Schweitzer, Albert

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{{Infobox Scientist
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| name              = Albert Schweitzer
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| image            = Albert Schweitzer, Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman.jpg
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| imagesize        = 230px
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| caption          = Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman
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| birth_date        = {{birth date|df=yes|1875|01|14}}
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| birth_place      = [[Kaysersberg]], [[Alsace-Lorraine]]
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| death_date        = {{death date and age|df=yes|1965|9|4|1875|1|14}}
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| death_place      = [[Lambaréné]], [[Gabon]]
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| nationality      = Germany / France
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| field            = Medicine, music, [[philosophy]], [[theology]]
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| alma_mater        =
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| doctoral_advisor  =
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| doctoral_students =
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| known_for        =
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| prizes            = [[Goethe Prize]] (1928)<br>[[Nobel Peace Prize]] (1952) 
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}}
  
[[Image:Albert Schweitzer Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman.jpg|thumb|200px|Albert Schweitzer, Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman]]
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Dr. '''Albert Schweitzer''', M.D. (January 14, 1875 &ndash; September 4, 1965), was a [[Germany|German]] theologian, musician, [[philosopher]], and [[physician]], renowned in the twentieth century as a humanitarian and advocate of peace. Schweitzer received the 1952 [[Nobel Peace Prize]] for founding the Lambaréné Hospital in west [[Africa]] and for serving as its physician, and for his “reverence for life” philosophy.
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Schweitzer was the principal of a theological college and author of a seminal work of biblical scholarship, ''The Quest for the Historical Jesus,'' which analyzed and effectively brought to a conclusion earlier studies of the Jesus of history. Schweitzer concluded that, rather than to atone for sin, Jesus sought to usher in the Kingdom of God and the end of history through his sacrifice on the cross. Schweitzer also gained a reputation as a prominent organist and musical theorist who scholarship and performances of [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] have made a lasting contribution.
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Schweitzer studied other world religions with sympathy. He was convinced that not only is all life sacred but that true Christianity, springing from the ''Spirit of Jesus,'' had yet to be developed. Schweitzer’s missionary work concentrated on service rather than conversion. His work in Africa inspired conservative Christians, particularly those who find kingdom-building rather than soul-winning more attractive. "The only ones among you who will be really happy," Schweitzer said, "are those who will have sought and found how to serve." 
  
Dr. '''Albert Schweitzer''', M.D., OM, (January 14, 1875 &ndash; September 4, 1965) was a [[Germany|German]] theologian, musician, [[philosopher]], and [[physician]]. He was born in Kaysersberg, Alsace-Lorraine, [[Germany]] (now in Haut-Rhin, Alsace, [[France]]). He received the 1952 [[Nobel Peace Prize]] in 1953, for founding the Lambaréné Hospital in [[Gabon]], a nation of west central [[Africa]] and for his 'reverence for life' philosophy.  During the first half of the twentieth century, Schweitzer was a house-hold name and an inspirational figure.  He was less well-known in the second half of the century, when the mantle of inspirational missionary-servant of the poor passed to Mother Teresa of Calcutta.  After making a seminal contribution to Biblical scholarship, and having earned himself a considerable reputation as a musician, he felt called to become a missionary in Africa, entering medical school at the age of 31. Principal of a Theological College, abandoning such a distinguished career seemed insane to most of his friends. He had been skeptical about our ability to know very much at all about Jesus but developed an existential response to Jesus' sacrifice of himself on the Cross that elevated love of others, and meeting the needs of the needy, into a univeral ethic.  Schweitzer also studied other religions with sympathy, convinced that all life is sacred and that dogmas and narrowly defined views of salvation are wrong. He thought that, freed of the idea that had so dominated Jesus' teaching, that the End of the World was imminent, Christians could build the Kingdom of God on Earth, here and now.  Although he remained an ordained minister, and preached regularly, he thought that traditional Christianity had made a lot of mistakes, and that true Christianity, springing from the 'Spirit of Jesus' had yet to be developed.  His missionary work concentrated on service, not on trying to convert people. Yet his missionary service in Africa was actually quite traditional, and has also proved inspirational to conservative Christians, as well as to those who find the kindgom-building rather than soul-winning task more attractive.  It was his organ-playing concerts to raise funds for his mission, as well as his writing that gained him international applause.  Critics have called him reactionary in some area but those among whom he worked greatly valued and respected his service. As he put it, he wanted to work for the 'direct service of humanity'.  From a God-believing perspective, it is indeed God who raises up and uses such talented, self-less and extraordinary individuals.  Schweitzer 'lived for the sake of others'.
 
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Schweitzer's father was a reformed (Calvinist)pastor, and a great influence on his life. His interest in others dates from his childhood experiences, when he noticed that he seemed to wear smarter and better clothes than other children. His initial career choice was music. At the age of 18, he studied under several renowned masters both in Alsace and at Paris, before deciding to become a pastor like his father. He switched to theological study, attending Strasbourg University from 1893. A brilliant student, he earned doctorates in philosophy (1899) and in Theology (1890), publishing works on [[J. S Bach]] and also pastoring a reformed congregation, St. Nicholas church.  While there he blessed the wedding of Theodor Heuss, who was to become the first President of the [[Germany|Federal Republic of Germany]]. In 1901, he became Principal of the Theological Seminary at Strassbourg following the publication of his book, ''The Secret of the Messiahship and the Passion: A Sketch of the Life of Jesus''.  In 1906, he published his seminal work, ''The Quest of the Historical Jesus'', which would alone have secured him an academic reputation sufficent to ensure a very respectable career. However, a year earlier he had made up his mind to become a missionary in Africa, convinced that wealthy Europeans should share their resources with those who were less-fortunate. Believing that he could do more good as a medical doctor than as a pastor, he enrolled in medical school, spending the next six years there.  He later wrote that the parable of Dives and Lazarus had spoken  to him.  Europeans were 'Dives, Africans were 'Lazarus'; Dives had medical knowledge which he took for granted, while Lazarus 'suffers from illness and pain' but has no doctors to help him (1998: 11). Accepted by the Paris Missionary Society on the condition that he did not confuse Africans with his liberal ideas (they at first turned him down), he traveled in 1913 to the Gabon, where he built his own hospital at Lambaréné, having raised his own funds.  He had married Helene Bresslau, the one friend who had understood his desire to go Africa, in 1912.  During [[World War I]], he and his wife were prisoners of war in France, having returned to Europe due to ill health but in 1924 they returned to Lambaréné. Their daughter, Rhena Schweitzer Miller was born in  Schweitzer made trips back to Europem, to raise funds, to promote his philosophy and to receive the honorary doctorates but his heart was in Lambaréné, and he was still working there when he died at the age of 90. With the $33,000 Nobel prize money, he started the leprosarium at Lambaréné. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace (1953). He was at Lambaréné Lambaréné 29-32 visiting Europe again in 32-33 speaking and giving fund-raising organ recitals. 33-34 he was back in Africa, then during 34 and 35 he presented the prestigious Hibbert and Gifford Lectures in the United Kingdom before returning to Lambaréné for the fifth time in February 1935. 35-37 he gave a second round of Giiford Lectures in the UK and recorded records for Columbia. 37-39 was his sixth stay at the hospital.  He traveled to Europe in 1939 but immediately returned to Lambaréné to avoid a repetition of his internment during the first World War.
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[[Image:KaysersbergAS.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Albert Schweitzer's birthplace, Kaysersberg.]]
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Albert Schweitzer was born in Kaysersberg, Alsace-Lorraine, [[Germany]] (now part of Haut-Rhin, Alsace, [[France]]). He spent his childhood in the village of [[Gunsbach]], [[Alsace]], where his father was pastor of the reformed liberal [[protestant]] Alsace Free Church, (later absorbed by the German Lutheran Church in 1871).  The Gunsbach parish church was an unusual Protestant-Catholic church found particularly in Alsace, shared by the two congregations, which held their prayers at different times on Sundays. Schweitzer, the pastor's son, grew up in this exceptional environment of religious tolerance and developed the belief that true Christianity should always work toward a unity of faith and purpose.<ref>G. Seaver, ''Albert Schweitzer—The Man and his Mind'' (London: A. & C. Black, 1951), 3-9.</ref> Schweitzer was deeply influenced by his father, who in addition to a broad-minded perspective of faith taught his son how to play music.<ref>Schweitzer.org, [http://www.schweitzer.org/dutch/asstamm.htm Family tree.] Retrieved December 10, 2008.</ref>
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When Schweitzer was 10 years old, he attended the well-regarded local school in Mulhouse and lived with his elderly relatives, from whom he acquired a stern ethical code and rigorous scholarly habits. Schweitzer's initial career choice was music. At the age of 18, he studied under several renowned masters both in Alsace and [[Paris]], before deciding to become a pastor like his father. He switched to [[theology|theological]] study, attending Strasbourg University from 1893. A brilliant student, he earned doctorates in [[philosophy]] (1899) and in theology (1890). Schweitzer particularly studied the thought of [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] and [[Leo Tolstoy]], rejecting on one hand Nietzsche's doctrine of the "overman" who could transcend moral laws, while attracted to Tolstoy's doctrine of love and compassion. Schweitzer's most important interest, however, was the life of Jesus, to which he devoted years of research and reflection. 
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Schweitzer later served as pastor to a reformed congregation at St. Nicholas church, where he blessed the wedding of [[Theodor Heuss]], who became the first [[president]] of the [[Germany|Federal Republic of Germany]]. In 1901, following the publication of his book, ''The Secret of the Messiahship and the Passion: A Sketch of the Life of Jesus,'' he was appointed Principal of the Theological Seminary at Strassbourg.  In 1905, Schweitzer published a biography of [[Johann Sebastian Bach]] and in 1906, published what would prove to be his seminal work, ''The Quest of the Historical Jesus.'' The book surveyed the scholarly attempts from the seventeenth century to critically examine the life of Jesus and alone would have secured him an academic reputation sufficient to ensure a respectable career.  
  
