians, and to introduction and influence of historical-critical methodology into the mainstream of intellectual Catholic life and thought; whether this process is now irreversible, as it seemed only a few years ago, remains to be seen. 12 Cf. John Rogerson, “John William Colenso,” chapter 16 of Old Testament Criticism in the Nineteenth Century (1984), 220-237; and Owen Chadwick, The Victorian Church (2 volumes). 13 Although Darwin had published The Origin of the Species in 1859, the theological world was in no position yet to assess the implications of that work for theology. Evolutionary, naturalistic thinking had been a part of the Western consciousness since the pre-Socratic philosophers (Empedocles, Anaxagoras, and materialism since at least Democritus), but Greek naturalism had lain dormant until the Renaissance and the scientific revolution that soon followed. Even with the scientific revolution of the 16 th and 17th 6 Mundi was accomplished in America by the translations by Unitarians and Transcendentalists of German critical works as early as the 1830s; special credit goes to Theodore Parker for his visionary appreciation of de Wette, clearly the favorite Biblical critic and theologian of the Transcendentalists (much to de Wette’s own amusement since he was a trinitarian!). CHRISTIANITY ENCOUNTERS THE WORLD RELIGIONS While these developments were going on in the internal history of Protestantism in the 19th century, other world historical movements were taking place simultaneously. The most important of these movements, particularly in its relevance to the study of religion in the West, has to do with the expansion of the British Empire into India and the Middle East. British presence in these parts of the world, hitherto known through the West through travel books written by explorers, adventurers, or, worse, a handful of zealous missionaries more interested in caricature and ridicule than in objective description, now brought with them missionaries in large numbers. Unlike previous centuries, when the interest or emphasis in Christianity did not lie in spreading the Christian message throughout the world, the 19 th century saw the rise of the missionary movement on a grand and organized scale. This movement did not begin in the 19th century. Through the cycle of great revivals of religion14 centuries, it was the physical (materialistic), not the biological or evolutionary, thinking of the Greeks that had the greatest immediate impact. With Lyell’s Principles of Geology early in the century, serious doubts began to be cast upon the antiquity of the earth, and attention called to the evidence of the fossil record. It is to the credit of the editors of Essays and Reviews that the essay “On the Mosaic Cosmogony” by C. W. Goodwin, where he addresses the issues with the Genesis record in the light of Lyell’s conclusions, was included. Darwin integrated both Lyell’s investigations with the evolutionary thinking of the Greeks in a comprehensive theory now backed by meticulous empirical observation. Only by the end of the 19th century was the West in a position to absorb the impact of Darwin upon religion, an impact that the conservative Christians saw, rightly, was inimical to a literal reading of the Genesis creation record and to the “creation-according-to-its-kind” (Aristotelian) spectacles through which this account had been read for almost two millennia—as evidenced by attacks on Darwin by conservatives like Charles Hodge What is Darwinism (1874), and Thomas H. Huxley’s equally impassioned apology for Darwin and evolutionary biology during the same period. Since Hodge and The Fundamentals (1917), “refutations” of Darwinism by conservative Christians continue to pour from the presses until our own day. It is quite ironic that Thomas Nagel, an atheist and naturalistic-minded philosopher, published a critique of Darwinism in 2012 (Mind and Cosmos Why the Neo-Darwinian Materialist Conception of Nature is Almost Certainly Wrong), to the delight of conservative Christian thinkers. The dissatisfaction with Scientific Naturalism in some circles has grown dramatically since the 1980s. 14 I am referring to the Great Awakening in the American colonies in the 1740s, led most prominently by George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards (in New England), Gilbert Tennent and Jonathan Dickinson (in the Middle Colonies of New Jersey and Pennsylvania), and Samuel Davies in the Southern Colonies (Kentucky). The best modern account of the Great Awakening is by Edwin Scott Gaustad, The Great Awakening in New England (1957). An older but still influential account is Joseph Tracy, The Great Awakening (1842). John Wesley, who experienced a powerful conversion experience in 1738, led an equally significant and long-lasting in its effect revival in England. It is to this first of several “awakenings” that 7 that began in the 1740s and continued unabated for the next century and a half, in England, Germany, and America, the desire of Christians in both of these nations to “fulfill the great commission” of