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The History of Presbyterianism in the United States

The History of Presbyterianism in the United States. Part 1: The Broader Picture B – German Higher Criticism Comes to America. Master Timeline. United States. Europe. 1620 – Mayflower lands 1730s-1743 – 1 st Great Awakening 1776-1783 – American Rev. 1790-1840 – 2 nd Great Awakening

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The History of Presbyterianism in the United States

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  1. The History of Presbyterianismin the United States Part 1: The Broader Picture B – German Higher Criticism Comes to America

  2. Master Timeline United States Europe • 1620 – Mayflower lands • 1730s-1743 – 1st Great Awakening • 1776-1783 – American Rev. • 1790-1840 – 2nd Great Awakening • 1830 – Book of Mormon • 1850-1900 – 3rd Great Awakening • 1861-1865 – American Civil War • 1870 – Scottish Common Sense • 1889 – Moody Bible Institute • 1891 – Briggs’ address • 1909 – Scofield Reference Bible • 1910 – Pres. G.A.: 5 Fundamentals • 1914-1919 – World War I • 1922 – “Shall Fund.s Win?” • 1923 – The Auburn Affirmation • 1925 – The Scopes Trial • 1929 – Westminster Theo. Seminary • 1936 – Orthodox Presbyterian Ch. • 1936 – John Mackay, Princeton Sem. • 1643 – Westminster Confession of Faith • 1650-1800 – Age of European Enlightenment & of Scottish Common Sense Philosophy • 1770s-1900 – Rise of German Higher Criticism • 1789-1799 – French Revolution • 1827 – Plymouth Brethren begin meeting • 1833 – Slavery Abolition Act of England • 1859 - Charles Darwin – Origin of Species • 1862-77 – Darby travels to the United States • 1919 – Rise of Neo-Orthodoxy United States (cont.) 1937 – Death of J. Gresham Machen - Bible Presbyterian Ch. (McIntyre) 1966 – RTS, Jackson, MI 1967 – Confession of ‘67, Book of Confessions 1973 – PCA 1983 – Union of UPCUSA & PCUS

  3. 1870 – The New Theology Theology was no longer viewed [by the growing consensus of new liberalism] as a fixed body of eternally valid truths. It was seen rather as an evolutionary development that should adjust to the standards and needs of modern culture. … The Idealism of the New Theology answered naturalism and higher criticism in two steps. One was by merging the supernatural with the natural, so that the supernatural was seen only through the natural. Simultaneously, however, Idealism posited a strong dualism between the material world, known through scinece and logic, and the spiritual world, known by intuition and sensitivity. (Marsden, p. 25, 26)

  4. 1770s-1900 – Rise of German Higher Criticism • A rejection of “tradition” in interpretation • Regard the books of the Bible on face value • Individually as opposed to collectively supported • Set aside theology and focus on origins/history of the document • Investigation into sources, forms, and traces of redaction • “Take apart” and “reconstruct” the documents • Seeking the original meaning in original context • Drawing conclusions re: true author & recipients

  5. Charles Augustus Briggs • Served in the Union Army during War Between the States • Studied in Germany under Wellhausen • 1874 – Professor of Hebrew at Union Seminary

  6. Charles Augustus Briggs • Professor of Hebrew and cognate languages in Union Theological Seminary from 1874 to 1891 • Authored several academic books: • Biblical Study: Its Principles, Methods and History (1883) • Hebrew Poems of the Creation (1884) • American Presbyterianism: Its Origin and Early History (1885) • Messianic Prophecy (1886) • Biblical history (1889) • Whither? A Theological Question for the Times (1889) • The Authority of the Holy Scripture (1891)

  7. Charles Augustus Briggs • Three sources of divine authority: • The institutional Church • Reason • The Holy Bible … but • The Bible too protected by dogma & protective creeds. • Protestant superstition: Bibliolatry. • No need to regard the Bible as inerrant. • Many traditional authors are not truly the authors.

  8. Charles Augustus Briggs • 1891 – Inaugurated a new “Biblical Theology” department at Union Theological Seminary, NYC • He gave an inaugural address which proved explosive.

  9. Charles Augustus Briggs “It may be regarded as the certain result of the science of the Higher Criticism that Moses did not write the Pentateuch or Job; Ezra did not write the Chronicles, Ezra or Nehemiah; Jeremiah did not write the Kings or Lamentations; David did not write the Psalter, but only a few of the Psalms; Solomon did not write the Song of Songs or Ecclesiastes, and only a portion of the Proverbs; Isaiah did not write half of the book that bears his name. The great mass of the Old Testament was written by authors whose names or connection with their writings are lost in oblivion.”

  10. Charles Augustus Briggs “We have undermined the breastworks of Traditionalism; let us blow them to atoms. We have forged our way through the obstructions; let us remove them now from the face of the earth. Criticism is at work everywhere with knife and fire! Let us cut down everything that is dead and harmful, every kind of dead orthodoxy, every species of effete ecclesiasticism, all mere formal morality, all those dry and brittle fences that constitute denominationalism, and are barriers to church unity. ... Let us burn up every form of false doctrine, false religion, and false practice. Let us remove every encumbrance out of the way for a new life; the life of God is moving throughout Christendom, and the spring time of a new age is about to come upon us.”

  11. Charles Augustus Briggs • Most of the students in the audience reportedly responded favorably. • Other Union faculty supported Briggs. • 1891 - Presbytery trial on charges of heresy • was turned into a forum on the new theology. • Briggs was acquitted. • 1893 – Presbyterian Church GA suspended Briggs. • Union Seminary separated from the Pres. Ch. • 1899 – Ordained in the Protestant Episcopal Ch.

  12. Liberal Theology Defines Itself • Nonpropositional – • Bible is not considered a collection of factual statements, but instead an anthology that documents the human authors' beliefs and feelings about God at the time of its writing—within a historical or cultural context. • do not seek to discover truth propositions but rather create religious models and concepts that reflect the class, gender, social, and political contexts from which they emerge. • Nonreligious – • Remove the “superstitious” – miracles, supernatural • Elevate the “humane” – beginning of the “Social Gospel”

  13. Henry Van Dyke, 1852-1933A major supporter of Briggs • 1877 – graduated from Princeton University & Seminary • 1901 – Chaired a 25 man committee to revise the WCF, primarily to remove the doctrine of election and universalize the gospel. • 1907 – Lyrics to “Joyful, Joyful, We adore Thee” Thou our Father, Christ our Brother, all who live in love are Thine;

  14. New Covenant Presbyterian Church Preaching God’s Sovereign Grace to a World of Need 128 St. Mary’s Church Rd., Abingdon, MD 21009 410-569-0289 www.ncpres.org www.ephesians515.com

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