18 Quotes by Alec Ryrie
- Author Alec Ryrie
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Protestants are Christians whose religion derives ultimately from Martin Luther’s rebellion against the Catholic Church. They are a tree with many tangled branches but a single trunk.
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Some Protestants insist that Protestantism is “Bible Christianity,” a religion that takes the whole, inspired Bible as the only and final authoritative source of truth.
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John Calvin, brought characteristic rigor to the question. Luther dreamed of good princes, disliked law on principle, and had little interest in institutions. As a result, Lutheran churches ended up with a mishmash of governing structures. Calvin, by contrast, had trained as a lawyer, knew that structures matter, and favored more participatory government.
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We cannot understand the modern age without understanding the dynamic history of Protestant Christianity.
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Luther disliked the idea of secret meetings, which he said reminded him of rats. Calvin had found a way of forming the rats into a choir and then drilling them to march.
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The Reformation became notorious for two fat men. The first, Martin Luther, we have already met. The second, King Henry VIII of England.
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That we should all have a say in choosing our own rulers and that those rulers ‘powers over us should be limited – these principles are in obvious tension, as every society that has tried to combine liberty and democracy has discovered. Without Protestantism and its peculiar preoccupations, that strange and marvelous synthesis could never have come into being as it has.
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The kind of sociopolitical structure that Protestantism engenders – based on free inquiry, participatory politics, and limited government – tends to favor market economics.
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Protestant princes believed the Gospel their ministers taught and valued the moral order, sobriety, and social cohesiveness their churches fostered. All sides usually rubbed along well enough.
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