Showing posts with label America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America. Show all posts

Sunday, July 19, 2009

An Invitation to Discover Jonathan Edwards

America's First Theologian and the Rise of Global Calvinism

Understanding Jonathan Edwards: An Introduction to America’s Theologian
Edited by Gerald R. McDermott
Oxford University Press, 2009. $24.95.

Living just before the American Revolution, Jonathan Edwards was a leader in the Great Awakening revivals and evangelization of American Indians. He struggled especially against the Deism of the Enlightenment. During the Civil War, his influence was widespread in America. And today, Edwards benefits from a global resurgence of Calvinism and dissatisfaction with rationalism.

Edwards scholar Gerald McDermott edits a generous, pluralistic, readable collection of introductions to Edwards’s thought. Eight topics are introduced by experts with responses written mostly by scholars previously unfamiliar with Edwards. McDermott himself contributes an introduction, conclusion, topical essay and response. He seeks dialogue among Protestants, Catholics, world religions, and society.

This collection focuses on the breadth of Edwards’s thought and “that beauty, not wrath, was at the center of his vision of God” (201). Essays highlight Edwards’s philosophy, literary life, and typological theology. Miklos Vetö examines the impact of John Locke and Francis Hutcheson on Edwards. Douglas A. Sweeney locates Edwards’s reading of the Bible in relation to Origen, Augustine, Luther, and Calvin. Sang Hyun Lee describes Edwards’s thought on the role of affectivity in knowing, the changed affectivity of a converted person, and a concrete mysticism which sees God’s beauty in nature.

Edwards considered the Catholic Church and Islam to be the two antichrists, and a prejudice against Catholicism does appear in a couple of the essays, notably by European authors — reminding me that friendship between Evangelicals and Catholics is a recent phenomenon in America. McDermott has carefully arranged the essays to foster dialogue and bring out the best in contributors. This collection is a starting point for understanding the American experience better, an open door to dialogue between Catholics and Protestants, and an opportunity to learn from the vibrant Christian experience of a man who lived when the American experience was just unfolding.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Missionary Efforts Among American Indians

Marden summarizing Jonathan Edwards' evaluation of Indian missions:

"Most of the Europeans had failed them; 'They have not done their duty toward you.' 'The French, they pretend to teach the Indians religion, but they won't teach 'em to read. They won't let 'em read the Word of God.' Most others are no better. 'And many of the English and Dutch are against your being instructed. They choose to keep you in the dark for the sake of making a gain of you." Edwards kept the tie close between the light of the Gospel education and the Indians' practical interests. 'For as long as they keep you in ignorance,' he coninued, ''tis more easy to cheat you in trading with you."

Marden, Jonathan Edwards: A Life, 385-386

Marsden on the comparitive success of French Jesuit and English missions:

"The events that led to the disaffection of many of the Indians who had spent time at Stockbridge illustrate the great defect in English missions to the Native Americans and why they were so much less successful than their French counterparts. Heroic French Jesuit missionaries who went to live among the Indians presented little immediate threat to the natives' territories or interests. The French population of New France was tiny and spread out compared to the situation in New England. 
[...]
When the French and their native allies said the English 'were only opening a wide mouth to swallow 'em up,' it was difficult to demonstrate otherwise."

Marsden, 407

What St. Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 7:33-34 would seem to be especially apt for missionary work, at least in the early American experience: "But a married man is anxious about the things of the world, how he may please his wife, and he is divided. An unmarried woman or a virgin is anxious about the things of the Lord, so that she may be holy in both body and spirit. A married woman, on the other hand, is anxious about the things of the world, how she may please her husband."

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Chaplain Emil Kapaun, Servant of God

Father Emil J. Kapaun: Chaplain, United States Army, 'Servant of God'

Chaplain Emil Kapaun, Servant of God

PRAYER

Lord Jesus,
in the midst of the folly of war,
your servant, Chaplain Emil Kaupan,
spent himself in total service to you
on the battlefields and
in the prison camps of Korea,
until his death at the hands of his captors.

We now ask you, Lord Jesus,
if it will be your will,
to make known to all the world
the holiness of Chaplain Kapaun and the
glory of his complete sacrifice for you by
signs of miracles and peace.

In your name, Lord, we ask,
for you are the source of peace,
the strength of our service to others,
and our final hope. Amen.

Chaplain Kapaun pray for us


* * * * * * * * * * * *

For more information or to
report favors granted please contact:

Fr. Kapaun Guild
424 North Broadway
Wichita, KS 67202
www.frkapaun.org

(PRINTED WITH ECCLESIASTICAL APPROVAL)

Monday, December 15, 2008

Cultural Renewal

Reposted from Cahiers Péguy

I'm about 20 pages into Cormac McCarthy's narrative, The Road. I figure that I'll read a little bit each day, several days a week. Here's the passage for today:

"It's snowing, the boy said. A single gray flake sifting down. He caught it in his hand and watched it expire like the last host of christendom."

