Although Puritans stood against [Roman?] Catholic and Anglican formalism, salvation for the Puritans was still mediated by institutions - family, church, covenanted society; in evangelicalism (at least in American forms) salvation was in principle unmediated except by the written Word of God. Puritans protested against nominal ecclesiastical life, but they still treated institutions of church and society as given; American evangelicals created their own communities, at first ecclesiastical, then voluntary. Puritans accepted authority from designated leaders; American evangelicals looked to authority from charismatic, self-selected leaders. Puritans fenced in enthusiasm with formal learning, respect for confessions, and deference to traditional interpretations of Scripture; American evangelicals fenced in enthusiasm with self-selected leaders, individualistic Bible reading, local grassroots organizations, and intuitively persuasive reason.
Noll, Mark, America's God pp173-4 quoted in D. G. Hart, John Williamson Nevin: High Church Calvinist (Philipsburg, P & R, 2005) p 26
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Puritan or Evangelical
Here's Mark Noll trying to capture something of the differences between Puritanism and American evangelical Protestantism:
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2 comments:
Thanks for this Mark - very striking quotation. Is Hart on Nevin worth a read?
Hmm: we are certainly in the realm of the broad brush stroke, but Mark Noll is a very credible voice...
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