Protestant Ethic Essay

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    Laura Womack April 24, 2015 Dr. Crutcher Special Topics E-Book Essay: “Learning from the Reformation” The Reformation is still influencing our lives today whether we know it or not. The arguments that come from this era are still present in today’s society, which include and range from theology, economy, politics, and family life. Motivation for the Reformation came from the ancient world. The thinkers of this time sought to restore the spiritual purity of early Christianity. Some of the leading

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    It was the English who played the major part in setting British North America were Protestants of a distinct type. When the youthful Edward VI succeeded Henry VII in 1547, his Protestant advisors greatly accelerated the pace of religious change in England. They enhanced the authority of such leaders as the Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Cranmer, whose liturgical theology was a subtle

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    In the middle of the 17th Century, one man produced a work of literature that would shock and confuse the Christian world. John Milton, a poet and a servant of the commonwealth of England under Oliver Cromwell, understood more than most the power of Christianity and the effects that it had on its sympathizers. In 1667, he decided to write an epic that would justify God’s actions to man, and how sin and death came into being, through the arduous decisions made by Adam and Eve. This epic was called

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    formation of the American colonies, there has been tension between Protestant and Catholic religious ideology. In his book Who Are We, Samuel Huntington discusses the importance of the early American settler’s dissenting Protestant values. Without the Protestants, Huntington claims, American culture as we know it would not exist (Huntington, 59). Huntington is right that American culture was formally designed by dissenting Protestants, although that history is fraught with prejudice against opposing

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    The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism • North was shaped by religious devotion while South was shaped by wealth (esp. tobacco) • 1517: Martin Luther nailed protests against Catholic doctrines; declared Bible as the only basis of God’s word  ignited Protestant Reformation in Europe for a century o John Calvin of Geneva: religious leader that elaborated Luther’s ideas and founded Calvinism (dominant ideo. of New England Puritans)  1536: Calvin published Institutes of the Christian religion

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    The Social Gospel

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    The social gospel was developed by the protestants during their movement in which they had incorporated Christian ethics to combat the problems that had arisen due to hasty suburbanization as well as industrialization which included but not limited to poverty, crime and lack of education and nutrition. The social gospel was used to make sure that the problems of society where addressed and not cast away and ignored as ignoring the problems was looked downed upon as its everyone’s reasonability to

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    Impact Is The Diffusion?

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    main source of the Western thought. Little is known about him and his life except what was recorded by his student, including Plato. Most of the information obtained about his life biography were from his students. He focused on the examination of ethics and virtue. At the same time, he believed the best way for people to live their lives was to focus on self-development rather than the pursuit of material wealth. He said his wisdom was limited to an awareness of his own ignorance. Socrates method

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    idea behind Calvinism is that good people are those who work and earn their power; aristocrats would have to act like aristocrats in order to achieve that title, rather than simply being born into it with no way to sway between social classes. The protestant reformation as a whole embraced the idea that there is no middle man between an individual and God, removing the clergy and Pope from their beliefs. The ideology of the sovereign individual also arose during this movement, where people began to

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    The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism Martin Luther: German friar who believed that only the Bible was God’s word and started Protestant Reformation Protestant Reformation: Movement that denounced the Church and believed that the Bible was the only true word of God John Calvin: Believed a reformation was needed so much he had ideas that affected the New World’s future Institutes of the Christian Religion: A book by John Calvin that explained the Protestant systematic theology Calvinism:

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    Evangelicals, a morally conservative group within Christianity stem from the Protestant reformation era of Martin Luther in the sixteenth century (Brown, 2016). Evangelicals are known for their strong beliefs in the Gospel and their spreading of the Word of God. They believe that the only way of salvation is by believing in the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Evangelicals reject many Roman Catholic and liberal protestant beliefs, as they do not strictly follow the Word of God (Brown, 2006). Evangelicalism

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