Alternate History: No Christian Fundamentalism
Christian Fundamentalism was originally a Protestant movement that grew up as a reaction to Modernist Bible Interpretations. They refer to the fundamentals of Christian faith as:
It was popularized by William Jennings Bryan, a prominent Democrat. In recent decades it has grown into a political force to be reckoned with, especially in the Republican party (it's possible I'm missing something here since I write from Sweden and is limited in my access to news sources). But what if it never got popular? What would change in the 20th century if Fundamentalism never became a large movement you had to be aware of as a public figure? Note: As always, this forum is not the place to argue about the existence of God. |
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Re: Alternate History: No Christian Fundamentalism
What politicians say has changed, but what they do hasn't so much. Individuals may have pet issues, but in general, money, and status quo is the name of the game.
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One would think that a world without Christian Fundamentalism would be like a world without Ultra-Orthodox Judaism or Islamism - substantially quieter without the extremists running around and giving their faiths a bad name.
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Also, the type of fundamentalism the OP meant is not all forms of Christian extremism, only the recent American politically empowered one. |
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Yes, it's a specific brand of Protestant Christianity. Not just "we believe this Holy Book".
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I'm sure that school prayer arguments would still continue, though. It is possible that the Gay Marriage issues would be... less contentious than they are now. I suspect other fundamentalisms would take up the slack, though. |
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It's not even particularly Protestant in political usage. Opus Dei is usually lumped in the same category in political contexts. And the LDS often promotes similar political objectives and supports the same candidates, despite the fact many people who'd self label as Fundamentalists in the Protestant religious sense would deny it's even part of Christianity. |
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I've heard the biggest part of the movement is simply the use of the word Christian instead of the more accurate but divisive terms for each specific (sub)sect. It gives the illusion of a massive unified movement instead of a mish-mash of often conflicting goals and beliefs.
A sad outgrowth of our very limited two party system. |
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