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Topic: Fundamentalist


  
 Fundamentalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fundamentalists claim both that they practice their religion as the first adherents did and that this is how religion should be practiced.
Fundamentalists justify this belief on the idea that the founders of the world's religions said and did things that were not written down; in other words, their original disciples knew things that we don't.
Fundamentalists direct their critiques toward and draw most of their converts from the larger community of their religion, by attempting to convince them that they are not experiencing the authentic version of their professed religion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamentalism

  
 Fundamentalist Christianity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fundamentalists also criticize evangelicals for a lack of concern for doctrinal purity and for a lack of discernment in ecumenical endeavors in working co-operatively with other Christians of differing doctrinal views.
Nevertheless, traditionally, fundamentalists have been very outspoken against communism, the United Nations and the ecumenical movement (particularly the National Council of Churches and World Council of Churches), all of which have been called by some, "Satanically-inspired" notions of false unity.
Drawing on their belief in an inerrant Bible and dispensational-literal hermeneutic, many fundamentalists adhere to young earth creationism and universal flood geology and ardently oppose alternate approaches such as old earth creationism and non-theistic evolution, commonly known as Darwinism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamentalist_Christianity

  
 How to Fight the Religious Right: A guide to defending yourself against Fundamentalist Christians
Fundamentalist Muslims have made many non-Muslims fear that religion, and yet the Muslim faith, at its core, remains a peace-loving faith.
Fundamentalist Jews have made many non-Jews fear that religion, and yet the Jewish faith, at its core, remains a peace-loving faith.
And Fundamentalist Christians have made many non-Christians fear that religion, and yet the Christian faith, at its core, remains a peace-loving faith.
http://www.elroy.net/ehr/fighttheright.html

  
 The term Fundamentalism in Christianity and Islam
Fundamentalist Christians typically believe that the Bible is inspired by God and is inerrant.
The Assemblies of God is one Fundamentalist denomination.
Instead, the fundamentalist wings of major world religions, including Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, Sikhism, have grown and become increasingly dedicated to preserving religious tradition.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/reac_ter9.htm

  
 Why Fundamentalism is Wrong
Fundamentalist apologists lack scholarly rigor, because in their rush to ensure that they are covering all the obvious problems with the doctrines they preach, they often commit unacceptable errors in logic.
Fundamentalist religions regard their missions with great seriousness.
The first link is to a fundamentalist Christian site that discusses the fundamentalists' claim to the inerrancy of the bible, followed by a site that discusses dozens of the hundreds of inconsistencies and inaccuracies in the bible, along with many of its more significant moral contradictions.
http://www.bidstrup.com/religion.htm

  
 What Southern Baptists and other Fundamentalist groups teach about salvation
Fundamentalists generally believe that the authors of the Bible were inspired by God, and thus that the Bible is inerrant ("without any mixture of error").
A major tenet of Protestant Fundamentalist belief is that if a person hears the Gospel, acknowledges their sinful nature, is genuinely repentant, believes in the divinity of Christ, and trusts him as Lord and Savior, then they will be "saved".
With a membership of about 16 million, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is the largest Fundamentalist denomination in the U.S. Among all the Christian denominations in the U.S., it is second in size only to the Roman Catholic church.
http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_savs.htm

  
 The First Presbyterian Church in the City of New York
Fundamentalist control of the Presbyterian Church was being diminished by altering the theological decision-making by the Presbyteries.
Opposed to them were doctrinal fundamentalists, who argued for an exclusivist church composed only of those who agreed with the five fundamental points.
Traditionalists, later known as Fundamentalists, adopted a five-point declaration at the 1910 General Assembly that all candidates for ordination had to affirm.
http://www.fpcnyc.org/fundamentalism.html

  
 Handbook of Texas Online: FUNDAMENTALISM
Fundamentalists constitute one part of the larger group of Protestants called evangelicals, who believe that they are bound by God to win converts to their faith, usually both from the ranks of nonbelievers and from those of adherents to other forms of religious belief, including other branches of Christianity.
Their reemergence in the major denominations from which fundamentalists had separated in earlier years reflected in the last third of the century a national trend back to the kinds of intrachurch conflict aimed at ridding denominations of suspected liberal influence that had characterized fundamentalism in its beginnings.
Unable to win control of mainstream religious organizations or achieve their most fervently longed-for changes in society through legal means, they followed for the middle third of the century a strategy of separating themselves from people who disagreed with them on the fundamentals of the faith.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/FF/itf1.html

