Are Religious Communities Reviving the Revival? in the US, Outdoor Worship Has a Long Tradition

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Are Religious Communities Reviving the Revival? in the US, Outdoor Worship Has a Long Tradition Philosophy and Religious Studies Publications Philosophy and Religious Studies 6-10-2020 Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition Jeffrey Wheatley Iowa State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/philrs_pubs Part of the Christianity Commons, Communication Technology and New Media Commons, Community Health and Preventive Medicine Commons, Environmental Public Health Commons, and the Social Media Commons The complete bibliographic information for this item can be found at https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/ philrs_pubs/42. For information on how to cite this item, please visit http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/ howtocite.html. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Philosophy and Religious Studies at Iowa State University Digital Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Philosophy and Religious Studies Publications by an authorized administrator of Iowa State University Digital Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition Abstract Religious communities have been forced to find alternative ways to worship together during the coronavirus pandemic. For some that has meant going online, but others have turned to a distinctly non- digital practice steeped in this history of the American religious experience: outdoor worship. Keywords Religion, Religion and health, Coronavirus, Outdoors, Religion and society, COVID-19, Social distancing, Reopening after social distancing Disciplines Christianity | Communication Technology and New Media | Community Health and Preventive Medicine | Environmental Public Health | Religion | Social Media Comments This article is published as Wheatley, J., Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition,” The Conversation, June 10, 2020. This article is available at Iowa State University Digital Repository: https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/philrs_pubs/42 6/30/2021 Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition Academic rigor, journalistic flair Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition June 10, 2020 8.13am EDT A pastor leads a prayer at an outdoor Easter service. AP Photo/Chris O'Meara Author Jeffrey Wheatley Instructor, of Philosophy & Religious Studies, Iowa State University Religious communities have been forced to find alternative ways to worship together during the coronavirus pandemic. For some that has meant going online, but others have turned to a distinctly non-digital practice steeped in this history of the American religious experience: outdoor worship. Prayer sessions in parking lots and services in green spaces formed part of an improvised response to the lockdown by religious leaders and they may now be part of the plan as the United States emerges from the crisis. Indeed, a team of clergy and scientists have issued a new guide suggesting, among other recommendations, that baptisms could take place in “flowing streams, lakes or in beach settings.” So are brick-and-mortar houses of worship essential? It is a question that states and courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have asked in considering the extent to which states can or should place restrictions on meetings in religious buildings. Political analysis, without partisanship Polics newsleer https://theconversation.com/are-religious-communities-reviving-the-revival-in-the-us-outdoor-worship-has-a-long-tradition-140052 1/4 6/30/2021 Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition Religious communities, too, have reflected on whether the terms “church,” “mosque,” “temple” or “synagogue” describe a building or a community – it is as much a religious question as a legal one. The responses to this question vary between traditions, communities and individuals. The history of outdoor worship in the United States reveals a diversity of understandings of the proper place of worship. As a scholar of American religious history, I believe it also reveals an irony: While white evangelical Protestants have been some of the more vocal protesters of government restrictions on houses of worship during the pandemic, they actually have a long history of embracing outdoor worship. Observing outside A variety of American religious communities in the 18th and 19th centuries made do without physical houses of worship. They turned to alternative spaces for worship out of necessity – due to lack of institutional support and issues of religious freedom – or even preference. Protestant communities were chief among the groups who considered making do without a physical church. Protestantism emerged in the 16th-century Reformation in part as a protest against some of the more formal aspects of the Roman Catholic Church, such as elaborate buildings, holy objects and even regular access to religious authority figures. As such, Protestants in this period were theologically more open to holding services outside of churches. The emergence of evangelical forms of worship in the 18th and 19th centuries included outdoor revival meetings, which Protestant groups such as the Methodists, Baptists and Shakers helped popularize. Revivals included spontaneous preaching, hymns, displays of emotion and an emphasis on conversion. Large crowds met for days at a time at outdoor sites like the one at Cane Ridge, Kentucky, where thousands congregated in 1801. Though not the first, the Cane Ridge Revival signaled the emerging popularity of evangelical outdoor services in the 19th century. Historian Brett Grainger has argued that evangelicals, through revivalism, formed a mystical relationship with nature. For white settlers in America, hosting revivals in frontier spaces was also a way of sanctifying the colonization of land held by indigenous peoples, who have their own intricate relationships with nature and outdoor worship. Camp meeting of the Methodists. Library on Congress Enslaved black people, too, embraced forms of outdoor worship. Some met in what were called “hush harbors,” or secret meetings held outside of established churches. In these meetings, as scholar of religion Albert Raboteau has examined, black