Protestantism.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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F England
The Anglican Church became the established church in England when Henry VIII assumed (1534) the ecclesiastical authority over the English church that had previouslybeen exercised by the pope.
Henry’s motive was to annul his marriage to Catherine of Aragón rather than to reform church doctrine, and he imposed severe lawsupholding the major tenets of medieval Catholicism.
Under King Edward VI and Queen Elizabeth, however, the Anglican Church developed a distinctly Protestant creedthat was set forth in the Thirty-nine Articles.
Anglican ritual and church organization nevertheless retained many of the forms of Roman Catholicism, which wereprotested by Calvinist-influenced dissenters known as Puritans ( see Puritanism).
See also Church of England.
G Radical Sects
As the Lutherans, Calvinists, and Anglicans formed established churches, a number of more radical Protestant groups emerged.
All of them maintained that theestablished Protestants had not gone far enough in the direction of a simplified, biblical Christianity.
They therefore attacked the established Protestant churches andthe Roman Catholic Church with equal vehemence and in turn were violently persecuted by both.
Some of these groups led political rebellions or invaded churches,destroying stained-glass windows, statues, and organs.
Others renounced all use of force.
Most of them rejected ties between church and state.
The most prominent ofthese sects were the Anabaptists, who were concentrated in Germany and Netherlands and who played a major role in the Peasants’ War.
They rejected infant baptism,advocating baptism only of adult believers.
The Mennonites, an Anabaptist sect that originated in Holland and Switzerland, were pacifists who tried to form separatecooperative communities based on the principles of the New Testament.
In England, a movement led by Robert Browne rejected church government by eitherpresbyters or bishops and developed into the Separatists, or Independents.
These earlier groups greatly influenced the Quakers, who began in the 1640s as followers ofGeorge Fox and who professed pacifism and the “inner light” ( see Friends, Society of).
H The American Colonies
Many of these smaller, more radical sects fled persecution by immigrating to America, beginning with the Puritans.
They were followed to New England byCongregationalists and Baptists.
The middle colonies were settled by a diversity of sects, particularly Lutherans, Mennonites, and Anabaptists.
In the southern coloniesthe Church of England was made the established church.
I Wars and Orthodoxy
The early history of Protestantism was marked by warfare in which political motives were entwined with religious ones.
In Germany, the religious wars of the 16thcentury and the Thirty Years’ War in the 17th century were bitter and devastating.
In France, the Calvinist Huguenots fought a bloody civil war with the RomanCatholics, culminating in the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew’s Day in 1572, in which many Huguenot leaders were killed.
The Huguenots were granted toleration by theEdict of Nantes (1598), but most of them were forced to emigrate when it was revoked by Louis XIV in 1685.
In England, the civil war between Parliament andmonarchy largely corresponded to the division between the Puritans and the Anglicans.
After the Peace of Westphalia (1648), which ended the Thirty Years’ War,Protestantism entered into a period of consolidation.
On the European continent the 17th century was a period in which Protestant orthodoxy was carefully defined andsystematically expounded.
This tendency has subsequently been called Protestant Scholasticism, by analogy with the systematic Catholic theology of the Middle Ages.Its emphasis was on the authority of the Bible and on rigorous logic.
J Pietism
By the 1670s in Germany a movement called Pietism developed in reaction to the intellectualism of orthodoxy.
Under the leadership of German pastor Philipp JakobSpener, people began to meet in small groups in private homes to study the Bible and pray.
Pietism stressed individual conversion and a simple, active piety rather thanthe acceptance of correct theological propositions.
It spread throughout Germany and to Scandinavia and America.
K Rationalism
The influence of scientific thought and the Enlightenment ( see Enlightenment, Age of) on Protestant theology was reflected in rationalism, a tendency that appeared in the late 17th and 18th centuries.
It was anticipated by several earlier movements, including Arminianism, which denied the Calvinist doctrine of unconditionalpredestination, and Latitudinarianism, a tolerant, antidogmatic tendency that arose within the Church of England during the 17th century.
Rationalism introduced acritical spirit into theology by insisting that traditional beliefs be examined in the light of reason and science.
By stressing broad agreement on the major tenets ofreligion rather than the fine points of theology, it tended to undermine the rigid orthodoxies that had developed earlier in the 17th century.
The purest expression ofthe rationalist tendency was Deism, a philosophical religion that rejected revelation, miracles, and the specific dogmatic teachings of any church.
Another form of Protestant rationalism that became influential in the 18th century was Unitarianism.
It had originated in the 16th century on the Continent, where it wascalled Socinianism, after its founder, Italian reformer Fausto Socinus.
After the Toleration Act of 1689, Unitarianism was openly professed in England, and during the18th century it began to gain adherents in New England, as well.
Unitarians denied the doctrines of the Trinity and the divinity of Jesus Christ, stressing instead hisethical teachings and example.
L Methodism and Revivalism
The reaction against intellectual and formalistic tendencies in Protestantism that had produced Pietism continued in the 18th century, with the emergence of severalpopular movements that made a direct appeal to emotional religious experience.
In England, the reaction took the form of Methodism, founded by John Wesley andCharles Wesley, who were influenced by both Pietism and Arminianism.
Stressing conversion and a concern for the poor, they preached to large outdoor meetingsthroughout Britain and brought about a revival of religious fervor among the British working classes, who had been alienated by the prevailing formalism and rationalismof the Church of England.
Because of official disapproval, the movement eventually separated from the Anglican Church and became one of the nonconformistdenominations.
In the American colonies, English evangelist George Whitefield and other itinerant ministers preached at large open-air religious revivals and inspired the first GreatAwakening, a general revival of religious enthusiasm.
M The 19th Century
During the 19th century Protestantism became a worldwide movement as a result of intensive missionary activity ( see Missionary Movements).
It also became increasingly varied, as new sects and theological tendencies appeared.
The most influential Protestant theologian of the century was the German Friedrich.
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