During the 50-year period spanning from ca. 1865 to ca. 1915, the Danish capital of Copenhagen saw a wave of social engagement emerge in revivalist circles, dealing with the social problems of industrialization and urbanization: missionaries targeting prostitutes and their customers, institutions for rehabilitating prostitutes and at-risk girls, the establishment of Sunday schools, societies for the erection of churches, organized poor relief, societies for the promotion of keeping the Sabbath holy, youth associations, and temperance and abstinence associations. The initiatives taken in this period were profoundly new in a Danish context, where social work had for a long time primarily been a concern for the state, municipalities, or the nobility, leaving the local priest as essentially a civil servant in the state-church [T. Knudsen Reference Knudsen2000; Markkola Reference Manow2010]. The historical importance of these initiatives is shown through the fact that the emerging organizations eventually became a central part of the Danish voluntary sector [Henriksen and Bundesen 2004].
This activity is an early case of civic action, where “participants are coordinating action to improve some aspect of common life in society, as they imagine society” [Lichterman and Eliasoph Reference Larsen2014: 809]. More specifically, to distinguish it from the activity of social movements, it will be considered a case of voluntary social action or “non-contentious collective action” (as opposed to what Tilly describes in e.g. Tilly Reference Tilly2012), where the main focus of the activity is not the making of claims that bear on someone else’s interest to a central authority, but the undertaking of social work “in the shadow” of this authority.Footnote 1
The fact that this activity first emerged in Lutheran-Pietist revivalist circles raises a host of questions: What role did revivalist ideas play in the emergence of voluntary social action in Copenhagen? What role do ideas play in the emergence of civic action in general? How was it possible for such voluntary activities to emerge from a Lutheran tradition that had traditionally seen “good works” as primarily an obligation of the state, and considered the Christian to be justified through faith alone?
This article seeks to answer these questions and consequently has a threefold aim.
First, the aim is to empirically demonstrate the role of religious ideas, specifically in the Lutheran tradition, in the historical emergence of voluntary social action. The historical case of revivalism and voluntary social work in Copenhagen clearly shows how religious ideas both retarded and stimulated this activity, and how it took several innovations in the religious “schemas” to find a formula that both supported the new activities and resonated with the Lutheran-Pietist revivalist tradition. It is thus shown how ideas mediate between the experience of suffering and the action undertaken to alleviate that suffering, so that ideas of worthiness, the extent and character of one’s obligation, the justification of civic action, as well as the appropriate means will shape the action undertaken.
The article’s second aim is consequently to contribute theoretically and empirically to what seems to be an emergent field of the role of ideas at the level of collective action. Recent research in contemporary civic action has opposed the decontextualized quantitative neo-Tocquevillian approaches and emphasized the role of action [e.g. Lichterman and Eliasoph Reference Larsen2014]; others have theorized culture and agency in associations on a theoretical level (so-called “civil society 4”) [Perez-Diaz 2014]. There is still much to be done, however. “Culture-in-action” approaches have been elaborated theoretically [esp. Swidler Reference Stein1986; Sewell Reference Schram, Berg van den and Van Dooren1992; Mann Reference Malmgart, Hansen, Gunder, Petersen and Petersen2012], but the role of ideas or culture in collective action has only recently been taken up in the historical sociology of collective action in the analysis of the emergence of the first social movements in the USA [Young Reference Young2006].
The third aim is to renew the attention to European civic traditions. While there has been a great deal of historical-sociological research in civic traditions from the USA, most prominently of course by scholars such as Theda Skocpol and Robert Putnam [Skocpol and Fiorina Reference Skocpol1999; Skocpol Reference Skocpol2004; Putnam Reference Olesen1994; Putnam Reference Putnam1995; Putnam Reference Putnam2000], research on European traditions is more sparse, and are often concerned with “deep” hermeneutical studies in the tradition of Robert Bellah [Bellah Reference Bellah1985 cf. Joas and Adloff Reference Joas and Adloff2007], social movements, or relations between state and civil society [cf. Trägårdh Reference Tilly2007], and less with studying the dynamics of non-contentious collective action in itself. Whereas the American research often takes place in a state vs. society discussion [Skocpol Reference Skinner1997], this problem is less urgent in Europe, where the state is more highly accepted as a provider of social services. Here, the problem may be to even acknowledge the civic traditions that do exist.Footnote 2
By going back to “creative juncture” [Joas Reference Joas2013], where new forms of acting and thinking were innovated from cultural traditions, in an unsettled period where ideas took on the explicit character of ideology, one might see more clearly how strong civic traditions emerge. One could show the role of ideas in this process as “midwives”, helping the experience of others’ suffering give birth to action; ideas that eventually became “habits of the heart” in civil society [Bellah Reference Bellah1985].
These considerations lead to the following research question that guides this analysis:
How did central cultural schemas of Protestant revivalism contribute to the emergence and form of voluntary social action in late 19th/early 20th century Copenhagen?
The article will first introduce the theoretical framework and methodology before moving on to the analysis of the three waves of revivalism that informed voluntary social action in Copenhagen at the time.
Analytical inspirations: Cultural schemas and the first US national social movement
Michael Young’s study of the emergence of the temperance and antislavery movements in antebellum United States provides an excellent starting point for exploring culture and collective action [Young Reference Wichern, Janssen and Sieverts2002; Young Reference Young2006].
Young correctly points out the missing focus on the role of cultural ideas in the contentious politics approach of Charles Tilly and Sidney Tarrow, as well as the life politics approach of Giddens, Calhoun and others [Young Reference Wichern, Janssen and Sieverts2002, 665]. In order to remedy this, Young draws on a large host of what one might call pragmatist cultural sociologists (because of their emphasis on action): Mann [Mann Reference Malmgart, Hansen, Gunder, Petersen and Petersen2012], Swidler [Swidler Reference Stein1986], Sewell [Sewell Reference Schram, Berg van den and Van Dooren1992], as well as American pragmatism [Dewey Reference Dewey1991].Footnote 3 He consequently argues that the first national social movements in the USA emerged as the result of a creative “collective adjustment” of cultural schemas in which the affectively intensive schema of public confession merged with the extensive schema of national sin and was appropriated or “transposed” to the new context of social movements [Young Reference Young2006, 34; 203f]. The evangelicals re-interpreted the political, economic, and religious unrest of their time as feelings of guilt that had to be redeemed––feelings that then became the “sounding board” for the adjustment of cultural schemas [37].