people could partake in Christian and African-derived worship practices apart from white surveillance and pro-slavery Christianity. The outdoors provided a refuge. Meanwhile, 19th-century white transcendentalists such as Margaret Fuller, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau emphasized nature as a site of devotional reflection to discern the reality of https://theconversation.com/are-religious-communities-reviving-the-revival-in-the-us-outdoor-worship-has-a-long-tradition-140052 2/4 6/30/2021 Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition the divine. Emerson wrote in his essay “Nature” that: “The aspect of nature is devout. Like the figure of Jesus, she stands with bended head, and hands folded upon the breast. The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship.” They sought to transcend their individual selves into a greater universal being. This required not churches but the experience and appreciation of nature. Parking lot prayers During the pandemic, different religious communities responded differently to the restrictions on indoor worship and the possible alternative of hosting events outdoors. The emphasis on ritual prayer in the Islamic tradition comes with a degree of flexibility for the safety and convenience of pious Muslims. A statement by the National Muslim Task Force on COVID-19, for example, considers recommendations from the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, local laws and Islamic moral tradition in asking Muslims to use caution and discernment in how they meet to pray. Where practical, the statement suggests that communities use mosque grounds or parking lots for Friday prayers. Most Jewish denominations have emphasized the need to keep synagogue buildings closed. Instead, many Jews have turned to virtual or outdoor worship services. Some Hasidic Jews have debated the permissibility of this and even questioned the scale of the threat of COVID-19, as have a minority in all faiths. In-person services play an important role in the Catholic tradition. Some Catholic leaders, such as Cardinal Raymond Burke have pushed for churches to remain open. Nonetheless, Pope Francis has urged churches to take precautions and follow the recommendations and mandates of local governments. Priests have had to adapt and find ways to bring the sacraments to parishioners outside of the church. Nave or nature? If any group’s theologies and histories suggest an adaptability to the present situation, Protestants would be high up there. Some Protestant communities today affirm outdoor worship as a positive good. For example, the Wild Church Network comprises Christians who “question the wisdom and consequences of regarding ‘church’ as a building where you gather away from the rest of the world for a couple hours on Sundays.” Nature, more than the inside of a building, is a proper space for Christian devotion for this network. Evangelical Protestants have been among those who have defied government shutdowns of houses of worship. As scholar of religion Pamela Klassen has argued, the resistance is especially evident in the United States, where conservative religious
Recommended publications
  • A Dissertation Submitted in Partial Satisfaction of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO PUBLIC CATHOLICISM AND RELIGIOUS PLURALISM IN AMERICA: THE ADAPTATION OF A RELIGIOUS CULTURE TO THE CIRCUMSTANCE OF DIVERSITY, AND ITS IMPLICATIONS A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Sociology by Michael J. Agliardo, SJ Committee in charge: Professor Richard Madsen, Chair Professor John H. Evans Professor David Pellow Professor Joel Robbins Professor Gershon Shafir 2008 Copyright Michael J. Agliardo, SJ, 2008 All rights reserved. The Dissertation of Michael Joseph Agliardo is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically: Chair University of California, San Diego 2008 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page ......................................................................................................................... iii Table of Contents......................................................................................................................iv List Abbreviations and Acronyms ............................................................................................vi List of Graphs ......................................................................................................................... vii Acknowledgments ................................................................................................................. viii Vita.............................................................................................................................................x
    [Show full text]
  • The Century of Evangelicalism
    THE CENTURY OF EVANGELICALISM by David A. Rausch and Carl Hermann Voss "What! Have you found me already? Another Methodist preacher!" exclaimed the shocked settler who had just pitched his tent on the ground of his future western home in 1814. "I left Virginia to get out of reach of them, went to a new settlement in Georgie, ... but they got my wife and daughter into the church. I was sure I would have some peace of the preachers, and here is one before my wagon is unloaded!" The Methodist missionary. Richmond Nolley, looked the bewildered man straight in the eye and counseled: "My friend, if you go to heaven, you'll find Methodist preachers there; and if to hell, I am afraid you will find some there; and you see how it is in this wor ld~ so you had better make terms with us, and be at peace." Modern Evangelism The nineteenth century was the great age of the modern Evangelical movement. Protestantism was permeated with the revivalistic spirit, and its compulsion to spread the message of the gospel to every corner of the earth was fervent and aggressive. Its goals went beyond revamping society. Indeed, optimistic nineteenth-century initiatives were to remake the world. The term "evangelical" (pertaining to the gospel or good news) had been used to describe Lutherans in their assertion of Protestant prin­ ciples during the Reformation era and soon had been commonly applied to all German Protestants, Lutheran and Reformed. By 1800, the word connoted a broader, ecumenical spirit that influenced the Protestant move­ ment in Britain and America.
