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British Empire, Catholic Church, El Salvador, Evangelicalism, God, Jews, Orthodox Judaism, Protestantism, UK, United States
This is based on a paper by Robert D. Woodberry of the National University of Singapore. It is available here. What I say here will seem quite abrupt to some. That is a function of reducing about thirty pages to a few blog posts. I have also removed all notes, footnotes, and references, and while I have quoted the author extensively, mostly I have restated his conclusions in my words.
He writes about five contexts: Context 1: Western Europe; Context 2: European Settler-based colonies; Context 3 and 4: Eastern Europe; and Context 5: Everywhere else. I have chosen to write about mainly Contexts 1, 2, and some on 5. All are interesting, but I think these more so.
He also has divided his theory into historical and statistical parts. While I’ve read through the statistical part of the study several times and closely, and it makes sense to me. I am not all that good with statistics, if anyone else is, I’d be interested in your conclusions. I’ve pretty much limited myself to the historical section of his study, which is more in my field of competence. All quotes are from the paper. You will, of course, find the link to the full paper, including references, footnotes, and far from least, the statistical work that supports this historical narrative.
Also, Greg Scandlen at ‘The Federalist’ wrote on this as well, his very superficial (although accurate) overview is here.
Religious actors played a huge role in post-Enlightenment modernization–although secular social scientists almost unanimously deny it. How do we know this? Partly because history tells us so, and partly because the historical study of statistical variables tell us so, and partly because we have eyes to see, and some measure of common sense. The author says this:
I argue that Western modernity, in its current form, is profoundly shaped by religious factors, and although many aspects of this “modernity” have been replicated in countries around the world, religion shaped what spread, where it spread, how it spread, and how it adapted to new contexts
In particular, conversionary Protestants (CPs) were a crucial catalyst initiating the development and spread of religious liberty, mass education, mass printing, newspapers, voluntary organizations, most major colonial reforms, and the codification of legal protections for nonwhites in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. These innovations fostered conditions that made stable representative democracy more likely—regardless of whether many people converted to Protestantism. Moreover, religious beliefs motivated most of these transformations. In this blunt form, without evidence or nuance, these claims may sound overstated and offensive. Yet the historical and statistical evidence of CPs’ influence is strong, and the cost of ignoring CPs in our models is demonstrably high. […]
For example, stable democracy first emerged in Protestant Europe and British-settler colonies, and by World War I every independent, predominantly Protestant country was a stable democracy—with the possible exception of Germany. Less stable versions of democracy developed in Catholic areas with large Protestant and Jansenist minorities, such as France. However, democracy lagged in Catholic and Orthodox parts of Southern and Eastern Europe where Protestants had little influence. A similar pattern existed outside Europe.
In European settler based colonies, Protestant based ones (United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand) are far more democratic than the otherwise similar, but Catholic based ones such as Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, and Costa Rica. You will note that this also weakens the theory that secularization tends to promote democracy, as the author says, the United States is far more religious than Uruguay. It is also worth noting that one set are all former British colonies and the other all-former Spanish colonies. What that seems to tell us is that, whichever colonial regime we choose (and these were the main two on offer) they seemed to export quite well.
I start with Western Europe and North America because that is where representative democracy was first developed. In this, I follow the author, and for the same reason. This is the baseline, if we can’t find links here, they are unlikely. If we can, and then we also find them in the other contexts we make our case stronger, possibly much stronger.
I too think the classical origin of democracy may well be overemphasized. Sure, Athenian, Enlightenment, and Deist roots exist, and were known, and important, but much of this is also paralleled by earlier specifically religious terms, especially arguments for political pluralism, electoral reform, and limitations of state power.
