Overseas Expansion
◩ What is Latin America?
- any part of the Americas where spanish and Portuguese is the main language
- Mexico + Central America + South America
- For Example : Mexico is part of North America and Latin America (but not South America)
◩ Americas in 1763
- The Spanish king's backyard?
- Christopher Columbus(c. 1451~1506)- discovered America(meaning put America on European maps)
- Tension between the crown and the settlers
- Native Americans "exploited and decimated."
◩ Spanish Conquered Lands
- Central America
- Panama
- Colombia and Venezuela
- Peru: Equador, Bolivia, Chile and Argentina
- La Plata
- Caribbean Mexic
- Part of the US
- Philippines
◩ Spanish Invasion
- Spanish Conquistadors
-- who are responsible for the destruction of the inca society among other places
-- Used medieval crusade tactics to conquer the "infidels"
- Potronato real - Monarchs had the power to nominate clergy in high positions
- Missionary work; Franciscans, Dominicans and Jesuits
- Missionaries of the defended the indians against the greedy Europeans and the encomiendo system of forced indian labor
◩ Bartolome de Las Casas(1484-1566)
- Spanish historian, theologian, and defender of the indians in the New World
- Oradined in 1507 as a priest and became a doctrinero, parish priest to the indians
- He owned a large encomiendo(grant of Indians)
- 1514 had a pronounced awakening and declared encomiendas wrong
-- Indians had the right to possess their own lands by natural laws and the law of nations
-- All Spanish conquests and wars in the New World were illegal
-- Spaniards had to make restitution of all that they had taken from the indians
- Wrote several books against the system.
◩ Portugal Colonies
- Portuguese Expansion c. 140 sailing around Africa to the East
-- Prince Henry the Navigator(1394-1460)
--- New Trade Route to Asia
--- Prestor John - mythical Christian King of in Africa
-- Vasco da Gama(1469-1524) - discovered sea route to india.
- African coast
- Brazil
- Missionaries sent to Asia by King Joao III of Portugal
◩ History of Chocolate....
Spanish - New world, cacao bean/ the natives of the New World used the cacao bean in marrige rituals, offerings to their gods, currency; the bean was precious.
....
France
Gallican (oxford Dic
- Adjective 1) relating to the ancient Church of Gaul or France.
2) of or holding a doctrine (reaching its peak in the 17th c)} which asserted the freedom of the RC church in France and elsewhere from the ecclesiastical authority of the papacy. Compare with ultramontane
- Noun - an adherent of the Gallican doctrine.
Gallicanism
- Before 1600s = autonomous French Catholic Church
-- Catholic in religious orientation
- Pro-French in political orientation
- Allowed French king to nominate church offices
= Clergymen were mostly French or loyal to the king
0 After 1600s (after Trent)
-- Gallicans wanted the continuity of French bishops to lead the Catholic church in France.
- Ultramontanes("beyond the mountains) favored ecclessiastical authority to be directly from the pope
◩ The State of the Church and the Legitimate power of the Roman Ponfiff(1763)
- Written by Justin Febronius(pseudonym)
- Concialiatory: authority resides in a council, not the pope
- Declared heretical by pope Clement XIII
- In France, provided hope for the reconciliation between Catholics and Protestants (that is, if bishops can change the doctrines of Trent)
- In Austria, Empereor joseph II took charge....
◩ Predestination Catholic Debate
- Jesuits affirmed that predestination was based on God's foreknowledge(alminian?)
- Dminicans called the Jesuits Pelagians
- Dominicans said that predestination is not based on foreknowledge
- jesuits called Dominicans Calvinists
◩ Jansenism
- Augustine by Cornelius Jansenius -- was similar to the doctrines of Calvin
-- condemned by pope Urban VIII
- Predestination debate turned in to the debate over "probabilism." which the jesuits supported and the Jansenist rejected as moral indifferentism
-- the probability that an action was correct made it morally acceptable
-- Example: Augustine said a marriage with a non- Christian should not be considered unlawful since it was not clearly condemned in the New Testament
◩ Spiritual Guide and "Treatise on Daily Communion" (1675)
- Author : Miguel de Molinos
- Religious mysticism
- Advocated withdrawal from the world and passive before God
- The person loses himself.
- Worship is purely spiritual without physical work or visible display
- Asceticism is another form of activism
- Condemned by the Catholic church
◩ The Enlightenment
- A European intellectual movement of the late 17th and 18th centuries emphasizing reason and individualism rather than tradition
- Heavily influenced by 17th philosophers"
-- Descartes, locke, and Newton
-- Kant, Goeth, Voltaire, Rouseau, and Adam Smith.
