Saturday, February 9, 2019

New Installment - Pietism and Halle - From Schleiermacher to Barth.
Calvin Ruined the Protestant Faith






Pietism, Halle University, Karl Barth and His Mistress Charlotte Kirschbaum


The Enthusiastic, rationalistic dogma of Zwingli and Calvin mixed with the Lutheran Church through Pietism. Ironically, Calvinist scholastics drove the Lutherans into countering those Latin, philosophical arguments with their own, much in the same vein. So distant were these arguments from teaching the Scriptures that a return to the Bible was the only answer to the vacuum. Sadly, Philipp Jakob Spener (1635-1705) - the founder and early leader of Pietism – learned piety from the Calvinists and Calvinists. The Catholic Rosary societies and the Calvinist prayer groups influenced him to make the cell group the “real” congregation. His ecumenical traits, in the wake of dogmatic warfare, meant that confessional agreement was no longer necessary.
Actually studying the Bible became a new trend, one encouraged by Spener’s vast letter-writing campaign among leading people of Europe. The sterile style of argumentation during the late period of Calvinist and Lutheran orthodoxy created far more interest in the Word of God.

Halle University

Frederick III founded Halle University in 1694, specifically to train men in the Bible. Spener encouraged August Hermann Francke to accept a position at the new school, which combined Biblical studies and good works among the poor and uneducated of that town. Halle quickly became the center of the Pietism movement, one which Spener established by attaching his program to a book by a very popular orthodox writer, Arndt.
Some hallmarks of Pietism are:
1.     A heart religion instead of a head religion. Pietists often promote that false distinction. They think controversy about doctrine should be avoided.
2.     Lay-led conventicles or cell groups, to develop piety through prayer and Bible study.
3.     Unionism - cooperation between Lutherans and the Reformed. Spener was the first union theologian (Heick, II, p. 23).
4.     An emphasis on good works and foreign missions. "Deeds, not creeds" is a popular motto.
5.     Denial of the Real Presence and baptismal regeneration, consequences of working with the Reformed. (Heick, II, p. 24)
6.     A better, higher, or deeper form of Christianity rather than the Sunday worshiping church. This often made the cell group the real church, the gathered church.
This generic approach to the Christian Faith changed the school from Biblical piety to anti-Biblical rationalism, in only one generation. Nevertheless, leaders of American Lutheranism came from Halle:
·        Henry Melchior Muhlenberg founded the General Synod, which ultimately became the Eastern branch of the Lutheran Church in America. He taught at the Franckean Foundation in Halle under the supervision of August Francke’s son.
·        Pastor Martin Stephan studied at Halle but did not graduate from any university. He became the leader of the migration that became the base of the Missouri Synod, after being invited by the Johann K. W. Loehe missionaries.
·        Adolph Hoenecke graduated from Halle University and was mentored by Tholuck, who was a mixture of Pietism and rationalism. Hoenecke became the leading Biblical theologian of the Wisconsin Synod, which established fellowship with the Missouri Synod.
The Norwegians and Swedes who came to America were Pietists, influenced by William Passavant, who left revivalism behind for the Lutheran Confessions.
The Walther circle of pastors consisted of Pietists led by Stephan, the Pietist pastor of a Pietist cell group church. They participated in Pietistic cell groups and brought that church-within-the-Church method to America, as the Swedes and Norwegians did. The groups today have many names – koinonia, small groups, cell groups, Bible study groups, lay-led groups, prayer groups, share groups, care groups – but the same ecumenical method, often anti-Sacrament and against infant baptism.[1]
Heick concluded that Spener was the first ecumenical theologian. No matter how groups were configured in the 19th century, the name of Spener was sacred. No one ever wrote against him.

Schleiermacher – the Perfect Transition to Karth and Kirschbaum

Friedrich Schleiermacher studied under Moravian Pietists at first, but asked to study at the Halle University, where rationalism dominated Biblical studies. Instead of education conquering his doubts, Halle solidified them. He rejected the faith of his father but became a professor at Halle and a pastor. He was a prolific scholar known for his work in classical philosophy and in theology, writing a dogmatics and life of Jesus.. He promoted the Prussian Union of Lutheran and Calvinist churches.
My fellow student at Notre Dame, Episcopalian Priest Charles Caldwell, described Schleiermacher’s system as “faith without belief.” As a transitional figure for modernism, Schleiermacher crafted the perfect system for unbelievers with a sentimental attachment to the Bible.

Karl Barth and His Lovely Marxist Mistress Charlotte Kirschbaum

Karl Barth was very much like Martin Stephan, not very education but very insecure. His initial doctrinal book was a flop. Just in time, a young assistant named Charlotte Kirschbaum came to help his scholarly work, live with him all summer in a distant cottage, move into his home with his wife and children, and travel with him, sharing the same room and bed. They shared the same Marxist ideals, to stretch the term, and fashioned the enormous Church Dogmatics to destroy the Christian Faith while creating a philosophy for their Communist handlers.
The disguise was elegant and only began unraveling in recent years. If Barth had been one more Leftist philosopher, it would matter little. But liberals and conservatives, Protestants and Catholics look to Barth as the leading theologian of the 20th century. My Reformed, Mennonite, Methodist, and Roman Catholic professors at Notre Dame had the greatest respect for Barth.[2]
Fuller Seminary’s rationalism phase began when two of the leading figures, including the founder’s son, studied under Barth in Switzerland. The school repudiated its rather weak inerrancy stance and inaugurated its Stygian era of Church Growth under McGavran, C. Peter Wagner, and other lupine leaders.
Barth and Kirschbaum took advantage of the foundation laid by Schleiermacher in re-imagining all the Bible terms. All of them harken back to Calvin who did the same in his own rationalistic, philosophical way.
Notice that Calvinists love to produce vast dogmatics sets that can be used to justify anything, from traditional Evangelical thought to radical Marxist liberation theology. Liberating theology from the Bible was the first thrust of Zwingli, polished to brilliance by Calvin, and improved for the moderns by Schleiermacher and Barth-Kirschbaum.
Next – examining the damage done by Calvin in the Lutheran Church today.


[1] I angered one woman about Lutheran cell groups being anti-Lutheran and against infant faith. She went to her cell group and found out the Lutheran leader would not even discuss infant faith or infant baptism. Cell group leaders are often women. Many groups are known for being Pentecostal recruiting grounds.
[2] Tjaard Hommes liberal Dutch Reformed, RIP; John Howard Yoder, Mennonite and student under Barth, RIP; Stanley Hauerwas, Methodist, now at Duke; and Frank Fiorenza, Roman Catholic and president of the Barth Society, now at Harvard.