  
 (Christian) Fundamentalism
With some differences among themselves, fundamentalists insist on belief in the inerrancy of the Bible, the virgin birth and divinity of Jesus Christ, the vicarious and atoning character of his death, his bodily resurrection, and his second coming as the irreducible minimum of authentic Christianity.
The term "fundamentalist" was carried into the 1950s by the ACCC as well as by a vast number of southern churches and independent churches not included in either body.
Through the 1920s the fundamentalists waged the battle in the large northern church denominations as nothing less than a struggle for true Christianity against a new non Christian religion that had crept into the churches themselves.
http://www.mb-soft.com/believe/text/fundamen.htm

  
 Growing up Fundamentalist
Fundamentalist churches define these worldly practices and expect members not to participate in them.
However, reading them carefully reveals a mix of people who clearly never had any kind of Christian salvation experience during their time in a fundamentalist church to others who were likely truly saved but were turned off by the people and practices of their church.
As I've thus spent my "spiritual youth" in fundamentalist churches, and as I'm raising my children in one, this book caught my attention.
http://www.craigr.com/books/growingup.htm

  
 Religious Movements Homepage: Fundamentalism
The Bible is the sacred text of the Christian Fundamentalists.
Further, Fundamentalists see themselves as the guardians of the truth, usually to the exclusion of others' interpretation of the Bible.
Indeed, if there is one single thing which binds Fundamentalists together, it is their insistence that the Bible is to be understood as literally true.
http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/nrms/fund.html

  
 MORMON FUNDAMENTALISM
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is not exempt from the "fundamentalist" phenomenon.
Regardless, "Mormon Fundamentalists" are not members of this Church.
There are Catholic fundamentalists, Jewish fundamentalists, Islamic fundamentalists, etc. They partake of their own specific interpretations of dogma and often attempt to force the mainstream church to comply with their specific notions.
http://www.mormonfundamentalism.com

  
 Chronology
Fundamentalists in Texas held their convention at the same time as the BGCT annual convention which was peaceful and without controversy (only about 50 votes in favor of the new Baptist Faith and Message out of the thousands that attended).
Fundamentalists attempted to refuse seating for messengers from the church where President Clinton had his church membership.
SBC Messengers commissioned a panel to reexamine the Baptist Faith and Message Statement with a view toward revising it to reflect unambiguous fundamentalist language.
http://www.mchorse.com/sbcchronology.htm

  
 Fundamentalism
Fundamentalists enjoyed some success in their effort to purge those who did not profess faith in the five fundamentals, but they were unable to seize control of any of the major denominations.
The Second was that of the fundamentalists who rejected science, and embraced the world view of the Scriptures, insisting the old ways must be preserved unimpaired.
The third view was that of Henry Ward Beecher and other Christocentric liberals who argued on behalf of the existence of two revelations from God--one in Scripture and one in the natural world--and argued these revelations are compatible with one another on some deeper level.
http://www.wfu.edu/~matthetl/perspectives/twentyone.html

  
 Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) : Apologetics research resources
Since the fundamentalist offshoots of the Mormon church (along with their respective sects) adhere to the fundamental ('foundational') teachings on which Mormonism was founded, the offshoots are in turn also considered to be - theologically - cults of Christianity.
The Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (FLDS) is America's largest polygamous group.
Aside from the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, other sects of Mormonism include the Apostolic United Brethren, the Kingston Family ("The Order," also known as the Kingston Clan), and the Centennial Park group.
http://www.apologeticsindex.org/f/f39.html

  
 UU World: The Fundamentalist Agenda, by Davidson Loehr
This means that when fundamentalists say they are obeying the word of God, they have severely understated the authority for their position.
Austin has the largest Hindu temple in North America, and Hindus are quite clear that Brahman is in no sense a being, and that all his personified images—as Krishna, Vishnu, Shiva, or the Divine Mother Durga and her manifestations—are all imaginative creations, not beings.
And what they discovered was that the agenda of all fundamentalist movements in the world is virtually identical, regardless of religion or culture.
http://www.uuworld.org/2004/01/feature2.html

