Eschatological Presentism in Protestant German Theology of the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries (original) (raw)
Time on a Human Scale
Abstract
This chapter’s exploration of preaching in Protestant Germany considers concepts of redemption through the period of the First World War, locating these within Christian intellectual culture over a wider frame. While the sense of a present charged with redemptive potential is a long held feature of Christian temporality (if sometimes poorly understood), it was in the conceptual framework of historical time as developed in 18th and 19th century thought that Protestant pastoral theology found a new way of articulating this sense of the divine present. In the mid- to late-19th century, pastors of the pietist tradition felt the nearness of the Second Coming and foresaw its signs in many of the political upheavals of their day. Ultimately the time of God and the time of man were increasingly seen as separate, but this meant that by the turn of the 20th century, the sense of an imminent end to the world was receding: many saw the Last Day as a distant event. The First World War, however, ...
Lucian Hölscher hasn't uploaded this paper.
Let Lucian know you want this paper to be uploaded.
Ask for this paper to be uploaded.