fundamentalism$30378$ - significado y definición. Qué es fundamentalism$30378$
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Qué (quién) es fundamentalism$30378$ - definición

REFORMED FUNDAMENTALISM
Reformed Fundamentalism
  • [[Christian head covering]] in the [[Restored Reformed Church]] of [[Doornspijk]], consistent with historic Reformed practice

Market fundamentalism         
STRONG BELIEF IN THE ABILITY OF UNREGULATED LAISSEZ-FAIRE OR FREE MARKET POLICIES TO SOLVE MOST ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
Market totalitarianism; Market theology; Market hegemony; Free-market fundamentalism; Free market fundamentalism
Market fundamentalism, also known as free-market fundamentalism, is a term applied to a strong belief in the ability of unregulated laissez-faire or free-market capitalist policies to solve most economic and social problems.Block,Fred.
Christian fundamentalism         
  • A Christian demonstrator preaching at [[Bele Chere]]
  • [[Jerry Falwell]], whose founding of the [[Moral Majority]] was a key step in the formation of the "New Christian Right"
  • J. Gresham Machen Memorial Hall
  • Princeton Seminary in the 1800s
BRITISH AND AMERICAN PROTESTANT MOVEMENT OPPOSED TO MODERNIST THEOLOGY
Christian fundamentalists; Fundamentalist Christians; Christian fundamentalist; Fundamentalist Christian; Fundamental Christians; Fundamental Christian; Fundamental Christianity; Fundamentalist christianity; Christian Fundamentalist; Catholic fundamentalism; Christian Fundamentalists; Fundamentalist Evangelical Christianity; Protestant fundamentalism; Christian - Fundamentalist; Fundamentalist Christianity; Christian Fundamentalism (religious movement); Christian Fundamentalism; American Christian fundamentalists; Criticism of Christian fundamentalism; American Christian fundamentalism; Christian fundamentalism in the United States; Biblical fundamentalism; History of Christian fundamentalism
Christian fundamentalism, also known as fundamental Christianity or fundamentalist Christianity, is a religious movement emphasizing biblical literalism. In its modern form, it began in the late 19th and early 20th centuries among British and American ProtestantsMarsden (1980), pp.
fundamentalism         
UNWAVERING ATTACHMENT TO A SET OF IRREDUCIBLE BELIEFS
Fundamentalist; Religious fundamentalism; Religious Fundamentalism; Fundamentalists; Hindu fundamentalism; Religious fundamentalist; Fundies; Fundamentism; Fundamental regime; Fundamentallism; Fundie; Religious extremist; Religious Fundamentalist; Religious Totalitarianism; Crazy base; Fundementalist; Atheistic fundamentalism; Religious extremists; Buddhist fundamentalism; Criticism of religious fundamentalism; Religious fundamentalists; Religiously fundamentalist; Fundamentalist religious
Fundamentalism is the belief in the original form of a religion or theory, without accepting any later ideas.
Religious fundamentalism was spreading in the region.
N-UNCOUNT
fundamentalist (fundamentalists)
He will try to satisfy both wings of the party, the fundamentalists and the realists.
...fundamentalist Christians.
N-COUNT: oft N n

Wikipedia

Reformed fundamentalism

Reformed fundamentalism (also known as fundamentalist Calvinism) arose in some conservative Presbyterian, Congregationalist, Reformed Anglican, Reformed Baptist, Non-denominational and other Reformed churches, which agrees with the motives and aims of the broader evangelical Protestant fundamentalism. The movement was historically defined by a repudiation of liberal and modernist theology, the publication (1905-1915) entitled, The Fundamentals, and had the intent to progress and revitalise evangelical Protestantism in predominantly English-speaking Protestant countries, as well as to reform separated churches according to the Bible, historic expression of faith and the principles of the Reformation. The Fundamentalist–Modernist controversy, and the Downgrade controversy, kindled the growth and development of reformed fundamentalism in the United States and the United Kingdom. Reformed fundamentalists have laid greater emphasis on historic confessions of faith, such as the Westminster Confession of Faith. Sixteenth century Reformers such as John Calvin, Martin Luther, John Knox, Theodore Beza, Philip Melanchthon and Protestant ministers such as Matthew Henry, John Gill, John Bunyan, George Whitefield, Jonathan Edwards, Charles Spurgeon, J. C. Ryle, John Burgon, F. B. Meyer, Dwight L. Moody, George Müller and G. Campbell Morgan have shaped the leaders in this reformed tradition.

Some of the recent and better-known leaders who have described themselves as both Calvinist and fundamentalist have been Carl McIntire of the American Bible Presbyterian Church, Ian Paisley of the Northern Irish Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, Thomas Todhunter Shields of Jarvis Street Baptist Church, D. James Kennedy of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, and J. Oliver Buswell of Wheaton College. Other evangelicals with connections to reformed fundamentalism would be J. Gresham Machen, O. T. Allis, Chester E. Tulga, Arthur Pink, E. J. Poole-Connor, Martyn Lloyd-Jones, J. I. Packer, and R. C. Sproul.

The Free Presbyterian dictum, "we preach Christ crucified" (1 Corinthians 1.23), is a unifying Christocentric maxim for those in the movement. Reformed fundamentalists have sought to maintain the authority and accuracy of the Bible, the doctrines of grace, purity of doctrine and the unique person of Jesus Christ. Fundamental Reformed liturgical praxis emphasizes the practices of congregational singing and head covering. It teaches the importance of family prayer in the home.