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AP World History 1.2 Industrialization and Global Integration, c. 1750 to c. 1900
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Modern World History 2.1 Judaism and Democracy 117 Views


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Transcript

00:04

Democracy is pretty cool. It's all about representative government, [A man wearing a suit in a political meeting]

00:08

toga parties, and fun carnival games like the hat-into-the-ring toss. So where did

00:13

democracy come from? Well, as cool as the founding fathers were, they didn't

00:17

exactly pull the ideas behind the Constitution out of a hat. In fact, the [Founding father pulls the constitution out of a hat]

00:21

notion that good people can form a good government has its roots in Judaism and

00:26

in Christianity. That's right: when Jesus rose on the third day, he brought

00:30

democracy back with him. He also brought t-shirts that said, "I rose from the dead [Jesus appears with a t-shirt]

00:34

and all I got was this lousy t-shirt... and democracy." Well, according to the New

00:38

Testament, Jesus frequently preached that all people are equal and that leaders [Man holding a Please Help sign and another man appears from a car]

00:42

should take care of their followers, while followers should take care of each

00:46

other regardless of social class. Pretty obvious idea, right? Well, back in the day

00:51

that was crazy talk. Like saying my selfies are all saved in the cloud... it [A girl taking a selfie by a Greek building]

00:55

just didn't make sense. In the centuries after Jesus popped down for a visit, left,

00:59

came back, and then left again, Christianity clawed its way to the top

01:03

of the heap to become the religion of the Western world. The influence of some

01:08

Christian beliefs of this time can be found in current democratic political [An open book and a dollar bill appears]

01:11

theory, and you don't even have to look too hard. Like, in Christianity, all souls

01:16

are equal, right? And if every human being has value, every human being is entitled

01:20

to the rights of life and liberty. Hm, where have heard that one before? And [A boy at the front of class discussing Christianity]

01:24

because Christianity values the spiritual over the physical, the opinions of

01:29

earthly rulers got trumped by scripture back in the day. Eventually, this led [A king hit in the face by the bible]

01:34

people to think that one guy shouldn't get to keep all the lovely political

01:37

power for himself and that there should be a clear separation between church and [A king and priest on opposite sides]

01:41

state... and that was the day fences were invented... Kidding. Anyway, the Christian

01:46

Church of olden times was seen as a check on government power, which led to

01:49

the idea of a system of checks and balances in government. We knew our

01:53

checkbooks would come in handy someday. So, by the time the 16th century rolled [A girl at her desk with a stash of checks]

01:57

around, the Catholic Church had a monopoly on Christianity. The Catholic

02:00

Church also had some problems. Enter reformers like John Calvin. His

02:05

influential book, Institutes of the Christian Religion, first published in [John Calvin reading the Institutes of the Christian Religion book]

02:10

1536, asked his readers to determine if they agreed with

02:13

the tenants of Catholicism and, if not, to take a sledgehammer to conformity. Calvin [A sledgehammer smashing a TV]

02:18

believed that people should be free to choose between and petition ruling

02:22

bodies when those bodies do something naughty... and give them coal for Christmas. [A priest carrying coal up his sleeve]

02:27

Well, Calvin also used his book to outline the relationship between church

02:30

and state and the duties governments have toward their citizens and vice

02:33

versa. Hey, duties... sorry. Anyway, besides all of that, Institute's of the Christian [Restroom cubicles and toilet flushes]

02:39

Religion was also frequently used during the 16th century as a cure for insomnia...

02:43

Get it? Because it was so boring it put people to sleep? All right, moving on. The theology Calvin [A woman falling asleep reading about Christian religion]

02:48

developed, aptly called calvinism, went on to play a central role in the

02:52

formulation of American democracy. Church and state are super duper separate, right?

02:57

Yeah, check. Free enterprise and capitalism go hand-in-hand with

03:00

democracy, right? Yep, check. Representative and limited government? Yep, check. Oh,

03:04

sorry, we're not asking for the check, we're just teaching here. All right, guess [Waiter appears with a check and walks away]

03:08

that's what happens when you try to educate in Applebee's. Hey, are those onion rings?

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