From 1939-1948 he stayed in Lambaréné, unable to go back to a Europe in war. Three years after the end of [[World War II]], in 1948, he returned  to Europe and kept traveling back and forth (and once to the USA where he received an honorary doctorate from Chicago) as long as he could until his death in 1965. In 1954, he accepted the 1952 Nobel Prize in Oslo, Norway. After [[World War II]] he used his reputation to campaign against nuclear arms. He was deeply shocked by the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In 1957, he launched a global appeal called ''A Declaration of Conscience'' and was a co-founder of  SANE -The Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. He collaborated with such eminent peace-activists as [[Bertrand Russell]] and [[Albert Einstein]] working for a test-ban treaty.  As his fame grew, more and more celebrities flocked to see him at Lambaréné much as later genrations would flock to see Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997), winner of the 1979 Nobel Peace Prize and, fittingly, of the first Albert Schweitzer International Peace Prize in 1975. However, as Anderson (1966)  shows, he remained somewhat shy and diffident and did not much like to be photographed. 'My trouble' she complained during her filming, 'is that Schweitzer is really very camera shy, always stiffening up and posing ... I wonder if I'll ever get him on film as he really is' (75). Nor may he always have been as aware of his celebrity status as some suggest; 'I don't think he's aware of his own importance', said her financial backer, Jerome Hill (1905-1972, the distinguished artist, filmaker and composer(118). One critic, Gerald McKnight, yet remaked:
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=== Calling as a medical missionary ===
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One morning in 1905 Schweitzer, then a charismatic and successful writer, cleric, musician, and lecturer with brilliant future prospects, experienced a profound religious revelation calling him to renounce worldly success and devote himself to the betterment of humankind. At age 30, Schweitzer answered the call of The Society Of The Evangelist Missions of Paris, who were looking for a medical doctor. He later wrote that the parable of Dives [rich man] and Lazarus had spoken to him. Europeans were "Dives," Africans were "Lazarus;" Dives had medical knowledge which he took for granted, while Lazarus suffered from illness and pain but has no doctors to help him. He planned to spread the Gospel by the example of his Christian labor of healing, instead of through the evangelical process of preaching, and believed that this service should be acceptable within any branch of Christian teaching.  
  
:The first meeting is unforgettable ... Nobody can meet Schweitzer without liking him, without responding to some instinctive respect and regard for this great individual. His power to disarm remains immense (1964: 47).
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However, the committee of this ([[Roman Catholic]]) French Missionary Society was not ready to accept his offer, considering that his Lutheran theology was "incorrect".<ref>Seaver (1951), 40.</ref> He could easily have obtained a place in a German Evangelical mission, but wished to follow the original call despite the doctrinal difficulties. Amid a hail of protests from his friends, family and colleagues, he resigned his post and re-entered the University as a student in a punishing seven-year course towards the degree of a Doctorate in Medicine, a subject in which he had little knowledge or previous aptitude. In 1911 he married Helene Bresslau, a professor's daughter who had studied nursing in order to work at his side in Africa, and earned his medical degree in 1912. He traveled in 1913 to central Africa, where he built his own hospital at Lambaréné in what is now [[Gabon]], having raised his own funds.  
After her father died, Rhena Schweitzer Miller continued to run the hospital he had founded.
 
  
He made his fourteenth and final trip to his beloved Lambaréné in 1959, staying until his death. His wife, due to ill health, did not accompany him on all his sojourns at Lambaréné and they kept a house at Gunsbach, where his father had been pastor for 50 years.
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Schweitzer spent roughly 42 years of his life in Lambaréné, spending fourteen periods there (1913-1917; 1924-27; 1929-1932; 1933-34; 1935; 1937-39; 1939-49; 1949-51; 1951-52; 1952-54; 1954-55; 1955-57; 1957-59 and finally from 1959 until his death). He treated and operated on thousands of people. He took care of hundreds of [[Leprosy|lepers]] and treated many victims of the African [[sleeping sickness]]. Over the years other doctors joined him.
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Schweitzer considered his work as a medical missionary in Africa to be his response to Jesus' call to become fishers of men, but also as a small recompense for the historic guilt of European colonizers:
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[[Image:Albert-Schweitzer-Haus.jpg|thumb|right|250px|The Schweitzer house and Museum at Königsfeld in the Black Forest.]]
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<blockquote>Who can describe the injustice and cruelties that in the course of centuries they [the coloured peoples] have suffered at the hands of Europeans? … If a record could be compiled of all that has happened between the white and the coloured races, it would make a book containing numbers of pages which the reader would have to turn over unread because their contents would be too horrible.</blockquote>
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Many accounts, such as Schweitzer chronicler and filmmaker Erica Anderson's (1966), attest to Schweitzer’s amazing work ethic and untiring passion for his work. She observed that “every day, Schweitzer is the first one up, the last to bed…he is untiringly at work” (116). Anderson’s documentary film on Schweitzer won the 1958 Academy Award for best non-fiction film.
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During [[World War I]], Schweitzer and his wife returned to Europe due to ill health and were held as prisoners of war in France. In 1924 they returned to Lambaréné, where their daughter, Rhena, was born on her father's birthday in 1919. He returned to Lambaréné from 1929-32, visiting Europe again in 1932-33 for speaking engagements and fund-raising organ recitals. In 1933 and 1934, he was back in Africa, then during 1934 and 1935, he presented the prestigious Hibbert and Gifford Lectures in the United Kingdom.
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Schweitzer returned to Lambaréné in February 1935. From 1935 to 1937 he gave a second round of Gifford Lectures in the [[United Kingdom]] and recorded organ performances for Columbia Records. The years 1937-1939 saw his sixth stay at the hospital. He traveled to Europe in 1939 but immediately returned to Lambaréné to avoid a repetition of his internment during the First World War. From 1939 to 1948 he stayed in Lambaréné, unable to go back to a Europe during the war. In 1948, Schweitzer returned to Europe, and made one trip to the [[United States]], where he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the [[University of Chicago]].
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=== International recognition ===
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After [[World War II]] Schweitzer used his reputation to campaign against nuclear arms. He was deeply shocked by the 1945 atomic bombings of [[Hiroshima]] and [[Nagasaki]] and in 1957 launched a global appeal called ''A Declaration of Conscience''. Schweitzer was a co-founder of The Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. He collaborated with such eminent peace-activists as [[Bertrand Russell]] and [[Albert Einstein]] in working for a test-ban treaty. His fame continuously grew, and celebrities flocked to see him at Lambaréné much as later generations would travel to see [[Mother Teresa]] of [[Calcutta]] (1910-1997). However, Schweitzer remained somewhat shy and diffident, and did not much like to be photographed. "My trouble," complained Erica Anderson, "is that Schweitzer is really very camera shy, always stiffening up and posing…. I wonder if I'll ever get him on film as he really is."  "I don't think he's aware of his own importance," said Anderson's financial backer, Jerome Hill. Another writer on Schweitzer, Gerald McKnight, remarked, "The first meeting is unforgettable…. Nobody can meet Schweitzer without liking him, without responding to some instinctive respect and regard for this great individual. His power to disarm remains immense."
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Schweitzer continued traveling back and forth to Lambaréné as long as he could. In 1954, he accepted the 1952 [[Nobel Prize]] in Oslo, [[Norway]]. Characteristically, he used the $33,000 cash award to build a leper colony at his hospital. He made his fourteenth and final trip to his beloved Lambaréné in 1959, staying until his death in 1965. His wife, due to ill health, did not accompany him on all his sojourns at Lambaréné and they kept a house at Gunsbach, where his father had been pastor for 50 years. After her father died, Rhena Schweitzer Miller continued to run the hospital he had founded.
  
 
==Theology==
 
==Theology==
As a young theologian his first major work, by which he gained a great reputation, was ''The Quest of the Historical Jesus'' (1906), in which he interpreted the life of [[Jesus]] in the light of Jesus' own [[eschatology|eschatological]] convictions. He contined to build up his reputation as a [[New Testament]] scholar with other theological studies including his medical degree dissertation, ''The Psychiatric Study of Jesus'' (1911), and ''The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle'' (1930). In his study of Paul he examined the eschatological beliefs of Paul and through this the message of the New Testament. Schweitzer argued, following [[Johannes Weiss]] (1863-1914) that while the Jesus of the nineteenth century liberals, who had taught timeless truths and a spiritual kingdom, was attractive this could not be derived from what Jesus had really taught. What the liberals had done was to dress Jesus in their own clothes. Jesus was an apocalyptic prophet, who anticipated the End of the World and who had no interest in establisging either an earthly Kingdom of peace and justice or in a spiritual after-life. He expected the End of history as we know it. In fact, said Schweitzer, Jesus willingly went to the Cross not to expiate human sin but to usher in the kingdom.  This did not happen, and Jesus was actually wrong.  Jesus remains an exotic, apocalyptuic figue who is alien to our own age, when the End is not expecetd to happen soon.  Yet Schweitzer was, existentially, able to rescue an ethic of love and of sarifice from Jesus' willingness to die on the cross.  Yes, he retreats from us when we think we understand him yet we can still hear his voice, across the centuries, calling us to 'follow him'.  The final paragraph of Schweitzer's ''Quest'' is well worth citing here, as few academic works of theology conclude with such hauntingly beautiful and challenging words:
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[[Image:Strasbourg Tram.JPG|thumb|right|250px|Saint-Nicolas, Strasbourg]]
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In 1899 Schweitzer became a deacon at the church Saint-Nicolas of [[Strasbourg]]. In 1900, with the completion of his licentiate in theology, he was ordained as curate, and in the following year he became provisional Principal of the Theological College of Saint Thomas (from which he had just graduated), and in 1903 his appointment was made permanent. (He officiated at the wedding of [[Theodor Heuss]] (later the first [[President]] of the [[Germany|Federal Republic of Germany]]) on April 11, 1908.)
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As a young theologian he published ''The Quest of the Historical Jesus'' (1906), a landmark work by which he gained a great reputation. (The original edition was translated into English by [[William Montgomery (cryptographer)|William Montgomery]] and published in 1910. A second German edition was published in 1913, containing theologically significant revisions and expansions. This revised edition did not appear in English until 2001.) In this book, he interpreted the life of [[Jesus]] in the light of Jesus' own apparent [[eschatology|eschatological]] convictions. Schweitzer demonstrated that the 19th century historical studies of Jesus were largely reflections of the authors' own historical and social contexts. This work effectively ended for decades the so-called Quest for the Historical Jesus as a subdiscipline of New Testament studies, until the development of a "Second Quest," among whose notable exponents was [[Rudolf Bultmann]]'s student [[Ernst Käsemann]].
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Schweitzer's theology demanded the most accurate historical picture possible. He became focused on the study and cross referencing of the many Biblical verses promising the return of the Son of Man and the exact details. Schweitzer believed, following [[Johannes Weiss]] (1863-1914), that while the Jesus of the nineteenth century liberals, who had taught timeless truths and a spiritual kingdom, was attractive, this could not be derived from what Jesus had really taught. What the liberals had done was to dress Jesus in their own clothes. Jesus was an apocalyptic prophet, Schweitzer said, who anticipated the imminent End of the World and who had no interest in establishing either an earthly kingdom of peace and justice or in a spiritual after-life. He expected the end of history as we know it. In fact, said Schweitzer, Jesus willingly went to the cross not to expiate human sin but to usher in the kingdom.   
  