For example, Calvinists tried to reconstruct states along “godly” lines and limit sinful human institutions. Perhaps as a result, most Enlightenment democratic theorists came from Calvinist families or had a Calvinist education, even if they were either not theologically orthodox or personally religious (e.g., John Locke, Rousseau, Hugo Grotius, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, Patrick Henry, James Madison, and Alexander Hamilton), and they secularized ideas previously articulated by Calvinist theologians and jurists. For example, Hobbes’ and Locke’s social contracts are secular versions of Puritan and Nonconformist covenants, and Locke’s ideas about the equality of all people are explicitly religious.
I would add that the perhaps most famous definition of representational democracy, Abraham Lincoln’s “of the people, by the people, for the people” was not original but an almost direct quote of John Wycliffe. Whose influence echoes down to us through not only his Bible, which strongly influenced Tyndale’s, but he also influenced Martin Luther, Jan Huss, and I think, John Calvin as well. Here is perhaps the first expression of what would be the major strains of the Reformation.
Moreover, the religious context influenced whether Enlightenment-linked revolutions gave birth to stable democracy. The Protestant English and Scottish Enlightenments were not anti-Christian, and where they spread, democracy flourished. The “Catholic” French Enlightenment was virulently anti-Christian (particularly anti-Catholic), and where it spread, stable democracy did not. The French Revolution devolved into violence and inspired both totalitarianism and democracy. Similarly, anticlerical Enlightenment governments formed in virtually every independent Catholic country in Europe and Latin America, but did not lead to stable democracy. […]
For example, even in nineteenth-century Great Britain, expansions of suffrage and reforms of the electoral system were directly tied to pressure by Evangelical Anglicans and Nonconformists—in this case, including nonstate Catholics.
Ideas are powerful things, but if those who hold them are crushed and killed, they don’t become the conventional wisdom. So, if power wasn’t dispersed enough, or secular and religious forces came to blows too much, democracy often did not last. In the next sections, we’ll look at how CPs fostered greater separation of church and state, helped to disperse power and, create the conditions which helped form stable democracies.
Next: PRINTING, NEWSPAPERS, AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE
I think the same case could be made for Conversionary Scientism (after all it was the Age of Enlightenment) which spawned an explosion of printed books, more leisure time, newspapers and literacy. That it is true that the West was primarity Protestant only reflects that many Christian values were still widely held within these countries. But the erosion had begun and the French give us the model of what the Conversianary Scientism becomes once the faith is rejected . . . morphing into what is prevalent today: Conversionary Secularism. Democracy is neither good or bad in itself as it fully depends on the will and the desires of the governed to plot a course. That course can lead to great freedom and independence or to beauracracies that enslave, oligarchies that rule, and large and growing dependency class (the new slavery). As much hope that those days must of held for the common man in the street did not always work out as they envisioned . . . and their belief that man had become smart enough to make their own laws without regard of natural or God-made laws has become the disaster of the modern era.
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Nope, that case can’t be made, or the French (or Spanish) Empire would have seen similar results to the British Empire. Gandhi himself, said that his tactics would only have worked on the british.
It wasn’t even close, and the major difference was the Protestant missionaries, and their commitment to individual learning. Are today’s problems, in large measure do to the diminution of the importance of God, actually in many cases the repudiation of Him by the very people who did so much to spread his word? Absolutely.
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I guess I fail to see your point NEO. Maybe in your next posts it will be more clear. As far as I know, in the end Colonialism of all these countries failed (sooner or later depending on the colony in question) and there was no democracy present in them . . . except for those of the Colonialists. Without newspapers or newsreels Gandhi would have failed with the British as well . . . and a case could be made that it was world pressure that effected the Brits more than some internal working of their government. And how did Protestant missionaies do in converting India (some converted but it certainly is not a Christian nation to even a small extent)? That some of these countries embraced different forms of democracy doesn’t seem to be that big of a mysterty. These ideas, as well as Marxism, Communism, Socialism, were in an ascendency. The mystery to me is whay a Constitutional Republic form of Democracy did not gain more momentum than it did. And maybe we are seeing why, in our day . . . for the corrupt can eventually change or ignore even the Constitution and transform this better model of democracy into an oligarchy of cronyists and deep-seated corruption. The other forms of democracies usually devolve into the socialistic groups in due time . . . we only delayed the inevitable by trusting that our government was on auto-pilot (the Everything is Beautiful syndrome).
