SaggyWoman
Active Member
Do you know if the church where Fred Phelps pastored is a fundy church?
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Do they fit the definition of a fundamentalist, though?
What definition is that please? I have been and still am a fundamentalist.
What fundamental of the faith require such hatred as the Westboro cult demonstrates?
The definition never has been simply someone who holds to the fundamentals. The New Evangelicals of the '50s until today hold to the fundamentals, but specifically deny that they are fundamentalists.I used to be a fundamentalist myself. I don't mean to seem hostile. I was asking out of curiosity.
There doesn't seem to be a set of definition on fundamentalism. In the past I would have said holding to the fundamentals of the faith (which I do), but apparently there's something more to it and not everyone is in exact agreement on what that is. Are churches and individuals fundamental merely because they claim to be, or is there certain criteria they have to meet, other than holding the five fundamentals, in order for this to be true?
Many who are fundamentalists and some who are not will add personal separation to the above definition. Personal separation is the doctrine that in order to avoid temptation and keep a good testimony, we should not practice various worldly things. We are separated from worldliness unto God as His servants. This does not mean that such personal separation makes us holier in any way. The true fundamentalist does not believe himself to be holier from such personal separation, since that would be legalism (something we are often accused of but rarely guilty of).I grew up in a very fundamental church. There has to be a difference between fundamentalist and holding the fundamentals, because even other churches that held the same basic fundamentals were decried as "too worldly" and certainly not fundamental. I don't mean this in a mocking way; that was how it really was at the church I grew up in.
Absolutely not, not by its history or affiliations or beliefs.Do you know if the church where Fred Phelps pastored is a fundy church?
The definition never has been simply someone who holds to the fundamentals. The New Evangelicals of the '50s until today hold to the fundamentals, but specifically deny that they are fundamentalists.
Any intelligent definition of the historical fundamentalist movement must include that: (1) they hold to the fundamentals of the faith, and (2) they are willing to aggressively defend those fundamentals and thus, (3) they believe in ecclesiastical separation--which is separating in the ministry (not from personal contact) from churches or individuals who deny one or more of the fundamentals, or are not Biblical in important ways (such as the Catholics or Charismatics).
Many who are fundamentalists and some who are not will add personal separation to the above definition. Personal separation is the doctrine that in order to avoid temptation and keep a good testimony, we should not practice various worldly things. We are separated from worldliness unto God as His servants. This does not mean that such personal separation makes us holier in any way. The true fundamentalist does not believe himself to be holier from such personal separation, since that would be legalism (something we are often accused of but rarely guilty of).
The definition never has been simply someone who holds to the fundamentals. The New Evangelicals of the '50s until today hold to the fundamentals, but specifically deny that they are fundamentalists.
Any intelligent definition of the historical fundamentalist movement must include that: (1) they hold to the fundamentals of the faith, and (2) they are willing to aggressively defend those fundamentals and thus, (3) they believe in ecclesiastical separation--which is separating in the ministry (not from personal contact) from churches or individuals who deny one or more of the fundamentals, or are not Biblical in important ways (such as the Catholics or Charismatics).
Very true! Most of us fundamentalists simply go quietly about our business working on that Great Commission, including those of us who have posted on your thread and are regulars on the BB.:jesus:Thanks. There seems to be a lot of confusion about this. But what you're saying makes sense and fits with what I recall being taught.
Personal separation seems to be most associated with fundamentalism (especially the more extreme examples) to the point that some seem to think it's part of the definition (especially nonbelievers), but then the loudest factions always seem to get noticed first by those unfamiliar with a movement.
Do you know if the church where Fred Phelps pastored is a fundy church?
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/westbor...fred-phelps-sr-on-the-edge-of-death-son-says/Last Updated Mar 16, 2014 7:53 PM EDT
The estranged son of the founder of the Westboro Baptist Church said his father is "on the edge of death."
Fred Phelps Sr. became famous for organizing picket lines of brightly-colored signs carrying hateful messages against tolerance during the funerals of military personnel and famous figures. His actions led to at least two federal and several state laws restricting protests during military funerals.
In a statement on his Facebook page, Nathan Phelps, who has been estranged from his father for 30 years, said the senior Phelps was dying in hospice care in Topeka, Kan., and that he had been excommunicated from his own church in August of 2013.
"I'm not sure how I feel about this. Terribly ironic that his devotion to his god ends this way. Destroyed by the monster he made," Nathan Phelps wrote.
Fred Phelps, (if this info is correct) has been excommunicated from his own church for almost a year now.
I assure you they are not Primitive Baptist.