THE REFORMATION PERIOD
THE MODERN PERIOD
1831
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William Miller
Preaches Adventism
Based on his interpretation of the Book of Daniel, William Miller predicts the second coming of Jesus Christ to be between March 1843 and March 1844. The event does not occur as predicted, and Miller's followers must revise their interpretation, but the group continues. Miller dies in 1849, leaving believers who call themselves "Evangelical Adventists," but have no formal organization. |
1833
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The Greek Government
Establishes the Greek Orthodox Church
G. L. Maurer, a Protestant acting as regent for Greek King Otto I, declares the Greek church autocephalous. |
1843
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Kierkegaard
Publishes Either/Or
Søren Aabye Kierkegaard—philosopher, theologian, and cultural critic—publishes Either/Or, originally under a pseudonym. It is the first of a long line of books and journals to become major influences on existentialism. He proposes that reason only takes the believer so far and that Christians meet God by taking a leap of faith into the spiritually unknown. He also proposes that this leap requires full commitment to God, rejection of worldly values and, perhaps, even of Church dogma. |
1850
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The Orthodox Patriarch
Confirms the Greek Orthodox Church
The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, Anthimus IV, recognizes the ecclesiastical independence of the Greek Orthodox Church. |
1863 May 21
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Millerites Organize
the Seventh-Day Adventist Denomination
Adventists, informal groups within Protestant denominations, formally organize the Seventh-Day Adventist denomination. Ellen G. White, whom followers considered to be a prophet, was one of the leaders of the new denomination. They believed that Christians should worship on the traditional Sabbath, Saturday, and observe the Old Testament dietary laws. |
1865
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Moldavia and Wallachia
Establish the Romanian Orthodox Church
Romanian Orthodox churches in Moldavia and Wallachia separate themselves from the Patriarch of Bulgaria. Later, in 1868, the Metropolitan of Transylvania, Andreiu Saguna, authors a constitution that significantly influences the development of this church. |
1865
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Booth Founds the
Salvation Army
Methodist minister William Booth founds missions in the East End section of London, England, to preach the gospel and minister to the needs of the poor. Booth preaches basic doctrines common among evangelical Protestants, but he denies that sacraments (or ordinances) are necessary to salvation. Church hierarchy is patterned on military organization, but worship services are designed to be informal. Converts, known as soldiers, must sign articles of faith, called Articles of War. Ministers, called officers, have a two-year resident training program followed by five years of advanced studies. Women have full equality in all church functions. Services are less ritualistic, and are the first to incorporate modern forms of music. This organization is not named the Salvation Army until 1878. |
1868-70
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The First Vatican
Council is Convened
The rise of nationalism—the concept that nations should be based on a common language, history, and geography, rather than which conquering army most recently passed through—and the continuing growth of the Protestant tradition causes some priests and bishops to question the role and power of the Pope. The First Vatican Council is convened by Pope Pius IX to address these concerns. Two doctrinal statements are published: (1) Dei Filius, the Constitution of the Roman Catholic Church on God, Revelation, Faith, and Reason. (2) Pastor Aeternus, which reaffirmed the Pope as the highest authority in Christianity. It adds that when the Pope speaks ex cathedra (Latin, "from the chair," meaning in his official capacity as Vicar of Christ), he is infallible. A few liberal bishops disapprove, but most welcome the absolutism of these statements. |
1875
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Eddy publishes Science
and Health with Key to the Scriptures
Mary Baker Eddy, following a variety of spiritual, familial, and health-related experiences, publishes Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. The publication results from nine years of study following a serious injury, in which Eddy became convinced she had made a spiritual discovery of great authority and power. |
1885
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The Orthodox
Patriarchate Recognizes the Romanian Orthodox Church
The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, Joachin IV, recognizes the ecclesiastical independence of the Romanian Orthodox Church. Later, in 1925, Romanian Orthodox adherents from the disbanded Austro-Hungarian Empire combine with adherents in Moldavia and Wallachia to form the modern Romanian patriarchate. |
1898
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The First Christian
Motion Picture, Passion Play of Oberammergau, Premiers
Thomas Alva Edison produces the first motion picture with a Christian theme, the Passion Play of Oberammergau. |
1899
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The Gideons are
Founded