  
 The Old Fashioned Fundamentalist
A fundamentalist believes all of Gods Word and seeks to be obedient to that Word regardless of the cost.
Thus, when a real fundamentalist comes along hearing a "thus saith the Lord" message with no trimmings or, trappings, with no additions, deletions or abbreviations, his message and approach are ridiculed and maligned.
If you are a fundamentalist in need of a good spiritual tonic and backbone strengthening, read the book Jeremiah.
http://www.biblebelievers.net/Fundmentalism/kjcoldfa.htm

  
 THE ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALIST VIEW OF LIFE AS A PERENNIAL BATTLE
Fundamentalist civil disobedience is rooted in situations where mere men command what God explicitly forbids in revealed scripture.
Fundamentalists state that the Prophet Muhammad as well as the early Caliphs and Imams were radical revolutionaries who had initiated a new system that destroyed the corrupt status quo, and that contemporary Muslims must emulate that system.
The large mainline fundamentalist movements such as the Muslim Brotherhood, although using the jahili concept in their discourse, follow the tradition of not pronouncing takfir on any Muslim, accepting claims of belonging to the faith at face value, while leaving the judgment of intentions to God.
http://meria.idc.ac.il/journal/2001/issue4/jv5n4a2.htm

  
 Fundamentalist Resurgence - Causes and Prospects
This new fundamentalist resurgence and Islamic revivalism has attained unprecedented proportions in the recent period.
In Iran now most factions of the Islamic sects are using anti-imperialistic rhetoric to whip-up support and fundamentalist terror amongst wider sections of the population in most Islamic countries.
All recent history has shown that, the secular and liberal forces in spite of their hatred and abhorrence of fundamentalism have failed to curb the rising tide of religious fanaticism.
http://www.marxist.com/Asia/fundamentalism.html

  
 Fundamentalist Islam at Large
Fundamentalists did not admit the sharing of this power, anymore than they admitted the sharing of religious truth, and although fundamentalists differed on the means of taking power, they were unanimous on what should be done with it.
It took a different kind of fundamentalist leader to play this role—Muslims who knew the West’s strengths and weaknesses first-hand, who had themselves come through the searing fire of its skepticism with their belief intact.
This latest repackaging not only has brought new adherents to fundamentalist movements, but has persuaded a surprising number of the West’s most hopeful observers of the Middle East that “Islam is the solution.” They now argue that beneath a monolithic façade, Islamism has grown diverse, and carries the seed of the long-awaited reform of Islam.
http://www.ict.org.il/articles/fundamentalist_islam.htm

  
 Mommie Dearest - The pope beatifies Mother Teresa, a fanatic, a fundamentalist, and a fraud. By Christopher Hitchens
She was a fanatic, a fundamentalist, and a fraud, and a church that officially protects those who violate the innocent has given us another clear sign of where it truly stands on moral and ethical questions.
Her position was ultra-reactionary and fundamentalist even in orthodox Catholic terms.
Mommie Dearest - The pope beatifies Mother Teresa, a fanatic, a fundamentalist, and a fraud.
http://slate.msn.com/id/2090083

  
 What is a Non-Fundamentalist Christian?
A few of my friends, especially those who live in areas where the choice of places of worship is limited, have told me they never joined a church because they have found that their free-thinking ideas are not welcome.
As the first fundamentalists sought to require conformity to the Fundamentals, many today do not fully accept the legitimacy of a theology that allows for human error in the Scripture.
Adherents to this five-point litmus test of theological purity became known as fundamentalists.
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/non_fundamentalist_christianity/52921

  
 "Born Again Fundamentalist Christianity and The Bible - Hope or Hoax ???"
When a born again fundamentalist Christian speaks of salvation or matters regarding his spiritual beliefs, he usually backs up his statements by quoting the bible to prove his authority.
He quotes biblical verses taken from various areas of the bible in a certain sequence.
Once other Christians become aware that the person has become "saved" or "born again", they encourage him to attend fundamentalist churches.
http://www.angelfire.com/pa/greywlf/why.html