In the following I will show how the Lutheran-Pietist cultural schema of sin provided a way of engaging with the “social question” that other moral projects were not able to, and how innovations in various aspects of the religious schemas allowed missionary work to develop into social work. Further, it will be shown how not all innovations resonated equally well with the existing revivalist schemas. It thus took several re-interpretations until the schemas were found that were able to combine the doctrine of justification by faith alone with that of good works. As opposed to Young’s interpretation of the early social movement as a “sounding board” for general societal developments, this interpretation sees the voluntary social undertakings as an adequate rational response, according to the norms of the group, to changes in lifestyle in society. It thus emphasizes this as a deliberate and political response rather than a function of general developments. I would propose with Joas to interpret the creative innovations analyzed below as the emergence of strong value commitments [Joas Reference Joas2000]. The innovations in cultural schemas are in this case provoked by the experience of suffering of others, giving rise to feelings that are then articulated in the available moral vocabulary in an interpretative circle that may in turn alter the feelings as well as the vocabulary [ibid.: 113f; 133f]. This process takes place in a “quasi-dialogical” relationship between actor and situation [Joas and Beckert Reference Joas, Beckert and Turner2006: 274], where existing values are not simply “applied,” but creatively re-interpreted. There is thus no primacy to experience, ideas, values, or action, since they occur together.
It is necessary, however, to nuance the culture-in-action approach in order to describe in more detail the role of ideas in this type of collective action. In order to act collectively, the individuals involved need to know why they should act, what the span of their obligation is, and what the appropriate means of action are. Young’s “merging schemas” explanation does not consider theoretically the innovations in doctrine that he also describes, namely the conservative Calvinist doctrine of pre-destination and the Arminian doctrine of free will, that legitimated these religious innovations [Young Reference Young2006, 62-65]. This on the one hand means that he does not link his work to the extensive literature on the influence of Protestantisms in different fields, and on the other it begs the question if the concept of schemas can cover all of the various functions of religious and cultural ideas. What is proposed is the analytical tools for a “collective soteriology”: ideas necessarily involved in projects aiming at collective salvation, in this world or beyond.
First, attention is paid to the role of religious doctrines. As more recent developments in the Weber-literature tell us, doctrines are “contextually selective”, that is: foundational texts are constructed and interpreted in specific contexts with specific purposes, and addressing specific audiences [Zaret Reference Young1995]. This means that doctrines should not be seen as closed systems, but rather as being “called to life” in action in order to achieve something. This does not mean that they do not have effects beyond the moment they are enacted. Gorski has for instance shown how Pietists adhering to the sola fide doctrine were instrumental in bringing about the modern Prussian state during the 17th and 18th centuries [Gorski Reference Gorski1993: 304ff]. Likewise, Kahl has shown how Catholic, Lutheran, and Calvinist doctrines have been decisive in the way that nation states have dealt with poverty, e.g. in their proclivity towards outdoor relief or work houses [Kahl Reference Kahl2005; cf. also Manow Reference Mann2008; Kersbergen and Manow 2009]. So, religious doctrines do have long-term effects, but only as resources of interpretation that depend upon actors to enact and re-interpret them in new contexts for new purposes.Footnote 4 Seen in this way, doctrines provide the basic articles of faith (whether religious or not) in terms of a more or less coherent system of ideas around which to rally in specific action situations and are thus central in creating the world view of a group [Swidler Reference Stein1986: 279]. Since doctrines are fundamental, the doctrine invoked in a specific situation has implications for the ideational practices that are undertaken. In a Protestant context, for instance, it matters if one refers to the doctrine of justification or sanctification, because certain ideas of community, reciprocity, and conversion are implied [McGrath Reference Martensen2005].
Second, the analysis focuses on ideals of community. Christianity, according to Jaspers and his followers, is an axial age religion and as such a transcendental religion implying the idea of a universal brotherhood of man [Joas Reference Joas2014]. Reiterating the notion of the situatedness of ideas, any commitment to such an idea of universalism must be specified in the context of concrete action [Joas Reference Joas1999; Reference Joas2013].Footnote 5 The ideal of community specifies responsibilities and rules for entering and exiting the community to be established [cf. Janoski Reference Janoski1998]. The rules of entrance may include certain tests that an applicant may have to pass in order to be accepted in the community, just as there are certain rules that cannot be violated without being expelled from the community. These processes can be swift or prolonged. Once in the community, you are expected to adhere to the formal or informal obligations. This includes the expectations for leaders and followers, and for behavior towards individuals within and outside the community, e.g.: are outsiders possible converts that can only be saved by joining the revivalist community or can the obligations of the congregation also include the alleviation of suffering without immediate conversion?
Third, the concept of recipe beliefs is introduced. Recipe beliefs constitute techniques for remedying the social problems that are identified. The term is inspired by [Haskell Reference Haskell1985b], who seeks to show that the modern “humanitarian sensibility”, as expressed in the 19th century antislavery movement, is in large parts the result of the effects of market discipline, or the spread of the norm of “promise keeping” in contractual relations, as Haskell puts it, and the concomitant spread of technological “recipe knowledge”, effecting both an increased internal moral scrupulousness and an external widening of the span of one’s obligations because of the factual ability to affect distant strangers due to technological (in the widest sense) innovations [ibid.]. “Recipe knowledge” has affinities to Tilly’s “repertoires of collective action” [Tilly Reference Thomsen1993], but the term also implies a sense of causal connection to a specific problem. Haskell’s point is that it is not enough to simply adhere to a certain moral principle or convention; you also need to be able to act on your principles in order for them to have any effect. When you (believe to) have a recipe for dealing with some sort of problem, the problem moves from a category of indifference, of moral neutrality, to the category of responsibility.Footnote 6 I prefer, however, to use the term “recipe beliefs,” since what actually matters is the (tested or untested) belief that one’s action can have an effect—most evident, of course, in the sphere of religion, where one cannot obtain direct proof of how to obtain salvation. The important take away here is that ideas not only influence action, but that possibilities of action also inform and alter ideas, as in this case when various techniques for social work have been historically developed, such as the “home,” the self-help group, or the pledge of sobriety.