◩ Nicolaus Copernicus(1473-1543)
- Polish astronomer
- proposed that the planets revolved around the sun
- De Revolutionibus Orbium Coelestium(1543)
- Overthrew geocentric cosmology
◩ Galileo(1564-1642)
- Italian philosopher, astronomer and mathematician
- His telescopic discoveries proved Copernicus right
- Inquisition charged him with heresy and he was under house arrest until he died
◩ Rene Descartes(1596-1650)
- Father of modern philosophy, founder of Cartesian Rationalism
- ....
Group Questions
1. what is the bible's position on slavery?
2. what is / should be the Christian's position on slavery?
◩ Slavery in Christianity an Overview
- In the bible, slavery exists
-- Spiritual Slavery
-- Physical/Earthly/Institutionalized Slavery
- The early Church said that the true master of people was God alone
-- No man can take Gods's role as the true master
-- God takes every person equally despite his sociaetal position
- Slavery s understood in spiritual terms
-- True freedom is in Christ
-- True slavery is to sin
-- Christ ....
◩ Biblical Slavery
- It reconciled the Christian public(during Paul's time) to the existing social order
- Seemingly contradictions regarding slavery
(1Cor 7:2) (*1 co 9:19)
- Lordship and bondage is directly linked to the fallibility of the world.
◩ Spiritual Slavery
- Spiritual enslavement and liberation is eaglitarian (Ep 6:7-8)
- Shristian slavery said that the slave is of equal value as a recipient of salvation
- Cynics, Sophists, and Stoics also argued that slaves had a free soul
◩ Christian Slavery to Sin
- The Christian understanding of slaves and the institution of slavery brok away from tradition(mainstream) Greek understanding of slaves and slavery
-
◩ Quakers
- Most egalitarian sects were annihilated because they challenged contemporary social order
- Quakers survived and became successful both economically and socially
- They were strong and active opponents of slavery
- 1688 : four Quakers sign antislavery petition in Germantown, Pennsylvania
- 1780: Pennsylvania dopts a gradual emancipation law (after Vermont)
◩ Dates of Slavery
- Spartacus / The Zanj, black African slaves, revolt / Gomes Eannes de Zurara / Columbus trans
◩ Institutionalized Slavery
- How do biblical imageries of slavery connect to physical slavery?
-- The B does not challenge the slavery system directly
-- Both masters and slaves should ...
◩ Slavery and Original Sin
- The doctrine of orginal sin often justified different forms of subjugation.
- Pro-slavery arguments state that some people needed to subordinated because they don't know better(because of orginal sin)
-- Slavery is one form of subjugation
-- They connect doctrine and put them into practice into state laws
- Howere,
-- The doctrine is about spiritual subjugation(not physical)
-- Church doctrines should not be used to creat state laws and institutions
◩ The Reintroduction of Slavery
- European Christians thougth that Christians should not enslave other Christians
-- Ex: Slavery was illegal in Britain since 1102
- They reasoned that they can enslave " savages"
-- Ex : Slavery can exist in the empire on plantations
- Africa has had an ongoning history of slavery before the European Christians began kidnapping them
-- They enslaved each other
-- They traded slaves with not-African
- Muslims enslaved people and traded them for centuries as laborers and soldiers
- American natives were difficult to enslave
- Diseases killed them
- They escaped
◩ Some Facts(1700-1810)
- More than 30,000 slave voyages occurred
- About three million African were transported
-- They knew how to work in hot conditions
- Not all slaves were Africans, some were Irish Catholics(from O Cromwell's wars), and some were Native Americans
- 1807 : S abolished in Britain
- 1834 : S abolished...
◩ Philosophers and Slavery
Anti
- Jean Bodin(French 16th lawmaker/politician) could not justify slavery
- Adam Smith(via laditudinarianism) condemned slavery as intolerable to human progress
Pro
- Thomas Hobbes believed that a master can kill his own slave without punishment
- John Locke placed slavery outside social ...
◩ Evangelical Faith and Slavery
- Methodist, Anglican Evangelicals, and American revivalists
-- condemned the slave trade
did not condemn the institution of slavery....
Original 13th Colonies-USA
◩ 13 Colonies
Virginia-Anglican, Church of England, settelers-English
Massachusetts- Setlers : Pilgrims, reason: religious freedom, Religion"separatists, church: Congregational
New Hampshire- Puritans, Expansion from Massachusetts Bay, Congregationalist, Congregational church
New York(1624)- Settler: Dutch
Economic gain, Dutch Reformed, Church of England (Church)
Maryland(134)- English , Refuge for Roman Catholics, Roman Catholic and others, Church of England
Connectucut(1634)- Puritans, Expansion from Massachusetts bay, Religion-Congregationalist, Congregational church.
