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History of the Church II: Week 12
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The Church in Society What is the role of the Church in society? In England where Wesley and Whitefield had been so successful in winning souls, there grew a passion to take Christian service to the community in the 19 th century. The Age of Industry had changed life so rapidly that most did not know how to handle it. Christians, both the Anglican and the several other minority denominations, believed they could affect change not only in their communities but also taking the good news overseas.
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The Church in Society Christians in England started forming societies for specific purposes. There were societies created for distributions of Bibles or taking care of the needy. These societies sprang up because of the evangelical movements which emphasized intense personal piety and its aggressive concern for Christian service in the world. The themes of the 18 th century revival were: God’s love revealed in Christ, the necessity of salvation through faith and the new birth experience wrought by the Holy Spirit.
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The Church in Society No where was this spirit of church involvement in the community more evident than in the Clapham village just four miles from London. This small village was alive in the early 19 th century with Christians who lived out their beliefs on a daily basis. This group of wealthy evangelicals knew how to practice “saintliness in daily life” while living with eternity in view. The villagers who lived here were the elite of British society but the most famous of them was William Wilberforce.
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The Church in Society Wilberforce was saved at the age of 25 while reading the book Rise and Progress of Religion in the Soul. Like most Christians he struggled with whether he should go into full time ministry or remain in his current job which was as a congressman in the House of Commons. His famous quote was “My walk is a public one: my business is in the world and I must mix in the assemblies of men or quit the part which Providence seems to have assigned me.” A man of extraordinary talents Prime Minster William Pitt said:
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The Church in Society “Wilberforce had the greatest natural eloquence he had ever known.” Others called him “the nightingale of the House of Commons.” In 1789, Wilberforce made his first speech in the House of Commons against the slave trade. He knew that speeches alone would not win over his colleagues. At Clapham, the members of the community would gather together for meetings which were called “Cabinet Councils”. It was there they would talk how to right the wrongs of social injustice.
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The Church in Society Two years later after conferring and prayer within the Cabinet Councils, Wilberforce introduced a bill to ban the slave trade. He knew that the bill needed support beyond Parliament. “It is on the feeling of a nation we must rely so let the flame be fanned.” Clapham had learned two important lessons about politics in a democracy: how to create public opinion and how to bring that pressure of opinion on the government. Through petitions, letters public forums and billboards they “fanned the flames”.
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The Church in Society Twenty years after making his first speech, the slave trade was abolished in the British Empire on Feb. 23, 1807. Wilberforce wasn’t done, he wanted to end slavery altogether. For another 26 years he petitioned the House of Commons to ban slavery. Finally on July 25, 1833 just four days before he passed away, Parliament let go of a shout that threatened to blow the roof off of the building. By using his talents for God, William Wilberforce gave us an example of how to live our Christian faith.
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