1. William Ellery Channing, a theologian and
minister not only changed the history of Unitarianism, but provided a new
version of liberal American theology. While
Channing helped to found the Transcendental Club, and died during the height of
the Transcendentalist movement, his views had a direct impact on philosophers
and theologians who followed. In his
ground breaking sermon Unitarian
Christianity, Channing said the Bible was a book “written for men, in the
language of men, whose meaning is to be sought in the same manner as that of
other books.” This and other claims in Channing’s sermon embodied the impulse
behind Emerson’s Divinity School Address
and Transcendentalism in general.
Excited by transcendental ideas of
the German Romantics and Emerson's Nature, he began sending
Emerson his poems, and Emerson obligingly published them in The Dial.
As a poet, Channing could be fluent and
pictorial, and his early poems were full of Transcendental abstractions. Although Channing participated in some of the
earliest meetings of the Transcendental discussion groups he eventually decided
that their views were too extreme for him.
His theology developed into
Unitarian Universalism, which is still active today.
The central views of
Transcendentalism were soon linked to this liberal form of Unitarianism, and
its connection to social reform movements.
Many Transcendentalists developed an even more liberal version of
Unitarianism that led to later ideas o secular individualism. Among New England Unitarians Channing was accepted
and debated by radical Transcendentalists and their conservative critics. Some referred to themselves as “Channing” Unitarians. His influence continues in the modern
denomination.
2. Theodore Parker was one of the most
practical and active of the Transcendentalist group in causes ranging from the
reform of parish ministry to widespread social activism. Parker’s own theological evolution
paralleled that of many Transcendentalists.
He helped turn Unitarianism away from its strict Calvinist origins
toward a liberal theology that encouraged social activism. Parker’s theology fit well with ideas of
early Transcendentalist thinkers.
Included in the first gatherings held by the Transcendental Club, he contributed
regularly to The Dial the most important Transcendentalist
periodical.
In
1840 Parker published a pamphlet, The Previous Question which
he wrote in the voice of a fictitious ordinary Unitarian believer named
"Levi Blodgett." Here he vigorously laid out the Transcendentalist
position on inspiration, miracles, and religious authority. Parker emerged as a major Transcendentalist
spokesman in May 1841, when he delivered A Discourse on the Transient
and Permanent in Christianity at an ordination in South Boston.
Leah,
ReplyDeleteThanks for filling in some biographical info on these two men. I din't realize Channing was also a poet, although I am not surprised considering the emphasis on literature for educated men of that era. Also, I had not heard of Parker's pamphlet 'The Previous Question.' Apparently pamphlets and journals were a way to disseminate forward thinking and even controversial subject matter so people could explore the material in the safety of their own homes. Thanks for your post.
Leah, Nice post. I read where Channing's concept of God took center stage in his theological system. In his concept God was first, foremost, beyond humanity and beyond nature. No wonder his views had a direct impact on philosophers and theologians that followed him. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteKey point in Channing was his anti-Trinitarianism; he denied the Triune God but not necessarily the special divinity manifested in Jesus. Like Origen, early Unitarian Christianity maintained the unique narure of Jesus as a created spiritual being with abilities far beyond human nature. Parker's emphasis was not Christological. He insisted Christianity consisted of principles, some of which were permanent, others transient, i.e., the latter have changed as socio-political circumstances evolved. Neither of them preached Unity's modern doctrine of an indwelling divinity, equally distributed among all people, with the same powers as Jesus Christ had. 19th Century Unitarianism rejected Calvinist "total depravity," but some humans were evil by choice. However, all humans had the power to choose the good, something John Calvin utterly rejected.
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