Rhode Island(1636)- English(settlers) Radicals fleeing Massachusetts bay, Congregationalist, Congregational church
New Jersey(1638)-
Swedish Dutch, English
Economic gain/ Expansion from New York/ Religious Freedom
Lutheran, Dutch reformed Anglican
Delaware(1638)
- Swedish, Dutch,
Economic gain Expansion from NY
Lutheran Dutch Reformed
North Carolina(1653)
-English / French
Economic gain / Religious Freedom
Anglican / Heugenats
Church of England(most)
South Carolina(1670)
-Eng French
Economic gain / Religious freedom
Anglican Huguenots
Church of England
Pennsylvania(1681)
- English / German
Religious Freedom / Fleeing thirty years war and Religious war
Quaker / Mennonite, Brethren, Amish, Moravian, Schwenkfelder
Virginia
- Named agfter Queen Elizabeth " the Virgin Queen" by Sir Walter Raleigh
-- 1585 first attempt at settlement, people returned to England
--1587 second attempt, people disappeared
- Established in 1607
Puritans wanted a purified English church
- The crown was against it
-- James I put colony under direct royal authority
-- Maryland formed from Virginia
- People earned a living by exporting tobacco
- 1619 they began importing slaves
Massachusetts
- Pilgrims came and settled in Plymouth in 1620 seeking religious freedom
- Mayflower Compact a compact where members will follow the will of the majority
- Puritans came to escape persecution and set up a godly community in Salem
- By 1630, large group of Puritans settle in different towns.
- Those who were unhappy with strict church life created and moved to other states.
- The crown, for the most part, interfered very little until the Stuarts were restored.
- From little interference to a royal province in 1691, the colonists became angry
- Repressive measures followed where royal acts
-- limited trade(which created less revenue)
-- taxed the colonists heavily(which took any profits away)
- Colonists rioted and boycotted several times
-- Sometimes the crown repealed the measure
-- The crown continued to creat more legislation.
Boston
- Boston Massacre(3/5 1770)
-- British soldiers fired upon rioting citizens
-- 5 killed
- Tea Act(1773)
-- Created a new price for British tea
-- to save the British East India Company
-- If the colonists accepted this, they would accept taxation without representation(even though it lowered the cost of tea)
- Boston Tea party(Dec, 16, 1773)
-- Boston's Sons of Liberty threw overboard 342 chests of East India Company's tea into the Boston harbor
- Shocked the British and other Americans
- More repressive measures(Parliament said, "Pay for the tea!")
◩ (American) Revolutionary War(1775-1783)
- Sometimes called the War of (American) Independence, American War of Independence
- "Declaration of Independence"(1776) - Colonies declared independence from Britain
-- France and Spain new allies of America
-- British government recruited Native Americans
- Treaty of Paris(1783) officially ended the war
(America won)
◩ War against Britain!
- Congreatinalists and Presbyterians
- Covenantal view of society where a government that violates God's covenant forfeits its right to obedience
- Fear of Anglican establishment
-- fear of renewed persecution -- radical dissenters for war
-- want to see its own church established -- Lutherans felt this way too
- Religious freedom is possible only when there is political freedom
-- Congregationalists
-- Presbytarians
-- Anglican ......
No War against Britain!
Anglican Clergy and Anglican Laymen in North and central Colonies
- Oath of loyalty to king is sacred according to Scripture
- G's favor of order of British rule over potential anarchy
- Wants an Anglican establishment
- Biblical requirement to Submit to rulers as ordained by God
-- Anglican Clergy
-- Anglican Leymen in North and Central Colonies
-- Methodists
- Support of Pacifism as a general principle- Radical Dissenters against war
◩ Congregationalism
- Individual local Churches that are self governing
- Local Churches can create their own network with their own policies and rules
- Tend to be Reformed in theology and government(but not always
◩ Jonathan Edwards(1703-1758)
- Pastor in Northampton, Massachusetts
- Missionary to Indians
- Educated at Yale, became President of Princeton(1758)
- Died of Smallpox inoculation
- Wrote
- "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God"(1741)- sermon
- Faithful Narrative(1737)
- Religious Affections(1746)
- The Freedom of the Will (1754)
◩ The Greatest theologian of America? Jonathan Edwards
- Staunch Calvinist
- Church affiliation was congregatiional
- Cahallenged liberal movements of the day: Deism, Socianism, Arianism, Arminianism, Continental rationalism, and Anglicanism
- Revitalized Calvinism with Newtons' Physics, Locke
's psychology, Ear of Shaftesbury III's aesthetics and Malebranche's moral philosophy
- Methaphysics: Beauty was an essential aspect of an entity, which subsisted in the harmony or agreement of its parts.