John H. Nicholson, Samuel E. Hill, and Will J. Knights decide to organize a group, "to band Christian commercial travelers together for mutual recognition, personal evangelism, and united service for the Lord." At their first meeting, Knights declares, "We shall be called Gideons," based on the story in Judges 6-7. Since many the early members are businessmen who travel extensively, they decide to place a Bible in every American hotel room as their contribution to Christianity. They place their first Bible in a Montana hotel in 1908. The organization grows into a worldwide group, and now operates in 190 countries. They estimate they have placed 1.6 billion sets of scripture throughout the world. |
1901 Jan. 1
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First modern record of
speaking-in-tongues sparks the Pentecostal denomination
Agnes Oznam, a student of Charles Fox Parham, experiences what is known as the gift of tongues, known as glossolalia, at Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas. Parham believes that modern Christianity is becoming too ritualistic and less spiritual. He looks for a return of the spiritual gifts mentioned in connection with the Pentecost. He encourages his students to follow the biblical process of prayer, fasting, and scripture study to bring a return to speaking in tongues, faith healing, and other gifts. |
c. 1907
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Mason Organizes the
Church of God in Christ
Charles H. Mason, a preacher in the Holiness Movement, calls together several predominantly African-American churches and proposes that the Church of God in Christ should be a Pentecostal denomination. Mason is elected "overseer" and serves as primate of the denomination. Mason leads as primate until 1933, when he delegates certain authority among four assistant bishops. The church retains a more episcopal structure than most Pentecostal churches. |
1910-15
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The Fundamentals launches the Fundamentalist Movement
Under the direction of Lyman and Milton Stewart, three million sets of twelve short booklets entitled The Fundamentals are distributed worldwide. Written by a variety of scholars, they cover fundamental Christian doctrines and current social issues. Synthesizing the revivalist, holiness, and millenarian movements, the booklets stress that conversion to Christ is more important than debates over fine points of theology in combating social upheaval. This upheaval was on the rise in the wake of rapid advancements of science and industry during the 19th century. The Baptist editor Curtis Lee Laws first uses the term "fundamentalist" in 1920 to describe Christian conservatives. In the 21st century, the term is frequently used but rarely defined—it usually describes Christians who are theologically and politically conservative. There is no formal organization or leadership among fundamentalists. |
1914
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The Independent
Pentecostal Churches form the Assemblies of God
A council of 120 evangelist and pastors meet in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and organize the Assemblies of God denomination. They select an Executive Presbytery as an administrative council to carry out the decisions of a General Council. Small groups of Pentecostal churches combine to form this national (later worldwide) organization. |
1918 Jan. 20
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The Communist
Oppression of Religion Begins
Russia's Bolshevik/Marxist government publishes a decree depriving the Russian Orthodox Church of all its legal rights, including that of owning property. In the decades following, in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and its satellite states, all religions are suppressed, but cannot be completely exterminated. |
1918 Nov. 7
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Billy Graham is born
William Franklin Graham, Jr., is born in Charlotte, North Carolina. In 1934, he has a revelatory experience that propels him to leave his family farm and, ultimately, to become an ordained minister of the Southern Baptist Convention. In 1944, he chooses to work as an evangelist through large missionary efforts, later called crusades. He preaches a simple gospel centered on the opposition between colloquial sin and salvation. He also pioneers the use of mass media in proclaiming the message of the gospel. Billy Graham is part of a larger movement called "Evangelicalism" which believed in a personal conversion, a high regard for biblical authority, and an emphasis on spreading and believing in, the gospel of Jesus Christ. This movement, which originally began in England in the 1700s, began gaining momentum during the 18th and 19th century in the Americas. This period is marked by revivals, street preaching, public crusades, and often the charismatic movement is associated with it as well. In Jun. 2005, Graham preaches his last public crusade in Queens, New York City, New York, and retires. |
1919
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The State Religion of
Germany Ends
The constitution of the Weimar Republic includes separation of church and state, ending Lutheranism as Germany's state religion, though it continues to allow Roman Catholic and Lutheran churches certain special privileges. |
1921 Jan. 2
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KDKA Broadcasts a
Christian Church Service
The broadcasting industry is just two months old, but growing beyond all expectations, causing a shortage of programming. A staff member of the Westinghouse Corporation-owned station, KDKA, is a choir member at Calvary Episcopal Church, and the station arranges to broadcast their service. The engineers run their equipment wearing choir robes so they do not distract the worshipers. Radio stations nationwide are soon hosting religious services. |
1924
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Poles Establish the