    [Show full text]
  • From Segregation to Independence: African Americans in Churches of Christ
    FROM SEGREGATION TO INDEPENDENCE: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CHURCHES OF CHRIST By Theodore Wesley Crawford Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Vanderbilt University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in Religion August, 2008 Nashville, Tennessee Approved: Dr. Dennis C. Dickerson Dr. Kathleen Flake Dr. John S. McClure Dr. Lucius Outlaw To my father, who helped make this possible but did not live to see its completion and To my wife, Kim, whose support is responsible for this project ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page DEDICATION……………………………………………………………………. ii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS…………………………………………………….. v INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………… vii Chapter I. UNDERSTANDING CHUCHES OF CHRIST……………..……………. 1 Denominational Organization…………………………………………. 1 Churches of Christ Journals………………………………………….... 7 Churches of Christ Schools………………………………………...….. 21 Churches of Christ Lectureships………………………………………. 34 Conclusion……………………………………………………………... 38 II. SEGREGATION…………………………………………………………... 40 White-Imposed Segregation…………………………...……………… 41 The Life and Ministry of Marshall Keeble…………...……………….. 61 Conclusion…………………………………………………………….. 83 III. INDEPENDENCE………………………………………………………… 84 The Foundation of Independence..……….…………………………… 85 African American Independence……………………………………… 98 White Responses to the Civil Rights Movement……………………… 117 A United Effort: The Race Relations Workshops…………………….. 128 Conclusion…………………………………………………………….. 134 iii IV. THE CLOSING OF NASHVILLE CHRISTIAN INSTITUTE…………… 137
    [Show full text]
  • Black Evangelicals and the Gospel of Freedom, 1790-1890
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2009 SPIRITED AWAY: BLACK EVANGELICALS AND THE GOSPEL OF FREEDOM, 1790-1890 Alicestyne Turley University of Kentucky, [email protected] Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Turley, Alicestyne, "SPIRITED AWAY: BLACK EVANGELICALS AND THE GOSPEL OF FREEDOM, 1790-1890" (2009). University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations. 79. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/gradschool_diss/79 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ABSTRACT OF DISSERTATION Alicestyne Turley The Graduate School University of Kentucky 2009 SPIRITED AWAY: BLACK EVANGELICALS AND THE GOSPEL OF FREEDOM, 1790-1890 _______________________________ ABSTRACT OF DISSERTATION _______________________________ A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Kentucky By Alicestyne Turley Lexington, Kentucky Co-Director: Dr. Ron Eller, Professor of History Co-Director, Dr. Joanne Pope Melish, Professor of History Lexington, Kentucky 2009 Copyright © Alicestyne Turley 2009 ABSTRACT OF DISSERTATION SPIRITED AWAY: BLACK EVANGELICALS AND THE GOSPEL OF FREEDOM, 1790-1890 The true nineteenth-century story of the Underground Railroad begins in the South and is spread North by free blacks, escaping southern slaves, and displaced, white, anti-slavery Protestant evangelicals. This study examines the role of free blacks, escaping slaves, and white Protestant evangelicals influenced by tenants of Kentucky’s Second Great Awakening who were inspired, directly or indirectly, to aid in African American community building.
