C
Contarini
Guest
Pietism was a Lutheran movement, originally. Lutherans had been ambivalent about the books rather than rejecting them outright.Thanks. I will look into the movement. Just thinking out loud here but it’s curious that there needed to be a movement to reject these books if they were already not accepted by the Protestant community. That’s the first thought with very very limited knowledge on the matter that comes to mind.
Since Esdra keeps referring to the 19th century, I think he may be talking about the evangelical revivals of the 19th century, which were certainly linked to Pietism but fueled by influences from British evangelicalism.
Original Pietism (in the late 17th century) was influenced by late medieval traditions of piety (particularly the “Rhineland mystics”), so in some ways it was a movement away from strict Lutheran “sola fide” and toward a more transformational, affective approach to the Christian faith. So I wouldn’t assume that it necessarily made Protestants less Catholic–but in some ways and in some times and places some versions of it no doubt did.
I read an article in grad school that argued that it was the 18th-century Prussian Pietists, and not the original Reformers, who fostered private Bible reading by all laypeople, distributing large numbers of Bibles. I think the article may have set up too much of a contrast, but 18th and 19th-century Pietist and evangelical movements certainly emphasized personal reading and interpretation of Scripture in a way that more traditional Protestant churches hadn’t. And I think the need to take a clearcut position about the deuteros went along with this. If you were primarily using the Bible in the context of the Church’s liturgy and preaching (as traditional Protestants had done), then you could include in the Bible books that were useful but not quite on the same level as the other books–you could leave the learned clergy to explain to the laity just how to use these books. But if, as 18th and 19th-century evangelicals increasingly came to do, you really expected the Bible to act “on its own” through private reading, you had to make sure that the books in the Bible really were divinely inspired.
It’s probably no accident that this was the same period in which Biblical criticism was rising. Just at the point at which the most was being claimed for the Bible, the foundations of the whole structure were being undermined.
Just so folks don’t think I’m losing my edge as a critic of both sides, I’ll point out that there’s a similar irony about the declaration of papal infallibility just as the Popes were losing their temporal authority and Europe as a whole was turning away from “throne and altar” Catholicism.
Edwin