:He comes to us as One unknown, without a name, as of old, by the lakeside, he came to those who knew Him not. He speaks to us the same word: 'Follow thoy me ' and sets us to the tasks which He has to fulfil for out time. He commands. And to those who obey Him, whether they be wise or simple, he will reveal Himself in the toils, the conflicts, the sufferings which they shall pass through in His fellowship and, as an ineffable mystery, they shall learn in their own experience, Who He is (403).
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Schweitzer notes that Saint Paul speaks of Jesus’ promise of a prompt return, in the First Century. Paul states that it will be at a time when "… we also … are still alive." Schweitzer claims that genuine first century theology specified a first century fulfillment of Jesus' promise. Since then, however, each generation of followers anticipates that their generation will be the one to see the world destroyed, another world coming, and the saints governing a new earth.
  
==Music==
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Schweitzer realized that critical First Century theology verses had later been ignored by the faithful. He concluded that the beliefs originating in the lifetimes of those who first followed Jesus are far removed from those beliefs later made official in Nicaea, almost 300 years later, under Constantine. Schweitzer observes that the variations of Christianity that now exist in modern times contradict the urgency of what Jesus originally proclaimed.
As an exponent of Bach, Schweitzer developed a simple style of performance, which he thought to be closer to what Bach had meant it to be. He based his interpretation mainly on his reassessment of Bach's religious intentions. Through the book  Johann Sebastian Bach , the final version of which he completed in 1908, he advocated this new style, which has had great influence in the way Bach's music is now being treated. Albert Schweitzer was also a famous [[organ (music)|organ]] constructor. Recordings of Schweitzer playing the music of Bach are available on CDs.
 
  
==Philosophy==
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Schweitzer established his reputation further as a [[New Testament]] scholar with other theological studies including his medical degree dissertation, ''The Psychiatric Study of Jesus'' (1911). The same period saw his first (of several) published study of the apostle [[Paul of Tarsus|Paul]], ''Paul and his Interpreters,'' thoughts which reached maturity in ''The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle'' (1930). This examined the eschatological beliefs of Paul and through this the message of the New Testament.  
Schweitzer's worldview was based on his idea of [[reverence for life]], which he believed to be his greatest single contribution to humankind. His view was that Western civilization was in decay because of gradually abandoning its ethical foundations - those of affirmation of life.  
 
  
It was his firm conviction that the respect for life is the highest principle. In a similar kind of exaltation of life to that of [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], a recently influential philosopher of the time, Schweitzer admittedly followed the same line as that of the Russian [[Leo Tolstoy]]. Some people in his days compared his philosophy with that of [[Francis of Assisi]], a comparison he did not object to. In his book ''Philosophy of Civilisation'' (all quotes in this section from chapter 26), he wrote:  
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In Schweitzer's thought, Jesus remains an exotic, apocalyptic figure who is alien to the modern age, when the end is not expected to happen soon. Yet Schweitzer was, existentially, able to rescue an ethic of love and of sacrifice from Jesus' willingness to die on the cross. The final paragraph of Schweitzer's ''Quest'' is worth citing, as few academic works of theology conclude with such hauntingly beautiful and challenging words:
  
<blockquote>True philosophy must start from the most immediate and comprehensive fact of consciousness: 'I am life that wants to live, in the midst of life that wants to live'. </blockquote>
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<blockquote>He comes to us as One unknown, without a name, as of old, by the lakeside, he came to those who knew Him not. He speaks to us the same word: "Follow thou me" and sets us to the tasks which He has to fulfill for our time. He commands. And to those who obey Him, whether they be wise or simple, He will reveal Himself in the toils, the conflicts, the sufferings which they shall pass through in His fellowship and, as an ineffable mystery, they shall learn in their own experience, who He is (403).</blockquote>
  
Life and love in his view are based on, and follow out of the same principle: respect for every manifestation of Life, and a personal, spiritual relationship towards the universe. Ethics, according to Schweitzer, consists in the ''compulsion'' to show to the will-to-live of each and every being the same reverence as one does to one's own. In circumstances where we apparently fail to satisfy this compulsion should not lead us to defeatism, since the will-to-live renews itself again and again, as an outcome of an evolutionary necessity and a phenomenon with a spiritual dimension.  
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==Music==
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Albert Schweitzer's immense stature as a humanitarian and medical missionary has largely overshadowed his contributions as a musician and musicologist. Yet from his years at Strasbourg University and later years in Africa, Schweitzer made important contributions as a performer and theorist, particularly of the works of [[Johann Sebastian Bach]].  
  
However, as Schweitzer himself pointed out, it is neither impossible nor difficult to spend a life of not following it: the history of world philosophies and religions clearly shows many instances of denial of the principle of reverence for life. He points to the prevailing philosophy in the European middle ages, and the Indian [[Hinduism|Brahman]]ic philosophy. Nevertheless, this kind of attitude lacks in genuineness. Nonetheless, Schweitzer saw similarities between the ethic that he derived from Jesus, and that in all religions that professes the ethic of love.  Reverence for life was universally true. Speaking to students of mission at the Selly Oak Colleges, Birmingham, on world religions in 1923, he described Christianity as the 'deepest expression of the religious mind' but said that if missionaries could show people of other faiths 'what it means to be apprehended by the living, ethical God', then they would know 'something of the truth of Jesus' for themselves (1923: 92-3).
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Schweitzer was among the six musicians who founded the [[Paris Bach Society]], a choir dedicated to performing Bach's music and for which Schweitzer performed the organ part regularly until 1913. He was also appointed organist for the Bach Concerts of the Orféo Català at [[Barcelona]] and often traveled there for the purpose. He also collaborated on a new edition of Bach's [[List of compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach#Works for organ|organ works]], with detailed analysis of each work in English, French, and German. Schweitzer, who insisted that the score should show Bach's notation with no additional markings, wrote the commentaries for the Preludes and Fugues. Six volumes were published in 1912-14; three more, to contain the Chorale Preludes with Schweitzer's analyses, were to be worked on in Africa but were never completed, perhaps because for him they were inseparable from his evolving theological thought.<ref>Seaver (1951), 44.</ref>
  
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While in Paris, and finding contemporary organs unsuited to the performances of Bach's counterpoint, Schweitzer began a study of organs and the art of organ building, all the while continuing preparations for establishing a hospital in Africa. During these preparatory years, he authored his masterly study ''J. S. Bach: Le Musicien-Poète'', published in French in 1905.  There was a great demand for a German edition, but instead he rewrote it in two volumes, ''J. S. Bach,'' in German,<ref>Schweitzer, ''My Life and Thought,'' 80-81.</ref> which were published in 1908, and in an English translation by British critic and writer [[Ernest Newman]] in 1911.<ref>Joy (1953), 58-62.</ref> Schweitzer's interpretative approach greatly influenced the modern understanding of Bach's music. Schweitzer explained figures and motifs in Bach's Chorale Preludes as painter-like tonal and rhythmic imagery, illustrating themes from the words of the hymns on which they were based. They were works of devotional contemplation, he said, in which the musical design corresponded to literary ideas, conceived visually. 
  
