In America fundamentalism is a movement within Protestantism that was organized immediately after World War I in opposition to modernism, which included liberal theology primarily, and also Darwinism and secularism. A subgroup of evangelicalism, fundamentalism staunchly affirmed with evangelicals fundamentals of the faith, including the deity of Christ, his virgin birth, his bodily resurrection, and his substitutionary atonement. What distinguishes fundamentalists from other evangelicals is their strident opposition to modernism. They are, to quote George Marsden, militant anti-modernist evangelicals
Historians have sometimes argued, and popular discourse certainly assumes, that evangelicalism and f...
When journalists or television commentators describe an individual, institution, or movement as fun...
In the 1920s a loosely-united band of militant conservatives launched a crusade to capture control o...
These days, the term “fundamentalism” is often associated with a militant form of Islam. But the ori...
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century American evangelical Protestantism, facing both the so...
Kragenbrink, Kevin R. (2000) The Modernist/Fundamentalist Controversy and the Emergence of the Inde...
Motivated by a perceived biblical imperative to win as many souls as possible, Protestant revivalist...
This thesis examines the relationship between pentecostalism and fundamentalism in the United States...
The origins of religious fundamentalism lie not in Islam, but in Christianity. Specifically, the “or...
This study presents an ethnographic record of both the micro and macro levels of American fundamenta...
This thesis examines the relationship between pentecostalism and fundamentalism in the United States...
Adventism emerged in the midst of the 19th century, right towards the end of the Second Great Awaken...
When the word fundamentalism appears in any form of written, oral, or visual media, it generally evo...
Widely used as a pejorative term to designate one's fanatical opponents - usually religious and/or p...
Preface Beginning in the last half of the nineteenth century in America the Christian Church became ...
Historians have sometimes argued, and popular discourse certainly assumes, that evangelicalism and f...
When journalists or television commentators describe an individual, institution, or movement as fun...
In the 1920s a loosely-united band of militant conservatives launched a crusade to capture control o...
These days, the term “fundamentalism” is often associated with a militant form of Islam. But the ori...
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century American evangelical Protestantism, facing both the so...
Kragenbrink, Kevin R. (2000) The Modernist/Fundamentalist Controversy and the Emergence of the Inde...
Motivated by a perceived biblical imperative to win as many souls as possible, Protestant revivalist...
This thesis examines the relationship between pentecostalism and fundamentalism in the United States...
The origins of religious fundamentalism lie not in Islam, but in Christianity. Specifically, the “or...
This study presents an ethnographic record of both the micro and macro levels of American fundamenta...
This thesis examines the relationship between pentecostalism and fundamentalism in the United States...
Adventism emerged in the midst of the 19th century, right towards the end of the Second Great Awaken...
When the word fundamentalism appears in any form of written, oral, or visual media, it generally evo...
Widely used as a pejorative term to designate one's fanatical opponents - usually religious and/or p...
Preface Beginning in the last half of the nineteenth century in America the Christian Church became ...
Historians have sometimes argued, and popular discourse certainly assumes, that evangelicalism and f...
When journalists or television commentators describe an individual, institution, or movement as fun...
In the 1920s a loosely-united band of militant conservatives launched a crusade to capture control o...