The French general who ascended to power in France after a period of confusion ending with a coup d'etat. Forged the Concordat of 1801 to give the Catholic Church a special place in France. His empire collapsed in 1815 and he was banished to an island in the Atlantic.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Concordat, history, Napoleon-Bonaparte[/tags]
8th century British missionary, also known as Winfred. Commissioned by Pope Gregory II in 729 to evangelize Germany. Later became Archbishop of Mainz.
[tags]BlogRodent, Boniface, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
A Pope (1294-1303) who declared, on February 22, 1300 a Jubilee — a Holy Year — to celebrate the new centenary of Christ's birth granting pardon for all the sins of those who reverently visited the churches of St. Peter and St. Paul during the Holy Year. He had a noted flair for pomp and circumstance. In 1296 Boniface had issued a "Clericis laicos," a document threatening excommunication for any lay ruler who taxed the clergy and any churchman who paid those taxes without papal consent. Boniface eventually backed down due to the resistance of Kings Edward and Phillip. He later earned even greater opposition from the king of France when he issued the "Unam Sanctum," a decree stating that all men were ultimately subject to the Roman pontiff. This adversarial relationship eventually led to his death at 86 when he was severely humiliated by French troops in his own hometown.
[tags]BlogRodent, Boniface,
During King Edward VI's brief years England saw the Six Articles repealed, priests allowed to marry, and the old Latin service of worship replaced by Thomas Cranmer's Book of Common Prayer in English. Under King Charles I and with the assistance of the Anglican Archbishop William Laud, the King insisted that worship in England be conducted according to the Prayer Book and no other. When Charles tried to force his brand of high-church on the Scots, John Milton called The Book of Common Prayer "the skeleton of a Mass-book."
[tags]BlogRodent, Book-of-Common-Prayer, Charles-I, church-history, ChurchRodent, Edward-VI, history, Thomas, William-Laud[/tags]
(1829-1912)
The most outstanding example of ministry to the dispossessed was the work of a pietistic evangelical William Booth. He started his ministry with the Methodist New Connection but soon withdrew to work with London's poor. His street preaching in London's East End in 1864 met with phenomenal success. Within eleven years he had thirty-two stations promoting evangelism and social service among London's destitute. His workers, organized like a military unit, were soon called the Salvation Army. Evangelist Booth became General Booth.
By 1888 the General had established 1,000 British corps and had dispatched patrols to many other nations. His book In Darkest England and the Way Out appeared in 1890 graphically comparing the social darkness in England to Africa's darkness pictured by David Livingstone. In London, in one year, he reported 2,157 people had been found dead, 2,297 had committed suicide, 30,000 were living in prostitution, 160,000 had been
(1862-1929)
A Canadian Anglican who served as a missionary to the Philippine Islands. He was conscious of the doctrinal differences that separated the churches. He saw Anglicanism as the bridge that might span these differences. On his urging the Edinburgh conference appointed a committee to invite "all churches which accept Jesus Christ as God and Savior to join in conferences following the general method of the World's Missionary Conference, for the consideration of all questions pertaining to Faith and Order of the Church of Christ." Brent believed that cooperation among churches was possible only on the basis of agreement on essentials of the faith. Disunity, he said, is fundamentally creedal.
[tags]BlogRodent, Charles-Brent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Jesus[/tags]
The virtual ruler of India since 1763. They refused Carey permission to live in Calcutta.
[tags]BlogRodent, British-East-India-Company, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
The persecution of the Anabaptists forced them to flee to the north. Many of them found refuge on the lands of some exceptionally tolerant princes in Moravia. There they founded a long-lasting form of economic community called the Bruderhof, a Christian commune. In part they aimed to follow the pattern of the early apostolic community. But they sought community for practical reasons too — as a means of group survival under persecution. Their communities attempted to show that in the kingdom of God brotherhood comes before self. Consolidated under the leadership of Jakob Hutter, who died in 1536, these groups came to be known as "Hutterites".