Before putting these concepts to work, a caveat is in order: ideas serve many purposes, and one major divide in the social study of ideas is between ideas as weapons and ideas as resources for action. This article does not focus on ideas as weapons; as external justification in a social context [Skinner Reference Shanahan2002: 177]. Even if the case definitely warrants such an analysis, since the social volunteers in Copenhagen were engaged in a battle with socialists and so-called “cultural radicals” that based their projects on very different (and atheist) visions of society, the focus here is on ideas’ ability to inform actors’ experience and action, regardless of the actors’ possible bellicose intentions. The article also does not analyze this as a case of “social control” where a privileged class launches philanthropic endeavors in order to uphold their position [Banner Reference Banner1973]. Many of these pioneers in social work supported the socialists’ claims for labor rights, even if they may have shaped their concrete activity, their “imagined society” in their own image [Lützen Reference Lützen2002], so the relation between class interest and voluntary action is at least more complex than assumed by some [Haskell Reference Haskell1985a].
The analysis will show how “soteriological” innovations in doctrine, ideals of community, and recipe beliefs led to the emergence of three distinct approaches to voluntary social work in the Copenhagen case, how revivalist ideas were both enabling and constraining in this regard, and why they were successful or not in terms of “resonating” with existing schemas, as well as the particular form the voluntary work took on, especially in terms of their “publicness” and emotional intensity.
Method and analytical strategy
The analysis is a single case study, but will include references to similar European developments in order to illustrate the transnational character of the developments. The single case study allows for an analysis that is close to the actors involved. In order to understand the experiences that triggered the innovations in schemas, I will start by outlining the situation in the rapidly growing city of Copenhagen, particularly in the cases of alcohol consumption and prostitution that became two focal points of the revivalist voluntary initiatives. Then some background on the special Danish organization of revivalism as “sects within the church” is offered, before analyzing three innovations of revivalist schemas.
The first part of the analysis relies primarily on secondary sources of the rather well researched organization of the Home Mission, while exemplifying the moral language of the group through a central text by its leader, Beck. The analysis of the second generation of urban revivalists builds on programmatic and autobiographical writings of some of the leading social revivalists primarily in Denmark, but also in Germany and the Netherlands, as well as the work of historians. The third analysis relies primarily on secondary sources with respect to the Holiness Movement in Denmark and the USA.
The situation
The social question, relief systems, and life politics projects in 19th century Denmark
Copenhagen grew explosively from 120,000 inhabitants in 1840 to 234,000 in 1880 [Malmgart Reference Lützen and Jensen2002: 8]. As had already occurred in other large cities in Europe, the so-called “social question” emerged. Or rather, social questions emerged, since the question had several aspects and was perceived in various ways, depending on group affiliation. The social question was thus also related to questions of “life politics,” questions of morality and lifestyle.
The city presented rural immigrants with a “float or sink”—situation, where the risk of pure material deprivation was intertwined with problems related to new patterns of interaction between strangers and new opportunities of consumption. Here, two main risks came to fall within the purview of the home missionaries: alcoholism and prostitution.
The industrialization of beer production led to the availability of stronger types of beer; the consumption of distilled spirits also increased. Alcohol seems to have been a way of coping with trauma and social problems, for instance by soldiers involved in the bloody Danish-Prussian war of 1864 [Eriksen Reference Eriksen1991]. Furthermore, the new sociality that arose with urbanization meant a relaxing of social control and traditional habits of alcohol consumption, while at the same time making consumption of alcohol more visible and thus more readily construed as a problem [Gundelach Reference Gundelach1988: 163]. Prostitution had at this time been legalized as a measure to combat the increase in venereal diseases. As a result, women who had been caught a third time trading sexual favors for money were required to register as “ladies of the night” and were confined to certain areas of the city [Bøge Pedersen 2007].
The state’s social relief systems were not geared towards the new risks of urban and industrialized society. While Pietism and Enlightenment ideas had guided the construction of a generous welfare system without means testing in the late 18th century [Sørensen Reference Smith1998], the rise of the bourgeoisie to power in 1848/1849 led to an increased focus on being able to distinguish between the deserving and the undeserving poor. This was primarily achieved through the deprivation of civil and political rights entailing the loss of the right to marriage, the loss of property rights [ibid., 370], and the deterrence and disciplining of poorhouses. These were however, quite crude tools for dealing with the question of the potentially underserving, the youth that might succumb to the temptations of the city, as well as the moral reformation of those that had already succumbed to alcohol or promiscuity [Lützen Reference Lindhardt1998; Malmgart Reference Malmgart2010; Kofoed Reference Knudsen2014].
The situation in Copenhagen thus represented a very real call for action due to the emerging social and life politics questions. The political elites thought of poverty in moral terms: one should not encourage the poor to seek relief, but discourage or discipline them through the poor house. However, with this renewed emphasis on moral categories as the access point to social welfare, a new host of problems emerged: drunkenness, gambling, promiscuity, lavishness, indolence etc. Here, the Home Mission presented itself as an actor that had a vocabulary for dealing with moral issues in contrast to the material focus of the socialists, the aesthetic evaluation of the bourgeoisie, or the parts of the church’s mainstream currents that focused primarily on the alleviation of poverty.
The three waves of voluntary social action in the Home Mission
The Copenhagen Home Mission grew to become the nub of the voluntary social work that was undertaken in the capital towards the end of the century. We now turn to the analysis of the innovations in religious schemas that enabled, hindered, and enabled once again the integration of voluntary social action into the Lutheran framework of justification by faith alone.