    [Show full text]
  • Like Fire in Dry Stubble - the Ts One Movement 1804-1832 (Part 2) R
    Restoration Quarterly Volume 8 | Number 1 Article 1 1-1-1965 Like Fire in Dry Stubble - The tS one Movement 1804-1832 (Part 2) R. L. Roberts J W. Roberts Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly Part of the Biblical Studies Commons, Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, Christianity Commons, Comparative Methodologies and Theories Commons, History of Christianity Commons, Liturgy and Worship Commons, Missions and World Christianity Commons, Practical Theology Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Roberts, R. L. and Roberts, J W. (1965) "Like Fire in Dry Stubble - The tS one Movement 1804-1832 (Part 2)," Restoration Quarterly: Vol. 8 : No. 1 , Article 1. Available at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly/vol8/iss1/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ ACU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Restoration Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ ACU. RESTORATION QUARTERLY CONTENTS The Biblical Doct r ine of the People of God-Richard Bat ey.......... 2 Introduction to Sept uagintal Studies ( continued ) -George Howard . .................................. ................. .............. ..... 10 Like Fire in Dry Stubb le- Th e Stone Movement 1804-1832 (Part 11)-R. L. and J. W. Roberts . .................... .................. 26 The Typology of Baptism in the Early Church -Everett F erguso n ... .............................. .......................... 41 Matthew 10:23 and Eschato logy (11)-Ro yce Clark ......... ........... .. 53 A Note on the "Double Portion" of Deuteronomy 21 :17 and II Kings 2:9-Pa ul Watson ............................. .......... 70 Book Reviews . .................... .. ················· .... 76 STUDIES IN CHRISTIAN SCHOLARSHIP VOL. 8. NO. 1 FIRST QUARTER, 1965 Like Fire in Dry Stubble....
    [Show full text]
  • The Work and Influence of Barton W. Stone
    The Work And Influence Of Barton W. Stone • Born In 1772 – Port Tobacco, Barton Maryland Warren • Father Died When He Was Young Stone • Moved South During His Youth • During Revolutionary War, He Lived In Alamance County, North Carolina When Cornwallis Met General Green At The Battle Of Guilford Courthouse, Though 30 Miles Away Could Hear The Sounds Of Artillery Causing Great Fear • At The Age Of 15 or 16 He Decided He Wanted To Be Educated To Become An Attorney • Feb 1, 1790, Age 18, Attends Doctor David Caldwell’s Guilford Academy • Born In Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, March David 22nd, 1725 • Graduated from Princeton in 1761 Caldwell • Licensed To Preach By The Presbytery Of New 1725-1821 Brunswick, June 8th, 1763 • 1765 While Doing Mission Work In North Carolina, He Started A Log Cabin School In Guilford County • 1766 Married Rachel Craighead, Daughter of Presbyterian Minister, Alexander Craighead • 1768, He Was Installed As Minister Of The Two Presbyterian Churches In Buffalo and Alamance Settlements • 1769 Began His Academy At Greensboro, N.C. • During Revolutionary War, Gen. Cornwallis offered a £200 Reward For His Capture For Speaking Out Against The Crown – Home Destroyed By Fire, Including Library By British • 1776, Member Of The Convention That Formed The Constitution Of The State Of North Carolina • 1789 When University of N.C. Was Chartered Caldwell Was Offered The Presidency • His School Sent Out Over 50 Preachers, 5 Governors, Congressmen, Physicians, David Lawyers & Judges • 1790 – 65 Years Of Age When B.W. Stone Caldwell Became Student 1725-1821 • Continued To Preach In His Two Churches Till The Year 1820 • Preached Often At Hawfields Church Where B.W.