Orthodox Church of Poland
The government of Poland supports the creation of an independent Polish Orthodox Church to govern Orthodox adherents in newly acquired territories. Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow objects, but secular politics make governance by Moscow challenging. Following World War II, much of this new territory is ceded to the USSR, and again comes under the rule of the Patriarch of Moscow. |
1925 Jul. 10-25th
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The Scopes
"Monkey Trial"
John Thomas Scopes, a high-school teacher Dayton, Tennessee, teaches Darwin’s theory of evolution, a violation of state law, and is arrested. William Jennings Bryan prosecutes and Clarence Darrow defends. The judge overrules attempts to test the law's constitutionality. Scopes is convicted and fined $100. On appeal, the Tennessee Supreme Court upholds the constitutionality of the law, but acquits Scopes, ruling the fine was excessive. The law remains on the books until 1967. The trial becomes the most famous court action in the ongoing battle between Christianity and secular humanism. |
1932
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Barth Publishes the
First Volume of “Church Dogmatics”
Karl Barth draws on fundamental texts inclusive of the scriptures and the texts of the early Christian fathers and Reformers as the basis for college lectures on religion. Barth questions the liberal theology that stems from the Enlightenment, advocates the pure love of God, who gave himself to man unconditionally. Barth eventually publishes four volumes of lectures before his death and is acclaimed to be one of the most influential Protestant theologians of the 20th century. After spending the war in Switzerland, Barth returns to Bonn, delivering an abbreviated course of lectures based on Dogmatics. He later addresses the opening session of the World Council of Churches' 1948 Amsterdam Conference. |
1937
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The Orthodox Patriarch
Creates Albanian Orthodox Church
Patriarch Benjamin I grants ecclesiastical independence to the Albanian Orthodox Church. |
1942
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Local Leaders form a
National Association of Evangelicals
Nearly 150 evangelical leaders form the National Association of Evangelicals as a fellowship of denominations, independent churches and religious organizations and individuals. Evangelical drives had appeared within denominations of the Protestantism tradition since the early 18th century, but had no formal network to promote their shared beliefs across denominational divides. All members must subscribe to a Statement of Faith that requires belief in the Bible as the authoritative word of God, and commitment to a well-defined category of fundamental Christian doctrines. |
1945
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Pentecostal Churches
form the United Pentecostal Church
The United Pentecostal Church forms through the merge of several independent congregations and associations that broke from the Assemblies of God when the Assemblies reaffirm the doctrine of the Trinity in 1916. |
1947
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The First Pentecostal
World Conference Convenes
Held in Zürich, Switzerland, the Pentecostal World Conference endeavors to bring some unity to the Pentecostal movement. The following year, an association called the Pentecostal Fellowship of North America (PFNA) is formed toward that same end, but limits itself mostly to larger, European-American churches. In 1994, the PFNA is dissolved and replaced by a new association, the Pentecostal/Charismatic Churches of North America, whose member churches include smaller and African-American congregations. |
1947
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The Dead Sea Scrolls
are Discovered
A shepherd boy accidentally discovers papyrus scrolls in a cave at Khirbat Qumran in Judea. Other discoveries in caves near the Dead Sea give rise to the collection’s common name: the Dead Sea Scrolls. The collection ultimately includes thousands of scrolls and fragments written on papyrus, leather, and even copper. They include doctrinal, commentary, liturgical, and legal texts. Many are copies of biblical texts, while others are of unknown origin. The contents of complete scrolls are published shortly thereafter; other fragments remain illegible and continue to challenge researchers. Most of the scrolls and fragments were first under the strict control of the Jordanian and Israeli Antiquities Authorities. Presently, they are available through libraries worldwide. The scrolls continue to excite researchers and the public, but remain controversial. |
1948
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The Patriarch
Recognizes the Orthodox Church of Poland
Patriarch Alexis grants ecclesiastical independence to the Orthodox Church of Poland. |
1948
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The World Council of
Churches is Formed
The World Council of Churches (WCC) is founded as a group of Christian churches that accept Jesus Christ as God, and as the savior of mankind. The WCC is a major part of the ecumenical movement, which seeks unity among Christian denominations. They also seek a forum in which they can work to put aside the animosities of the past, promote tolerance and understanding, and cooperate in efforts of mutual interest. Now headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, the Council's work is divided into three divisions: church relations, ecumenical study and promotion, and interchurch aid and refugee services. |
Mid-20th-century
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Evangelical Movement
