freeatlast
New Member
One of the best weapons in the Neo-Orthodox armory is to redefine historical terms to fit their new (hence "Neo") definitions. That is what many people are doing today. They are trying to redefine the word "Fundamentalist" to fit their own pre-conceived biases.
A Fundamentalist is one who believes the following:
1. The Deity of Christ.
2. The Virgin Birth.
3. The Blood Atonement.
4. The Bodily Resurrection.
5. The inerrancy of the scriptures.
Historic Fundamentalism is divided into three main areas:
1. Militant Fundamentalism believes that the Fundamentalist must not only believe the above, but must also publicly expose those who do not.
2. Moderate Fundamentalism believes that the Fundamentalist must believe all the above but is not required to publicly expose those who do not.
3. Modified Fundamentalism believes all of the above but is open to the reinterpretation of some or all of the historic doctrines of the Christian faith including, but not limited to, the antiquity of man, the universality of the flood, God's method of creation, etc. While reaffirming the theological view of fundamentalism, the Modified Fundamentalist repudiated Fundamentalism's ecclesiology and its social theory as well as rejecting its separatism.
The error of many on this type of forum is to try to limit Fundamentalism to either just the first one, or just the first two, without recognizing the third one as being Fundamental.
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Thank you for that information. It leads me to ask this. By the way I am serious with this question. If that is what defines a fundamentalist then can a fundamentalist also be liberal in his/her doctrine and walk? The reason I ask is because none of those definitions or explanations of the differences covers ones attitude toward holiness.