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Our Christian Heritage
by Betsy Hill Williams
Have you ever wondered what the difference is between a
Baptist and a Methodist? A Presbyterian and a Lutheran? What is the United
Church of Christ and why do some UU churches have the word "Congregational"
in them? These are just a few of the questions which UU children (and
not a few adults!) often ask about "the church across the street."
In this issue of Connections I'd like to focus on Christianityits
history, its relationship to UUism and the differences and similarities
between various Christian churches.
Things to look for as you visit other churches:
What religious symbols do you see in the church?
Who participates in the service?
What is the arrangement of the altar end of the church?
How are the churches and services the same? How do they differ?
To understand where we are today it is helpful to know where we have come
from. So I begin with a condensed history of the evolution of Christianity
and the births of various sects (including UUism) along the way. Visiting
other churches is a great way for children to learn the similarities and
differences in today's Christian churches. From , a Unitarian Universalist
Christian Fellowship curriculum, I have reprinted lists of things to look
for in various Christian churches and services. Locate these churches
in your area and take family field trips to as many as possible. If you
would like to pursue this topic in greater depth, ask to borrow How Others
Worship from the CLF Loan Library.
The Old Story of Salvation
At the center of the unfolding drama of Christianity lies the Old Story
of Salvation. This early Christian conception of the history of humankind
and the meaning of life on earth is at the heart of all the twists and
turns taken throughout the ages, resulting in today's wide range of Christian
sects.
The story, as written by Augustine in the 5th century, is known as The
Seven Great Ages of Time. It is the story of humankind's repeated failure
to live up to the standards of righteousness which God originally set
for his creatures. Following the original sin of disobedience in the Garden
of Eden (which marked the end of the First Great Age of Time), God intervened
five times to give humans another chance at salvation. First Noah, then
Abraham, Moses, and King David were all sent by God to lead humankind
to righteousness. But each time the evil nature of humanity prevailed.
God could not let these sins go unpunished, yet his love for his creatures
was great. He concluded that in order to save humanity someone must be
punished whose value is greater than the value of all humanity. That someone
was his only son. And so, in the Sixth Great Age of Time, God's son humbled
himself and was sent to earth in human form, to die as ransom for all
human sins.
We are now in the Seventh Great Age of Time, waiting for the Son of God
to return to earth to establish and rule over all the nations of the world.
When he returns, peace will reign for a thousand years and then the Day
of Judgment will come. All people, dead and living, will come before God
to be judged on the basis of their lives on earth. Those who believed
in Jesus as Savior, and were baptized to wash away sin, would be granted
eternal happiness in heaven. Those who were disobedient and did not receive
the pardon of their sins through the sacrifice of Jesus will be condemned
to everlasting punishment. The Great Day of Judgment will end the Seventh
Great Age of Time and eternity will begin.
The First Controversy
You will recognize the first five ages of time as found in the Old Testament
and belonging to the Jewish faith. Following Jesus' death, the Jews were
divided on the issue of Jesus' divinity. While some remained monotheistic,
rejecting the notion of God in two parts (God the father and God the Son),
others, led by Paul and Peter, believed that Jesus was Savior to all humankindJews,
Romans, Greeks, rich, poor, master or slave. These latter followers of
Jesus, the earliest "Christians," were persecuted and feared
by the Roman rulers or these inclusive, democratic ideas.
In the Lutheran Church:
Is there an eternal light?
What function do the acolytes perform?
Many Lutheran churches are predominantly German or Scandinavian. Does
this congregation seem to have a common background?
The service contains a statement of Affirmation of Faith. What is it called?
What do the words Psalmody and Kyrie mean?
But the simple, humble Christian church was soon to undergo radical change.
In 313 AD the Emperor of Rome, Constantine, declared himself to be a Christian.
Although Constantine originally called for religious freedom, power corrupted
that ideal, and soon Christianity became an absolute spiritual monarchy,
with the pope as spiritual leader. The Roman Catholic Church was born.
Church organization and government became hierarchical and complex with
strict laws and creedal statements which church members were required
to believe.
In a Roman Catholic Church:
What season of the church calendar is being celebrated?
What is the main color used in the service during this season?
What special apparel is worn by the clergy during the mass?
Is the Eucharist a part of the service? At what point in the mass does
it occur?
In what language is the mass celebrated?
The first to rebel against the power of this religious system was the
Bishop of Constantinople in 1054. He rejected the infallibility of the
pope and was himself excommunicated from the Roman Church. And so the
Greek Orthodox, or Eastern Catholic Church was formed.
