Social Thought in American Fundamentalism, 1918-1933

Download or Read eBook Social Thought in American Fundamentalism, 1918-1933 PDF written by Robert E. Wenger and published by Wipf and Stock Publishers. This book was released on 2007-05-01 with total page 358 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle.
Social Thought in American Fundamentalism, 1918-1933
Author :
Publisher : Wipf and Stock Publishers
Total Pages : 358
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ISBN-10 : 9781556353970
ISBN-13 : 1556353979
Rating : 4/5 (70 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Social Thought in American Fundamentalism, 1918-1933 by : Robert E. Wenger

Book excerpt: At a time when fundamentalist evokes an image of a militant social reactionary, it is important to examine the original nature of historical American fundamentalism, from which the term originated. Rejecting as simplistic the stereotypes of fundamentalism in social, political, regional, economic, or psychological categories, this study argues that in the 1920s it was a complex social composite unified by common theological concerns. Among all the social issues confronting Americans in the rapidly changing and uncertain 1920s, fundamentalists reached a consensus only on those that had a direct connection with their biblical faith. The only theme that approximated their theological agreement was their nationalism, and only to the extent that it added urgency to their task of saving America from spiritual ruin. Even in this fundamentalists differed among themselves as to how biblical truth should affect the nation. An examination of fundamentalists' viewpoints toward the intellect, the minorities, and social reform further demonstrates that their common denominator was not a set of cultural characteristics or ideas. It was, rather, a biblically based core of Christian theology. A loose alliance by nature, fundamentalism would have had no cohesiveness at all apart from this core. While fundamentalists by no means escaped cultural influence, the fundamentals of the faith shaped their view of culture far more than culture shaped their theology. In a generation when the religious faith of many was becoming little more than the American way of life, they purported to speak to their contemporaries from an external authority--a divinely-inspired Bible.


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