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You’re right, it will become clearer as the series goes on, it’s even clearer in the source document, it is long, however. 🙂
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I noticed that and since I am heading down to FL to spend a long weekend with my brother and his wife tomorrow, I will have to read this when I get back . . . but I shall try to catch up then.
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Given that India was partitioned amid huge suffering, displacement and worse, I am afraid that Gandhi did indeed fail.
India was not able to rise to his vision of its future.
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Yes, that too, is an important point I think. His biggest success was simply getting the sympathy of the world stage to side with him and against the British Colonizers.
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Quite a lot of truth, and not something I know much of, but it seems to me that India came out better than it went in, I’m not sure the same can be said for Pakistan and the rest.
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In Bangladesh there remain deserted villages where nobody will live. Hindu ones. A tiny shadow of the immense suffering and displacement of millions of people.
The Raj may have been an evil, in some ways, but partition was another. I imagine people in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh prefer to be independent, but Gandhi was always afraid that the human cost would be far too high. Ultimately his worst fears were realised.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/modern/partition1947_01.shtml
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All very true. But I don’t know enough to have a valid opinion. Maybe I will after studying your outstanding link. 🙂
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Interesting. I am looking forward to reading the rest of this series. It does make me wonder what the fate of our culture is as it moves away from God. I think you allude to this in your last paragraph today.
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It is, I’ve rarely been as fascinated as I was with this. And yes, I do indeed wonder about that as well.
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The development of democracy in the Caribbean is interesting – I only know a few fact as presented below:
Plantation owners did not, encourage missionaries access to their slaves – I am told they did not allow the Anglicans to preach to them as they felt it would be morally problematic for the slave owners to have slaves that were Christians.
The first 2 Prodestant missionaries to the Caribbean were Moravians to the island of St. Thomas – some say they sold themselves into slavery to gain access to the island and the slave population. I think they were prepared to do so but that in fact their passage was paid by the Queen of the Netherlands.
The story of these first Moravian missionaries is very moving and the subject of a film called “First Fruits” (https://www.visionvideo.com/dvd/4821D/first-fruits Cost $5.00) (an older version on youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdMzydSaPs8) produced by the church.
There are quite a number of Moravian churches in the various islands; they are very interesting missionary movement. Moravian’s worldwide would be numerically greater but for the fact than where they encountered existing healthy evangelical missions of other denominations they simply joined and assisted them.
The Quakers (who were initially thoroughly evangelical) were active in conversions and education and there were at one time 5 Quaker meeting houses in Barbados.
A Baptist minister (and the slave converts) was in the forefront of a slave uprising and their liberation in Jamaica.
The oldest parliament in the western hemisphere is that of Barbados and George Washington was here for a while to observe it. George Washington House is a tourist attraction in Barbados.
Of the islands I have seen the French Islands are far more developed than the British or Spanish as the French Islands are actually a part of France. This (I believe) led to greater investment remaining locally rather than wealth being repatriated to the homeland.
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That non-state church thing will, as we will see, is of the utmost importance. It’s an interesting history..
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The assumption appears to be that representative democracy in the Anglo-American mode is necessarily A Good Thing. I’m not convinced that it is. It contains many good elements certainly but also a seemingly inexorable trend to centralisation and to an amalgamation between the political classes and the financial oligarchies. Societies which have multiple centres of power may be less efficient and/or formally democratic but they can leave more space for families and individuals to lead their own lives.
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An excellent point. I see nothing in the founder’s work in America pointing that way, the Senat was to have been the representative of the state, organizationally, not the people. It’s one of the things that has gotten perverted over the years, usually, at least somewhat innocently. Federalism, like subsidiarity, is one of the things that are supposed to help against centralizing, and its practitioners, who rarely have the good of anybody but themselves in mind.
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