Protestant Reformation
About 500 years later, in the early 16th century, the protestant reformation
began with "people who protested" either some part of the Old
Story of Salvation or some part of the hierarchy of church government.
The first great leader of this reformation was Martin Luther (1483-1546),
founder of the Lutheran Church.
Luther was an Augustine friar at the University of Wittenberg when he
challenged the selling of "indulgences," special certificates
sold by the pope to guarantee absolution of sins and happiness in heaven.
Luther claimed that women and men did not have to do "good works,"
or celebrate the sacraments, or give money in order to be saved. He believed
salvation was a free gift and available to all who have faith. Luther
also believed that each person has access to God and that the pope, bishops
and cardinals of the Roman church were not necessary. Luther was excommunicated
in 1520 and barely escaped with his life.
Luther lived to see a strong reformation taking place in Germany and elsewhere
in Europe. One of his followers was a young Frenchman named John Calvin
(15091564). Persecuted in France for his outspokenness, Calvin retreated
to Switzerland where he wrote his famous treatise, The Institutes of the
Christian Religion. The basic tenets of Calvinism are: the sinfulness
of man, the ultimate authority of the Bible, and predestinationsalvation
of some and damnation of others. In this latter belief he deviated markedly
from Luther.
Calvin tried to turn Geneva Switzerland into the City of God. He set forth
strict rules to be followed by all Christians and actually encouraged
spying on one's neighbor and reporting misconduct. Church services were
austere and filled with foreboding. It was believed that the poor, the
weak, or simply the unsuccessful were those predestined for damnation.
Therefore all believers worked hard and lived serious, pious livesconstantly
in fear of being revealed as one of the damned.
One of Calvin's greatest supporters, John Knox, was a Scot living in exile
in Switzerland . After the reign of Scotland's Catholic Queen Mary, Protestantism
was again allowed in Scotland and Knox returned hoping to set up a society
similar to Calvin's City of God. The result of his efforts was the establishment
of the Presbyterian Church as the official state church of Scotland.
In the late sixteenth century Scottish Presbyterians were sent into Ireland
to occupy the land of the rebellious Irish Catholics who refused allegiance
to the Anglican Church. But the hostilities of the angry Catholics drove
many Presbyterians across the ocean to America where Presbyterian churches
flourished in every colony.
Calvin was ruthless in his treatment of reformers who did not agree with
him. One such reformer was Michael Sevetus (15111553), a Spaniard
who was raised Roman Catholic during the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella.
When in college Sevetus read the Bible for the first time on his own and
decided that the Trinity was something made up by the church and not supported
in the Bible. He came to believe that Jesus was more like a man and became
the son of God because of the quality of his life. His writings were banned
everywhere in Europe and he was eventually arrested and burned at the
stake by Calvin in 1553. To this day, Sevetus is considered a martyr of
religious freedom and one of the "fathers" of Unitarianism.
Although it is not known when the word "Unitarian" was first
applied to those who believed in the unity (as opposed to the trinity)
of God, the sixteenth century saw growth of this movement in many European
countries. For a time Unitarians were the majority in Poland. In Transylvania
(Hungary and Rumania) King Sigismund was converted to Unitarianism by
Francis David and it was proclaimed the state religion. England was home
to many of these freedom loving reformers, as were (understandably) the
new American colonies.
In the Episcopal Church:
Is the Eucharist part of the service?
What are some of the differences between the Roman Catholic and Episcopal
services? (Notice the choir. Where do they sit, what are they wearing?
What part do they have in the service? Are there any women clergy?)
What prayer book is used?
During this same period, Henry VIII was ruler of England. He was married
to Catherine of Aragon, daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella, and a devote
Roman Catholic. For centuries the English clergy had been in conflict
with the Roman Catholic authorities. This conflict escalated when Henry
wanted to divorce Catherine because she did not produce a son. Divorce
was illegal in the Roman Catholic church so Henry empowered his Archbishop
to declare a separation with the church and name him as the Supreme Head
of the Church of England.
After Henry's death the archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Cranmer, set
about to complete three major reforms: 1. hold church services in English
instead of Latin, 2. state the beliefs of the church in a creedal form,
and 3. state the laws by which the church and the morals of the people
should be governed. The Book of Common Prayer was written and in it were
significant deviations from Catholicism. All prayers for the dead in purgatory
were eliminated, as were all references to the Holy Mother of God.
