Analysis Of The Unintended Reformation By Brad Gregory

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Religion and opinions are both products of humans. Our intelligence gifts us with the freedom of thought and capability to apply it to our views on deep life questions. Intelligence provides us the right to believe in any sort of God, afterlife, or way of living. Brad Gregory describes the Protestant Reformation’s effects on the present society’s Christian qualities in a book he wrote titled “The Unintended Reformation.”1 (After my awareness of the outcome of the western history of the Protestant Reformation, I gained an opinion on today’s religious views that do not completely agree with Gregory’s valuation.) The Protestant Reformation was vital to the progress in the knowledge about the Christian faith.
Brad Gregory argues that the lack …show more content…

Gregory never states that he wishes hyperpluralism to be vanished, but he is so negative about the concept. He teaches the events of the Western hyperpluralism as though it was a destruction of unity. To me, the Reformation should be viewed as an optimistic series of events. The Reformation allowed Christians evolve into the people they wanted to be instead of being told who to be. In Martin Luther’s “Freedom of Religion,” he explains the commandments from the Old Testament. He is saying that the commandments are meant to teach humans to know themselves and that they allow humans to accept that they are not perfect.1 (Luther) He makes a point that Christians do not need the church to reach the grace of God. This gives them freedom to accept who they are as individuals on their own. Their minds were able to open to secular views and it also allowed freedom to be a part of their religion. There is no right or wrong answer to an opinion.
I disagree that a variety of opinions of scripture are to be frowned upon. The secular interpretations are what defines Christianity in the 21st century. I view the immense number of ideas as the creativity that is essential for mankind. Everyone’s life is different and the environments in which people lived throughout their life will change their point of view on …show more content…

(113) Sola ratio is the idea that reason alone is the definite authority for Christian faith. It is a secular, repeated problem that stemmed from sola scriptura, according to Gregory. (126) I think as humans, we are creatures of intelligence. We seek reasons for events that occur in everyday life. It can trouble people when the meaning is incomplete or hard to identify. I disagree that sola ratio is a corrupt solution. We should not be punished by taking the freedom to seek reason to have faith away. There is no shame in looking to philosophy for reason when answering the life questions. Faith takes a large role in many people’s lives. When there is a reason to believe, people use it to guide them in how to live. If we all had the same answers to the life questions, would be living as a nation of people following the same path to

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