In all these posts, I don't believe I've added the book cover. Here it is! Now you know what to look for when you go to pick up a copy. On with the Blog Tour!
The final segment of Christian history covers the year 1500 to the present and is called the Reform and Denominational Proliferation period. During this period individuals came forward to challenge the established Christian Church to reform itself from corruption. When reform did not go far enough more schisms took place leading to the formation of the 33,820 Christian denominations we have today (Word Christian Encyclopedia).
This period is marked by five
major activities including the carryover of corruption, the emergence of
refiners, reformers and restorers, Christian movements and influencers, the
propagation of published scripture and the proliferation of denominations.
The corruption of the former
period continued in ongoing nepotism, immorality, greed, and arrogance.
Alexander VI, perhaps the most corrupt pope in history prolonged his crooked
reign with more appointments of cardinals for money, arrangements of marriages of
his children for financial gain, and the famous Banquet of Chestnuts in 1501
where the pontiff hosted prostitutes for sex on display among his guests. These
acts of corruption were not isolated to Catholicism alone.
Exhausted by the state of affairs
there came forward three types of individuals calling for an end of church
corruption: Refiners—those who sought to change the Church from within (e.g.
Saint Francis of Assisi); Reformers—those
who sought to change the Church through public debate and open accusation (e.g.
Luther, Calvin, Tyndale, Wesley, etc.); and Restorers—those who believed the corruption of the established
Christian Churches and its doctrinal base had become so contaminated that a
complete restoration to that of the original Church of Jesus Christ was
necessary (e.g. Campbell, Stone, Smith, Russell, etc.).
Movements marking this period
included the First and Second Great Awakenings in the Americas along with other
movements such as the Charismatic, Evangelicalism, Free Grace, Holiness,
Methodism, and Pentecostalism. These movements, along with the Protestant
Reformation, could not have succeeded without the establishment and
availability of the scriptures into local languages—a dynamic that has led to
there being 92 translations of the Bible into English alone.
All of this activity led to the
explosion of Christian denominations from one in Roman Catholicism around AD
1000 to nearly 34,000 ten centuries later. The World Christian Encyclopedia categorizes the sects of Christianity
today into seven segments: 1) Orthodox,
2) Roman Catholic, 3) Catholics (Reformed Catholics, New Apostolic, etc.), 4)
Anglicans, 5) Protestants (Lutherans, Methodists, etc.), 6) Marginal
Protestants (Unitarians, LDS/Mormons, etc.), and 7) Non-White Indigenous
Christians. The stories and motives behind this proliferation are critical to
understanding Christianity today and are covered by the author.
Modern-day Christians are
influenced by the past and are products of their own history. It is a history
that produced the best and worst of humanity over a 2,000 year period. Our
faith walk today is affected by and reflects these four periods of Christian
history. Having a better understanding of where we came from as a Christian
people we are now ready for the next leg of our journey taking on the
question: “What is a Christian?”
Go to www.findyourchristianity.com to watch the book trailer, find
out what type of Christian you are, and to order the book
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