Schweitzer advocated the concept of reverence for life widely throughout his entire life, though he first formulated the phrase in 1915. The historical [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] waned and corrupted itself, Schweitzer held, because it has not been well enough grounded in thought, but compulsively followed the ethical will-to live. Hence, he looked forward to a renewed and more profound [[Renaissance]] and Enlightenment of humanity (a view he expressed in the epilogue of his autobiography, ''Out of My Life and Thought''). Albert Schweitzer nourished hope in a humankind that is more profoundly aware of its position in the Universe. His optimism was based in belief in truth . The spirit generated by [conceiving of] truth is greater than the force of circumstances. He persistently emphasized the necessity to think, rather than merely acting on basis of passing impulses or by following the most widespread opinions.  
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Schweitzer's pamphlet "The Art of Organ Building and Organ Playing in Germany and France" (1906, republished with an appendix on the state of the organ-building industry in 1927)<ref>Joy, 127-129, 129-165.</ref> effectively launched the twentieth-century ''Orgelbewegung,'' which turned away from romantic extremes and rediscovered baroque principles—although this sweeping reform movement in organ building eventually went further than Schweitzer himself had intended. In 1909 he addressed the ''Third Congress of the International Society of Music'' at [[Vienna]] on the subject. Having circulated a questionnaire among players and organ-builders in several European countries, he produced a very considered report that provided the basis for the ''International Regulations for Organ Building.''<ref>Joy, 165-166.</ref> He envisaged instruments in which the French late-romantic full-organ sound should work integrally with the English and German romantic [[reed pipe]]s, and with the classical Alsace [[Gottfried Silbermann|Silbermann]] organ resources and baroque [[flue pipe]]s, all in registers regulated (by [[Organ stop|stops]]) to access distinct voices in [[fugue]] or [[counterpoint]] capable of combination without loss of distinctness: different voices singing together in the same music.
 +
[[Image:Eglise St Thomas - Orgue de Choeur.JPG|thumb|right|250px|The Choir Organ at St Thomas's Church, Strasbourg, designed in 1905 on principles defined by Albert Schweitzer.]]
 +
On departure for Lambaréné in 1913, he was presented with a piano with pedal attachments (to operate like an organ pedal-keyboard).<ref>Seaver (1951), 63.</ref> Built especially for the tropics, it was delivered by river in a huge dug-out canoe to Lambaréné, packed in a zinc-lined case. At first he regarded his new life as a renunciation of his art, and fell out of practise: but after some time he resolved to study and learn by heart the works of Bach, [[Felix Mendelssohn|Mendelssohn]], [[Widor]], [[César Franck]], and [[Max Reger]].<ref>Seaver (1951), 63-64.</ref> It became his custom to play during the lunch hour and on Sunday afternoons. Schweitzer's piano-organ was still in use at Lambaréné as late as 1946.<ref>Joy, 177.</ref>
  
<blockquote>Never for a moment do we lay aside our mistrust of the ideals established by society, and of the convictions which are kept by it in circulation. We always know that society is full of folly and will deceive us in the matter of humanity. [...] humanity meaning consideration for the existence and the happiness of individual human beings.</blockquote>(From the 'Philosophy of Civilization', chapter 25 at [http://www.chapman.edu/schweitzerInstitute/revRead/civilization.asp].)
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Schweitzer also continued to spend time in Europe, presenting organ recitals and accepting engagements as a lecturer and rapidly gained prominence as a musical scholar and organist.
  
Respect for life, resulting from contemplation on one's own conscious will to live, leads the individual to live in the service of other people and of every living creature. Schweitzer was much respected for putting his theory into practice in his own life. He loved animals, and many pets and wild creatures roamed the grounds of his hospital. He appears to have had a rapport with the; ‘the moment Schweitzer is out of the door, animals and birds come swarming to him in every direction - cats, dogs, chickens, goats, and duncks’ (Anderson, 1966: 40) which cannot but evoke a comparison with [[Francis of Assisi]], who also left a life of comfort for one of servicei. Critics say that his ‘ban on flushing toilets’ and on use of insecticides took his philosophy to the extremity of ridiculousness (see Allen, 1998: 239). To know life we need to know how our lives relate with other living forms in the Universe. Then, we can achieve harmony between and within the universe of beings. In 1963 he supported a US Senare Bill to limit aninimal experimentation.
+
==Philosophy==
 +
Schweitzer earned his Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Tübingen in 1899. The same year he published ''The Religious Philosophia of Kant'' and in 1923 ''The Philosophy of Civilization,'' a comprehensive historical overview of ethical thinking from Socrates (c. 470-333 B.C.E.) to Henri-Louis Bergson (1859-1941). In this work, Schweitzer argued that no thinker of the past had offered a workable system of ethics.<ref>Mark D. Isaacs, "Blessed are the Peacemakers: Albert Schweitzer as Exemplar," ''Journal of Unification Studies'' Vol. IX, 2008: 119.</ref>
  
==Stance on racial relations==
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In his autobiography, ''Out of My Life and Thought'' (1933), Schweitzer recounted a three day journey on the Ogowe River in September 1915 to visit a patient. On a slow moving barge, Schweitzer had pondered the need for “an elementary and universal concept of the ethical.” As they slowly passed a herd of hippopotamuses with their young on a sandbank, he remembered, "the phrase Reverence for Life struck me like a flash."<ref>Answers.com, [http://www.answers.com/topic/albert-schweitzer Albert Schweitzer: Biography.] Retrieved November 21, 2008 </ref>  Some three decades earlier Schweitzer had refused the promptings of his boyhood friends to shoot his slingshot at sweetly singing birds; now, “reverence for life" became the central tenet of his philosophical thought and daily practice and, he believed, was his greatest single contribution to humankind. Some compared his philosophy with that of [[Francis of Assisi]], a comparison he did not object to. In his ''Philosophy of Civilisation'' he wrote: "True philosophy must start from the most immediate and comprehensive fact of consciousness: 'I am life that wants to live, in the midst of life that wants to live.'”
Schweitzer considered his work as a medical missionary in Africa to be his response
 
to Jesus' call to become  fishers of men  but also as a small
 
recompense for the historic guilt of European colonizers: Who can describe the injustice and cruelties that in the course of centuries they [the coloured peoples] have suffered at the hands of Europeans? . . . If a record could be compiled of all that has happened between the white and the coloured races, it would make a book containing numbers of pages which the reader would have to turn over unread because their contents would be too horrible.  (1998: 127).
 
  
Schweitzer was sometimes accused of being paternalistic or colonialist in his attitude towards Africans. For instance, he thought Gabonese independence came too early, without adequate education or accommodation to local circumstances. Edgar Berman quotes Schweitzer speaking these lines in 1960:  No society can go from the primeval directly to an industrial state without losing the leavening that time and an agricultural period allow.  (1986: 139). [[Chinua Achebe]] has quoted Schweitzer as saying  The African is indeed my brother but my junior brother. <sup>[http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/wyrick/debclass/achcon.htm]</sup>, which Achebe criticized him for.  Others point out how Schweitzer was, enlightened though he was, still a creature of his time, and that he shared the attitude that Africans needed a guardianOn the other hand, he was tolerant of many African practices, such as allowing whole famiies to stay in the hospital, as well as their animals.
+
Life and love in his view are based on the same principle: respect for every manifestation of life, and a personal, spiritual relationship toward the universe. Ethics, according to Schweitzer, consists in the ''compulsion'' to show to the the same reverence for the will-to-live of each and every being as one does to one's own self. Circumstances where we apparently fail to satisfy this compulsion should not lead us to defeatism, though, since the will-to-live renews itself again and again, as an outcome of an evolutionary necessity and a phenomenon with a spiritual dimension.   
  
==Medicine==
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Schweitzer saw similarities between the reverence for life that he derived from Jesus and in all religions that profess the ethic of love. Reverence for life was universally true, he believed. Speaking to students of mission at the Selly Oak Colleges, Birmingham, on world religions in 1923, he described Christianity as the “deepest expression of the religious mind,” but said that if missionaries could show people of other faiths “…what it means to be apprehended by the living, ethical God,” then they would know “something of the truth of Jesus” for themselves (1923: 92-93).
Albert Schweitzer spent roughly 42 years of his life in Lambaréné in what is now [[Gabon]], spending fourteen periods there (1913-1917; 1924-27; 1929-1932; 1933-34; 1935; 1937-39; 1939-49; 1949-51; 1951-52; 1952-54; 1954-55; 1955-57; 1957-59 and finally from 1959 until his death). He treated and operated on literally thousands of people. He took care of hundreds of [[lepers|Leprosy]] and treated many victims of the African [[sleeping sickness]].  Over the years he was joined by other doctors in the hospital. Critics say that he was not a very good doctor yet insisted on performing operations himself, instead of allowing more skilled colleagues to do so. They also claim that he failed to move with the times, rather liking his quaint mission hospital in the jungle. Perhaps such critics merely set out to destroy the romance of the image of a man who was an all-round genius, a theologian, musician and a doctor who left a successful career in Europe to be a missionary in Africa.  However, Erica Anderson (1966) who visited Schweitzer many times in Africa and also accompanied him on a European trip, describes how the hundreds of patients, for whom he was the ''Grand Docteur'' and who flocked daily to the hospital greatly appreciated Schweitzer’s medical care, thus ‘the hospital is jammed with patients of all ages, awaiting their trunto be examined’ (37). She stresses how hard he worked; ‘every day, Schweitzer is the first one up, the last to bed.  On the construction site, in the hospital, at his desk, on the scaffolding of the new building, he is untiringly at work’ (116).  She pictures him watching on whole Dr Emeric Percy performs an operation (opposite 40).
 
  
She also describes modernization of the hospital. Anderson’s documentary on Schweitzer won the 1958 Academy Award for best non-fiction.
+
Schweitzer advocated the concept of reverence for life widely throughout his entire life. His believed that Western civilization was in decay because it was gradually abandoning its ethical foundations grounded in affirmation of life. But he looked forward to a renewed enlightenment of humanity, more profoundly aware of its position in the universe (a view he expressed in the epilogue of his autobiography, ''Out of My Life and Thought''). He persistently emphasized the necessity to think and reflect, rather than merely act on the basis of widespread opinions.  
 
 
Bennett (2001) comments that he suspects that ‘the services of a not-too-brilliant physician may be preferable to lack of any medical care’ (122).  Schweitzer, unlike other missionaries, does not appear to have regarded his mission as one of civilizing the ‘natives’, of imparting to them a superior culture.  Rather, he saw himself as serving them, and respected their culture, commenting that they were more interested than he expected them to be in ‘elemental questions about the meaning of life and the nature of good and evil’ (cited in Allen, 1998 p 141).
 
