Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editor's Introduction
- SECTION I BACKGROUND ON RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS – PRE-1500S
- SECTION II RELIGIONS IN THE POST-COLUMBIAN NEW WORLD – 1500–1680S
- SECTION III RELIGIOUS PATTERNS IN COLONIAL AMERICA – 1680S–1730S
- SECTION IV RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY IN BRITISH AMERICA – 1730S–1790
- 17 Religious Ferment among Eastern Algonquians and Their Neighbors in the Eighteenth Century
- 18 African Slave Religions, 1400–1790
- 19 Colonial Judaism
- 20 Roman Catholicism in the English North American Colonies, 1634–1776
- 21 Anglicanism and Its Discontents: Protestant Diversity and Disestablishment in British America
- 22 Protestant Evangelicalism in Eighteenth-Century America
- 23 Sectarian Communities: Religious Diversity in British America, 1730–1790
- 24 Liberal Religious Movements and the Enlightenment
- 25 Folk Magic and Religion in British North America
- SECTION V AMERICAN RELIGIONS IN THE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
- SECTION VI THEMATIC ESSAYS
- Index
- References
24 - Liberal Religious Movements and the Enlightenment
from SECTION IV - RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY IN BRITISH AMERICA – 1730S–1790
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editor's Introduction
- SECTION I BACKGROUND ON RELIGIOUS TRADITIONS – PRE-1500S
- SECTION II RELIGIONS IN THE POST-COLUMBIAN NEW WORLD – 1500–1680S
- SECTION III RELIGIOUS PATTERNS IN COLONIAL AMERICA – 1680S–1730S
- SECTION IV RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY IN BRITISH AMERICA – 1730S–1790
- 17 Religious Ferment among Eastern Algonquians and Their Neighbors in the Eighteenth Century
- 18 African Slave Religions, 1400–1790
- 19 Colonial Judaism
- 20 Roman Catholicism in the English North American Colonies, 1634–1776
- 21 Anglicanism and Its Discontents: Protestant Diversity and Disestablishment in British America
- 22 Protestant Evangelicalism in Eighteenth-Century America
- 23 Sectarian Communities: Religious Diversity in British America, 1730–1790
- 24 Liberal Religious Movements and the Enlightenment
- 25 Folk Magic and Religion in British North America
- SECTION V AMERICAN RELIGIONS IN THE EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
- SECTION VI THEMATIC ESSAYS
- Index
- References
Summary
Liberal religion, as a discernible movement, was far more a product of the nineteenth century than of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. “Liberalism,” like “secularism,” was a coinage of the nineteenth century, and the first group, the Unitarians, to self-describe as liberal Christians only took denominational shape in the 1820s and 1830s. Even in the case of the Unitarians, the label of “liberal Christian” was first pinned on them as a tag to mark their departure from the soundness of Calvinist orthodoxy, not as a proud party badge. Only in 1815 did William Ellery Channing formally embrace the appellation as an indicator of the Christian charity, broad-mindedness, and creedal flexibility – the disposition toward liberality – that he thought typified the nascent Unitarian movement. This essay, with British America its primary purview, necessarily details the background, not the foreground, of religious liberalism. It explores the intellectual and political frameworks out of which full-blown liberal religious movements and organizations – from Unitarianism to Reform Judaism to the Ethical Culture Society – subsequently emerged. It highlights the theological, political, cosmopolitan, and colonial roots of religious liberalism: the advent of deism and universalism, the development of church-state separation, and the process of liberal self-definition through conflict with religious opponents and through growing knowledge of the world's manifold religions.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of Religions in America , pp. 489 - 509Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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