Revivalist pietism: Faith alone
Established in 1861, “Indre Mission” (Home or Inner Mission; HM from now on) grew out of the early 19th century revivals.Footnote 7 It had its basis in local societies in the rural areas, but was centrally controlled by priests belonging to the national church, though with a high degree of local independence [Lindhardt Reference Lieburg1978: 84-92; Gundelach Reference Gundelach1988: 112-115]. From the outset, the association was largely controlled by the controversial and highly influential priest, Vilhelm Beck, who officially became leader of the association in 1881 and remained so until his death in 1901.
The HM established itself as one of the four major branches of the national church, and the most conservative branch at that, emphasizing a literal reading of the Bible, the impossibility of conversion after death (thus stressing the importance of proper behavior in this life), and abstinence from adiaphora such as dancing, drinking, and card games [Lindhardt Reference Lieburg1978: 70f].
In terms of doctrine, the HM emphasized the Lutheran doctrine of sola fide, justification by faith alone. In this regard, the organization was truly an offspring of the early revivals that marked a creative juncture within the Protestant churches. The earliest revivals in Denmark, as in other European Protestant areas [Beyreuther Reference Beyreuther1977], were protesting their priests’ and the state church’s rationalist teachings. Rather than the practical Enlightenment teachings that put man at the center of religion, and saw God in an assisting role, the revivalists emphasized that salvation was achievable only through inner faith. In line with Luther, who had launched the doctrine of sola fide as an answer to the Catholic practice of selling indulgences, man, along with the world as such, came to be seen as wholly depraved and unable to change this state through action. This meant that being in a state of grace could only be assumed through an inner conviction; it could not be interpreted from outer signs such as fortune in business dealings or secured through good deeds. Since this world was seen as sinful and primarily as a preparation for the next, the alleviation of suffering in this world came to mean less than saving souls for eternity.
Luther had himself emphasized in his teachings that, even though salvation was solely a matter of faith, good deeds played a part in this in as much as faith must “bear fruit” [Gorski Reference Gorski1993: 292]. Beck, together with the HM, followed this thinking. The Mission did thus not have strong concepts for the role of charity in its theology. It was actually rather treated as a “middle thing,” neither encouraged nor discouraged, a thing that local communities could take up if they wanted. It was simply not a concern for the HM, and when Beck did deal with charity, he emphasized its possible good effects on faith [Larsen Reference Kofoed, Crowman, Kofoed and Karlsson Sjögren2000: 236]. Following this logic, the HM also opposed the temperance movement when this emerged in a mainly secular version in Denmark at the end of the century. Rather than seeking out a pseudo-religion, people should seek Christ and join the Mission to combat their vices [Eriksen Reference Eriksen1988]. The doctrine of sola fide thus led the Home Mission to adopt a reluctant attitude towards organized charity, and in this way failed to develop a language for social work, as for instance the institution of the diaconate could have constituted.Footnote 8
What the HM did have a language for was sin and morality, and this influenced the organization’s ideal of community. As in Puritan Calvinism, the wholly transcendent God, and the inability of the individual to secure her/his own salvation meant a search for being on the right side of the saved/lost divide. The Pietist moral teachings thus became a means of distinguishing the “children of God” from the “children of the world.” Even if the leadership did not condemn drinking, playing cards, or dancing as sin, there is evidence that these activities were perceived by many of the followers of the movement as clear markers as to whether one belonged to the saved or the lost [Holt Reference Holt1979: 471ff]. Within this backdrop, the Home Mission communities evolved, as did other revivalist groups, into “subcultures” with their own specific way of dressing, their own formula for greeting and speaking, and their own practices of endogamy, i.e. finding spouses within their own group [Balle-Petersen Reference Balle-Petersen1977; Balle-Petersen Reference Balle-Petersen and Jonsson1986]. The ideal community was thus one of pious Christians that were not slumbering, but were truly awakened in their faith; a faith that could be recognized through a certain moral behavior and a certain “code” language.
The sharp divide between saved and lost also meant that the obligations to individuals inside and outside the community were immensely different, and the recipe beliefs or religious techniques applied varied accordingly.
Internally, the “Ordo salutis,” or the steps to salvation, took on a distinctive form. Rather than the progression towards moral perfection that was the mark of certain strands of Calvinism, the techniques of the Home Mission had no progressive element. Rather, there was the constant threat of falling out of grace. In a central sermon, Beck uses a rural metaphor in that he compares the corn cockle (a type of beautiful weed) in the wheat field to the sins in man. The corn cockles have been planted by the devil, and since we do not know one from the other before the Last Day, the true Christian should every day watch for the corn cockles within himself [Beck Reference Beck1872]. Internally in the community, we can thus talk of a religious technique of vigilance,Footnote 9 of persistent self-surveillance, watching over one’s behavior and thoughts.
Externally, the Home Mission stressed the individual conversion or rather the “awakening” of the dormant Christian. This type of awakening traces back to influences of the early awakenings from Pietism and the Moravians [Olesen Reference Olesen1983]. With the institutionalization of the revivals in the Home Mission, the experience of awakening was toned down in the official theology, so that “rebirth” occurred through the church’s sacrament of baptism, where the totally depraved human being received the gift of grace, and became justified in the eyes of God. Conversion was not to take place after baptism, but if an individual were to lose sight of their covenant with God instigated through baptism, a “deep” conversion would be necessary, “back to” a life of renunciation and belief [Larsen Reference Kofoed, Crowman, Kofoed and Karlsson Sjögren2000: 32-48]. Rather than the minutely detailed description of the violent “Busskampf” of the Pietists, the conversion techniques used by the home missionaries consisted of addressing possible converts in a direct manner (“Have you met Jesus?”), the singing of psalms, and handing out of tracts and distributing of Bibles [Larsen Reference Larsen2011: 59ff].
