The Spirit of Protestantism is an affirmative book based on the 'large body of shared convictions' of the various Protestant groups, and on the author's own beliefs. Professor Brown writes directly to the reader as he discusses the place of the Bible in Protestantism, the laity and the clergy, worship, the relationship between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism, and finally, social and individual ethics.
Robert McAfee Brown was a minister in the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, a theologian, and an activist.
He earned a bachelor's degree from Amherst College in 1943 and was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1944. Brown earned a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Union Theological Seminary in 1945, and served as a United States Navy chaplain from 1945 to 1946. The recipient of a Fulbright grant, Brown studied at the University of Oxford before completing a doctorate in the philosophy of religion at Columbia University in 1951. He married Sydney Thomson, and had four children.
Initially, Brown taught at his alma mater, Union Theological Seminary, before accepting an appointment as Professor of Religion at Stanford University in 1962. There he became an international leader in civil rights, ecumenical and social justice causes. Brown campaigned against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War and was a co-founder of the group "Clergy and Laity Concerned about Vietnam". He was also a Protestant observer at the Second Vatican Council.
Brown left Stanford in 1975 to return to Union as Professor of World Christianity and Ecumenism, but quickly found his new post unfulfilling. He resigned and moved back to the Bay Area, where he taught at the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley until his retirement in 1984. Brown was the author of 29 books, and his papers are now held at the Graduate Theological Union. Brown died on 4 September 2001, survived by his wife. A lecture series is named in his honor.
Brown’s “Spirit of Protestantism” is an engaging presentation of a religious movement that, for many, simply defies easy description (e.g., the common argument that one can only discuss “Protestantisms”). Surely, Luther’s initial break with the medieval Roman Catholic Church has spawned a wild assortment of further divisions and break-aways, yet Brown has largely succeeded in identifying a stable core that grants these innumerable children a “family resemblance.” This is so, it seems, because, instead of attempting to simply identify a series of theological propositions that are common to Lutheran, Reformed, Anabaptist, Anglican/Episcopalian, Presbyterian (et. al) groups—an exercise that is unavoidably reductive and ultimately unhelpful—he really focuses instead on what I suppose would best be described as a cluster of “affections” that define Protestantism’s fundamental orientation. Here, we do not find the fundamental identity of Protestantism in a doctrine such as “justification by faith alone” or even in a reprioritization of sources of theological authority but instead in “an openness to the judging and renewing activity of the living God made known in Jesus Christ.” Most importantly, then, for Brown, the Reformation is not some past historical era but a work of the Spirit that has been unleashed on the global Church and still is at work. (In fact, if one is looking for a history of the Reformation, this book will largely disappoint.) For Brown, the “spirit” of Protestantism is wrapped up in the Latin phrase, “Ecclesia reformata sed semper reformanda.” Therefore, the central section of the book that sets out to describe the pillars of Protestantism does not content itself with a simply historical description but focuses on how each element opens up Protestantism to further growth and development. For example, Brown’s explanation of the cardinal Protestant claim of the “priesthood of all believers” begins by disclaiming the popular understanding of this phrase as “every man is his own priest” (the definition given in Webster’s dictionary); instead, the phrase should be understood to mean, Brown says, “every man is priest to every other man.” Therefore, instead of promoting the power of modern individualism, the phrase instead promotes the power of community. We are responsible to each other not just to God alone. Brown does a lot here to develop an otherwise-deficient Protestant ecclesiology and to provide a way for the voice of tradition to have a genuine contribution (as the voice of the priestly “community”) to future development. The final section turns toward what Brown sees as the contemporary concerns facing the Protestant family. I found here his chapters on Protestantism’s relationship to culture and “holy worldliness” to be most engaging (probably owing to the fact that my tradition springs from the American Holiness movement of the late 19th century). He well expresses the profound tensions that animate this relationship and should, if understood correctly, serve to make the Church a vital corrective and contributor to the broader culture. And, again, he has much to contribute to a rounded-out Protestant understanding of the role of the Church. As I hope I made clear, there was much worthwhile here. Brown does the almost-impossible of at once “surveying” the field and contributing to it, of summarizing the contributions of others while make a substantial one himself. Just for that, the book deserves its reputation. However, there were several points where I took issue with Brown’s analysis or, perhaps, more forthrightly, simply felt uncomfortable with it. The first point, to put it bluntly, was his commitment to a Schleiermachian understanding of theological doctrine as a kind of disposable “husk” that covers an inexpressible “seed” of religious experience. (Since the doctrine is not identical with the experience it articulates, doctrine can—even should!—be altered to better fit with the shifting worldviews and core assumptions of contemporary society.) As I intimated above, Brown’s commitment to a church that is “always reforming” is wholesale; nothing, as near as I could tell—the inspiration of Scripture, the identity of Jesus Christ, the meaning of the Cross—stands beyond the need for “reform(ul)ation.” At several points, he clearly tips his hand that he is presenting here the “spirit” of LIBERAL mainline Protestantism and is content to essentially write off Fundamentalists, Evangelicals, and Pentecostals as mere “sectarians.” The second point of discomfort was his commitment to ecumenism. I must be clear on what I mean here. First, I am not opposed to ecumenical dialogue per se, especially when it is understood as a tool for better self-definition. Secondly, this book was written in the 1960s, in the sort of “hey day” of the World Council of Churches; it is pretty clear in Brown’s writing that ecumenism is “all the rage,” so he really cannot be faulted, I suppose, for addressing ecumenism’s concerns. However, my problem really is Brown’s subtle insinuation that such thinking is somehow part of the “original” essence of Protestantism, an inheritance we share with Luther and Zwingli and Calvin. However, knowing the bit I do about Luther’s treatment of Andreas Karlstadt or Calvin’s treatment of Michael Servetus, I dare say “ecumenical” is not the word to describe their theological views! And Brown really does seem to imagine a day when these petty doctrinal differences can be erased and the church can, both physically and spiritually, reunite. However, even with those caveats, Brown’s work here is admirable for its comprehensiveness and its simplicity. His attempts to write in a way appealing to lay readers were sometimes contrived and bit “cutesy” for an otherwise-unabashedly theological work, but, on the whole, he achieved an enviable clarity of communication. This book is an important landmark in Protestant theological reflection and, even as the religious complexion of the movement changes, will continue to be an important resource for future generations of Protestant theologians.