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A Questioning Faith:

A Questioning Faith:. What is Fundamentalism?. What many think. The truth. Webster’s Dictionary. “a movement or attitude stressing strict and literal adherence to a set of basic principles.”. Dictionary of Christianity in America.

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A Questioning Faith:

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  1. A Questioning Faith: What is Fundamentalism?

  2. What many think

  3. The truth

  4. Webster’s Dictionary “a movement or attitude stressing strict and literal adherence to a set of basic principles.”

  5. Dictionary of Christianity in America “A movement organized in the early twentieth century to defend orthodox Protestant Christianity against the challenges of theological liberalism, higher criticism of the Bible, evolution and other modernisms judged to be harmful to traditional faith.” Timothy Weber

  6. Fundamentalists vs. Evangelicals “Militantly anti-modernist Protestant evangelicalism.” George Marsden

  7. Definition of an Evangelical • Classic doctrines of salvation • Authority of scripture • Crisis conversion • Personal experience

  8. Definition of an Evangelical • All fundamentalist are evangelical, not all evangelicals are fundamentalists

  9. Dynamics of Fundamentalism • An embattled form of spirituality that is a response to a perceived crisis. • They are in a battle with secular forces and policies that are hostile to religion.

  10. Dynamics of Fundamentalism • This is a cosmic struggle between good and evil. • Fear annihilation, thus fortify themselves with selected doctrines and practices.

  11. To avoid contamination they withdraw from mainstream society to create a counterculture

  12. Phase 1- Forming Conservative Coalitions (1875-1900) • New Influential Forces (Modernism) 1. Higher Criticism of Scripture 2. Darwinism 3. Psychology/comparative religions 4. Jewish/Catholic immigrants

  13. Reactions • New Theology- Incorporate all new ideas Modernize traditional doctrines • Social Gospel Focus on social injustices

  14. Evangelical Reaction • Rejected both options

  15. Key Proponents Dwight L. Moody Urban Revivalism

  16. Key Proponents • Benjamin Warfield and Archibald Hodge Biblical Inerrancy

  17. Key Proponents • C.I. Scofield and John Nelson Darby Dispensationalism

  18. Phase 2- Finding a Fundamentalist Agenda (1900-1920) • 1910 General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America- Five fundamentals

  19. 5 Fundamentals • Inerrancy of Scripture • Virgin Birth • Christ’s substitutionary atonement • Bodily resurrection of Jesus • Miracles • Pre-millennialism (1919)

  20. Phase 3- Battling Modernism in the Public Arena (1920-1935) • Inside the Church • The Presbyterians “In 1923, the same year that the General Assembly reaffirmed the five essentials, Professor J. Gresham Mechen of Princeton Seminary published Christianity and Liberalism, in which he argued that because of radically different assumptions, liberalism was not Christianity at all…

  21. Auburn Affirmation Liberals countered by issuing the Auburn Affirmation, in which they made a clear distinction between the facts of religion and the theological theories developed to explain them and called for an inclusive church in which doctrinal differences could be tolerated.”

  22. Outside the Church The Scopes Trial (1925) Dayton, Tennessee John C. Scopes vs. State of Tennessee

  23. Lead Attorneys Clarence Darrow William Jennings Bryan • Tennessee and Bryan won battle • Scopes and Darrow won the war

  24. General Public Perception “As a result, fundamentalism became identified in the public mind with anti-intellectualism, combativeness, extremism and what was viewed by many as a ‘paranoid’ style.”

  25. Phase 4- Establishing New Institutions (1930-1950) • Creation of a subculture • Schools • Publishing Companies • Emphasis on sectarianism

  26. Phase 5- Rebuilding and Regrouping (1945-Present) • Rethinking after WWII • Many unhappy with 20-30’s • Call for a “New Evangelicalism”

  27. Intellectual Integrity

  28. Public Voice

  29. Parachurch Organizations

  30. Fundamentalist Reaction “Militant fundamentalists were not happy with these developments. They looked at new evangelicals as defectors and compro-misers who were willing to cut doctrinal corners and associate with people from apostate denominations.”

  31. New Agenda’s Secular humanism Decline of traditional family values

  32. New Agenda’s Feminism Legalized abortion

  33. New Agenda’s The Homosexual Agenda Elimination of prayer in public schools

  34. New Agenda’s • Evolution vs. “Creation Science”

  35. The Rise of Influence Rather than depicting themselves as the faithful remnant, their best-known representatives tagged themselves ‘the moral majority.’” George Marsden

  36. Evangelical/Fundamentalist Diversity “While the most militant fundamentalists keep moving to the right, and left-wing evangelicals are heading back toward the mainline churches from which fundamentalism arose in the first place, fundamentalists and evangelicals closer to the center appear to be experimenting with new alliances which may give the fundamentalist tradition new opportunity to affect American society in significant ways.”

  37. Final Thought: A Global Perspective “Fundamentalism is now part of the modern world. It represents a widespread disappointment, alienation, anxiety, and rage that no government can safely ignore.” Karen Armstrong

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