[tags]Anabaptists, BlogRodent, Bruderhof, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Hutterites, Jakob-Hutter[/tags]
(1860-1925)
As leader of the Progressive cause in the Democratic party, three-time candidate for President of the United States, and Secretary of State in the cabinet of President Woodrow Wilson, Bryan was sustained by his faith in the "democracy of the heart." He was devoted to peace and arbitrated treaties with 30 countries under Wilson, but eventually resigned his position as Secretary of State for Wilson and his cabinet opposed treaties. He then threw himself into Prohibition, and his last crusade was the one that drew him directly into the fundamentalist movement, the effort to outlaw the teaching of evolution on the public schools of America.
Bitter opposition to the teaching of evolution in public schools brought about the Scopes trial in 1925 in Dayton, Tennessee. Bryan was the prosecuting lawyer, and Clarence Darrow (1857-1938) defended John T. Scopes. Scopes lost the case, and several Southern legislatures passed laws banning
(1491-1551)
A supporter of the Zwinglian type of reformation. From Strassburg, Germany, he was surpassed in influence throughout Germany only by Luther and his associate Melanchthon and was inclined to sympathize with Zwingli rather than Luther.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Martin-Bucer[/tags]
Controversy between the Protestant and Catholic cantons in Switzerland led, on 11 October 1531, to a battle at Kappel between Zurich and its Catholic neighbors. In the course of the battle Zwingli lost his life. Thus, the leadership of the reformation in Zurich fell to Heinrich Bullinger.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, Heinrich-Bullinger, history[/tags]
(1889-1996)
A pioneer in neo-orthodoxy, Brunner emphasized the subjective encounter in meeting God while denying the inspiration of Scripture and the historicity of Adam. In accepting general revelation, he disagreed with Barth.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Rudolf-Bultmann[/tags]
During the early stages of the Renaissance, when intellectuals (for example, Voltaire) aimed their critical disregard at the Church, several men wrote effectively against deism. Yet none of them proved more effective than Bishop Joseph Butler (1692-1752). His monumental work, The Analogy of Religion, virtually ended the debate for thinking people. Skirmishes continued for years, but after Butler it was clear that all the fundamental issues had been settled.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Joseph-Butler, Renaissance, Voltaire[/tags]
A former slave, who later became the Bishop of Rome (217-222). He was the first to accept repentant sinners as a matter of policy. He argued that the church is like Noah's ark. In it unclean as well as clean beasts can be found. He defended his actions by insisting that the Church of Rome was heir to Peter and that the Lord had given keys to Peter to bind and to loose the sins of men. This marks the first time a bishop of Rome claimed this special authority.
[tags]BlogRodent, Callistus, church-history, Church-of-Rome, ChurchRodent, history, Peter[/tags]
(1509-1564)
John Calvin (aka. Jean Cauvin) played an important role in the Protestant Reformationperhaps second only to Martin Luther in importance.
Calvin wrote the deeply influential Institutes of the Christian Religion (published in 1536, see also the Britannica summary), developed the "presbyterian" model of church government, and has been called the "organizer of Protestantism" because of his pastoral work organizing churches in Strassburg and Geneva.
He was born on July 10, 1509 in the city of Noyon in Picardy, France (where his childhood home is now a museum), was raised with children of the aristocracy, adopted the Latin "Calvin" as a young scholar. His father was the Bishop's secretary serving the cathedral in Noyon, and he ensured that Calvin was well educated. At age 14, Calvin enrolled at the University of Paris and later attended the College de Montaigu there. Calvin studied theology and in the
Perhaps the first one was held by McGready in July 1800 at the Gasper River Church in Logan County, Kentucky. A "camp meeting" is a religious service of several days' length held outdoors, for people who had traveled a distance to attend. They camped on the spot.
[tags]BlogRodent, Camp-Meetings, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
Canon law served the church just as civil law supported a secular government. It defined the rights, duties and powers of all people and priests within the church. It was the law administered in all ecclesiastical courts, from those of the bishop up to that of the pope.
