12 February 1834 A.D. Friedrich David Schleiermacher Dies
12 February 1834 A.D. Friedrich David Schleiermacher Dies
Graves, Dan. “Schleiermacher Was Mourned.” Christianity.com. May 2007.
http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1801-1900/schleiermacher-was-mourned-11630427.html. Accessed 15 Jul 2014.
Germany was awash with grief.
Popular professor Friedrich David Schleiermacher, a cofounder of the University
of Berlin, was dead. He had slipped out of the world on this
day, February 12, 1834. A common cold, neglected as Schleiermacher went
about his teaching and administrative duties, developed into pneumonia. Lying
in bed, surrounded by family members, his last major action was to celebrate
the Lord's supper. Over 20,000 people attended the funeral of the man who has
been called "the founder of modern Protestant theology."
Feeling and emotion are important
to many Protestant groups, especially Pentecostals and denominations which call
for a definite salvation experience. This was true long before Schleiermacher
began writing theology. The Pietists, Moravians, Methodists and others were
sometimes accused of emotional excess by more traditional believers. However,
Schleiermacher wrote such experiences into his theology. His theology was
centered not on God but on man, because he believed we can never know God as He
is in Himself; rather we can only know God as He is in relation to us. In
Schleiermacher's view, religious feeling arose from a sense of absolute
dependence. To be a Christian, one had to have a self-consciousness of faith in
Christ as redeemer. Christianity to Schleiermacher was the highest truth but
not the only truth. We need Christ because are not able to produce perfection
by our own minds since our religious self-consciousness is infected by sin.
However, Jesus was not the same
person to Schleiermacher that he is to orthodox Christians.
To the German thinker, Christ was not so much a member of the Godhead as a
human with a perfect consciousness of God. That was all that his
"divinity" consisted of. No wonder Schleiermacher's superiors doubted
if he was a Christian at all and accused him of heresy. This did not stop his
ideas becoming widely accepted among those who were looking for teachings to
replace traditional Christianity.
Schleiermacher's popularity was
not necessarily the result of his religious theories. During Napoleon's
invasions, he was an ardent nationalist and preached popular sermons in behalf
of Prussia. Later he reorganized Germany's school system on a new model. It was
for these national activities rather than his liberal theology that so many
thousands turned out to his funeral.
Bibliography:
Brastow, Lewis Orsmond. Representative Modern Preachers.
New York; London: Macmillan, 1904.
"Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher."
(http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/schleiermacher/).
"Schleiermacher, Friedrich Daniel Ernst"
and other articles in the New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious
Knowledge. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1954.
"Schleiermacher, Friedrich Daniel Ernst."
The
Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross
and E. A. Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
"Schleiermacher, Friedrich Daniel Ernst."
Encyclopedia
Americana. Chicago: Americana Corp., 1956.
"Schleiermacher, Friedrich Daniel Ernst."
Encyclopedia
Britannica. Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 1967.
Various internet articles.
Last updated May,
2007.
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