  
 A Psychological Analysis of Fundamentalism: Essay by Anitra Freeman
For those who grew up fundamentalist, the church was the central activity of family life, all else was subsidiary to the church, and social interaction with "non-believers" was discouraged, except when evangelizing.
A spiritual epiphany, with a new faith that one's relationship with God is not conditional on "perfect" faith or behavior, that it can grow and change.
(There are people who believe this way who are not fundamentalists: at least, not religious fundamentalists.)
http://anitraweb.org/activism/fundamentalism/psychology.html

  
 Religious cults and sects : Apologetics research resources
Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
For this reason, many conservative theologians who might be regarded as heirs of the original fundamentalists disown the label today.
In news reports and secular articles, the term ''fundamentalist'' often is applied to any group or individual that fits the second definition shown above.
http://www.apologeticsindex.org/f00.html

  
 What is a fundamentalist Christian?
From the Christian perspective, fundamentalist has traditionally referred to any follower of Christ who believes that the Bible is the inspired Word of God and who believes in its literal interpretation and fundamental teachings.
Generally, they classify a Christian as a radical fundamentalist if they merely believe in the literal interpretation of the Bible, if they hold views against sexual permissiveness, homosexuality, abortion on demand, or any views which are politically incorrect.
The fundamental Christian believes in the experience of the "new birth" which occurs when faith is placed in Christ as Savior and Lord.
http://www.victorious.org/chur21.htm

  
 Spokesmen for the Despised: Fundamentalist Leaders of the Middle East, Edited by R. Scott Appleby, excerpt
Each of these groups of religious fundamentalists provokes outrage on the part of their coreligionists who prefer moderation in the pursuit of societal and political reform, or who do not share the exclusivist religious vision of the fundamentalists.
Yet fundamentalist leaders want their followers—who include university-educated doctors, lawyers, and engineers—to believe that the political message they preach is also grounded in unchanging and absolute authority and that the leader holds this authority from God.
This tension between the absolutism of religious devotion and the calculation and compromise of politics, means that the fundamentalist leader will move uneasily back and forth between his dual identities, attempting to negotiate their competing universes of discourse and moral responsibilities.
http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/021254.html

  
 May God Damn You To Hell if You Call Us Either Fanatics or Fundamentalists!
Because of this confusion, like other members of the Southern Baptist Convention, Landover Baptist Church will discontinue using the word "fundamentalist" since it is a word associated with religious fanatics who believe they are the only ones who have God's blessing or act according to His wishes.
We are very concerned with our image after the word 'fundamentalist' has, through the diligent efforts of religious fanatics at home and abroad, come to signify mindless adherence by zealots to superstitious nonsense.
But, you see, whereas American conservative religious fundamentalists may kill folks for God, them rag-wearing Muslims do it in a "fanatic" kind of way.
http://www.landoverbaptist.org/news1001/fundamentalists.html

  
 Jeffrey Dahmer: Born Again Fundamentalist Christian
Jeffrey Dahmer is the son of a Born Again Fundamentalist (Church of Christ) father.
He has become a Born Again Fundamentalist, baptized by a minister of the Church of Christ.
The following 3 articles chronicle the story of Jeffrey Dahmer's pilgrimage of faith: from Born Again Fundamentalist home to Born Again Fundamentalist prison cell, from Church of Christ to Church of Christ.
http://www.holysmoke.org/hs00/dahmer.htm

  
 RealMagick Article: The Fundamentalist's Problem by Crystal Kernan
You see, the fundamentalist typically argues from one frame of reference only: his sacred text, or his sacred teacher, whatever the case may be.
One of the most frustrating things for a person who does not subscribe to a fundamentalist way of thinking is that having an open and expansive conversation about spirituality and God with a fundamentalist personality is virtually impossible, if possible at all.
When he is unable to return to his argument with any sort of credibility, typically he will cite the "pearls before swine" scripture, waving it as a banner, and hotly deem the recipient unworthy of the truth he is attempting to divulge.
http://realmagick.com/articles/55/2055.html

  
 Amazon.com: Books: Jesus Doesn't Live Here Anymore: From Fundamentalist to Freedom Writer
Back in New York, growing disenchantment with fundamentalist practices led Porteus to reexamine the role religion played in his life.
To me, the most interesting (and frightening) parts of the book are where he describes the fake healings and "exorcisms" and his radio conversations with fundamentalists.
Also frightening is the amount of hate shown him by the "Godly" religious right after he deconverts.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0879756896?v=glance

