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Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World by Alec Ryrie
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“What made Luther’s stance so outrageous was not that he valorized the Bible. That is hardly unusual for Christians. What was shocking was that he set it above everything else. He treated the views of the early church fathers, of more recent scholars, even of church councils, with great respect, but he would not be constrained by them. In the end, anything outside the Bible, including anyone else’s interpretation of the Bible, was a mere opinion. This was the true and enduring radicalism of Protestantism: its readiness to question every human authority and tradition.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“The simple justification for the elders and their work was Christ’s detailed prescription in Matthew’s Gospel for how Christians should deal with sinners among the faithful: first private admonition, then progressively more formal reprimands, and finally, if repentance was not forthcoming, expulsion from the community.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Luther’s revolution had, like all great revolutions, failed. But like all great revolutions, it had created a new world.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Protestants are Christians whose religion derives ultimately from Martin Luther’s rebellion against the Catholic Church. They are a tree with many tangled branches but a single trunk.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“That we should all have a say in choosing our own rulers and that those rulers ‘powers over us should be limited—these principles are in obvious tension, as every society that has tried to combine liberty and democracy has discovered. Without Protestantism and its peculiar preoccupations, that strange and marvelous synthesis could never have come into being as it has.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“We cannot understand the modern age without understanding the dynamic history of Protestant Christianity.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Protestant princes believed the Gospel their ministers taught and valued the moral order, sobriety, and social cohesiveness their churches fostered. All sides usually rubbed along well enough.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Luther disliked the idea of secret meetings, which he said reminded him of rats. Calvin had found a way of forming the rats into a choir and then drilling them to march.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“John Calvin, brought characteristic rigor to the question. Luther dreamed of good princes, disliked law on principle, and had little interest in institutions. As a result, Lutheran churches ended up with a mishmash of governing structures. Calvin, by contrast, had trained as a lawyer, knew that structures matter, and favored more participatory government.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“More important, however, Henry’s book found its mark in Rome. He had long resented the pope’s gift of glorious titles to the kings of Spain (“the Catholic King”) and France (“the Most Christian King”), while England was left out. Now, finally and after some negotiation, Henry got his prize and became “Defender of the Faith.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Luther was horrified. Partly this was because, for all his spiritual radicalism, he was deeply socially conservative. His instinct was to obey rightful authorities, to respect social hierarchies, and to preserve good order. For him, Christian freedom meant inner liberation, not political upheaval.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Martin Luther was the Reformation’s indispensable firestarter. Would there have been a Reformation if young Martin had followed his father’s wishes and become a lawyer? Who knows, but the Reformation as it actually happened is unimaginable without him.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Some Protestants insist that Protestantism is “Bible Christianity,” a religion that takes the whole, inspired Bible as the only and final authoritative source of truth.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“The real novelty of our own time is not the prominence of the religious Right but the silence of the religious Left.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“The kind of sociopolitical structure that Protestantism engenders—based on free inquiry, participatory politics, and limited government—tends to favor market economics.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“To outsiders, Protestantism may seem admirable for its role in promoting racial equality and in fighting apartheid, or it may seem culpable for its role in promoting racism and defending injustice. Yet it was only incidentally and temporarily a vehicle for those causes. Protestant movements that become too deeply attached to such social and political issues tend to find that they are running out of steam. Like it or loathe it, the heart of Protestantism’s message is a spiritual one, a message of salvation and of divine power.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Their tradition began in Martin Luther’s ravishing love affair with the God he met in the Bible. It was a love for which he was willing to sweep aside any tradition or power structure that stood in his way. Since his day, Protestants have pursued that love in radically different ways: individually or through institutions, intellectually or emotionally, tolerantly or violently, calmly or restlessly, apocalyptically or idealistically, working within older traditions or radically rejecting them. Often that old flame has been reduced to a simmer or doused altogether, sometimes it has blazed beyond any control, but it is the same fire. To understand Protestantism’s enormous impact on our world, we need to understand the restless burning it has kindled and rekindled in generations of believers.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Luther’s breakthrough had a dazzling, corrosive simplicity to it. The power of those twin principles, “faith alone” and “Scripture alone,” lay in the word “alone.” There is nothing and no one else other than God incarnate in Jesus Christ worth attending to. Being a Christian means throwing yourself abjectly, unreservedly, on Christ’s mercy. Living a Christian life means living Christ’s life—that is, abandoning all security and worldly ambitions to follow him “through penalties, deaths and hell.” It is only then that we may find peace. That ravishing paradox is at the heart of Protestantism. It is a further paradox that such a profoundly personal insight should have such an impact on the outside world.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“It turned out that the Germans’ modest and conscientious reforms were only a starting point for more rapacious regimes to come.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“The Reformation became notorious for two fat men. The first, Martin Luther, we have already met. The second, King Henry VIII of England.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Martin Luther was a friar as well as a professor. When a man in his position accused the church of moneygrubbing, people were ready to listen.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World
“Luther’s fire caught because fuel had been quietly building up for some time. The principal fuel was desire for reform of the church.”
Alec Ryrie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World