Sometime around 1140 Gratian, a monk of the monastery of St. Felix at Bologna, published a Harmony of Discordant Canons which tried to coordinate all previous collections of church law. Since he arranged his quotations of authorities subject by subject, his Harmony soon emerged as the sole manual for teachers and for judges in the church. But it also directed man's most intimate relationships. By virtue of its concern with baptism it established standards for all births — and all that led to births. The first inviting smile between man and woman brought the couple under its watchful shadow. It directed penance
The first Protestants to attempt to reach distant peoples with the gospel were the Pietists. Moravian concern, however, was focused on individuals in some European colony, perishing without the knowledge of Christ. The Christian groups created by Pietists were tiny islands in the surrounding sea of "heathenism."
William Carey introduced Christians to missions on a grander scale. He thought in terms of the evangelization of whole countries, and of what happens when whole populations become Christian. He held that the foreign missionary can never make more than a small contribution to the accomplishment of the work that has to be done, and that therefore the development of the local ministry is the first and greatest of all missionary considerations. Above all, he saw that Christianity must be firmly rooted in the culture and traditions of the land in which it is planted. For all these reasons and more Carey
During the 1976 Presidential campaign in the United States, Jimmy Carter's evangelical faith arose as one of the major issues. The Watergate scandal had toppled the Nixon administration a short time before, and many Americans felt that morality in government was of supreme importance. Others, however, warned that religion could divide the nation and had no place in an American political campaign.
[tags]BlogRodent, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Jimmy-Carter[/tags]
(See "Albigenses")
[tags]Albigenses, BlogRodent, Cathari, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
Daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain. First wife of King Henry VIII, she bore five children, but only one survived infancy, Mary. Catherine was previously the wife of King Henry's deceased brother, Arthur. Because she bore Henry no male children, he persuaded the English courts to annul their marriage. Her daughter eventually ascended the throne.
[tags]BlogRodent, Catherine-of-Aragon, church-history, ChurchRodent, Henry-VIII, history[/tags]
In 1521 Martin Luther stood before the Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Worms. In that same year Ignatius Loyala entered convalescence from an injury and soon had a spiritual conversion of sorts. Loyola subsequently formed the Society of Jesus, the greatest single force in Catholicism's campaign to recapture the spiritual domains seized by Protestantism.
While the Catholic Church did not immediately respond to the Protestant challenge, when it finally did it called upon its spiritual warriors, the Jesuits. It convened a new, militant council; and it reformed the machinery of the papal office. Faced by the rebellion of almost half of Europe, Catholicism rolled back the tide of Protestantism until by the end of the sixteenth century Protestantism was limited roughly to the northern third of Europe, as it is today.
Some historians have interpreted the Catholic Reformation as a counterattack against Protestantism; others have described
Catholic and Anglican priests, as well as early Protestant ministers, undertook vows of celibacy in the belief that they must follow in the footsteps of Christ, who was celibate, and avoid marriage at all costs, abstaining from any sexual relationships while serving God as a minister. Sexual drives were widely seen as evidence of man's fallen state, and were thus sinful. Finally, in 1522, Martin Luther took himself a wife and transformed the image of ministry — the married pastor living like any other man with his own family.
[tags]BlogRodent, Celibacy, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Martin-Luther[/tags]
An outspoken critic of Christianity who noted: "Far from us, say the Christians, be any man possessed of any culture or wisdom or judgment; their aim is to convince only worthless and contemptible people, idiots, slaves, poor women, and children. … These are the only ones whom they manage to turn into believers."
[tags]BlogRodent, Celsus, church-history, ChurchRodent, history[/tags]
The Irish were Celtic people and their conversion is traced to Patrick of England, early in the fifth century. Their culture was agriculturally based. The Irish, or Celts, were then called Scots.
[tags]BlogRodent, Celts, church-history, ChurchRodent, history, Patrick[/tags]