Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
My wife and I attended a UU class on Fundamentalism that focused on what was and where it came from and when. There was a lot of information that I won't even attempt to relay in total with any accuracy.
The interesting elements to me is that, as a religious movement, it is only about 120-130 years old and started in the northeast at Princeton University by a group of scholars and intellectuals. The term "fundamentalism" originated from a scholarly paper entitled, I believe, "The Fundamentals", that outlined five fundamental principles of Christianity. I'm struggling to remember what they were but they included:
The movement eventually found its way to the south and was more or less taken for granted. It was the woman who taught the class's opinion that the Scopes Monkey trial was a catalyzing event that changed and polarized fundamentalism into the movement that it became today but also, ironically, nearly killed it for several decades.
I don't know this is true pre-Scopes, but of the key of the characteristics of fundamentalism post-Scopes is anti-modernism. They have an idea of a perfect time in the past that they are striving to reach (whether or not such a time ever actually existed). Despite that, they are very early adopters of new technology that allows them evangelize.
It should be noted that while all fundamentalists evangelize, not all evangelicals are fundamentalists. Further, all fundamentalists are conservatives, but not all conservatives are fundamentalists. Feel free to Venn diagram that to your heart's content.
Another defining characteristic is the feeling of being on the defensive. Fundamentalist philosophy takes the position of being under attack by modern ideas/philosophy/science/etc. As such, they see themselves as being subjugated and oppressed even in communities where they are the majority. Changes to society are seen not as a natural progression but as it falling apart.
Those were the big ones that I can recall off the top of my head. If I ever have my notes with me at my computer, I'll reproduce some of the quotes and references we were given.
Here's a quote I do have with me from Bruce Lawrence's book Defenders of God: The Fundamentalist Revolt Against the Modern Age:
The interesting elements to me is that, as a religious movement, it is only about 120-130 years old and started in the northeast at Princeton University by a group of scholars and intellectuals. The term "fundamentalism" originated from a scholarly paper entitled, I believe, "The Fundamentals", that outlined five fundamental principles of Christianity. I'm struggling to remember what they were but they included:
- Truth of the virgin birth.
- Jesus Christ died for our sins and was resurrected.
- The Bible is the direct word of God.
- maybe the Trinity.
- and something else I can't recall at the moment.
The movement eventually found its way to the south and was more or less taken for granted. It was the woman who taught the class's opinion that the Scopes Monkey trial was a catalyzing event that changed and polarized fundamentalism into the movement that it became today but also, ironically, nearly killed it for several decades.
I don't know this is true pre-Scopes, but of the key of the characteristics of fundamentalism post-Scopes is anti-modernism. They have an idea of a perfect time in the past that they are striving to reach (whether or not such a time ever actually existed). Despite that, they are very early adopters of new technology that allows them evangelize.
It should be noted that while all fundamentalists evangelize, not all evangelicals are fundamentalists. Further, all fundamentalists are conservatives, but not all conservatives are fundamentalists. Feel free to Venn diagram that to your heart's content.
Another defining characteristic is the feeling of being on the defensive. Fundamentalist philosophy takes the position of being under attack by modern ideas/philosophy/science/etc. As such, they see themselves as being subjugated and oppressed even in communities where they are the majority. Changes to society are seen not as a natural progression but as it falling apart.
Those were the big ones that I can recall off the top of my head. If I ever have my notes with me at my computer, I'll reproduce some of the quotes and references we were given.
Here's a quote I do have with me from Bruce Lawrence's book Defenders of God: The Fundamentalist Revolt Against the Modern Age:
[fundamentalism is] the affirmation of religious authority as holistic and absolute, admitting of neither criticism nor reduction; it is expressed through the collective demand that specific creedal and ethical dictates derived from scripture be publicly recognized and legally enforced.