The World's Christians. Douglas Jacobsen. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Douglas Jacobsen
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Религия: прочее
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119626121
Скачать книгу
reason: to undercut the notion that prayers said in a church building are somehow more effective than prayers said elsewhere. For Protestants, God is equally available to everyone everywhere.

Bar chart depicts the number of Protestant Christians living in each region of the world.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      Protestant spirituality is centered on and grounded in the Bible. Protestants frequently refer to the Bible as the Word of God (with a capital “W”), and they expect God to speak to them through that Word. This was the experience of Martin Luther, who read the biblical words “the just shall live by faith,” and it turned his life upside down, freeing him from anxiety about his moral failures and God’s judgment. In the twentieth century, that same focus on the words of the Bible energized the ministry of Billy Graham, the conservative American Protestant who was the century’s best known and most widely traveled preacher. In his sermons and other public comments, Graham never tired of repeating the phrase “the Bible says.” The centrality of the Bible is also echoed in the words used by pastors in the United Church of Christ (one of the most progressive Protestant denominations in the world) when they introduce the reading of the Bible in Sunday worship with the words “God is still speaking.”

      For Protestants, reading the Bible is a spiritual discipline undertaken for the purpose of keeping one’s vision of the gospel fresh and vibrant. Protestants want people to read the Bible for themselves and therefore the translation of the Bible has been a major priority. Largely due to Protestant efforts, the Bible has now been fully translated into more than 650 languages and has been partly translated into 2,000 more. But it is not just the ability to read the Bible that matters for Protestants; they also put great emphasis on the “right of private interpretation,” the right of individuals to read the Bible and decipher its meaning for themselves. This was and still is a revolutionary concept, and in recent years Christians around the world have invoked this Protestant principle of interpretation to support and defend many different readings of the Bible.

Photo depicts the interior of Reformed Church illustrating the architectural centrality of the pulpit.

      Photo by author.

      The idea of “vocation” is another key emphasis within Protestant spirituality. To have a vocation is to be called by God to a specific kind of work in the world. This work can take many different forms. Some vocations are explicitly religious, like becoming a pastor, but other vocations can look quite “secular,” at least on the surface. Protestants believe that God can call people to become artists, teachers, police officers, stay‐at‐home parents, accountants, or politicians in addition to calling some people to be pastors. What makes this work a vocation, rather than simply being a job, is doing it in God’s name and out of a religious sense of service to others. This is a very different understanding of vocation than is common within the Catholic tradition. Catholics generally apply the term vocation only to becoming a priest or a religious sister or brother. By contrast, Protestants believe that everyone can have a vocation or calling from God regardless of the kind of work they do.