C
Contarini
Guest
That doesn’t make sense. Historic Protestant piety holds that self-denial is to be cultivated in the normal affairs of human life, not in a monastery. You are equating lack of monasticism with lack of a tradition of self-denial, and that’s a mistake. (Now I think you can make a good case that the lack of monasticism has made the Protestant tradition of self-denial much harder to maintain. On the other hand, monasticism has itself shown a tendency to become corrupt over time, shared with all other institutions and traditions, so the difference may not really be that great. In Protestantism, as in Catholicism, whenever the spiritual disciplines appear to have been lost the Holy Spirit stirs up a renewal movement. I do think Catholics have an advantage because of the historic continuity–Protestant movements are prone to reinvent the wheel!)Historical notes are great Edwin. Thank you. Translate that to a monastery today that is Protestant.
Google “new monasticism.” Google “spiritual disciplines” (or visit this website).Translate that today to a group that encourages and invites ascetism.
And then there are the traditional groups that still hang on, and the young people who occasionally find their way to them. I knew a guy in grad school who became New Order Amish.
Actually you did. You said that there was no tradition of self-denial. Now that I’ve shown you to be wrong, you shift your ground instead of admitting error.No one questions the past.
Use this search engine to discover Protestant ascetism
This is wikipedia
Yes. That’s why that’s not the best search term to use. (Weber was onto something with his “inner-worldly asceticism” and his account of how this functioned in a secularized, post-Protestant world, but I think most scholars of Puritanism would say he got Baxter and other seventeenth-century figures wrong, and he himself admitted that Calvin did not teach what he calls the “Calvinist” view.)What shows up most is Protestanism and the Spirit of Capitalism.
Try the terms I suggested above instead.
Edwin