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modernist$49783$ - перевод на греческий

CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS ISSUE
Five fundamentals; The Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy; Presbyterian Controversy; The Presbyterian Controversy; Fundamentalist-Modernist; Modernist-Fundamentalist; Modernist-Fundamentalist Controversy; The Modernist-Fundamentalist Controversy; Christianity and Liberalism; Fundamentalist controversy; Modernist controversy; Fundamentalist modernist controversy; Modernist fundamentalist controversy; Fundamentalist-modernist controversy; The fundamentalist/modernist controversy; Fundamentalist/modernist controversy; Fundamentalist modernist; Fundamentalist Modernist Controversy; Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy; Fundamentalist–Modernist Controversy; Fundamentalist-Modernist controversy; Fundamentalist–Modernist controversy
  • [[Charles Augustus Briggs]] (1841–1913), the first major proponent of [[higher criticism]] within the [[Presbyterian Church in the United States of America]] and the source of a major controversy within the church, 1880–1893
  • A fundamentalist cartoon portraying modernism as the descent from [[Christianity]] to [[atheism]], first published in 1922 and then used in ''Seven Questions in Dispute'' by [[William Jennings Bryan]].
  • A 1926 photograph of [[Harry Emerson Fosdick]] (1878–1969), whose 1922 sermon "Shall the Fundamentalists Win?" sparked the fundamentalist–modernist controversy
  • [[Henry Sloane Coffin]] (1877–1954) on the cover of ''Time'' magazine.
  • [[Henry van Dyke]] (1852–1933), a modernist who pushed for revisions to the [[Westminster Confession of Faith]], 1900–1910
  • [[J. Gresham Machen]] (1881–1937), founder of the [[Orthodox Presbyterian Church]] and the [[Westminster Theological Seminary]]
  • [[John D. Rockefeller Jr.]] (1874–1960).
  • [[Lyman Stewart]] (1840–1923), Presbyterian layman and co-founder of [[Union Oil]], who funded the publication of ''[[The Fundamentals]]: A Testimony to the Truth'' (1910–15)
  • [[Pearl S. Buck]] (1892–1973).
  • [[Princeton Theological Seminary]], headquarters of the Old School Presbyterians (1879)
  • [[Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York]], headquarters of the New School Presbyterians (1910)
  • [[William Jennings Bryan]] (1860–1925), 1907.

modernist      
n. νεωτεριστής

Определение

modernism
¦ noun modern ideas, methods, or styles.
?a movement in the arts or religion that aims to depart significantly from traditional forms or ideas.
Derivatives
modernist noun & adjective
modernistic adjective

Википедия

Fundamentalist–modernist controversy

The fundamentalist–modernist controversy is a major schism that originated in the 1920s and 1930s within the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. At issue were foundational disputes about the role of Christianity; the authority of the Bible; and the death, resurrection, and atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ. Two broad factions within Protestantism emerged: fundamentalists, who insisted upon the timeless validity of each doctrine of Christian orthodoxy; and modernists, who advocated a conscious adaptation of the Christian faith in response to the new scientific discoveries and moral pressures of the age. At first, the schism was limited to Reformed churches and centered around the Princeton Theological Seminary which had fundamentalist faculty members found Westminster Theological Seminary when Princeton went in a liberal direction. However, it soon spread, affecting nearly every Protestant denomination in the United States. Denominations that were not initially affected, such as the Lutheran churches, eventually were embroiled in the controversy, leading to a schism in the United States.

By the end of the 1930s, proponents of theological liberalism had, at the time, effectively won the debate, with the modernists in control of all mainline Protestant seminaries, publishing houses, and denominational hierarchies in the United States. More conservative Christians withdrew from the mainstream, founding their own publishing houses (such as Zondervan), universities (such as Biola University), and seminaries (such as Dallas Theological Seminary and Fuller Theological Seminary). This would remain the state of affairs until the 1970s, when conservative Protestantism emerged on a larger scale in the United States, resulting in the rise of conservatism among the Southern Baptists, Presbyterians, and others.