In the local communities, however, sin and moral conduct in a sense remained “private,” and the techniques were “silent.” To rid oneself of sin, one needed to return to the covenant of baptism, which in practice meant joining one of the Home Mission’s communities; working with the outside world had the final aim of conversion. The techniques were “silent” in the sense that they were practiced by singing emotional psalms, especially Pietist versions, and reading devotional literature aloud, while preferring coffee to alcohol, and singing to dancing—and by adhering to your own kind through endogamy [H. Knudsen Reference Kersbergen and Manow1984: 10ff; Balle-Petersen Reference Balle-Petersen1977; Balle-Petersen Reference Balle-Petersen and Jonsson1986].
When the HM launched its Copenhagen branch in 1865 (CHM from now on) with an independent, self-supplying board, the means undertaken with respect to the alleviation of poverty reflected these kinds of techniques. The Mission’s stance with respect to charity was not opposed to private charity, but the main aim of the HM was always primarily religious; charity or voluntary initiatives were secondary—a means to do mission or, in the Lutheran vocabulary, a fruit of the true beliefs. It was something that the local congregations could carry out, but not a task for the organization as such [Larsen Reference Kofoed, Crowman, Kofoed and Karlsson Sjögren2000: 110-113; Larsen Reference Larsen2010: 36-40]. The situation in the city, however, prompted the Mission to employ more public forms of missionary work. The social problems in the city were interpreted in the language of sin, and Copenhagen as Satan’s Capital in Denmark [Lützen 1998: 288], where loose morality was the order of the day. Consequently, a kind of mission was required that did not solely focus on saving souls, but also on raising the morals of citizens, if salvation for all was to be achieved. Such work had been started by private individuals and subsequently incorporated in and supported by the Mission in the capital. Besides spreading the message of the gospel in the destitute areas of the city, these missions targeted the centers of sin: pubs and prostitution districts (the so-called “Midnight missions”), where prostitutes and pub owners as well as their “customers” were confronted, Bible in hand, with their sinful ways [e.g. Thomsen Reference Thompson1904].
The HM’s entry into the capital did not significantly change the cultural schemas of doctrine, ideals of community or recipe beliefs. They were “transposed” in a rather direct manner, as the new questions of the city were combatted within the well-proven missionary vocabulary: faith was imperative as the only way to be just in the eyes of God; as such, charity, philanthropy etc. could only be understood as “fruits of faith”, as almost accidental byproducts. The encounter with urban life did not initially change the goals of the organization; only the missionary means, the recipe beliefs, changed from focusing solely on salvation to becoming “moral missions” targeting the public sins of alcohol and prostitution.
The language of sin, however, provided an articulation of the social question that was more readily transformed into social work than the projects of the socialists or the J.S. Mill-inspired cultural-liberals where the road to salvation went through the rights of the state or the demolishing of existing gender norms, respectively.
Social Pietism: Faith active in love
CHM’s initial Lutheran-Pietist approach to “social work” did not attract many followers. The board was reconstituted in 1875, as a new generation of younger priests and laymen took control, most prominently the priest Harald Stein, elected chairman in 1879, who came to articulate most clearly the ideology of the organization [Holt Reference Holt1979: 36f].
This new generation constituted a “moral elite” of priests, civil servants of various professions, and merchants, less occupied with the “divide” between saved and lost, and more with Christianity as a moral force. The Mission in the capital soon became a field of struggle between ideas and methods of the HM, and new impulses from abroad, summarized at the time as a “mission of words” vs. a “mission of deeds.” The new generation was part of a wider international network of “second generation revivalists,” encompassing the German Lutheran “Erweckungsbewegung” and the Reformed continental movement “Le Reveil.” The most influential initiatives in this movement were taken by the Lutheran priest Johann Hinrich Wichern, who had founded the educational institution for boys “Das Rauhe Haus” near Hamburg, Germany, in 1833, and the reformed Protestant pastor Otto Gerhard Heldring who founded the asylum for prostitutes “Steenbeek” in Guelders in the Netherlands in 1849; Stöcker, Bodelschwingh, and the London City Mission were also part of the network [Schram Reference Putnam1978; J. Stein Reference Stein1933: 40; 44; Olesen Reference Ohlemacher1964: 27f; Steen and Hoffmeyer Reference Sørensen1915: 55].
Stein’s programmatic series of lectures from 1876 can safely be taken as the ideological manifesto of this current that inspired the explosion in voluntary social work in Copenhagen. It was reprinted several times and also translated into German. Stein here laid out three “missions” based on the “deeds of love”: preserving (protecting children and youth), saving (outreach to the fallen: prostitutes, prisoners and drunkards), and comforting love (helping the poor, the sick and the helpless). The lectures are a peculiar mix of indignation regarding social conditions especially in the city, where Satan had free rein, combined with regret over the state of a Christian community that did not act on this; they also included practical directions for doing social work gathered from the European network.
Stein’s lectures mark an innovation in Protestant thought in Denmark,Footnote 10 where for the first time an appeal was made for the congregation to take voluntary social action, and not rely on the priest or the state, who were thought capable of delivering the last “kiss of Judas” to the church [H. Stein Reference Steensland1872: 127].
Merging the doctrinal schema of sola fide with what could easily be construed as the detested schema of “works” required some theological consideration. How could the organized obligations of the Christian be formulated without falling back on a Catholic kind of justification through deeds? Here, the “magic formula,” so to speak, became the merging of faith and love through Luther’s formulation of faith active in love [Forell Reference Forell1999: 70-111]. Though salvation could still only be obtained through faith, this faith was expressed in the idea of neighborly love, which manifested itself through deeds. The Christian is thus moved to act on his love, and in a sense it is not the Christian as such that acts, but love that acts through the Christian: a love that “saves,” “protects,” “helps” etc. These formulations served to combine the purely inner relation to God on the one hand with an emphasis on action on the other that avoided both what was seen as the Catholic mistake of perceiving good deeds as a way of securing salvation and the almost equally mistaken rationalist theology that emphasized Christian “virtues” in everyday life [Dubois Reference Dubois2010; Lieburg Reference Lichterman and Eliasoph2012; Van Drenth Reference Trägårdh2002; Beyreuther Reference Beyreuther1962: 25ff; 88-96; Wichern Reference Weber1956a: Bd. 1:151f and passim; esp. Shanahan 1954: 70-94; H. Stein Reference Stein1882: 11 and passim].