I also read Chapter 3 of Christopher Dawson's book, The Historic Reality of Christian Culture. To understand Dawson, I have had to live a certain reality with friends, looking to verify the Christian claim. According to Dawson, we live in the sixth age of the Church. This is not a schema imposed on history according to apocalyptic theorizing, but a historian's synthesis of the various epochs of renewal, accomplishment, and decay. Here are the six ages as Dawson presents them:
  1. Apostolic Age: "the main achievement of the first age of the Church was the successful penetration of the dominant urban Roman-Hellenistic culture" (49).
  2. Age of the Fathers: from the Peace of the Church (Constantine: 313AD) to the Muslim conquest of Jerusalem (638), Antioch, and Alexandria.
  3. Third Age: Seventh-Tenth Centuries. "The Church was the sole representative of higher culture and possessed a monopoly of all forms of literary education, so that the relation between religion and culture was closer than in any other period." Christianity "ceased to be a predominately urban religion; the old link between bishop and city was broken, and the monastery became the real center of life and Christian culture" (52). "[...] Saint Boniface, who was the chief agent in bringing about the alliance of the Frankish monarchy, the Papacy, and the Benedictine order [...] its educational and liturgical work, which laid the foundations of that common Latin ecclesiastical culture, which underlay the subsequent development of medieval civilization" (53).
  4. Fourth Age: "began as a movement of monastic reform in Lorraine and Burgandy and gradually extended its influence throughout Western Christendom" (53). This monastic reform culminated in the poverty of St. Francis — "This marks the climax of the reforming movement, and the greatness of the medieval Papacy is nowhere more evident than in the way in which it accepted this drastic breach with the traditional order and made the new institution an organ for the evangelization of the masses and an instrument of its international mission" (55). The decay at the end of this age was the breakdown between the papacy and the reform movements.
  5. Baroque Age: Italian Renaissance and the Reformation, Turkish expansion in Europe, discovery of America — ending in the French Revolution (1799). Artistic revival, St. Francis Xavier goes to Asia.
  6. The latest age of the Church. 1850-???? (several hundred years at least). "This revival began in France during the Revolution, under the shadow of the guillotine, and the exiled French clergy contributed to the creation or restoration of Catholicism in England and America. Indeed the whole history of Catholicism in the United States belongs to this sixth age and is in many aspects typical of the new conditions of the period. ¶ American Catholicism differs from that of the old world in that it is essentially urban, whereas in Europe it was still rooted in the peasant population. Moreover from the beginning it has been entirely independent of the state and has not been restricted by the complex regime of concordats which was the dominant pattern of European Catholicism in the nineteenth century" (57). Dawson makes just a couple of suggestive remarks about the present age, leaving that work to the retrospective work of unborn historians.
1845, however, is the year that John Henry Cardinal Newman became Catholic. The first half of the Twentieth Century saw a cultural renewal in Europe, which could be termed Resourcement: Péguy, Bernanos, Claudel, Henri de Lubac, Jean Hans Urs von Balthasar, Daniélou. A revival of the common life among the laity with Dorothy Day and Madeleine Delbrêl. The Second Vatican Council. The rise of lay movements. Notably, the 1950s had Fr. Giussani starting Communion and Liberation in Italy. Around the same time, Francis Schaeffer rediscovered Christian hospitality at L'Abri in Switzerland, which incubated his ideas on worldview and political engagement. Stanley Hauerwas and the Protestant New Monastic movement.

Of all that was done in the past, you eat the fruit,
either rotten or ripe.
And the Church must be forever building, and always
decaying, and always being restored.
For every ill deed in the past we suffer the consequence:
For sloth, for avarice, gluttony, neglect of the Word of
God,
For pride, for lechery, treachery, for every act of sin.
And of all that was done that was good, you have the
inheritance.
For good and ill deeds belong to a man alone, when he
stands alone on the other side of death,
But here upon the earth you have the reward of the good and ill that was done by those who have gone before you.
And all that is ill you may repair if you walk together in humble repentance, expiating the sins of your fathers;
And all that was good you must fight to keep with hearts as devoted as those of our fathers who fought to gain it.
The Church must be forever building, for it is forever
decaying within and attacked from without;
For this is the law of life; and you must remember that
while there is time of prosperity
The people will neglect the Temple, and in time of
adversity they will decry it.

T.S. Eliot, Choruses from ‘‘The Rock’,
Collected Poems, 1909-1962

(New York: Harcourt Brace & Company, 1963), 153-154.
We live in remarkable times, times of hope and struggle.