- Challenged Hobbes and Descartes
- Anticipated theoretical physics
◩ Jonathan Edwards : Preacher
- Convinced that people need apersonal experience of Conversion
- 1734 people began responding to his sermons, sometimes with emotional outbursts, with increased attention to their devotional lives
- Whitefield came and spoke at Edwards' church and the latter wept
- He wrote books about the experiences of people
- Stereotyped as a "Fire and brimstome" preacher - "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God"(1741)
- His sermons were "careful expositions of profound theological matters"
-- he focused more on heaven and love
-- goal: congregation has a "Saving knowledge of God through an awareness of the beauty of God's great and powerful redemptive love for them"
◩ 1st great Awakening(1730-1760)
- Sometimes known as the Great Awakening
- Religious revival movement in America
- Revival occurred as traveling preachers visited the countryside led by George Whitefield
- Criticized for being too emotional: "Emotion over study and devotion"
- Real goal: significant ONE experience
-- More devotion
-- Study the Bible well
- Leaders(general characteristics)
-- More self-controlled than emotional
-- Scholarly
-- Orthodox Calvinists in Congregational and Presbyterian circles
-- Believed that emotions should never replace doctrine and orderly worship
- Local pastors found new zeal
- People had very emotional reactions : wept repenting their sins, shouted for joy, fainted
- who benefitted: Baptists and Methodists
- Baptists first opposed it then liked it because
-- Profound conversion undermined infant baptism
-- Many Congregationalist and Presbyterian people(and some churches) became Baptists
- Baptists and Methodists preached to the West
-- Organized their religious life
-- More churches formed in the frontier
- 1st movement that affected all thirteen colonies. Raised awareness
-- Awareness of human rights
-- Nature of government
-- Growing sense of commonality
◩ 2nd Great Awakening(1820-1840)
- Emphasized Christian devotion and living
- Not marked by outbursts and chaos
- Although leaders were came from Presbyterian and Congregationalist backgrounds
-- sermons and theology had more Arminian notions
-- Less Calvinistic in terms of predestination
- Most benefited groups: Methodists and baptists
◩ Charles Finney(17920 1875)
- Best preacher during this time
- Urban rival meetings in tents
- Changed American revivalism?: preacher( personality and influence) became the center of revival rather than message
-- "Anxious bench" - wrestle here if you had no assurance
-- "new measures" = crude and impudent language = anxiois bency
- He admitted that he was ignorant of the Westeminster Confession of Fatih yet ordained Presbyterian minister
- Finny's revival were controversial
0 Lectures on Revivials of Religion(1835)
-- Revivals occur on human lnitiateve when God given meants to promote them are properly used
-- Revivals are not miracles, -- they more predictable than surprisin
-- more a matter of human planning an control
- Critics
-- he sowed seeds of confusion
-- followers disobeyed church leaders
- Social movements
anti slavery / Women's Rights / anti-Masonry / Temperance
- Theology : melioristic(world can be made better through human effort)
-- Pelagian: people can obey God without divine grace?
-- Wesleyan in sanctification
◩ 2nd Great Awakening Contemporary Issues
- Slavery openly opposed by Lyman Beecher and Charles Finney
0- New Haven theology(or "Taylorism")
-- Modified Calvinism/ Edwardseanism in the direction of Arminiaism
-- Human have the power to avoid sin/ sin is in the sinning (not in the will)
-- Nathaviel Taylor(1786-1858), chair of the divinity school
-- Split Calvisnist camp
- other theological Issues
-- can humans generate a real revival
--Finny said yes
◩ American Civil War(1861-1865)
- North / Us government / Union/ leader: Abraham Lincoln/ Military champion: Ulysses S Grant
- South/ 11 states/ Confederate states of America/ leaders: Jefferson Davis /Military champion: Robert E Lee
- Civil War is when citizens of one country fight each other
Main issue: to abolish slavery in America
- 2.4 million soldiers: 620,000 death
...
◩ Unitarianism
- The belief that rejects the Trinity and emphasizes that God is one being(J is not God incarnate but a man)
-- Favors a rationalist approach to G
-- Usually rejects dogma(no officail creed)
-- Usually stressed the obligation of the individual under divine moral sanction
-- Inclusivist approach to religion
-- support freedom of religionus though
--- Everyone has the right to seek the truth and meaning for themselves
--- Best setting to find religious truth and meaning in the community which welcomes each though, beliefs, doubts and questions
- A Unitarian is a person who follows Unitarinism
◩ Universalism
In theology
- the belief that all humankind will eventually be saive
- "an all-good and all-powerful God saves all souls
- Emphasized religious individualism and moralism
- Challenged Calvinism
- Identified with rationalist dissent
- A universalist is a person who follows Universalism
......... Non-theology
- A universial
◩ Transcendentalism
- Transcendentalism is an idealistic philosophical and social movement which developed in New England around 1836 in reaction to rationalism
-- Influenced by comanticism, Paltonism, and Kantian philosophy, it taught that divinity pervades all nature and humanity and its members held progreesive views on feminism and communal living
-- Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau were central figures.
- Transcendentalism
-- a system developed by immanuel Kant,
-- based on the idea that, in order to understand the nature
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