Staying within the HM revivalist tradition, the “social question” was still perceived in moral terms, so that attention was paid to the “Sittlichkeit”-side of the question, even if some of the leaders of the movement touched upon structural aspects as well [Wichern Reference Wichern and Janssen1956b, e.g. 258f]: prostitution, indecency, the breakdown of the family, alcoholism etc. These questions were taken up in the language of “sin.” The city, especially, was perceived as a place where sin flourished in the form of dancing establishments, bars, and unsupervised youth. The city was portrayed in this way in Denmark, Germany, Holland, and the UK [H. Stein Reference Stein1882: 85; 93 and passim; Wichern Reference Wichern and Janssen1956b; Van Drenth Reference Trägårdh2002; Guthrie Reference Guthrie2015].
Even if the social question was still perceived through the cultural schemas of the revivalist tradition as sin, the ideals of community and the recipe beliefs changed, and thus also the ordo salutis from the shackles of Satan to salvation.
The social Pietists’ main innovation can be said to be a change in the nature of the obligations of the congregation. Women, drunkards, criminals, etc. were seen as weak, as “fallen,” that is, as essentially passive victims of a sinful society; the congregation, the ones who had already found faith, hence carried the responsibility to act. Stein held up the congregations of the early churches as an example of the active congregation [H. Stein Reference Stein1882: 1-19], while Wichern in Hamburg, like Spener before him, invoked Luther’s concept of universal priesthood [Wichern Reference Weber1956a, Bd. 1: 37].
The recipe beliefs or techniques for treatment were developed chiefly by combining the older idea of the institution or the “Anstalt,” not least inspired from the German diaconal tradition, with “modern” pedagogical means based on “family principles” and the idea of voluntary participation. So, for instance, the “Magdalen homes”Footnote 11 for the rehabilitation of prostitutes in Holland and Denmark were explicitly based on the idea that the “fallen” women were free to leave at any time, symbolized in Denmark by the ritual of showing that the door to the facility could be unlocked by anyone on the inside. Similarly, the institutions were called “homes” to resemble family life, and the superintendent considered him or herself a “father” or a “mother” of the family [cf. Esche Reference Esche1920]. Here, Wichern’s ideas from his “Rauhe Haus” institution (est. 1833) for “street kids” had been groundbreaking. Wichern had developed a “theological pedagogy” built on forgiveness, trust, education to freedom, an individual approach, where a book was kept for each child, and the “family principle,” where older “brothers” took care of younger ones [Beyreuther Reference Beyreuther1962: 93; Anhorn Reference Anhorn, Anhorn, Bettinger and Stehr2007]. These ideas proved powerful and effective to a rising bourgeois middle class that sought to act on the experiences of poverty and deprivation in the city. As a result, a range of initiatives was taken in Copenhagen, including homes for children, nurseries, Sunday schools, Bible classes for youth, “young men’s associations,” missions for maids and “factory girls,” soldier and seamen’s missions, as well as institutions for epileptics [Olesen Reference Ohlemacher1964: 28-31].
While the schemas of love and recipes of voluntary work resonated well with the wider national church and the bourgeoisie that came to differentiate sharply between the rural HM and CHM [cf. Steen and Hoffmeyer Reference Sørensen1915: 115ff], the social Pietist merging of the doctrinal schemas of faith and love did not resonate with the revivalist schemas of laymen in the CHM and the rural HM—and this was the case in Germany and the Netherlands as well. In Copenhagen, the rural Home Mission criticized the approach for being a “mission of deeds” rather than a “mission of words,” as well as casting suspicion on the initiatives as a kind of “German” mission, which was not popular after the Second Schleswig War of 1864 between Prussia and Denmark [Holt Reference Holt1940: 51], and Stein eventually retired as chairman of the CHM board. In Germany, similar criticism from the orthodox Lutherans was raised against Wichern, who was thus accused: “by the jingle of good works to seduce the Protestant church to idolatry” [Janssen Reference Janssen and Wichern1956, 35 my translation], just as Wichern’s vision of the universal priesthood did not resonate with the “Erwerkungs-bewegung” [Janssen and Sieverts Reference Janssen, Sieverts and Wichern1962: 143]. In Holland, the translation of German Lutheran thoughts to a reformed Protestant context also proved too difficult for Heldring [Benrath, Sallmann and Gäbler Reference Benrath, Sallmann and Gäbler2000: 72f; Lieburg Reference Lichterman and Eliasoph2012: 120; 134].
At this point, however, a “louder” and more public theology than the inwards looking “quiet” and private Pietism was to enter the continent: that of the Holiness Movement.Footnote 12
Holiness Movement: Sanctification and public recipes
What can be called the “third generation” in and around the Copenhagen Home Mission was heavily influenced by holiness theology and practice. Stein’s stepping down as leader of the Copenhagen Home Mission in 1886 has been interpreted as a victory for the rural home mission [Holt Reference Holt1979: 39], but even if the capital branch now declared its allegiance to the national (rural) Home Mission, it is probably more accurate to say that it was a certain type of Protestantism that triumphed.
If we take a look at the layer beneath the leadership of CHM, the practitioners or laymen, then we see that many of these were inspired by holiness-ideas. During the battle between the rural and the urban Home Mission, Beck in 1898 asked publicly for the support of the laymen in CHM. He got the support he wanted, but more importantly for our purposes, the response from the laymen (published in the Home Mission periodical) ended with the greeting that they had a common purpose in “human souls’ conversion and sanctification” [Holt Reference Holt1979: 59ff]. The mention of “sanctification” shows that the holiness teachings were now part of the vocabulary among laymen, and we see how several of the “workers” in the Home Mission were influenced by this line of thinking. For instance Thora Esche [Esche Reference Esche1920], leader of the Magdalen Home for prostitutes, Colonel Christian von Keyper and his wife Therese, who were active in the Sunday school work, as well as city missionaries such as R.B. Clausen, initiators of the temperance organization “The Blue Cross,” the librarian H.O. Lange and the priest H.P. Mollerup. The latter also co-founded the Holiness-inspired Church Army in Denmark. Finally, the leader of the ymca in Denmark was also influenced by these teachings. These are but a few examples of the many well documented examples available [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 571-589].
