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Encyclopedia :
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CHR :
Christian humanism |
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Christian humanismChristian humanism, as a philosophical tendency that has been traced back to the 12th century at least, is grounded in the mystery of God as present in history as a human being, Jesus, and secondly, on several teachings of Jesus, as found in the New Testament. The term has also been applied to the thought of Catholic theologian Jacques Maritain.Christian humanism usually signifies a fundamental 'human-centeredness' as a basic value. It does not, however, elevate ordinary human beings to the status of deities, or deny the primacy of God. It does celebrate humanity, and place the serving of one's fellow human beings as one of the highest Christian duties. According to sociologist Robert Bellah, such a perspective is characteristic of the 'modern' stage of religion, in which "man in the last analysis is responsible for the choice of his symbolism" (Beyond Belief: Essays on Religion in a Post-Traditional World [San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1970], p. 42). James Davison Hunter believes that Christian humanism carries within it a potential for reaching across the metaphysical divide separating the two sides of what he calls "the American culture war," in which one side places moral authority in something transcending the individual, and the other places moral authority in personal human experience ("The American Culture War," in Peter Berger, ed., The Limits of Social Cohesion: Conflict and Mediation in Pluralist Societies [Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1998], p. 6). Selected Humanist Teachings of JesusThe Second Great Commandment"You shall love your neighbor as yourself" - Matthew 22:39, Mark 12:31, Luke 10:27 (also Leviticus 19:18) Unto the LeastThen shall the King say unto them on his right hand "Come, ye blessed of my Father, Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, And the King shall answer and say unto them, "Verily I say unto you, Literary criticism Christian humanism is first of all a movement for widened learning that emerged out of the Renaissance and was brought by devoted Christians to the study of the philological sources of the Greek New Testament. This project was undertaken at the time of the Reformation in the work of Erasmus of Rotterdam (who remained a Catholic), Martin Luther (who was an Augustinian priest and led the Evangelical Reformation, translating the Scriptures into his native German), and John Calvin (who was a student of law and theology at the Sorbonne where he became acquainted with the Evangelical Reformation, and began studying Scripture in the original languages, eventually writing a text-based commentary upon the entire Christian Old Testament and New Testament except the Book of Revelation). John Calvin was the most prominent of the many figures associated with Reformed Churches that proliferated in Switzerland, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and portions of Germany, Hungary, Lithuania, and Poland. Each of the candidates for ordained ministry in these churches had to study the Christian Old Testament in Hebrew and the New in Greek in order to qualify. This continued the tradition of Christian humanism.
Sources W.J. Bouwsma, John Calvin: A Sixteenth-Century Portrait See alsoChristianity, humanism, religious humanism, ErasmusExternal Links
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