  
==Legacy==
+
<blockquote>Never for a moment do we lay aside our mistrust of the ideals established by society, and of the convictions which are kept by it in circulation. We always know that society is full of folly and will deceive us in the matter of humanity. […] humanity meaning consideration for the existence and the happiness of individual human beings. (From the ''Philosophy of Civilization,'' chapter 25.)</blockquote>
Schweitzer's 1906 ''Quest'' remains a standard text for Jesus' studies, even though recently the trend has moved towards a non-apocalyptic Jesus (see Miller, 2001). His book generated a genre of literature, that is, surveys of the search for the Jesus of History (see Allen, 1998 and Bennett, 2001 for examples). Schweitzer remains an inspirational figure for many people.  Some critics think that he exaggerated his remoteness from Europe, returing a total of 13 times.  Others point out that even if he did visit Europe fairly often, and enjoyed some comforts at his mission station, life was still not as easy there as it would have been in Europe. he did several long stretches (5 years 1913-17; 10 years 39-49 and finally six between 1959 and his death). Perhaps the value of his legacy was summed in the presentation speech in Sweden, when he was awarded the Nobel Prize: ‘Albert Schweitzer will never belong to any one nation. His whole life and all of his work are a message addressed to all men regardless of nationality or race ‘ (http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1952/press.html).  What is undeniable is that he could have lived an easier life, but chose not to. It was his desire to live for the sake of others that compelled him to study medicine at the age of 31, to go to Africa six years later and apart from some interuptions, to stay there until his death at age 90. Albert Einstein is reported to have said of Schweitzer that he:
 
  
:did not preach and did not warn and did not dream that his example would be an ideal and comfort to innumerable people. He simply acted out of inner necessity (cited at [http://www.moreorless.au.com/heroes/schweitzer.html].
+
Respect for life, resulting from contemplation on one's own conscious will to live, he believed, leads the individual to live in the service of other people and of every living creature. Schweitzer was much respected for putting his theory into practice in his own life. He loved animals, and many pets and wild creatures roamed the grounds of his hospital. Like legends of St. Francis, “the moment Schweitzer is out of the door, animals and birds come swarming to him in every direction—cats, dogs, chickens, goats, and ducks” (Anderson 1966, 40). In 1963 he supported a U.S. Senate bill to limit animal experimentation.
In the forword to the 1998 edition of Schweitzer's autobiography, Jimmy Carter wrote: 'despite a isolation that is hard to fathom in our world of easy communciations, Dr Schweitzer stayed current on the affairs of the world and provided commentary on ethics, war, nuclear weapons, and environmental degradation.  His eclectic interests benefited not only Africa but the entire world' (ix-x).
 
  
Schweitzer's life was portrayed in the 1952 movie ''Il est minuit, Docteur Schweitzer'', starring Pierre Fresnay as Albert Schweitzer and Jeanne Moreau as his nurse Marie. His cousin Anne-Marie Schweitzer Sartre was the mother of [[Jean-Paul Sartre]].
+
=== An ecumenical thinker ===
 +
To gain a deeper understanding of his essential reverence for life, Schweitzer looked to the teachings of world religions to find an ethic that would encourage an active and practical affirmation of life. He valued to teachings of ancient Stoicism, Chinese religions, and aspects of Indian religions, particularly the Jain commitment to ''ahimsa,'' an ethic of radical nonviolence and sacred respect for all life. He later also acknowledged the Buddha as an inspiration for his reverence for life. Thus, the antecedents of his great idea were worldwide.
 +
Mike W. Martin, professor of philosophy at Chapman University, wrote, “Schweitzer’s metaphysics… shares a kinship with the world views of Spinoza, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Native American religions. Perhaps its greatest value lies in bridging Christian orthodoxy and naturalistic world views.”<ref>Mark D. Isaacs, "Blessed are the Peacemakers: Albert Schweitzer as Exemplar," ''Journal of Unification Studies'' Vol. IX, 2008: 119</ref>
  
He was chevalier of the Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem, and a Member of the British Order of Merit (1955). He was awarded honorary doctorates from Zurich (1920), Edinburgh (1929), Oxford and St Andrews (1932), Chicago (1949), Marburg (1952), Kapstadt (1953), Cambridge (1955),Munster and Tubingen (1958).
+
==Legacy==
 +
[[Winston Churchill]] (1874-1965) called him, “a genius of humanity.” [[Albert Einstein]] wrote of him, “nowhere have I ever found such an ideal union of goodness and passion for beauty as in Albert Schweitzer.” He is, Einstein added, "the only Westerner who has had a moral effect on his generation comparable to Gandhi. As in the case of Gandhi, the extent of this effect is overwhelmingly due to the example he gave by his own life's work.”<ref>Ibid, 120.</ref>
  
Schweitzer died on September 4, 1965 in Lambaréné, [[Gabon]].
+
Living through the carnage of [[World War I]], the rise of totalitarianism, and the atrocities of Nazi Germany, Schweitzer answered though an example of service to others in remote Africa, practicing a "reverence for life" that awoke the conscience of the world. His recognition of the sacred value of all life, including plants and animals, anticipated later environmental movements.  Although he didn't seek recognition, he used his enormous moral stature late in life to call for nuclear disarmament and the end of war as a method of settling disputes.
  
==Selected bibliography==
+
Schweitzer's ''Quest'' remains a standard text for Jesus' studies. His book ended a epoch of historic studies of the life of Jesus, and later became the starting point for a new search for the Jesus of history.
===By Schweitzer===
 
*''The Quest Of The Historical Jesus; A Critical Study Of Its Progress From Reimarus To Wrede'', Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2001 edition (original 1906)ISBN 0800632885
 
*''The Psychiatric Study of Jesus: Exposition and Criticism'', Gloucester, Massachusetts: Peter Smith Publisher, 1948 (original 1911), ISBN 0844628948
 
*''The Mystery of the Kingdom of God: The Secret of Jesus' Messiahship and Passion'', (1914), Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985, ISBN 0879752947
 
*''The Decay and the Restoration of Civilization'' and ''Civilization and Ethics'' (1923) combined in one volume, Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1987, ISBN 0879754036
 
*''The Philosophy of Civilization'', Buffalo: Prometheus, 1987 ISBN 0879754036
 
*''The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle'', Baltimore, NJ: Johns Hopkins University Press, (original 1930) 1998 ISBN 0801860989
 
*''Out of My Life and Thought: An Autobiography'' Baltimore, NJ Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 (origanal 1933)with forward by [[Jimmy Carter]] ISBN 0801860970
 
*''Indian Thought and Its Development'', London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1936
 
*''Peace or Atomic War'' 1958
 
*''The Kingdom of God and Primitive Christianity'', NY: Seabury Press, 1966
 
*''Christianity and The Religions of the World'', NY: George H Doran & Co, 1923
 
*''On the Edge of the Primeval Forrest'', NY: Macmillan, 1956; reprinted Baltimore, NJ: John Hopkins University Press,  1998  ISBN 0801859581
 
  
===About Schweitzer===
+
He was chevalier of the Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem, and a Member of the British Order of Merit (1955). He was awarded honorary doctorates from the universities of Zurich (1920), Edinburgh (1929), Oxford and St. Andrews (1932), Chicago (1949), Marburg (1952), Kapstadt (1953), Cambridge (1955), and Munster and Tubingen (1958).
*Anderson, Erica ''Albert Schweitzer's Gift of Friendship'', London: Robert Hale, 1966
 
*McKnight, Gerald ''Verdict on Schweitzer'', London: Frederick Miller, 1964
 
*Miller, Robert J (ed) ''The Apocalyptic Jesus: A Debate'', Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2001 ISBN 0944344895
 
  
==References==
+
“Albert Schweitzer will never belong to any one nation," said Gunnar Jahn, Chairman of the Nobel Committee, in his presentation speech. "His whole life and all of his work are a message addressed to all men regardless of nationality or race…. All through his long life he has been true to his own youth and he has shown us that a man's life and his dream can become one. His work has made the concept of brotherhood a living one, and his words have reached and taken root in the minds of countless men.
*Allen, Charlotte ''The Human Christ: The Search for the Historical Jesus'', NY: The Free Press, 1998 ISBN 0745942350
 
*Bennett, Clinton ''In Search of Jesus'', NY: Continuum, 2001 ISBN 0826449166
 
*Berman, Edgar ''In Africa With Schweitzer'', Far Hills, NJ: New Horizon Press, 1986 ISBN 0882820257
 
*Miller, Robert J (ed) ''The Apocalyptic Jesus: A Debate'', Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2001 ISBN 0944344895
 
*Weiss, Johannes ''Jesus' Proclamation of the Kingdom of God'', Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971 (1st published in German, 1892).
 
  
 
==Timeline==
 
==Timeline==
Line 112: Line 137:
 
* 1957 - 1958 - Four speeches against nuclear armament and tests
 
* 1957 - 1958 - Four speeches against nuclear armament and tests
  
 +
==Selected bibliography==
 +
*''The Quest of the Historical Jesus: A Critical Study of its Progress from Reimarus to Wrede''. Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2001 edition (original 1906). ISBN 0800632885
 +
*''The Psychiatric Study of Jesus: Exposition and Criticism''. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith Publishers, 1948 (original 1911). ISBN 0844628948
 +
*''The Mystery of the Kingdom of God: The Secret of Jesus' Messiahship and Passion''. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985 (original 1914). ISBN 0879752947
 +
*''The Decay and the Restoration of Civilization'' and ''Civilization and Ethics'' combined in one volume. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1987 (original 1923). ISBN 0879754036
 +
*''The Philosophy of Civilization''. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1987. ISBN 0879754036
 +
*''Christianity and The Religions of the World''. New York: George H. Doran & Co, 1923.
 +
*''The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle''. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 (original 1930). ISBN 0801860989
 +
*''Out of My Life and Thought: An Autobiography'' (Foreword by [[Jimmy Carter]]). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 (original 1933). ISBN 0801860970
 +
*''On the Edge of the Primeval Forrest''. New York: Macmillan, 1956. Reprinted 1998: Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press (referenced in above article as 1998b).
 +
ISBN 0801859581
 +
*''Indian Thought and Its Development''. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1936.
 +
*''Peace or Atomic War'' (1958)
 +
*''The Kingdom of God and Primitive Christianity''. New York: Seabury Press, 1966.
  