The Holiness ideas first arrived in Denmark through the interdenominational and international movement, The Evangelical Alliance, which held its 8th World Conference in Copenhagen in 1884 [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 231], and quickly came to influence large portions of the revivalist circles around the Home Mission, first in the capital and then nationwide.Footnote 13
The central ideational innovation of the Holiness Movement was the revival of the doctrine of sanctification. In Lutheranism, as we have seen, the dominating doctrine was that of justification by faith alone, whereas sanctification, the process of becoming holy in this life, was of minor importance. The doctrine was first developed in a revivalist manner by Zinzendorf and his followers in the Moravian community: against the Pietist conversion struggle they defended their version of the doctrine of sanctification, of freedom from sin, and distinguished between the habitus of sinning and the act of sinning. While man cannot be free from the first, he is free from the last kind of sin, when he has experienced conversion. The ideas were developed further in reformed Protestantism by the father of Methodism, John Wesley, who translated them to the idea of “Christian perfection”: “Exactly as we are justified by faith, so are we sanctified by faith” [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 88].
In reality, the doctrine of Holiness turned the image of man—and thus of sin—upside-down. Whereas Lutherans and Calvinists had taught the total depravity of man (to a greater or lesser extent), and especially Calvinists had taught the lack of free will, the Holiness message taught that since Jesus had bled on the cross for all humanity, grace was universally available, sin had already been taken away, and man had only to embrace what had already happened—he was free to choose not to sin. There were more or less radical interpretations of this doctrine: while some used the phrase “Christian perfection” and counted the days since they left the old human being behind and stopped sinning, others talked more discretely about “liberation” from sin rather than total freedom. For the adherent to this doctrine, sin ceased to be a problem.
The ideal of the Christian community changed with the doctrinal changes: old confessional divides were expected to wither away, and a new global community of Christians was thought to arise. This ideal was linked to imaginaries of the second coming of Christ, the expectation that God’s rule on earth was imminent, comprised in concepts such as millennialism, eschatology, and Parousia expectations (of Jesus’ imminent return) [Ohlemacher Reference McLoughlin1986: 173]. This was not the wholly transcendent God of Weber’s Calvinists, but an immanent God whose presence was deeply felt and experienced. The ideal was concretized in interdenominational organizations such as The Evangelical Alliance, or in single-purpose organizations such as the YMCA, and in Copenhagen in the voluntary initiative “The Church Foundation” concerned with building new churches for congregations in that city. Wesleyan and German Holiness ideals of the congregation as an active, self-organizing community around a strict church discipline were at the center of this initiative—only it should be realized within the bounds of the national church [Bach-Nielsen and Schjørring Reference Bach-Nielsen and Holger Schjørring2012: 501-502].
That sin was no longer a necessity, that it came from “without” so to speak, that everyone could will to be free of sin, that God’s presence was felt—all these things meant that the eradication of sin was no longer the obligation of a loving and merciful congregation towards those who had “fallen,” as in social Pietism. Rather, it was a question of getting the happy message out: that everyone could be free of sin, if only they would, and using the proper religious techniques. Only, sin did naturally not disappear entirely after all, and a new problem arose: the problem of “backsliding”, of returning to old sinful ways [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 87]. As we will see, these ideas were reflected in the recipe beliefs put into practice in the social work of the movement.
The central innovation in terms of recipe beliefs or religious techniques of the movement was the application of the so-called “New Means.” The New Means consisted in mass conversion meetings, week-long camp meetings, private and public prayer meetings etc., where the number of conversions was registered and publicly announced. Since grace was freely available, one only had to declare that one was reborn, and the ordo salutis was thus not the quiet, but violent, internal battle of the Pietists, but the loud and public announcement or testament of having shed off the old sinful nature [cf. McLoughlin Reference McGrath1978: 141ff; Smith Reference Skocpol and Fiorina1976: 63-79]. The New Means also included a louder and more intense interaction between the preacher and the congregation/audience, where especially the Palmers constituted a vanguard in promoting a new form of psalms, where the audience in a seemingly spontaneous, but highly rehearsed way, loudly expressed their approval of the sermon through affirming outbursts of “Hallelujah,” “Bless the Lord!,” “Oh, Lord!” etc. [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 62f]. Whereas in early revivalist Pietism, the breaking of the fiddle had been a sign of conversion, musical instruments now became integral for the conversion process—to the point where the guitar became the ultimate sign of Holiness-adherence [Olesen Reference Olesen1996, 256]. Moreover, there was a “magical” element in the Holiness Movement. The more radical believed in the power of faith and the Holy Spirit to cure diseases, and this intuition was also present in the less radical forms, such as faith’s ability to heal social illnesses and individual sinful habits [ibid.: 221-224; 243-252].
Rather than the “Anstalt” (institution or asylum), the main recipe for dealing with moral-social issues now became what could be called the “abstinence association.” Temperance and abstinence are concepts mostly associated with the “moral crusade” against alcohol consumption, but temperance or abstinence became a widespread technique around which Christians formed associations. Abstinence was applied to combat in particular alcoholism (The Blue Cross), sexual promiscuity (The White Cross), and the depravation of youth (ymca). In the furrows left in the soil by the Holiness revivals, such groups mushroomed [Fleisch Reference Fleisch1903: 56-65]. In Germany, the Gnadauer Konferenz, an annual week-long Holiness Conference, was instrumental in causing such abstinence associations to flourish. These associations carried the “public spirit” of the movement by clearly showing adherence though a pin or a ribbon, and interestingly contained elements both of self-help and philanthropy. The abstinence associations concerned with alcohol consumption, for instance, were often set up by priests and converted laymen, who in solidarity with the drunkard signed an abstinence pledge (philanthropy), while former drunkards entered the movements and became central members (self-help).