Matthew 28:20 (“go into all nations and make disciples, baptizing them in the name of the father, the son, and of the holy spirit”) became the dominant emphasis of Protestant Christianity, and particularly of Evangelical (Conservative) Christians in England and America. Thousands of young men and women, like William Carey (India) and Adoniram Judson (China) and in mid century, James Legge (China), flocked to foreign lands with the message of salvation through Jesus Christ, determined to save the “heathen” for eternal life and from the fires of hell and eternal damnation. At this time Bible Societies and Foreign Mission Boards were founded to organize the work and support the missionaries abroad, societies and organizations that still continue to support missionaries the world over. However, these missionaries had to preach to populations who did not speak English, and who possessed religious traditions comparable to Christianity in depth, breadth, and antiquity; and Scriptures, theologians, and philosophers that matched or exceeded anything that Christianity had produced in the last eighteen hundred years. This meant then that native tongues had to be learned in order to preach and translate the Christian message, and particularly the Bible, the key document in the Protestant understanding of the Christian proclamation. In the apologetic task (i.e. defense of the faith against objections), Hindu, Muslim, Confucian, Taoist Scriptures had to be understood in order to be refuted, and that necessitated (especially for those gifted in languages, such as James Legge of China) the translation of those Scriptures into English. Others, like H. H. Wilson, a businessman with the East India Company but with a remarkable aptitude for Sanskrit, the language of India’s sacred literature, found themselves becoming scholars and overnight sensations in the West eager for knowledge from these exotic lands that were now British possessions. It is to Wilson that we owe several studies of Hindu religion and sects, and translations of postClassical texts such as the Vishnu Puranas (1840), a central text for understanding the development of the god Vishnu in sectarian Vaishnavism (the cult of Vishnu, as distinguished from Saivaism, the cult of Shiva). In the same year, Eugene Bournouf, professor of Sanskrit in France, published his translation of a fundamental text of the Bhakti movement, the Bhagavata Purana. Legge’s translations of the Chinese Classics, and the Analects of Confucius and the Tao te Ching (pronounced and now transliterated as Dao de Jing) attributed to Lao Tzu, the great Taoist sage, in particular have stood the test of time. Soon men like Wilson and Legge found themselves lecturing at Western universities, such as Oxford and Cambridge, first as speakers and later as professors of comparative religions. Coeval with the work of these pioneers was the foundations of Journals and Societies devoted to the investigation and study of the religions and cultures of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. the explosion of missionary activity owed its fundamental impulse. In Germany “awakening” came later, in the early 19th century (1817 to be exact), with rise of Neo-Pietism comparable to the older Pietism and Puritanism of England and America, but now much more dogmatic (doctrinally or confessionally rigid) than the relaxed Pietism of the 17th century that ultimately produced Schleiermacher, de Wette, and a host of other Biblical critics. For information about these 19th century developments the student is encouraged to consult Walter H. Conser, Church and Confession: Conservative Theologians in Germany, England, and America, 1815-1866 (Mercer, 1984). 8 THE EMERGENCE OF THE SOCIOLOGICAL AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF RELIGION It should added that the wealth of anthropological and ethnological data being amassed at a prodigious rate and documented in a plethora of journals from universities and research societies, together with Darwin’s theory of evolution (extended now to the evolution of cultures), led to the creation of the academic disciplines of philology, ethnology, folklore and mythology, anthropology, and sociology.15 It is apparent that one of the founders of sociology, Emile Durkheim, formulated his theory of religion (in The Elementary Forms of Religious Life, 1912) on the basis of the accumulated information; and this same information lies at the foundation of the anthropological work of E. B. Tylor (Primitive Culture, 1871), Max Müller work on Sanskrit, including his translation of the Upanishads (1880s), Jacob Grimm (Teutonic Mythology, 1854), James Frazer (The Golden Bough, 1890-1915), and Freud’s Totem and Taboo, The Future of an Illusion, Civilization and its Discontent, and Moses and Monotheism, inter alia. It is this kind of comparative investigation of the religions that led Troeltsch to adopt what he called the religionsgeschichtliche (“history-of-religions”) approach to the study of religion, an approach that I emphasized in the first handout was already implicit