==external links==
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==Notes==
*[http://www.schweitzer.org/english/aseind.htm] offical homepage of the International Albert Schweitzer Society
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<references/>
*[http://myhero.com/myhero/heroprint.asp?hero=albertSchweitzer] from the 'my-hero' project.
+
 
*[http://people.bu.edu/wwildman/WeirdWildWeb/courses/mwt/dictionary/mwt_themes_710_schweitzer.htm] useful material on Schweitzer from the Boston Collaborative Encyclopedia of Western Theology
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==References==
* ''Albert Schweitzer: a Biography'' by [[James Brabazon]] - the definitive biography
+
*Allen, Charlotte. ''The Human Christ: The Search for the Historical Jesus'', NY: The Free Press, 1998. ISBN 0745942350.
*[http://www.albertschweitzer.info/ Albert Schweitzer] - information on Albert Schweitzer's life and thought
+
*Anderson, Erica. ''Albert Schweitzer's Gift of Friendship''. London: Robert Hale, 1966.
*[http://www.albertschweitzer.org.uk/ Friends of Albert Schweitzer (UK)] - a charity promoting Reverence for Life
+
*Bennett, Clinton. ''In Search of Jesus''. New York: Continuum, 2001. ISBN 0826449166.
 +
*Berman, Edgar. ''In Africa With Schweitzer''. Far Hills, NJ: New Horizon Press, 1986. ISBN 0882820257.
 +
*McKnight, Gerald. ''Verdict on Schweitzer''. London: Frederick Miller, 1964.
 +
*Miller, Robert J (ed.). ''The Apocalyptic Jesus: A Debate''. Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2001. ISBN 0944344895.  
 +
*Weiss, Johannes. ''Jesus' Proclamation of the Kingdom of God''. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1971 (first published in German, 1892).
 +
 
 +
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved June 17, 2023.
 +
 
 +
*[http://people.bu.edu/wwildman/bce/schweitzer.htm Useful material on Schweitzer] from the Boston Collaborative Encyclopedia of Western Theology
 +
*[http://reverenceforlife.org.uk/ Reverence for Life] - a charity promoting Schweitzer's ethical philosophy of Reverence for Life
 
*[http://home.pcisys.net/~jnf/ The Albert Schweitzer Page]
 
*[http://home.pcisys.net/~jnf/ The Albert Schweitzer Page]
 
*[http://www.schweitzerfellowship.org/ Albert Schweitzer Fellowship]
 
*[http://www.schweitzerfellowship.org/ Albert Schweitzer Fellowship]
*[http://www1.chapman.edu/schweitzer/reverence_readings.html Readings on Reverence for Life]
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*[http://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1952/press.html Schweitzer Nobel Presentation Speech by Gunnar Jahn]
*[http://medlem.spray.se/atarme/albert.html Biography information on the 1952 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate]
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*[http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1952/schweitzer-bio.html Page at the Nobel e-Museum]
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{{Template:Nobel Peace Prize Laureates 1951-1975}}
*[http://nobelprize.org/peace/laureates/1952/press.html#not_10 Schweitzer Nobel Presentation Speech by Gunnar Jahn]
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*[http://albert-schweitzer.com/ Schweitzerforlaget (Norwegian text only)]
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[[Category:Biography]]
*[http://www.quinnipiac.edu/x3312.xml] the Albert Schweitzer Institute of Quinnipiac University, Hamden, CT, which aims to: To make us all reverent before life, to teach us to live and work respectfully together, to help each of us to find our own Lambarene— to ensure the sustainability of life and its future generations on our planet.
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[[Category:Nobel Peace Prize Winners]]
[[Category:History and biography]]
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{{credits|Albert_Schweitzer|51191783|Albert_Schweitzer|253629124}}
{{credit|51191783}}
 

Latest revision as of 05:02, 17 June 2023


Albert Schweitzer

Albert Schweitzer, Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman.jpg
Etching by Arthur William Heintzelman
Born

14 January 1875(1875-01-14)
Kaysersberg, Alsace-Lorraine

Died 4 September 1965 (aged 90)

Lambaréné, Gabon

Nationality Germany / France
Field Medicine, music, philosophy, theology
Notable prizes Goethe Prize (1928)
Nobel Peace Prize (1952)

Dr. Albert Schweitzer, M.D. (January 14, 1875 – September 4, 1965), was a German theologian, musician, philosopher, and physician, renowned in the twentieth century as a humanitarian and advocate of peace. Schweitzer received the 1952 Nobel Peace Prize for founding the Lambaréné Hospital in west Africa and for serving as its physician, and for his “reverence for life” philosophy.

Schweitzer was the principal of a theological college and author of a seminal work of biblical scholarship, The Quest for the Historical Jesus, which analyzed and effectively brought to a conclusion earlier studies of the Jesus of history. Schweitzer concluded that, rather than to atone for sin, Jesus sought to usher in the Kingdom of God and the end of history through his sacrifice on the cross. Schweitzer also gained a reputation as a prominent organist and musical theorist who scholarship and performances of Johann Sebastian Bach have made a lasting contribution.

Schweitzer studied other world religions with sympathy. He was convinced that not only is all life sacred but that true Christianity, springing from the Spirit of Jesus, had yet to be developed. Schweitzer’s missionary work concentrated on service rather than conversion. His work in Africa inspired conservative Christians, particularly those who find kingdom-building rather than soul-winning more attractive. "The only ones among you who will be really happy," Schweitzer said, "are those who will have sought and found how to serve."

Biography

Albert Schweitzer's birthplace, Kaysersberg.

Albert Schweitzer was born in Kaysersberg, Alsace-Lorraine, Germany (now part of Haut-Rhin, Alsace, France). He spent his childhood in the village of Gunsbach, Alsace, where his father was pastor of the reformed liberal protestant Alsace Free Church, (later absorbed by the German Lutheran Church in 1871). The Gunsbach parish church was an unusual Protestant-Catholic church found particularly in Alsace, shared by the two congregations, which held their prayers at different times on Sundays. Schweitzer, the pastor's son, grew up in this exceptional environment of religious tolerance and developed the belief that true Christianity should always work toward a unity of faith and purpose.[1] Schweitzer was deeply influenced by his father, who in addition to a broad-minded perspective of faith taught his son how to play music.[2]

When Schweitzer was 10 years old, he attended the well-regarded local school in Mulhouse and lived with his elderly relatives, from whom he acquired a stern ethical code and rigorous scholarly habits. Schweitzer's initial career choice was music. At the age of 18, he studied under several renowned masters both in Alsace and Paris, before deciding to become a pastor like his father. He switched to theological study, attending Strasbourg University from 1893. A brilliant student, he earned doctorates in philosophy (1899) and in theology (1890). Schweitzer particularly studied the thought of Friedrich Nietzsche and Leo Tolstoy, rejecting on one hand Nietzsche's doctrine of the "overman" who could transcend moral laws, while attracted to Tolstoy's doctrine of love and compassion. Schweitzer's most important interest, however, was the life of Jesus, to which he devoted years of research and reflection.

Schweitzer later served as pastor to a reformed congregation at St. Nicholas church, where he blessed the wedding of Theodor Heuss, who became the first president of the Federal Republic of Germany. In 1901, following the publication of his book, The Secret of the Messiahship and the Passion: A Sketch of the Life of Jesus, he was appointed Principal of the Theological Seminary at Strassbourg. In 1905, Schweitzer published a biography of Johann Sebastian Bach and in 1906, published what would prove to be his seminal work, The Quest of the Historical Jesus. The book surveyed the scholarly attempts from the seventeenth century to critically examine the life of Jesus and alone would have secured him an academic reputation sufficient to ensure a respectable career.

Calling as a medical missionary

One morning in 1905 Schweitzer, then a charismatic and successful writer, cleric, musician, and lecturer with brilliant future prospects, experienced a profound religious revelation calling him to renounce worldly success and devote himself to the betterment of humankind. At age 30, Schweitzer answered the call of The Society Of The Evangelist Missions of Paris, who were looking for a medical doctor. He later wrote that the parable of Dives [rich man] and Lazarus had spoken to him. Europeans were "Dives," Africans were "Lazarus;" Dives had medical knowledge which he took for granted, while Lazarus suffered from illness and pain but has no doctors to help him. He planned to spread the Gospel by the example of his Christian labor of healing, instead of through the evangelical process of preaching, and believed that this service should be acceptable within any branch of Christian teaching.

However, the committee of this (Roman Catholic) French Missionary Society was not ready to accept his offer, considering that his Lutheran theology was "incorrect".[3] He could easily have obtained a place in a German Evangelical mission, but wished to follow the original call despite the doctrinal difficulties. Amid a hail of protests from his friends, family and colleagues, he resigned his post and re-entered the University as a student in a punishing seven-year course towards the degree of a Doctorate in Medicine, a subject in which he had little knowledge or previous aptitude. In 1911 he married Helene Bresslau, a professor's daughter who had studied nursing in order to work at his side in Africa, and earned his medical degree in 1912. He traveled in 1913 to central Africa, where he built his own hospital at Lambaréné in what is now Gabon, having raised his own funds.

Schweitzer spent roughly 42 years of his life in Lambaréné, spending fourteen periods there (1913-1917; 1924-27; 1929-1932; 1933-34; 1935; 1937-39; 1939-49; 1949-51; 1951-52; 1952-54; 1954-55; 1955-57; 1957-59 and finally from 1959 until his death). He treated and operated on thousands of people. He took care of hundreds of lepers and treated many victims of the African sleeping sickness. Over the years other doctors joined him.

Schweitzer considered his work as a medical missionary in Africa to be his response to Jesus' call to become fishers of men, but also as a small recompense for the historic guilt of European colonizers:

The Schweitzer house and Museum at Königsfeld in the Black Forest.

Who can describe the injustice and cruelties that in the course of centuries they [the coloured peoples] have suffered at the hands of Europeans? … If a record could be compiled of all that has happened between the white and the coloured races, it would make a book containing numbers of pages which the reader would have to turn over unread because their contents would be too horrible.

Many accounts, such as Schweitzer chronicler and filmmaker Erica Anderson's (1966), attest to Schweitzer’s amazing work ethic and untiring passion for his work. She observed that “every day, Schweitzer is the first one up, the last to bed…he is untiringly at work” (116). Anderson’s documentary film on Schweitzer won the 1958 Academy Award for best non-fiction film.

