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The Idea of Progress in Most Recent American Protestant Thought, 1930–1960
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
“In hope that sends a shining ray/far down the future's broadening way…” Quoting these lines from a well-known hymn by the Social Gospel pioneer Washington Gladden, Clarence Reidenbach, a Congregationalist minister in Holyoke, Massachusetts, addressed himself late in 1930 to the question of the meaning of the New Year: “Was Dr. Gladden right? Is life really a broadening way” Or, to put the matter in the language of a classic of intellectual history, is “the idea of progress”—in Professor Bury's words the idea “that civilization has moved, is moving, and will move in a desirable direction”—a valid description of social reality? Reidenbach had no doubt that it was. that it was. “I have at least two great reasons for optimism” that the future is in fact a broadening way, he continued. “One is my confidence in God … the other is that history shows progress.”
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References
1. Reidenbach, Clarence, “The Future's Broadening Way,” The Congregation. alist and Herald of Gospel Liberty, Vol. 116 (01 1, 1931), p. 3.Google Scholar This journal is the ancestor of the later Advance and the present United Church Herald. (These successive changes of title may have a subtle bearing on the subject of the present paper.)
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29. Excerpts from this address appeared in Advance, Vol. 134 (01, 1942), p. 8.Google Scholar Cf. the very similar argument set forth by Joseph Fort Newton in 1932, note 18, supra.
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31. Ibid., December, 1942, p. 546.
32. On obliteration bombing, see editorial “The Leveling of Tokyo,” The Christian Century, Vol. 62 (06 6, 1945), p. 667Google Scholar; on what would now be called “genocide,” Ibid., April 25, p. 509, under title “Now McNutt is for extermination”; on Japanese bones as American souvenirs, the article “Kagawa on the Radio,” Ibid., June 6, p. 670. This last was a comment on a photograph which was alleged to have appeared in Life “last August” (i.e., 1944). Careful search of the files of Life for the months of July, August, and September failed to disclose any such photograph; but although the Century staff may have been wrong in detail, they were correct in depiction of a national mood. Any veteran of the Pacific War can attest, if he will, that equally outrageous things were in fact done by Americans to Japanese, although this is still sometimes rationalized as a response to the latter's “fanaticism.” (Just as Hiroshima is still, in some quarters, viewed as a “trade” for Pearl Harbor.) But American mistreatment of the American Indian used to be justified in the same way.
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39. It is an error, in my opinion, to view H. G. Wells as always having been an optimist. Alongside his progressivism there had now and again appeared flashes of apocalyptic terror, most notably in some of his science-fiction. The Time Machine, for example, which was first published before the turn of the century, forecasts an end for Majn as grisly as any of the anti-Utopias of the Huxley/Orwell school. For the same reason, it is unfair to dismiss Wells's last book, as some have, as being simply a garrulous old man's senile fears. The book has powerfully influenced too many younger men, most notably Cohn Wilson, for that.
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54. Mr. Toynbee came to New York to help launch Volumes VII through X before their American audience in the fall of 1954. While there, he visited Union Theological Seminary, and lectured to a remarkably hostile audience of seminary students; their anger seemed to me about equally composed of disappointment that he had not turned out to be a Christian (he called himself “Christians-Buddhist” on that occasion) and pique that they had allowed themselves to be persuaded that he would. I thought Mr. Toynbee conducted himself with becoming modesty and charity, under the circumstances.
55. This remarkable experiment in universal liturgies may be found in Volume X of the Study (London, New York, and Toronto, 1954), pp. 143f.Google Scholar As a British satirist was to observe of Mr. Toynbee's theology: “Before the 1939 war he was quite sound (strict C of E [Church of England] and all that), but after it—Oh My!” “Myra Buttle,” pseud., Toynbee in Elysium (New York, 1959), p. 6.Google Scholar
56. J. B. Bury, op. cit., p. 276.
57. Toynbee, Arnold J., Civilization on Trial (New York, 1948), p. 235Google Scholar Cf. his article “Churches and Civilizations” in the Yale Review, Vol. 37 (new series) (09, 1947), p. 7Google Scholar: “Religious enlightenment is apt to be learnt through suffering … and … in the life of societies, the form of suffering through which the deepest spiritual lessons are learnt is the breakdown and disintegration of a civilization.” This was also the article in which he called modern Western civilization “an unfortunate, and even disastrous, aberration.”
58. Ibid., Vol. 38 (new series) (Autumn, 1948), p. 142.
59. Text of address, in translation from the Latin, in the New York Times, 10 12, 1962, p. 18.Google Scholar I am indebted to my wife for calling my attention to this passage in the Pope's address, and for pointing out its relevance to the subject of the present paper.
60. Schlink, Edmund, “Christ—the Hope of the World,” text in The Christian Century, Vol. 71 (08 25, 1954. p. 1002.Google Scholar Another of the opening addresses to the Assembly, by Robert L. Calhoun, followed. Perhaps a bit less apocalyptic than his colleague, Calhoun nevertheless noted that “death … armed at this moment with terrible new weapons … stands across the path of every human person and people,” and warned: “Whatever can be achieved in earthly history … a hope that can rightly triumph over such hydra-headed perils must envisage in some sense ‘a. new heaven and a new earth.’” (In short, it would have to be “providential” rather than “progressive.”) Ibid., p. 1011. The literature surrounding the theme of Evanston abounds Lu such examples— and in oceasional dissent. Cf. Walter H. Riley, “Hope in God and Man,” Ibid., August18, 1954, pp. 970f.
61. Konrad, N. I., “Notes on the Meaning of History,” Vestnik lstorii Mirovoi Kul'tury (Journal of the History of World Culture), 1961, no. 2;Google Scholar in Soviet Studies in History: Selected Articles from Soviet Journals in English Translation, Vol. 1 (Summer, 1962), pp. 7, 20, 21.Google Scholar
62. Ibid., p. 22.
63. Niebuhr, Reinhold, The Self and the Dramas of History (New York, 1955), p. 216.Google Scholar
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