in the work of the young Tholuck(with his work on Islamic mysticism in the early 1820s), Strauss (life of Jesus) and Baur (Paul and Christianity of the first two centuries), and certainly in the work of Schleiermacher and Hegel, the last of whom lectured on the world religions in 1821, 1824, 1827, and 1831. Although someone like Legge never gave up his assumption that Christianity was the “only way,” he acknowledged, even while defending the absoluteness of Christianity, that Confucius had anticipated the golden rule (“do unto others as you would have them do to you”).16 Except for translation of the Qur’an into English by George Sales in 1734, nothing 15 The sociological study of religion and its implications for theology are explicitly drawn out by Shailer Mathews in a number of works, whose interpretation of religion achieves its maturest form in The Faith of Modernism (1924), the manifesto of the Modernist movement in American theology. Other Modernists of the so-called Chicago School, all influenced by sociology, and modern scientific naturalism: Roy Wood Sellars, Religion Coming of Age (1928); The Next Step in Religion (1918), for example), and John Dewey’s naturalistic pragmatism (including but not limited to Dewey’s A Common Faith, 1934) are Henry Nelson Wieman, Bernard Loomer, and Bernard Meland. The strong antipathy between Modernists and Fundamentalists in the 1920s and 30s was mutual. The influence of Alfred North Whitehead’s Process and Reality (1929), a “process” and naturalistic interpretation of God, on Wieman, Loomer, and Meland must also be mentioned. In this connection, Samuel Alexander’s Space, Time and Deity (1920), and Lloyd Morgan’s Emergent Evolution (1927) must be mentioned. An excellent analysis of these developments can be gleaned from the first part of Langdon Gilkey, Naming the Whirlwind (1969) 16 Legge’s comments can be read in his contribution to a series of papers defending the Christian faith against “unbelief” collected, in ten volumes, as Living Papers Concerning Christian Evidences, Doctrines, and Morals (Cincinnati: Cranston & Stowe, 1887). Critiques of Hinduism, Zoroastrianism, Buddhism, and Islam, invidiously comparing these religions with Christianity and therefore mostly dismissive or hostile, can be found in those volumes. 9 of worth was available in a Western language until the aforementioned efforts; and what was known was invariably dismissive, caricature, misleading, or downright slanderous and distorting. Even a brilliant, educated, and enlightened man such as James Mill, father of the philosopher John Stuart Mill, and author of the great multi-volume History of India (ca. 1820s), spoke of the Hindu religion and its literature in the most disparaging and condescending language. He wrote something to the effect that the entire wisdom of India could be summarized in a few paragraphs and there is nothing there anywhere comparable to Western philosophy and religion (and I am being charitable to Mill). By the 1870s the triumph of the historical-critical methodology reviewed in the last handout is now irreversible, something that Ernst Troeltsch takes for granted in his important papers from 1898 to 192317; and the impetus the development of this methodology gave to the comparative study of religion cannot be overestimated. The internal developments discussed previously now come together with the external mentioned in the foregoing to create a favorable atmosphere, almost by the necessity of the circumstances, for the establishment of chairs of comparative religion at the major Western universities (we had seen how Tholuck and even the conservative Hengstenberg had been trained as orientalists [Arabic] in the first quarter of the 19th century!). Oxford brought Max Müller, an Englishspeaking German scholar with a mastery of Sanskrit, to Oxford, and soon commissioned him edit a series of volumes (fifty in all when the project was completed in the early 20 th century) containing scholarly translations of the Sacred Books of the East. For the first time the English-speaking world had a collection of translations of the Bhagavad Gita, the Vedas, the Upanishads (translated by Müller himself), the Qur’an, the Tao te Ching, the Analects of Confucius (both by Legge), the Gathas attributed to Zarathrusta (Zoroaster, the founder of Zoroastrianism) presented without missionary or religious biases, and according to methodological principles consistent with the new historical consciousness. It should be added that lesser known but important writings, such as the great commentaries of the great Hindu philosopher-theologians Sankara (9th century) and Ramanuja (11th century), the Laws of Manu, and the like, were included in the series, giving the Western reader more complete picture of the spiritual depth, vitality, and richness of the great non-Christian religions. Great philosophical or literary figures in the 19th century, such as Schopenhauer, Hegel, Nietzsche, Goethe had been impressed with the wisdom of the East quite early in the century. In America the Transcendentalists