There are so many theological interpretations of Christianity today, I
don’t think it is possible to choose one that matches the original. The word
“theology” did not even exist then. There were gods (theos) and words (logia)
to discuss them. There were many gods and many ideas about how the world
worked, and these ideas were competing and changing and would continue to
change. An emperor might even declare himself a god, but people knew that other
emperors did the same thing. The idea of one true god having influenced all
generations and all to come had not taken root.
To make my case, I’ll first need to show where the origins of the term
“Fundamentalism” and how it is used today. To understand that, I’ll look at the
liberalization of Christianity that was happening before that and how it led to
the reaction by the Fundamentalists. We’ll see how that liberalization began
with Erasmus and was further promoted by Luther and Calvin and resulted in
several wars and the complete restructuring of the political boundaries in
Europe. The thread of what could be called liberal or humanist Christian has
existed throughout Christian history, but I will be following the Christianity
that was in power. That power structure began in the 4th century,
related to the often cited Council of Nicea. I will, hopefully, clear up some
of the confusion around that.
I should note that I don’t really care what version of Christianity is
right. I won’t be discussing much about the theology, except when pointing out who
believed what when. What I do care about is how everyone deals with their
differences today. Past fights over theological differences have caused
tremendous suffering and we have much more powerful means to create suffering
today than we ever have before. So we need a better to search for a resolution.
If there is anything we need to learn from the past, it is the manner
in which philosophical differences were discussed by the Greeks before the Fall
of Rome. They were developing the methods of discovering what is true then and
we have refined those methods since but they barely get taught to most people.
We have applied them to democracy, curing disease and exploring space. We can
apply them to how we educate the next generation and make a safe world for them
to live in, or we can draw lines and claim our righteousness.
Let’s get started.
Dictionary definitions of fundamentalism vary and even groups that many
consider fundamentalist don’t use the label themselves, so just what it is can
be debated. Here are all of the theological precepts I could find that are
claimed by one or another fundamentalist group:
Belief in:
- The Trinity
- The Person of Jesus Christ
- The Second Coming
- Salvation
- The inerrancy of Scripture
- Dispensationalism; The interpretation of the Bible that includes periods of changing relationships with God leading up to some sort of end times.
- Virgin Birth
- Substitutionary atonement
- Resurrection of Christ
- The creation account in Genesis
- Miracles, particularly those of Christ
- Intelligent Design
- Prophecies have been fulfilled and are being fulfilled now
- We are saved by faith, not works
- Literal Satan, hell, demons, heaven and angels
- Do not believe in evolution
The first five appear in the original pamphlets titled “The
Fundamentals” which will be discussed more in a minute. The others vary widely
and some, like dispensationalism, have many variations. Espousing just a few of
these beliefs would not make someone a fundamentalist necessarily. In fact you
will probably note that some of them seem like perfectly normal beliefs held by
Christians. That is why most definitions of fundamentalism will include not
just these “whats” by also some “how” and some applications of the theology,
such as:
- Government should have values based on religion
- Unwilling to compromise
- Presuppositional arguments for the theology
- Subordination of the wife, and women in general
- Children should be taught faith beginning early
- Radical up to and (for some) including violence
- The scope of religious life; where it should be displayed, its inclusion in public spaces, part of public school during ceremonies or prayer in the classroom
- Religion test for candidates
- Rejection of modern scholarship (theological or historical)
- Refusal to recognize scientific theories
- Value faith over evidence.
These short versions of the beliefs mask the underlying
complexity that result in long theological works going back for centuries. The
differences described in those works have resulted in 10’s of thousands of
Protestant sects. Some variations find harmony, for instance by saying that
salvation is by faith but we must show our faith through our works, or it is
meaningless. Others isolate verses and claim they are the only correct ones.
This debate begins in the Book of Acts between Peter and Paul and as far as I
can tell is not settled by the end of the New Testament.
Some of these are very difficult just to define, like the
Trinity. Biblical support for it is difficult to find. Augustine wrote an
extensive work on it in the 4th century and even he concluded in the
end that it is a mystery. This made for a bit of a dilemma when teaching the
Trinity became Roman law. If you can’t describe what it is, how do you enforce
its proper teaching? This led to more councils, more debates and more unclear
explanations, like The Chalcedonian Formula of 451. Later when Emperor Leo I
asked the Bishop of Melitene if he wanted a council in 457, he responded, “We
uphold the Nicene creed but avoid difficult questions beyond human grasp.
Clever theologians soon become heretics.” A more concise statement against free
thought would be hard to find.
Accepting miracles has always seemed important to Christians
I have known, but some are harder to explain than others. Raising from the dead
can just be a difference in what “dead” means, as we see with increasing
knowledge of medical science. Feeding multitudes could have just been a good
leader who encouraged sharing of resources. Bodily resurrection however should
be considered an extraordinary event in any time. Any mythical interpretation
of it diminishes Christ as a god. I could understand a Christian who refuses to
accept any of the other miracles in the Bible, but if you don’t accept this
one, I wonder how you define “Christian”.
This question of the definition of Christianity seems to be
what some people were worried about in the 19th century. As more
translations of the Bible became available and our ability to translate the
original scriptures improved, scholars, Christian scholars, began to pick apart
the Bible. Primarily coming out of Germany, this was known as Higher Criticism.
It questioned not only the historical accuracy of the Bible, but the very
authorship of its books.
This was too much for some Christians. They reacted with a collectionof pamphlets by 90 authors.
They were distributed for free between 1910 and 1916. They coincided with the
rising evangelical movement. This vocal minority brought their cause to
national attention with the Scopes Monkey Trail in 1925. Although they actually
won that trail, because the law clearly stated that it was illegal to teach
evolution, the fundamentalist movement suffered afterwards. The modernist
movement did not portray itself well either, coming across as somewhat of a
bully in the proceedings.
It seemed for a while that this would work itself out in
academic circles, but as the world began to change rapidly after World War II,
people like Billy Graham and Francis Schaeffer were bringing these ideas back
into the forefront. I’ll pick up there next time.
Next in the series
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