The Communion ritual was changed so that people partake of bread and wine
in remembrance that Christ died for them, not as body and blood of Christ.
And so the Anglican Church was born. When Anglican churches in America
later became independent of the mother church in England, they took the
name Protestant Episcopal.
Soon Anglican church members became disillusioned with various requirements
of ritual and conformity much the same way as earlier reformers of the
Catholic church had. Robert Browne (15501631) led the Congregational
movement, so-called because the congregation governed its own affairs
according to its own interpretation of the Bible, not the word of the
bishops or the Queen. The sermon took on great importance because it was
there that the interpretation and understanding of the Bible was given.
In the Baptist Church:
Notice differences in ritual, clothing worn by clergy, congregational
participation, references to the Bible, focus of the service.
In the Methodist Church:
Methodism was founded on evangelism. Is there any trace of this religious
zeal in the service?
How do members of the congregation participate in the service?
Does the congregation recite the Apostles Creed?
It was the Bible itself, not any church hierarchy, which took prominence
in the reform movement's search for truth and authority. And no where
in the Bible, said John Bunyan (16281688) is there mention of baptism
of babies. Baptism, Bunyan claimed, marks the beginning of one's Christian
lifea committing of oneself to Christ which can only be done by
a consenting adult. In the Anglican and Catholic churches baptism is considered
a sacrament, not a symbol of commitment. The Baptists were against all
sacramental acts, which they considered to be "forms without spirit."
As this thinking suggests, traditional Baptists were great believers in
freedom of faith, freedom that was bound only by loyalty to the scriptures.
Later, conservative (or fundamentalist) Baptists declared belief in the
truth of all statements of scripture as fundamental to the very existence
of true Christianity. In these five essentials of fundamental Baptist
faith you may recognize the Old Story of Salvation: 1. virgin birth of
Jesus, 2. physical resurrection of Jesus, 3. inerrancy of the Bible, 4.
substitutionary atonement (Jesus died as ransom for all humankind's sins)
and 5. truth of miracles recorded in the Bible.
Another reform movement, which was to become very popular with the pioneers
of America, was the Methodist movement, led by John Wesley (1703-1791)
and named for its unique method or approach to religious services. As
a missionary Anglican minister Wesley traveled to the new colony of Georgia
where he failed to reach the Indians and Colonists with the ritual and
ceremony of the Anglican church. On his travels he was inspired by the
strength and courage of his fellow travelers who were German Lutherans.
When he returned to England he had an "awakening" that Christ
alone was his savior. He and his brother Charles began to travel the English
countryside holding outdoor services and spreading the "good news"
of salvation to all who cared to listen.
This method of preaching, and the services themselves which were filled
with extreme emotionalism and spirited singing, caused great controversy
but also gained much support. The Wesley brothers traveled on foot or
horseback conducting these first "evangelical revivals" in fields
any time of the day or week, providing worship to literally thousands
of country folk. Both the method and the message of Methodism took root
quickly in the American colonies where Methodist "circuit riders"
fed the pioneer spirit with the message of God's free love and humankind's
free will.
One of John Wesley's followers was John Murray, whose doctrine of universal
salvation was to later become the foundation of the Universalist Church.
Murray found no evidence in the Bible for the idea that some people are
destined for eternal damnation while others will be saved. This was considered
dangerous heresy to the Presbyterians, for without fear of hell there
was no motive for living a good life. Murray escaped to America where
he hoped to quit preaching. Instead, he was rescued by a man who was "waiting"
for a minister to appear who would lead their small congregation. Murray
accepted the position and began freely preaching his doctrine of universal
salvation.
The movement grew and in 1791 the first national convention of the Universalist
Church was held in New Jersey. Many eloquent preachers followed Murray
in America, notably Hosea Ballou (1771-1852), a farmer from New Hampshire,
whose clear reasoning and effective preaching converted many to both Unitarian
and Universalist beliefs. Ballou denounced the trinity as strongly as
he affirmed universal salvation and regretted that some of his Unitarian
colleagues could not give up the notion of eternal damnation and join
the Universalists. Ballou's premature vision was finally realized in 1961
with the Unitarian Universalist merger.
Change has continued to be constant for most Christian faiths. Issues
which originally sparked various reform movements have faded, and many
Protestant churches have united to form the United Church of Christ. Each
UCC church is locally governed and has the right to decide upon its creed
or statement of faith, if the membership elects to use one.
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