Ralpha Waldo Emerson and James Freeman Clarke, the author of the first book on world religions published in America (two volumes, 1871), had been impressed not only by the wisdom but the power and depth of Eastern spirituality, with Emerson becoming in his mature years (post-1838) a pantheist himself (cf. his “Nature” and the Harvard “Divinity School Address”). There was clearly no way back to the time when Christianity could be taken for granted as the “absolute,” “final,” or “unique” revelation from God to humankind. Internal and external historical developments had made it impossible. As Troeltsch points out in his 1898 and later reiterates in his 1923 paper, the arguments from prophecy, miracles, and the moral and spiritual superiority of Christianity 17 “Historical and Dogmatic Method in Theology” (1898), “A Half Century of Theology: A Review” (1908), “What does ‘Essence of Christianity’ Mean?” (1903) ; “Religion and the Science of Religion” (1906); “The Significance of the Historical Existence of Jesus for Faith” (1911), among others. 10 looked very vacuous and unpersuasive by the end of the 19th century. There were then, as there are today, reactions to these developmens: Hengstenberg’s during the 1830s, which effectively held at bay the progress of historical criticism in Germany until his death in 1866; the rise of the Bible College movement in England but most prominently in America in response to the liberalization of universities and theological schools (seminaries); the rise of the Fundamentalist movement in America (early 1900s) determined, as it is still today, to fight infidelity, liberalism, historical-critical methology, and naturalism which in their view have led to a rejection of Christianity as the absolute truth and unique revelation from God. But the reactions could not stem the tide.18 In 1893 the first World Parliament of Religions congress was held in Chicago. Eminent representatives from the great world religions were in invited, but none was more impressive or affected more deeply the subsequent course of the study of religion in the West than Swami Vivekananda, an associate and disciple of Sri Ramakrishna, a Hindu mystic of renown in India. Vivekananda gave an impassioned exposition of the Hindu view of life, based primarily on the more philosophical and non-theistic Upanishads. By all accounts, Vivekananda showed the West that India had spiritual traditions and resources that rivalled if not exceeded anything that the Western Judeo-Christian tradition had to offer. India then not only had nothing to envy in the West, but the West could use some of the insights and methods for the attainment of spiritual renewal that India had to offer. It is in the last decades of the 19th century that the West experiences a veritable explosion of research into the great oriental religions, including Islam. Henceforth the question, at least in scholarly circles, was not how do we learn about these “heathen” religions for missionary or apologetic purposes (i.e. in order to convert their adherents), but how do we understand and do justice to religions that are in all the relevant respects comparable and in some aspects perhaps even superior to Judeo-Christianity. By the early 20th century, except for Zen Buddhism, the religious contribution of the non-Christian world had been explored and documented with great depth—although not always without preconceptions and prejudices it must be said, since the West as the colonial and imperial power could not easily abandon its tacit belief in its superiority culturally, materially, and by extension, spiritually. It was left to D. T. Suzuki to introduce the West to Japanese Zen Buddhism in an authoritative manner, with his monumental Essays in Zen Buddhism (three volumes, 1927-1934). This exposure at the turn of the century to the wisdom of the East, coupled with the triumph of a more tolerant, open, less dogmatic theological climate due to the results of Biblical and Historical criticism, led to the rise of the Ecumenical Movement. Christians in the West felt more humble now about inter-confessional differences and divisions, made more painful by now amply documented centuries of religious warfare and heresy trials among Christians belonging to different confessions and churches. The Enlightenment and the rise 18 I have already briefly alluded to the manifesto of early 20th century Fundamentalism. a series of pamphlets collected and published in 1917 as The Fundamentals in four volumes. This collection was in effect the successor and in some ways American counterpart of the Living Papers (since the authors of the earlier collection were mostly British), although the authors of the earlier collection were not Fundamentalists or Dispensationalists (as were many of the authors of The Fundamentals). Fundamentalism is, as I say above, a distinctively American movement. 