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Published byBruce Bailey Modified over 8 years ago
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History of the Church II: Week 16
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The Church in the 20 th century The Progressive Movement of the late 19 th and early 20 th century was the end product of the Enlightenment movement of the 17 th and 18 th centuries. The Progressives had all the answers before WWI. The Industrial Revolution had increased production to unimaginable wealth. Evolution and science had become the new religion. Democracy had freed more people and given more rights to more people than at anytime in all of human history.
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The Church in the 20 th century Then WWI struck all the progress down. Totalitarian governments replaced democracies in the 1920’s. World wide depression hit in the 1930’s. The greatest loss of life in all of history occurred during WWII. The Church, still reeling from the blows of the late 19 th century, retreated into itself. It withdraw from culture and became irrelevant in the 1920’s.
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The Church in the 20 th century However, two things happened in the 1930’s that revived the Church. The radio had been developed right after WWI and it became very popular in the 1920’s. In the 1930’s with the Depression, programming was expanded to help keep people’s mind off their suffering. Preachers like Charles Fuller who broadcast The Old Time Revival Hour began to get huge followings. The Great Depression itself was the other factor which drew Americans back to religion.
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The Church in the 20 th century When WWII was at its darkest hour in Europe, the English government put a little known Oxford professor on the radio. C.S. Lewis gave a series of messages on the radio which were later made into the best known apologetic book of the 20 th century: Mere Christianity. The Church made a resurgence after WWII with the modern day revivals of Billy Graham and the emergence of TV evangelists. The 1950’s found more people going to church than at anytime in American history. The warning clouds were on the horizon as churches were mere social gatherings that lacked theological depth.
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The Church in the 20 th century The 1960’s exposed the lack of theological depth of the church as young people searched for answers to life but religion could provide answers. Mainstream liberal churches moved to accept the social norms of the culture instead of fight against culture. Out of the abyss of culture grew the modern evangelical movement. By the 1990’s, the liberal churches had lost up to ½ of their congregations while conservative evangelical churches grew by 150%. The evangelical movement affected American politics as well as they tended to vote Republican.
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The Church in the 20 th century It looked like the Church may be on its way back to influencing culture. Although overall church attendance was down among the American public in the 1990’s, religion was having an impact in certain areas of life. However that optimism proved to be short lived as post-modernism hit with a vengeance in the late 1990’s. The world change drastically in the 21 st century.
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