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The Decline of Calvinism: An Approach to Its Study
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
One of the major themes in the intellectual history of the Western world has been the rise and fall of Calvinism. A militant and crusading ideology during the Reformation era, Calvinism was nevertheless showing signs of losing its expansive force by the time of the Treaty of Westphalia (1648) and the Restoration of the English monarchy (1660). Before much longer, the inner conviction of Calvinist adherents as well as their determination to impose their beliefs upon others somehow faltered. Despite periodic ‘revivals’ such as the Great Awakening of the 1740s in the British colonies, the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were, for the most part, a time of gradual weakening for the Calvinist impulse. This weakening was by no means uniform; it occurred at different rates among different groups of people. (Indeed, even in the mid-twentieth century, a virtually undiluted Calvinism remains a powerful force in at least one part of the world: Afrikaans-speaking South Africa.)
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1972
References
1 Walzer, Michael, The Revolution of the Saints (Cambridge, Mass., 1965), does not specifically discuss the Synod of Dort, but portrays beautifully the grim zeal of the early Calvinists. ‘It was in many ways an age of fear’, he writes of their era (p. 88).Google Scholar
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32 Most historians seem convinced that the cultural contrast here mentioned existed; whether the actual operation of the southern economic system was significantly less capitalistic than that of the north is a different, though related, question.
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44 The scholarly literature to which I am indebted for ideas on Calvinism and its relationship to society is large, and much of it is justly famous (e.g. the writings of Ernst Troeltsch and R. H. Tawney). To have tried to cite all of this literature would have transformed my piece from an interpretative essay into a bibliographical and historiographical one. There are, however, in addition to the works mentioned in previous notes, some articles to which I should like to call the reader's attention: Bains, E., ‘Die Wirtschaftsethik der Calvinistischen Kirche der Niederlande’, Niederlandsch Archief voor kergenschiedenis, n.s., 24 (1931), 81–150Google Scholar; Sayous, A., ‘Calvinisme et capitalisme: L'expdrience genevoise’, Annates d'histoire iconomique et sociale, 7 (1935), 225–44Google Scholar; Clive, John and Bailyn, Bernard, ‘England's Cultural Provinces: Scotland and America’, William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 11 (1954), 200–13CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ahlstrom, S. E., ‘Scottish Philosophy and American Theology’, Church History, 24 (1955), 262–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Meyer, D. B., ‘The Dissolution of Calvinism’, in Paths of American Thought, ed. Schlesinger, A. M. Jr., and White, Morton (Boston, 1963), pp. 71–85Google Scholar; Morgan, E. S., ‘The Puritan Ethic and the American Revolution’, William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 24 (1967), 3–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Loubser, J. J., ‘Calvinism, Equality, and Inclusion: The Case of Afrikaner Calvinism’, in The Protestant Ethic and Modernization, ed. Eisenstadt, S. N. (New York, 1968), pp. 367–83.Google Scholar
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