11 of secular states (of which the first was the United States of America, to the credit of Roger Williams, James Madison, and Thomas Jefferson) had contributed to greater toleration, respect, and civility between members of the many sects and denominations populating the Christian West. At first the movement was intended only for inter-faith dialogue among Christians. Soon, especially after the 1930s, it became obvious that the world religions could not be excluded from the dialogue.19 Ecumenism had to be a worldwide affair, and the work of Troeltsch (particularly his 1923 paper, “The Place of Christianity Among the World Religions”) and the avalanche of scholarly investigations, books, and faculty and contacts between East and West contributed in no small measure to the change in attitude. There was of course resistance to this changed atmosphere. What is surprising is not that evangelical or conservative Christianity continued to oppose the changes and inveigh vehemently against what it perceived (and still does perceive) as compromises with evil and radical departures from the historic Christian faith. Fundamentalism, an American movement at the turn of the century, led the battle in the 20th century, opposing not only ecumenism, historical criticism, but also Darwinian evolution, and even geological and cosmological theories about an “old” earth (a view that has only recently, with respect only to an “old” earth and not evolution, made concessions to modern science). But Fundamentalism is in reality, with few exceptions,20 parasitic and dependent on the 19th century apologetics of Hengstenberg, et al. and in that sense is continuous with and moored to the past. What is surprising is that a critique of liberalism would emerge from within liberalism itself in the work of Karl Barth (1889-1968). Barth’s rejection of 19th century liberalism, interpreted by Barth as quintessentially articulated by its greatest theologian, Schleiermacher, is a major mistake and falling away from historic and Reformation 19 Cf. William E. Hocking, Re-Thinking Missions (1932), where a more inclusive, pluralistic stance is recommended, in contrast to the dominant exclusivist view maintained by Christians since the inception of the missionary movement, a view ably defended, from a Barthian perspective, by Heindrik Kraemer in The Christian Message in a Non-Christian World (1938) and Why Christianity of all Religions (1962). 20 I have in mind the recent (post-1980s) work of Ravi Zacharias, J. P. Moreland, Gary Habermas, and William Lane Craig, the leading evangelical apologists and who are all still very active today (for references students should consult my article, “On the Possibility of an Evangelical Theology,” Theology Today, Volume 55, 1998). Among the earlier apologists one also must mention C. S. Lewis (1930-1960) and Francis Schaeffer (1960-1980), and especially Alvin Plantinga (83 years old as I write), who began his apologetic work in the 1960s but who has recently written against the type of historical criticism as advocated by Troeltsch (“Two Types of Historical Criticism,” a chapter in his book, Warranted Christian Belief [2000]), for their enormous impact and continuing influence. Zacharias, of Indian parentage, has made it his business to evaluate and compare the world religions with Christianity, concluding (predictably) that Christianity is the absolute truth, and superior to the others in every significant respect. Troeltsch was right that conservative Christianity tends to ignore or dismiss modern developments, and most certainly Christianity’s encounter with the world religions. Norman Geisler, also a leading apologist initially in the 19th century mold, has since the 1980s moved closer to a Protestant Thomism, and constantly debates philosophers and theologians in the lecture circuit (as do Moreland, Zacharias, and Craig). 12 Christianity (Luther and Calvin). But this same Barth had been a devoted disciple of the master himself in his seminary years (along with his teachers, Wilhelm Herrmann and Ernst Troeltsch, the greatest Schleiermachians of the 20th century). Beginning with his Commentary on Paul’s Epistle to the Romans (Ger. Römerbrief, 1918, 2nd enlarged and rewritten edition, 1922), written under the influence of the Danish existentialist religious thinker, Soren Kierkegaard (d. 1855),21 followed by his university lectures on The Theology of Schleiermacher (1923/1924, English transl., 1982),22 and culminating with his monumental Church Dogmatics (1932-1968), Barth mounted what has to be considered without question the most impressive and sustained critique of 19the century liberal theology (from Schleiermacher to Troeltsch). (I deal with that critique in my courses on Contemporary Issues in Religious Thought and Contemporary Theology.) Barth is unique. Without being biblicist (Bible=inerrant Word of God), he is a Biblical theologian who takes the Word of God seriously; without being a confessionalist or dogmatist in the 17th or 19th century Neo-Pietist sense of the word, he is a theologian who writes a dogmatics; without believing that Christianity, qua a world religion, is any better than Hinduism, Buddhism, or Islam, yet he still manages to believe that it is the unique, final, and