Kevin Flatt
Kevin Flatt is an associate professor of history and Director of Research at Redeemer University College in Ancaster, Ontario. His book After Evangelicalism: The Sixties and the United Church of Canada was recently published by McGill-Queen's University Press. He is currently fascinated by the history of secularization, Christianity in the modern world, and the changes in Western societies that took place during the 1960s.
Bio last updated April 30th, 2018.
Articles by Kevin Flatt
Religious War or State Bloodshed?
By Kevin Flatt
April 25, 2016
Modern secularism attributed to Europe’s infamous Wars of Religion really rests on 19th century myths that ignored the State’s provocation of bloodshed, writes historian Kevin Flatt.
In what kind of Christian society could auto-da-fé, meaning “act of In our secular age, a more common reading of the Wars of Religion runs something like this: After the Reformation, religious passions ran amok and led to great bloodshed, until finally political authorities banished religious disputes from the public realm, and established the religiously neutral, secular State as a bulwark against irrational extremism The largest of these wars included the French Wars of Religion (1562-1598), a period of civil strife primarily pitting Catholics against Huguenots; the massive Thirty Years’ War (1618- 1648), which expanded from a war between rivals within the Holy Roman Empire to draw in France, Sweden and other combatants; and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms (1639-1651) in the British Isles, which were in part provoked by the religious policies of James I and Charles I We can rightly conclude from the Wars of Religion and their antecedents that the Christian political order of the medieval and Reformation eras failed, catastrophically, to peacefully accommodate confessional diversity The image of a bloody era of religious wars ended by the rise of the peace-loving State quickly turns to nonsense when we think of the wars of Louis XIV, or the French Revolution, or the 19th century apogees of imperialism and nationalism, or the bloodbaths of the first half of the 20th century perpetrated by fascist, communist and liberal states
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Cracks in Everything
Kevin Flatt
December 1, 2014
Cracks in the secular are matched by those that could bring the Church down on our heads
Nevertheless, the long-term trends are clear, and they suggest that a society based on a denial of transcendent norms and an exaltation of individual autonomy is unsustainable; the core values of the secular order are corrosive of the relationships and institutions that make human flourishing possib...