The techniques used in the abstinence associations had a clear affinity with the holiness teachings: the pledge was a way of publicly committing oneself to no longer sin; the problem of “sliding back” into sin was of course ever present, but was handled through techniques of probation and quarantines [Granum-Jensen Reference Granum-Jensen1979]. The goal of the ordo salutis was of course still the salvation of the soul, but since the kingdom of God was here and now, the steps were steps to a life in grace in this life as well. Not only ethics, but salvation itself became inner-worldly.
Telling of the difference between the Social Pietism and the Holiness approach is the fact that Stein did not even believe in erecting asylums for drunkards in Denmark, since the shame of entering one would be too great, and the temperance pledge was too easily broken [H. Stein Reference Stein1882: 98ff]. This illustrates clearly the irreconcilability of the public and loud Holiness teachings and the private and quiet means of the social Pietists.
In Copenhagen, the Blue Cross (est. 1895) and the Church Army (est. 1912) were started by men inspired by Holiness-teachings. In their early days, these associations most clearly resemble the ideal type of the abstinence association by building on the solidary engagement of the volunteer with the “voluntee,” through the use of musical instruments, the “after-meeting”, and the idea of human perfection. The Danish ymca (est. 1878), however, was also clearly marked by the Holiness movement in terms of ideas and persons––and of course the Salvation Army (est. 1887 in Denmark), whereas this organization, unlike the others, was established as a direct “branch” of the parent organization.
Paradoxically, it was thus the Reformed cultural schema of sanctification stemming from the Holiness Movement that finally made it possible to integrate “good works” into the Lutheran revivalist sola fide tradition. This was made easier as these notions had more or less consciously entered into the rural Home Mission’s vocabulary [Olesen Reference Olesen1996: 323-341]. Eventually, as the turbulent period settled, many of the initiatives borne by the revivalist civic engagement were integrated into or supported financially by the emerging welfare state, while often continuing to be supported financially and ideologically by the Home Mission adherers [Kaspersen and Lindvall 2008; Henriksen and Bundesen 2004]. The once highly controversial question of how to conduct voluntary social work in a Lutheran context thus cooled down and became a civic habit in revivalist circles. Had it not been for the creative reinterpretations of Protestant cultural schemas of sin, works, justification, sanctification, community, and recipes for action, in light of the experience of suffering, the so-called third sector in Denmark would have emerged in a different form and maybe at an earlier or later period in time.
Conclusion
The aim of this study has been explore a specific, but influential strand of especially European civic vocabulary, that of Lutheran revivalism, through the case of the emergence of voluntary social action in Copenhagen in the period 1865-1915. Specifically, it has been shown how the Lutheran cultural schema of sin worked, both enabling and retarding, how schemas were creatively reinterpreted and merged on the basis of new experiences, and how these re-interpretations emerged concomitantly with new forms of voluntary social action. Cultural ideas thus provide part of the explanation of the who, when and how of the emergence of voluntary social work.
It was the cultural schema of sin that first prompted the revivalists of the Home Mission to engage with the life politics aspects of the social question in Copenhagen at the end of the 19th century. This language allowed for the articulation of and voluntary action upon issues of prostitution and alcoholism better than did the language of rights of the emerging social democracy or the language of liberation of the cultural liberals. It was soon clear, however, that the revivalist framework not only enabled voluntary social work, but also retarded it. The question of how to integrate good works and deeds into a Lutheran context that emphasized that the Christian could only be saved through faith, represented a problem for a revivalist movement that adhered to ideals of community that distinguished unequivocally between the saved and the damned, and consequently only allowed for moral missions that urged sinners to return to God. It thus took two reinterpretations of the Lutheran-Pietist tradition to reach a theological language that allowed for voluntary social work to be integrated into the Pietist religious framework. While the Priests of the social Pietist movement rearticulated the role of deeds and works with the Lutheran doctrine of “faith, active in love” and thus expanded the Home Mission’s purely soteriological understanding of their task, this framing seemed to resonate better with the bourgeois public than with the laymen and rural basis of the Mission, who found the ideal of the responsible community and the methods of the institution overly distanced and lacking in religious enthusiasm. Only the second reinterpretation, inspired by Holiness ideas mostly found within the Reformed tradition, succeeded in merging the sola fide doctrine with that of works through the addition of the doctrine of sanctification and the resultant re-articulation of the Christian community as consisting of sinners freed from sin, following enthusiastic, involving, and public recipes for voluntary social action, realized exemplarily in the various temperance organizations.
Through this short period of time, a development in soteriology is evident. The path to salvation, the ordo salutis, is reinterpreted so that both the nature of sin and the means to combat it is altered. For the first generation Pietists, sin is individual and combatted internally through vigilance, while externally only individual conversion to the “children of God” would mean salvation. For the second generation, sin became a state of being caused by the depraving environment of the city. It was thus necessary to take the first step of removing social suffering, before conversion or “awakening” was even a possibility. For the third generation, however, the ordo salutis was short: since sin had already been overcome two millennia ago, freedom from sin and faith, action and word, were inherently linked and immediately realizable.
Theoretically, the aim has been to contribute to the literature on civic and voluntary engagement by analyzing the role of ideas in a case of emerging voluntary collective action during a specific creative juncture in recent history. Religious revivalism represents an especially clear case of value based non-contentious collective action, and so it may be argued the concepts of doctrine, ideals of community, and recipe beliefs could provide an analytical pathway for analyzing other forms of religious or secular soteriologies, of pathways to social salvation, provided that there will always remain a non-rational element in such action.
Recent research [Steensland Reference Steen and Hoffmeyer2014] has shown how the American evangelical tradition is waking up to engage once again in social questions, but there are vast opportunities to study innovations in religious schemas that restrain or promote specific types of collective action leading to violent action, welfare initiatives, or life politics action. In a European context, it is urgent to understand how various civic vocabularies are rearticulated in order to act on other's suffering, for instance on the suffering of refugees escaping the violent conflicts in the Middle East.