    [Show full text]
  • Views and Experiences from a Colonial Past to Their Unfamiliar New Surroundings
    MIAMI UNIVERSITY The Graduate School Certificate for Approving the Dissertation We hereby approve the Dissertation of Matthew David Smith Candidate for the Degree: Doctor of Philosophy ____________________________________________ Director Dr. Carla Gardina Pestana _____________________________________________ Reader Dr. Andrew R.L. Cayton _____________________________________________ Reader Dr. Mary Kupiec Cayton ____________________________________________ Reader Dr. Katharine Gillespie ____________________________________________ Dr. Peter Williams Graduate School Representative ABSTRACT "IN THE LAND OF CANAAN:" RELIGIOUS REVIVAL AND REPUBLICAN POLITICS IN EARLY KENTUCKY by Matthew Smith Against the tumult of the American Revolution, the first white settlers in the Ohio Valley imported their religious worldviews and experiences from a colonial past to their unfamiliar new surroundings. Within a generation, they witnessed the Great Revival (circa 1797-1805), a dramatic mass revelation of religion, converting thousands of worshipers to spiritual rebirth while transforming the region's cultural identity. This study focuses on the lives and careers of three prominent Kentucky settlers: Christian revivalists James McGready and Barton Warren Stone, and pioneering newspaper editor John Bradford. All three men occupy points on a religious spectrum, ranging from the secular public faith of civil religion, to the apocalyptic sectarianism of the Great Revival, yet they also overlap in unexpected ways. This study explores how the evangelicalism
    [Show full text]
  • The Work and Influence of Barton W. Stone in Kentucky
    The Stone/Campbell Movement Barton Alexander Warren Campbell Stone http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Early 19th Century America http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Background To The Kentucky Revival “The Kentucky Revival” Richard McNemar, Chapter 1 http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com The Work And Influence Of Barton W. Stone In Kentucky http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com • Born In 1772 – Port Tobacco, Barton Maryland Warren • Feb 1, 1790, Age 18, Attends Stone Doctor David Caldwell’s Guilford Academy, Greensboro, NC • The Young Student Gets Religion Under The Preaching Of William Hodge • 1795 Spends A Year At Hope Hull’s Academy In Washington, Ga. William Hodge • 1796 – Ordained Orange Presbytery, Henry Patillo http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Stone Goes West To Kentucky Barton Warren Stone http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Getting Religion: Calvinism’s Influence On Late 18th & Early 19th Century Religion http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Red River Meetinghouse Logan County, Kentucky Birthplace Of The Kentucky Revival http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com B.W. Stone Battle With Calvinism Does God Really Love The Whole World as is said in John 3:16? Continued On Next Slide http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com B.W. Stone Battle With Calvinism http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com The Cane Ridgek Revival http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Some Falsely The Focus Of The Revival Claim That The Focus Of The Cane Ridge Revival Was To Achieve A Religious Experience. See Stone’s Purpose In The Revival From His Autobiography http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com The Last Will & Testament Of The Springfield Presbytery, June 28, 1804 http://www.TheRestorationMovement.com Resolutions from The Last Will Of The Springfield Presbytery A Call To Take The Bible As The Only Sure Guide to Heaven A Call To Reject The Westminster Confession Of Faith And All Document Designed By Man That The church of Christ Resume Her native Right Of Internal Government That The Title Of “Reverend” Be Forgotten, And Designated Only For The Lord.
    [Show full text]
  • THE ADOPTION of BIBLICAL ARCHAISMS in the BOOK of MORMON and OTHER 19TH CENTURY TEXTS by Gregory A
    Purdue University Purdue e-Pubs Open Access Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 12-2016 Sounding sacred: The dopta ion of biblical archaisms in the Book of Mormon and other 19th century texts Gregory A. Bowen Purdue University Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/open_access_dissertations Part of the English Language and Literature Commons, History of Religions of Western Origin Commons, and the Linguistics Commons Recommended Citation Bowen, Gregory A., "Sounding sacred: The dopta ion of biblical archaisms in the Book of Mormon and other 19th century texts" (2016). Open Access Dissertations. 945. https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/open_access_dissertations/945 This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. SOUNDING SACRED: THE ADOPTION OF BIBLICAL ARCHAISMS IN THE BOOK OF MORMON AND OTHER 19TH CENTURY TEXTS by Gregory A. Bowen A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of Purdue University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Linguistics West Lafayette, Indiana December 2016 ii THE PURDUE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL STATEMENT OF DISSERTATION APPROVAL Dr. Mary Niepokuj, Chair Department of English Dr. Shaun Hughes Department of English Dr. John Sundquist Department of Linguistics Dr. Atsushi Fukada Department of Linguistics Approved by: Dr. Alejandro Cuza-Blanco Head of the Departmental Graduate Program iii For my father iv ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to thank my committee for all they have done to make this project possible, especially my advisor, Dr. Mary Niepokuj, who tirelessly provided guidance and encouragement, and has been a fantastic example of what a teacher should be.