Emerges in the United States
In the early 21st century, part of the Protestant community in the United States was divided. The modernists, or "liberals," disagreed with the fundamentalists, or "conservatives," in several mainstream Protestant churches. The fundamentalists thought modernism to be heretical, and a denial of fundamental Christian beliefs. Many former fundamentalists left their churches and joined more modern institutions. By 1930, the conservatives who remained in their denominations joined as a united front. They called themselves Neo-Evangelicals, or Evangelicals for short. One of the Evangelical front-runners was Billy Graham, a Baptist evangelist who became well known for his impressive oratory skills and dedication to preaching the Christian gospel. Fuller Theological Seminary in Pasadena, California, Wheaton College in Chicago, Illinois, and the publication Christianity Today all came out of the Evangelical movement. By 1942, the National Association of Evangelicals was formed. |
1951
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The Patriarch of
Moscow creates the Czech/Slovak Orthodox Church
Following a large increase in the number of Orthodox adherents in the area, the Patriarch of Moscow, Alexius I, grants ecclesiastical independence to the Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia. |
1952 Feb 12
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"Life Is Worth
Living" Premiers
Fulton John Sheen is ordained a priest in 1919, and, in 1930, he begins a radio program called "The Catholic Hour." Sheen is named a bishop and moves to television in 1951 with "Life is Worth Living," competing successfully against established Hollywood stars with entertainment shows. "Life is Worth Living" wins a 1952 Emmy award and thirty million weekly viewers before leaving the air in 1957. Sheen then hosts a second series, "The Fulton Sheen Program," from 1961-1968. This most successful early Christian programming eventually gives rise to a new type of ministry called "televangelism." St. Bernard's Seminary, Rochester, New York, later creates The Fulton J. Sheen Co. to make the Bishop's works available to the public. |
1962
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The Second Vatican
Council Redefines Catholicism
Shortly after his 1958 election, Pope John XXIII calls for an ecumenical council of the entire Roman Catholic Church. After four years of preparation, over two thousand clerical leaders meet in the Second Vatican Council, the largest council in church history. John's goal is a focus on pastoral care of the faithful, which is called an aggiornamento. John does not dictate to the council, but leads them to monumental decisions. As a result of the council, the Catholic church celebrates mass in local languages rather than in Latin, their clergy and laity have a calling in Christ and should take part in ministering, and their bishops share the Pope's apostolic authority. They also determine that scripture, not tradition, was primary in discovering divine truths and that one need not be a Catholic to be Christian. The church also formally renounces power over the political arena. The changes were met with some debate and objection, but the council is generally viewed by church members as having achieved its goal. |
1965 Dec. 7
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Actions During the
Great Schism are Revoked
Pope Paul VI in Rome and Patriarch Athenagoras I in Istanbul revoke the mutual excommunications of 1054. |
1970
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The Orthodox Patriarchate Proclaims “Self-Rule” for Orthodox Churches in America The Patriarch of Moscow proclaims its diocese in America to be the autocephalous Orthodox Church in America. In 2003, the Antiochian Orthodox Church is granted self-rule (not full autocephaly), and incorporates as Evangelical Orthodox Church. The formal union of all Orthodox adherents and churches in North and South America remains incomplete to this day. |
1989
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The Velvet Revolution
in Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia declares itself free of its alliance with the USSR. Czechs and Slovaks overthrow their Communist government and peacefully divide the country into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The "Velvet Revolution," which refers to a peaceful, non-military regime change, spreads to other Soviet satellite states. Communist restrictions in these states against churches and religious practices are reversed. Churches begin to function as public institutions of mainstream society. Denominations other than the traditional state religions also initiate missionary efforts with the permission of the new regimes. |
1991 Dec. 8
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The USSR collapses;
Religion becomes Legal in the Former Soviet Republics
Following the 1990 example of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania, Russia, the Ukraine and Byelorussia (modern-day Belarus) declare independence from, and the dissolution of, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. The Soviet President, Mikhail Gorbachev, resigns effective Dec. 25, and all institutions of the USSR cease function on Dec. 31. The newly independent republics quickly reverse laws against religions and churches begin to function as public institutions of mainstream society. Denominations other than the Russian Orthodox Church also initiate missionary efforts within the new republics. The remaining communist governments in Soviet-satellite states soon fall, replaced by various types of democracy.
Source : www.faithology.com
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