absolute revelation of God to humankind.23 Reluctantly at first, but now in greater numbers, evangelical conservatives see in Barth an ally in their struggle against liberalism. Barth’s NeoOrthodoxy or Dialectical Theology, as it came to be known, had prominent allies. In particular, we must mention the great New Testament scholar, Rudolf Bultmann (d. 1976), and the American theologians Reinhold Niebuhr (d. 1970) and his brother H. Richard Niebuhr (d. 1962).24 At first an ally but then a sympathetic critic,25 Paul Tillich (d. 1965) has to be classed 21 Kierkegaard is considered, along with Nietzsche and Dostoievski, the forerunners of 20 century Existentialism. In works such as Attack upon Christendom, Either/Or, Philosophical Fragments, and Concluding Unscientific Postcript, Kierkegaard sharply criticized the decadent and compromising “liberal” Christianity of mid 19th century Denmark, but quite relevant to theological liberalism in general. This critique lay dormant for over fifty years, since Kierkegaard’s “voice crying in the wilderness” went unnoticed and unheeded during his lifetime (he paid for the publication of his books). But in the work of the early Barth (1918-1932), Kierkegaard was heard again, and quite loudly. th 22 Barth wrote three other essays on Schleiermacher that have to be mentioned, both from the 1920s: “Schleiermacher’s Celebration of Christmas” (on Schleiermacher’s controversial 1806 book), “Schleiermacher,” both in Theology and the Church, a collection of his early papers published in English in 1962; and the later paper, written and published in 1952, “Schleiermacher,” in Barth’s Protestant Theology in the Nineteenth Century (English transl., 1972). 23 Barth believes that by God’s grace and sovereign will God has “elevated” Christianity to a privileged status vis à vis the other world religions. Barth’s most sustained treatment of the relationship of Christianity to the world religions is in Church Dogmatics. The work of Heindrik Kraemer are influential statements of the Barthian approach to the world religions. 24 Reinhold Niebuhr’s work, specially Moral Man and Immoral Society(1932), and The Nature and Destiny of Man (2 volumes, 1941-1943), is closer to Barth in spirit if not in letter; 13 ultimately with the liberals, and many would say the same about Bultmann (though I do not agree). But Neo-Orthodox was unstable, one could say almost inherently so.26 Suffice it to say that “dialectical” for Barth meant both a yes and a no; that is, theology is a human all-too human affair (cf. his appreciative introduction to the publishing of Ludwig Feuerbach’s The Essence of Christianity in 1957),27 while it is yet a speaking or proclamation of the Word of God to humankind (at the same time!); Christianity as a religion is no better than Hinduism, Buddhism, and the like, but as God’s chosen vessel for His disclosure to humans, it is the absolute religion (at the same time); he believed in the Word of God, but the Word was the work of his brother, H. Richard Niebuhr, influenced by both Troeltsch and Tillich on the one hand, and Jonathan Edwards and Barth on the other, is more ambivalent in crucial respects but just as important. H. Richard Niebuhr’s influence on contemporary theologians as diverse as Gordon Kaufman, Van Harvey, Richard R. Niebuhr, Ronald Thiemann, Edward Farley, John B. Cobb, Peter Hodgson is incalculable. 25 Tillich’s paper, “What is Wrong with the “Dialectic” Theology,” Journal of Religion XV (1935), 127-45, is a compelling critique of Barth’s “supernaturalism,” inter alia. Bultmann, in works like “New Testament and Mythology” (1941), and Jesus Christ and Mythology, distanced himself from the Barth of Dogmatics in significant ways, although remaining quite “Barthian” in the fundamental assumptions. In Jesus Christ and Mythology, Jesus and the Word, and New Testament Theology, Bultmann articulates a rather sceptical approach to the historical Jesus, who for him is only available to us through the Christian proclamation (Kerygma)and the “eyes of faith,” a view reminiscent of the late 19th century liberals (cf. the invaluable survey of the 19th century “lives of Jesus” by Albert Schweizer, The Quest for the Historical Jesus [1906]). Tillich’s Systematic Theology (1951-1963) and other works reveal a theologian who is more willing to grant to modern culture a greater status and influence in shaping our understanding and content of the Christian message than Barth would allow. In way Tillich is exceptional in his willingness to engage the modern world in ways reminiscent of Troeltsch. 26 Despite his natural sympathy for Barth’s critique of 19th century liberalism, Charles C. Ryrie, a leading Fundamentalist theologian of the 1960s and 1970s, in a pamphlet published in 1958 entitled Neo-Orthodoxy, takes Barth to task for not defining his position clearly on the side of the Orthodoxy he alleged to be defending and restoring. For Ryrie, Barth is a wolf in sheep’s clothing, and perhaps more dangerous because of it. Many, if not most, Fundamentalist Christians agree. 