    [Show full text]
  • 7-26-20 Sermon
    July 26, 2020 Acts 20:17-21 “Stone’s Own” Cane Ridge Meeting House David A. Shirey It was 177 years ago this summer (August 21, 1843 to be exact) that Barton Warren Stone (1772-1844) stood in this pulpit and preached what would be his last sermon here. Seven years earlier, in 1836, he had moved to Jacksonville, Illinois, where in 1841 he suffered a stroke that left him paralyzed and greatly affected his speech. But with great determination, he learned to walk with a cane and speak so that people could understand him. In 1843, he made a final tour of his beloved KY and gave in to his many friends’ request to preach one last time at Cane Ridge. As you might imagine, his last sermon here at Cane Ridge was quite an emotional occasion. This old church was packed. People stood outside the windows to be a part of the farewell to the man they affectionately called “Elder Stone.” A man by the name of John Rogers was there and in his biography of Barton Stone he wrote: While memory lives, I can never forget that day. The circumstances of that parting scene are indelibly engraved on the tablets of my heart. With staff in hand, the venerable man limps into the pulpit, which he had so often filled for near 47 years! … The silence of death pervades the audience; and all are leaning forward with intense interest to hear the last instructions, admonitions and exhortations of their father in the gospel1 So it was 177 years ago when Barton Stone delivered his final sermon here.
    [Show full text]
  • A Pneumatological Virtue Ethic for Churches of Christ
    HELP US TO BE GOOD: A PNEUMATOLOGICAL VIRTUE ETHIC FOR CHURCHES OF CHRIST Dissertation Submitted to The College of Arts and Sciences UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for The Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Theology By Mac S. Sandlin, M.Div. August 2021 HELP US TO BE GOOD: A PNEUMATOLOGICAL VIRTUE ETHIC FOR CHURCHES OF CHRIST Name: Sandlin, Mac S. APPROVED BY: Brad J. Kallenberg, Ph.D. Dissertation Director William L. Portier, Ph.D. Dissertation Reader Dennis M. Doyle, Ph.D. Dissertation Reader Jana Bennett, Ph.D. Dissertation Reader John Mark Hicks, Ph.D. Dissertation Reader _____________________________________________ Jana Bennett, Ph.D. Chair, Department of Religious Studies ii ©Copyright by Mac S. Sandlin All rights reserved 2021 iii ABSTRACT HELP US TO BE GOOD: A PNEUMATOLOGICAL VIRTUE ETHIC FOR CHURCHES OF CHRIST Name: Sandlin, Mac S. University of Dayton Advisor: Dr. Brad J. Kallenberg Churches of Christ (Stone-Campbell Movement) have inherited from early thinkers in the Restoration Movement and generally operate out of an ethic which can be summarized in the maxim, “Try hard to do what the Bible says.” This approach has two major flaws: self-reliance rather than reliance on the Holy Spirit, and a tendency to treat Scripture and an individual’s obedience to Scripture as ends in themselves instead of the means to an end. This ethic yields an anthropology that is at once too high and too low: too high in its assumption that we can achieve goodness without the direct aid of the Spirit and too low in its assumption that obedience is the highest good to which we are called.
    [Show full text]
  • The Springfield and Cumberland Presbyteries: Conflict and Secession in the Old Southwest
    Restoration Quarterly Volume 32 Number 3 Article 2 7-1-1990 The Springfield and Cumberland Presbyteries: Conflict and Secession in the Old Southwest Douglas A. Foster Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly Part of the Biblical Studies Commons, Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, Christianity Commons, Comparative Methodologies and Theories Commons, History of Christianity Commons, Liturgy and Worship Commons, Missions and World Christianity Commons, Practical Theology Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Foster, Douglas A. (1990) "The Springfield and Cumberland Presbyteries: Conflict and Secession in the Old Southwest," Restoration Quarterly: Vol. 32 : No. 3 , Article 2. Available at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly/vol32/iss3/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Digital Commons @ ACU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Restoration Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ ACU. VOLUME 32/NUMBER 3 THIRD QUARTER 1990 ResLoROLton c-1ar<LeRld' The Springfield and Cumberland Presbyteries: Conflict and Secession in the Old Southwest Douglas A. Foster David Lipscomb University Although the Old Side-New Side schism in American Presbyterianism ended in 1758 with the merging of the Synods of New York and Philadelphia, the tension between the two groups never ceased to exist. The issues that would continue to plague the Presbyterian Church in the USA had been identified in that fight, including required ministerial subscription to the Westminster Confession, the location of ecclesiastical authority (synod or presbytery), educational qualifications of ministers, and the use of revivals in evangelism.
    [Show full text]