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Who in the world is Gerald Smith? Never heard of him and I've been a fundamentalist all my life and studied it for years.Baptist Fundamentalism in America is a[n] [over?]reaction to the so-called "higher criticisms" of the biblical texts and the Darwinsim and Feminism that crept in giving them momentum in the late 19th/early 20th centuries.
If I had to point to the signature events in American culture that helped defined the movement, I would say the Scopes Monkey Trial, and the Christian Nationalist movement of Gerald L. K. Smith.
So you are a conservative evangelical rather than a "New Evangelical."I am an Evangelicals Christian, but do not associate with liberal churches and their theology, nor Wof, nor any who deny full biblical inspiration etc, so would uphold the Fundamentals of the Faith, but would say we can be in the culture and seek to spread the light of Christ into the worlds darkness, and can fellowship and be working with like minded saved, regardless if Baptists or not.
Yes and no. There is a dictionary definition and a definition "on the ground".How would you describe Fundamentalism?
Do you agree with Mr. Webster ? "a movement in 20th century Protestantism emphasizing the literally interpreted Bible as fundamental to Christian life and teaching"
Would you say the 5 points of fundamentalism sums it up?
In 1910, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church identified what became known as the five fundamentals:[19]
- Biblical inspiration and the infallibility of scripture as a result of this
- Virgin birth of Jesus
- Belief that Christ's death was the atonement for sin
- Bodily resurrection of Jesus
- Historical reality of the miracles of Jesus
This is a narrow view of modern fundamentalism. There are other fundamental groups: the IFCA, "God's Bible College" in Cincy, the Bible Presbyterians, John Macarthur's group (he told my uncles he was a fundamentalist), conservative SBC leaders (who sometimes would rather not use the term but in private will admit the movement), etc. There are also the BJU folks. I am currently at a meeting of fundamental Bible profs at BJU. None of us at this mtg. are KJVO.Yes and no. There is a dictionary definition and a definition "on the ground".This is
I agree that the dictionary definition is the fundamentals.
But what I have experienced from fundamental churches (Baptist churches with "fundamental" in their nsme) is different. It is not, I understand, encompassing of every fundamental church. But I have found it to be a commonly held picture of fundamental churches (IFB churches) among Christians and the secular world.
This picture of "fundamentalism" (IFB) is legalistic, making rules that exceed Scripture to keep Scripture. They are viewed as modern Pharisees, straining out gnats but swallowing camels. I do know of IFB churches that are not like this, but my experience has been that they are the minority.
"Fundamentalism" has come to mean "hatred", "legalistic". It is not fair, and there are many good IFB churches.
So, to answer again....yes and no. There is the technical definition and then what the word has come to mean within Christianity.
I found Smith online. He is from the "Christian Church," and therefore I reject him as a fundamentalist. The Church of Christ/Christian Church is a separate historical movement from fundamentalism. Furthermore, that movement believes in baptismal regeneration, definitely not a fundamentalist belief, as seen from the articles in the original series of books called "The Fundamentals" from which the movement gets its name.Who in the world is Gerald Smith? Never heard of him and I've been a fundamentalist all my life and studied it for years.
I think the fundamentals were written into the texts of scriptures and is summarized by passages such as this in Luke's gospel.How would you describe Fundamentalism?
Do you agree with Mr. Webster ? "a movement in 20th century Protestantism emphasizing the literally interpreted Bible as fundamental to Christian life and teaching"
Would you say the 5 points of fundamentalism sums it up?
In 1910, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church identified what became known as the five fundamentals:[19]
- Biblical inspiration and the infallibility of scripture as a result of this
- Virgin birth of Jesus
- Belief that Christ's death was the atonement for sin
- Bodily resurrection of Jesus
- Historical reality of the miracles of Jesus
It is narrow, and only based on my experience. And I know my experience is not the truth about all IFB churches (I attended a few here and found a couple that were godly, and that God was using in the area).This is a narrow view of modern fundamentalism. There are other fundamental groups: the IFCA, "God's Bible College" in Cincy, the Bible Presbyterians, John Macarthur's group (he told my uncles he was a fundamentalist), conservative SBC leaders (who sometimes would rather not use the term but in private will admit the movement), etc. There are also the BJU folks. I am currently at a meeting of fundamental Bible profs at BJU. None of us at this mtg. are KJVO.