27 Ludwig Feuerbach (d. 1872) published in 1841 The Essence of Christianity, in which gives an analysis of religion that reduces theology to anthropology (i.e. religion is a projection or creation of the human imagination, and religious values a reflection of human values and ideals attributed to an infinite being, God, who does not exist outside of our imagination). This critique and interpretation of religion, and of Christianity in particular, influenced Marx and aspects of it can be seen in Freud’s The Future of an Illusion, inter alia. Feuerbach’s interpretation receives further elaboration in The Essence of Faith According to Luther (1844) and Lectures on the Essence of Religion (1848). 14 ultimately Jesus for Barth, not the written word which for him was not inerrant or infallible, and therefore a human word, even when it became (technical term for Barth) the Word of God (at the same time). Barth was still too much a child of the Enlightenment, and he could not or would not abandon historical criticism (however much he tried to limit it to the “human” side of Christianity). By the 1960s Neo-Orthodxy was moribund; and worse, liberalism was making a comeback, almost with a vengeance. That story would take us too far afield for the purposes of this course and is the subject of other courses I teach at FIU, so stay tuned. But what needs to be said is that since the 1960s, we are right back where Ernst Troeltsch left us, in a radically pluralistic world; with a strong historical-critical methodology that has confirmed the work of de Wette, Strauss, and Baur (although modifying to some degree in some cases, to larger degrees in others, the material conclusions of these great pioneers but not the methodological principles or orientation); with stronger sense of the ecumenical, trans-cultural task ahead of us; and with an even greater awareness of the grave dangers of dogmatism and extreme fundamentalisms that threaten to destroy the well being and flourishing of what is now one world community. I have dealt only briefly in this handout with non-theological developments that shaped the study of religion in the 19th and first half of the 20th century and word needs to be said about this. I have incidentally mentioned Nietzsche, Hume, and Kant in either of the handouts. However, Hume, in his essay, The Natural History of Religion, stimulated what I have would to call somewhat anachronistically the purely “sociological” (“anthropological” or “ethnological”), and through Freud the “psychological” study of religion. Hume’s, Kant’s, Hegel’s, Feuerbach’s, Marx’s, Comte’s, and Nietzsche’s28 critiques and analyses of religion also contributed to this growing trend, culminating, as already mentioned, in the work of E. B. Tylor, Emile Durkheim, Freud; and in the early 20th century, Max Weber (The Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Capitalism, Sociology of Religion, Ancient Judaism, The Religion of China and India, and important essays on the sociology of religion), and Ernst Troeltsch (The Social Teachings of the Christian Churches, and the incomplete Historicism and its Problems), to mention only the most prominent names. These analyses have proved fecund and led to “structuralist,” “post-structuralist,” or “post-modernist” interpretations of religious phenomena. Claude Levi-Strauss, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, Mary Douglas, Réne Girard, Joseph Campbell, inter alia, have proffered seminal analyses of religion in the second half of the 20th century that continue to influence and shape the study of religion.29 In the period after 1920 to 1960 the work of Clifford Geertz (The Interpretation of Cultures), Victor Turner (The Ritual Process), Peter Berger (The Sacred Canopy: A Sociological Interpretation of Religion), Mircea Eliade (The Sacred and the Profane, Cosmos and History: The Myth of the Eternal Return) in anthropology and sociology represent a new appreciation for religion, at the very least as a substantive dimension of the human that has to be taken into account. 28 Anticipated in often ponderous (and often overly simplistic and hostile) critiques of religion by several Enlightenment figures in the late 17th early 18th century, as we saw earlier. 29 For more details about the sociological or anthropological study of religion since the Enlightenment, consult Edward Evans-Pritchard, Theories of Primitive Religion (1965), and J. Samuel Preus, Explaining Religion (1987). 15 Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology has proved a very useful method for analyzing religious phenomena, as well as Martin Heidegger’s early and later work.30 Since the 1960s the work of Wilfred Cantwell Smith, particularly his The Meaning and End of Religion (1963) has stimulated analyses of religion that are not reductionist or based on a hostile attitude toward religion. Other developments have been pointed out in the course of this handout. 30 Husserl, Ideas: Introduction to Pure Phenomenology (1913); Heidegger, Being and Time (1927), and his later work, especially “Letter on Humanism” (1946). 16