During World War I, Schweitzer and his wife returned to Europe due to ill health and were held as prisoners of war in France. In 1924 they returned to Lambaréné, where their daughter, Rhena, was born on her father's birthday in 1919. He returned to Lambaréné from 1929-32, visiting Europe again in 1932-33 for speaking engagements and fund-raising organ recitals. In 1933 and 1934, he was back in Africa, then during 1934 and 1935, he presented the prestigious Hibbert and Gifford Lectures in the United Kingdom.

Schweitzer returned to Lambaréné in February 1935. From 1935 to 1937 he gave a second round of Gifford Lectures in the United Kingdom and recorded organ performances for Columbia Records. The years 1937-1939 saw his sixth stay at the hospital. He traveled to Europe in 1939 but immediately returned to Lambaréné to avoid a repetition of his internment during the First World War. From 1939 to 1948 he stayed in Lambaréné, unable to go back to a Europe during the war. In 1948, Schweitzer returned to Europe, and made one trip to the United States, where he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Chicago.

International recognition

After World War II Schweitzer used his reputation to campaign against nuclear arms. He was deeply shocked by the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and in 1957 launched a global appeal called A Declaration of Conscience. Schweitzer was a co-founder of The Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy. He collaborated with such eminent peace-activists as Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein in working for a test-ban treaty. His fame continuously grew, and celebrities flocked to see him at Lambaréné much as later generations would travel to see Mother Teresa of Calcutta (1910-1997). However, Schweitzer remained somewhat shy and diffident, and did not much like to be photographed. "My trouble," complained Erica Anderson, "is that Schweitzer is really very camera shy, always stiffening up and posing…. I wonder if I'll ever get him on film as he really is." "I don't think he's aware of his own importance," said Anderson's financial backer, Jerome Hill. Another writer on Schweitzer, Gerald McKnight, remarked, "The first meeting is unforgettable…. Nobody can meet Schweitzer without liking him, without responding to some instinctive respect and regard for this great individual. His power to disarm remains immense."

Schweitzer continued traveling back and forth to Lambaréné as long as he could. In 1954, he accepted the 1952 Nobel Prize in Oslo, Norway. Characteristically, he used the $33,000 cash award to build a leper colony at his hospital. He made his fourteenth and final trip to his beloved Lambaréné in 1959, staying until his death in 1965. His wife, due to ill health, did not accompany him on all his sojourns at Lambaréné and they kept a house at Gunsbach, where his father had been pastor for 50 years. After her father died, Rhena Schweitzer Miller continued to run the hospital he had founded.

Theology

Saint-Nicolas, Strasbourg

In 1899 Schweitzer became a deacon at the church Saint-Nicolas of Strasbourg. In 1900, with the completion of his licentiate in theology, he was ordained as curate, and in the following year he became provisional Principal of the Theological College of Saint Thomas (from which he had just graduated), and in 1903 his appointment was made permanent. (He officiated at the wedding of Theodor Heuss (later the first President of the Federal Republic of Germany) on April 11, 1908.)

As a young theologian he published The Quest of the Historical Jesus (1906), a landmark work by which he gained a great reputation. (The original edition was translated into English by William Montgomery and published in 1910. A second German edition was published in 1913, containing theologically significant revisions and expansions. This revised edition did not appear in English until 2001.) In this book, he interpreted the life of Jesus in the light of Jesus' own apparent eschatological convictions. Schweitzer demonstrated that the 19th century historical studies of Jesus were largely reflections of the authors' own historical and social contexts. This work effectively ended for decades the so-called Quest for the Historical Jesus as a subdiscipline of New Testament studies, until the development of a "Second Quest," among whose notable exponents was Rudolf Bultmann's student Ernst Käsemann.

Schweitzer's theology demanded the most accurate historical picture possible. He became focused on the study and cross referencing of the many Biblical verses promising the return of the Son of Man and the exact details. Schweitzer believed, following Johannes Weiss (1863-1914), that while the Jesus of the nineteenth century liberals, who had taught timeless truths and a spiritual kingdom, was attractive, this could not be derived from what Jesus had really taught. What the liberals had done was to dress Jesus in their own clothes. Jesus was an apocalyptic prophet, Schweitzer said, who anticipated the imminent End of the World and who had no interest in establishing either an earthly kingdom of peace and justice or in a spiritual after-life. He expected the end of history as we know it. In fact, said Schweitzer, Jesus willingly went to the cross not to expiate human sin but to usher in the kingdom.

Schweitzer notes that Saint Paul speaks of Jesus’ promise of a prompt return, in the First Century. Paul states that it will be at a time when "… we also … are still alive." Schweitzer claims that genuine first century theology specified a first century fulfillment of Jesus' promise. Since then, however, each generation of followers anticipates that their generation will be the one to see the world destroyed, another world coming, and the saints governing a new earth.

Schweitzer realized that critical First Century theology verses had later been ignored by the faithful. He concluded that the beliefs originating in the lifetimes of those who first followed Jesus are far removed from those beliefs later made official in Nicaea, almost 300 years later, under Constantine. Schweitzer observes that the variations of Christianity that now exist in modern times contradict the urgency of what Jesus originally proclaimed.

Schweitzer established his reputation further as a New Testament scholar with other theological studies including his medical degree dissertation, The Psychiatric Study of Jesus (1911). The same period saw his first (of several) published study of the apostle Paul, Paul and his Interpreters, thoughts which reached maturity in The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle (1930). This examined the eschatological beliefs of Paul and through this the message of the New Testament.

In Schweitzer's thought, Jesus remains an exotic, apocalyptic figure who is alien to the modern age, when the end is not expected to happen soon. Yet Schweitzer was, existentially, able to rescue an ethic of love and of sacrifice from Jesus' willingness to die on the cross. The final paragraph of Schweitzer's Quest is worth citing, as few academic works of theology conclude with such hauntingly beautiful and challenging words:

He comes to us as One unknown, without a name, as of old, by the lakeside, he came to those who knew Him not. He speaks to us the same word: "Follow thou me" and sets us to the tasks which He has to fulfill for our time. He commands. And to those who obey Him, whether they be wise or simple, He will reveal Himself in the toils, the conflicts, the sufferings which they shall pass through in His fellowship and, as an ineffable mystery, they shall learn in their own experience, who He is (403).

Music

Albert Schweitzer's immense stature as a humanitarian and medical missionary has largely overshadowed his contributions as a musician and musicologist. Yet from his years at Strasbourg University and later years in Africa, Schweitzer made important contributions as a performer and theorist, particularly of the works of Johann Sebastian Bach.

Schweitzer was among the six musicians who founded the Paris Bach Society, a choir dedicated to performing Bach's music and for which Schweitzer performed the organ part regularly until 1913. He was also appointed organist for the Bach Concerts of the Orféo Català at Barcelona and often traveled there for the purpose. He also collaborated on a new edition of Bach's organ works, with detailed analysis of each work in English, French, and German. Schweitzer, who insisted that the score should show Bach's notation with no additional markings, wrote the commentaries for the Preludes and Fugues. Six volumes were published in 1912-14; three more, to contain the Chorale Preludes with Schweitzer's analyses, were to be worked on in Africa but were never completed, perhaps because for him they were inseparable from his evolving theological thought.[4]

While in Paris, and finding contemporary organs unsuited to the performances of Bach's counterpoint, Schweitzer began a study of organs and the art of organ building, all the while continuing preparations for establishing a hospital in Africa. During these preparatory years, he authored his masterly study J. S. Bach: Le Musicien-Poète, published in French in 1905. There was a great demand for a German edition, but instead he rewrote it in two volumes, J. S. Bach, in German,[5] which were published in 1908, and in an English translation by British critic and writer Ernest Newman in 1911.[6] Schweitzer's interpretative approach greatly influenced the modern understanding of Bach's music. Schweitzer explained figures and motifs in Bach's Chorale Preludes as painter-like tonal and rhythmic imagery, illustrating themes from the words of the hymns on which they were based. They were works of devotional contemplation, he said, in which the musical design corresponded to literary ideas, conceived visually.

Schweitzer's pamphlet "The Art of Organ Building and Organ Playing in Germany and France" (1906, republished with an appendix on the state of the organ-building industry in 1927)[7] effectively launched the twentieth-century Orgelbewegung, which turned away from romantic extremes and rediscovered baroque principles—although this sweeping reform movement in organ building eventually went further than Schweitzer himself had intended. In 1909 he addressed the Third Congress of the International Society of Music at Vienna on the subject. Having circulated a questionnaire among players and organ-builders in several European countries, he produced a very considered report that provided the basis for the International Regulations for Organ Building.[8] He envisaged instruments in which the French late-romantic full-organ sound should work integrally with the English and German romantic reed pipes, and with the classical Alsace Silbermann organ resources and baroque flue pipes, all in registers regulated (by stops) to access distinct voices in fugue or counterpoint capable of combination without loss of distinctness: different voices singing together in the same music.

The Choir Organ at St Thomas's Church, Strasbourg, designed in 1905 on principles defined by Albert Schweitzer.

On departure for Lambaréné in 1913, he was presented with a piano with pedal attachments (to operate like an organ pedal-keyboard).[9] Built especially for the tropics, it was delivered by river in a huge dug-out canoe to Lambaréné, packed in a zinc-lined case. At first he regarded his new life as a renunciation of his art, and fell out of practise: but after some time he resolved to study and learn by heart the works of Bach, Mendelssohn, Widor, César Franck, and Max Reger.[10] It became his custom to play during the lunch hour and on Sunday afternoons. Schweitzer's piano-organ was still in use at Lambaréné as late as 1946.[11]

Schweitzer also continued to spend time in Europe, presenting organ recitals and accepting engagements as a lecturer and rapidly gained prominence as a musical scholar and organist.