I understand, I think. There are some fundamentalists like you mention, but few in my circles.It is narrow, and only based on my experience. And I know my experience is not the truth about all IFB churches (I attended a few here and found a couple that were godly, and that God was using in the area).
Given the definition (the formal one) in the OP I'd say all SBC churches are "fundamental" and even that all true churches are "fundamental". But there is the definition (perhaps what it should be) and what I have witnessed.
To be honest, when I think FBC I think Westboro Baptist Church.
And I know that is not right. That is just the image that comes to my mind when I hear the word because it has been my experience for the most part.
AND I have a limited experience with the group.
My first experience was watching members of an IFB yelling at a 7 year old girl in the neighborhood telling her she is going to Hell for wearing shorts to play outside. That colored my opinion, and was reinforced by similar instances throughout my life.
And I know that colored my opinion ununfairly.
Smith wasn't a Baptist. But he came to prominence organizing evangelical Christians in political activism to resist secularization, desegregation, and communism, and his Christian Nationalist Crusade in large part paved the way for Jerry Falwell and Moral Majority.Who in the world is Gerald Smith? Never heard of him and I've been a fundamentalist all my life and studied it for years.
I have found that IFB churches are different where I live now than my past experiences with the denomination.I understand, I think. There are some fundamentalists like you mention, but few in my circles.
As for Westboro BC, it is not nor has it ever been a true fundamental Baptist church. I know of no fundamental Baptist which would approve of them, and I know many, many fundamentalists. They are simply WACKO!
I am currently at a meeting with about 40 other fundamental seminary and college profs, and every single one of us would categorically reject Westboro.
We fundamentalists strongly object to this view of "legalism." Simply having standards of dress, etc., is not legalism, though many anti-fundamentalists like to say it is. If simply having rules or standards is legalism, then all Baptist churches with a church constitution are legalistic.I have found that IFB churches are different where I live now than my past experiences with the denomination.
Here they are legalistic about dress (at church, women should not wear pants, men should wear a jacket and tie, etc) and KJVO, but they are not unchristian about their preferences. I would jave mo problem visiting IFB churches here (and I have, quite a few times).
Standards of dress can be legalisism if it is imposing specific standards under the guise of modesty onto other people.We fundamentalists strongly object to this view of "legalism." Simply having standards of dress, etc., is not legalism, though many anti-fundamentalists like to say it is. If simply having rules or standards is legalism, then all Baptist churches with a church constitution are legalistic.
Here is a theological definition of it: “Legalism is a slavish following of the laws in the belief that one thereby earns merit; it also entails a refusal to go beyond the formal or literal requirements of the law” (Millard Erickson, Christian Theology, 3rd ed., 908).
What you are describing here is not legalism according to any theological definition, but more of a cultural definition. It is a way to accuse fundamental Baptists of legalism without any explanation. ("Those guys insist on dresses on women. What legalism!") The only way this description would be of theological legalism is if the church in question were to affirm that one could not be righteous without such standards.Standards of dress can be legalisism if it is imposing specific standards under the guise of modesty onto other people.
I wore a suit and tie (mostly because I had to wear this for work so I had a bunch of them). So I had no problem meeting the standards a church I considered joining held.
But the problem came in when I realized they expected men to wear a at least a coat and tie, and women to wear dresses. Women dressing modestly in pants was actively discouraged and excluded people from participating in the ministry.
It fits (in this church) the theological definition you provided, not towards salvation but to merit the right to participate in the ministry of the church.
Ironically, women would show up in very nice dresses wearing earrings and necklesses, the opposite of modesty.
Anyway, that wouldn't work in our church because we have homeless people often attending.
I disagree that it is not legalism. But I do get that it is not legalism in the sence of earning salvation.What you are describing here is not legalism according to any theological definition, but more of a cultural definition. It is a way to accuse fundamental Baptists of legalism without any explanation. ("Those guys insist on dresses on women. What legalism!") The only way this description would be of theological legalism is if the church in question were to affirm that one could not be righteous without such standards.