Philosophy

Schweitzer earned his Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Tübingen in 1899. The same year he published The Religious Philosophia of Kant and in 1923 The Philosophy of Civilization, a comprehensive historical overview of ethical thinking from Socrates (c. 470-333 B.C.E.) to Henri-Louis Bergson (1859-1941). In this work, Schweitzer argued that no thinker of the past had offered a workable system of ethics.[12]

In his autobiography, Out of My Life and Thought (1933), Schweitzer recounted a three day journey on the Ogowe River in September 1915 to visit a patient. On a slow moving barge, Schweitzer had pondered the need for “an elementary and universal concept of the ethical.” As they slowly passed a herd of hippopotamuses with their young on a sandbank, he remembered, "the phrase Reverence for Life struck me like a flash."[13] Some three decades earlier Schweitzer had refused the promptings of his boyhood friends to shoot his slingshot at sweetly singing birds; now, “reverence for life" became the central tenet of his philosophical thought and daily practice and, he believed, was his greatest single contribution to humankind. Some compared his philosophy with that of Francis of Assisi, a comparison he did not object to. In his Philosophy of Civilisation he wrote: "True philosophy must start from the most immediate and comprehensive fact of consciousness: 'I am life that wants to live, in the midst of life that wants to live.'”

Life and love in his view are based on the same principle: respect for every manifestation of life, and a personal, spiritual relationship toward the universe. Ethics, according to Schweitzer, consists in the compulsion to show to the the same reverence for the will-to-live of each and every being as one does to one's own self. Circumstances where we apparently fail to satisfy this compulsion should not lead us to defeatism, though, since the will-to-live renews itself again and again, as an outcome of an evolutionary necessity and a phenomenon with a spiritual dimension.

Schweitzer saw similarities between the reverence for life that he derived from Jesus and in all religions that profess the ethic of love. Reverence for life was universally true, he believed. Speaking to students of mission at the Selly Oak Colleges, Birmingham, on world religions in 1923, he described Christianity as the “deepest expression of the religious mind,” but said that if missionaries could show people of other faiths “…what it means to be apprehended by the living, ethical God,” then they would know “something of the truth of Jesus” for themselves (1923: 92-93).

Schweitzer advocated the concept of reverence for life widely throughout his entire life. His believed that Western civilization was in decay because it was gradually abandoning its ethical foundations grounded in affirmation of life. But he looked forward to a renewed enlightenment of humanity, more profoundly aware of its position in the universe (a view he expressed in the epilogue of his autobiography, Out of My Life and Thought). He persistently emphasized the necessity to think and reflect, rather than merely act on the basis of widespread opinions.

Never for a moment do we lay aside our mistrust of the ideals established by society, and of the convictions which are kept by it in circulation. We always know that society is full of folly and will deceive us in the matter of humanity. […] humanity meaning consideration for the existence and the happiness of individual human beings. (From the Philosophy of Civilization, chapter 25.)

Respect for life, resulting from contemplation on one's own conscious will to live, he believed, leads the individual to live in the service of other people and of every living creature. Schweitzer was much respected for putting his theory into practice in his own life. He loved animals, and many pets and wild creatures roamed the grounds of his hospital. Like legends of St. Francis, “the moment Schweitzer is out of the door, animals and birds come swarming to him in every direction—cats, dogs, chickens, goats, and ducks” (Anderson 1966, 40). In 1963 he supported a U.S. Senate bill to limit animal experimentation.

An ecumenical thinker

To gain a deeper understanding of his essential reverence for life, Schweitzer looked to the teachings of world religions to find an ethic that would encourage an active and practical affirmation of life. He valued to teachings of ancient Stoicism, Chinese religions, and aspects of Indian religions, particularly the Jain commitment to ahimsa, an ethic of radical nonviolence and sacred respect for all life. He later also acknowledged the Buddha as an inspiration for his reverence for life. Thus, the antecedents of his great idea were worldwide. Mike W. Martin, professor of philosophy at Chapman University, wrote, “Schweitzer’s metaphysics… shares a kinship with the world views of Spinoza, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Native American religions. Perhaps its greatest value lies in bridging Christian orthodoxy and naturalistic world views.”[14]

Legacy

Winston Churchill (1874-1965) called him, “a genius of humanity.” Albert Einstein wrote of him, “nowhere have I ever found such an ideal union of goodness and passion for beauty as in Albert Schweitzer.” He is, Einstein added, "the only Westerner who has had a moral effect on his generation comparable to Gandhi. As in the case of Gandhi, the extent of this effect is overwhelmingly due to the example he gave by his own life's work.”[15]

Living through the carnage of World War I, the rise of totalitarianism, and the atrocities of Nazi Germany, Schweitzer answered though an example of service to others in remote Africa, practicing a "reverence for life" that awoke the conscience of the world. His recognition of the sacred value of all life, including plants and animals, anticipated later environmental movements. Although he didn't seek recognition, he used his enormous moral stature late in life to call for nuclear disarmament and the end of war as a method of settling disputes.

Schweitzer's Quest remains a standard text for Jesus' studies. His book ended a epoch of historic studies of the life of Jesus, and later became the starting point for a new search for the Jesus of history.

He was chevalier of the Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus of Jerusalem, and a Member of the British Order of Merit (1955). He was awarded honorary doctorates from the universities of Zurich (1920), Edinburgh (1929), Oxford and St. Andrews (1932), Chicago (1949), Marburg (1952), Kapstadt (1953), Cambridge (1955), and Munster and Tubingen (1958).

“Albert Schweitzer will never belong to any one nation," said Gunnar Jahn, Chairman of the Nobel Committee, in his presentation speech. "His whole life and all of his work are a message addressed to all men regardless of nationality or race…. All through his long life he has been true to his own youth and he has shown us that a man's life and his dream can become one. His work has made the concept of brotherhood a living one, and his words have reached and taken root in the minds of countless men.”

Timeline

  • 1893 - Studied Philosophy and Theology at the Universities of Strassburg, Berlin and Paris
  • 1900 - Pastor of the Church of St. Nicolas in Strassburg
  • 1901 - Principal of the Theological Seminary in Strassburg
  • 1905-1913 Studied medicine and surgery
  • 1912 - Married Helene Bresslau
  • 1913 - Physician in Lambaréné, Africa
  • 1915 - Developed his ethic Reverence for life
  • 1917 - Interned in France
  • 1918 - Medical assistant and assistant-pastor in Strassburg
  • 1919 - First major speech about Reverence for life at the University of Uppsala, Sweden
  • 1919 - Birth of daughter, Rhena
  • 1924 - Return to Lambaréné as physician; frequent visits to Europe for speaking engagements
  • 1939-1948 Lambaréné
  • 1949 - Visit to the USA
  • 1948-1965 - Lambaréné and Europe.
  • 1953 - Nobel Peace Prize for the year 1952
  • 1957 - 1958 - Four speeches against nuclear armament and tests

Selected bibliography

  • The Quest of the Historical Jesus: A Critical Study of its Progress from Reimarus to Wrede. Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg Fortress Publishers, 2001 edition (original 1906). ISBN 0800632885
  • The Psychiatric Study of Jesus: Exposition and Criticism. Gloucester, MA: Peter Smith Publishers, 1948 (original 1911). ISBN 0844628948
  • The Mystery of the Kingdom of God: The Secret of Jesus' Messiahship and Passion. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1985 (original 1914). ISBN 0879752947
  • The Decay and the Restoration of Civilization and Civilization and Ethics combined in one volume. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1987 (original 1923). ISBN 0879754036
  • The Philosophy of Civilization. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1987. ISBN 0879754036
  • Christianity and The Religions of the World. New York: George H. Doran & Co, 1923.
  • The Mysticism of Paul the Apostle. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 (original 1930). ISBN 0801860989
  • Out of My Life and Thought: An Autobiography (Foreword by Jimmy Carter). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998 (original 1933). ISBN 0801860970
  • On the Edge of the Primeval Forrest. New York: Macmillan, 1956. Reprinted 1998: Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press (referenced in above article as 1998b).

ISBN 0801859581

  • Indian Thought and Its Development. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1936.
  • Peace or Atomic War (1958)
  • The Kingdom of God and Primitive Christianity. New York: Seabury Press, 1966.

Notes

  1. G. Seaver, Albert Schweitzer—The Man and his Mind (London: A. & C. Black, 1951), 3-9.
  2. Schweitzer.org, Family tree. Retrieved December 10, 2008.
  3. Seaver (1951), 40.
  4. Seaver (1951), 44.
  5. Schweitzer, My Life and Thought, 80-81.
  6. Joy (1953), 58-62.
  7. Joy, 127-129, 129-165.
  8. Joy, 165-166.
  9. Seaver (1951), 63.
  10. Seaver (1951), 63-64.
  11. Joy, 177.
  12. Mark D. Isaacs, "Blessed are the Peacemakers: Albert Schweitzer as Exemplar," Journal of Unification Studies Vol. IX, 2008: 119.
  13. Answers.com, Albert Schweitzer: Biography. Retrieved November 21, 2008
  14. Mark D. Isaacs, "Blessed are the Peacemakers: Albert Schweitzer as Exemplar," Journal of Unification Studies Vol. IX, 2008: 119
  15. Ibid, 120.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Allen, Charlotte. The Human Christ: The Search for the Historical Jesus, NY: The Free Press, 1998. ISBN 0745942350.
  • Anderson, Erica. Albert Schweitzer's Gift of Friendship. London: Robert Hale, 1966.
  • Bennett, Clinton. In Search of Jesus. New York: Continuum, 2001. ISBN 0826449166.
  • Berman, Edgar. In Africa With Schweitzer. Far Hills, NJ: New Horizon Press, 1986. ISBN 0882820257.
  • McKnight, Gerald. Verdict on Schweitzer. London: Frederick Miller, 1964.
  • Miller, Robert J (ed.). The Apocalyptic Jesus: A Debate. Santa Rosa, CA: Polebridge Press, 2001. ISBN 0944344895.
  • Weiss, Johannes. Jesus' Proclamation of the Kingdom of God. Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1971 (first published in German, 1892).

External links

All links retrieved June 17, 2023.


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