  
 Gay Fundamentalist
A number of studies have investigated the interrelation of religious practice and minority sexual identity, but they usually focus on either glbt congregations in extremely progressive faith communities (Buddhism, Reform Judaism, the Metropolitan Community Church) or anti-gay Protestant fundamentalist congregations.
It is often assumed that no such congregations exist, or they fall under the aegis of the "ex-gay" movement.
Few studies have approached those congregations that have both a glbt-identified membership and a fundamentalist orientation.
http://www.fau.edu/~jdennis/_private/sample11.htm

  
 Amazon.com: Books: The Book of Jerry Falwell: Fundamentalist Language and Politics.
As in the twelfth century, when there was a rise of monasticism to separate the Church from society, in the twentieth century the impulse was pretty sedate.
For this reason, Harding's perceptive commentary on fundamentalist political and religious speech resonates with my own perceptions, and thus emerges as fascinating, incisive and authentic.
Focusing on Falwell's subtle dance between American evangelicalism and Bible-based fundamentalism, she calls her study not theology but the vernacular of Bible believers.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0691089582?v=glance

  
 Fundamentalist Muslim Rage
- Fundamentalist Muslim leaders have focused on the frustrations and hopelessness of the people of the Middle East and promised a new world in which Muslims control their own destinies.
They see the USA as responsible for a decline in traditional values and lifestyles.
"Of all these offenses the one that is most widely, frequently, and vehemently denounced is undoubtedly imperialism...." "What is truly evil and unacceptable [to the Fundamentalist Muslim] is the domination of infidels over true believers."
http://www.awesomelibrary.org/Muslims-Rage.html

  
 Are You a Fundamentalist?
But if the Fundamentalists had their way, our religions, belief systems, and societies would never grow beyond the what Fundamentalists believe to be the pristine conditions of their founding.
Thus, one can be a Catholic Fundamentalist, a Buddhist Fundamentalist, an atheist Fundamentalist, an environmentalist Fundamentalist, etc.
Fundamentalists see themselves as Keepers of Tradition (a role actually played by non-Fundamentalist Conservatives), without whom our societies would drift into meaninglessness, or worse.
http://www.dogchurch.org/narthex/fundie.html

  
 DIRECTORY OF INDEPENDENT BAPTIST CHURCHES
One reason I have hesitated until now to try to put together a lengthy list of churches on the web is the difficulty of analyzing each church doctrinally and practically.
I am contacted frequently by people seeking assistance to find a church in a certain part of the country or world.
In its most basic definition, "independent Baptist" simply describes a church that is Baptist in polity and that is unaffiliated with a denominational structure.
http://www.wayoflife.org/fbns/churchdir/!churches.htm

  
 Fundamentalist or Polygamy-Practicing Mormon Groups
Since the rise of Fundamentalism, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints has been at pains to refute the claims of Lorin C. Woolley.
His major losses came in Mexico, where Joel LeBaron left to form the Church of the First Born of the Fullness of Time in 1955.
Allred, the son of a former Speaker of the House in the State of Idaho, had joined the Fundamentalists in the 1930s.
http://www.americanreligion.org/cultwtch/polygamy.html

  
 SNP fundamentalist - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The argument goes that if the SNP is unprepared to argue for its central policy then they are unlikely ever to persuade the public of its worthiness.
It should also be noted that this term is considered pejorative by some people, considering the negative overtones of the word fundamentalism in religious contexts, and that it appears to have been coined by the Gradualist faction.
Many fundamentalists (including Jim Sillars) were extremely wary of supporting the establishment of the devolved Scottish Parliament as they believed it has been designed to limit the aspirations of those who desire independence.
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/SNP_Fundamentalist

  
 Bush agenda in hands of religious right
This is a problem, because what some religious people want to do to the Constitution is radical and dangerous.
Bush's handlers also correctly figured the president's pitch for undecided voters would not benefit from reminders of how beholden he is to fundamentalist Christians.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/189785_valdez08.html

  
 Stalking the anti-fundamentalist voter
In fact, Bolce and De Maio argue that historians must dig back to the bitter pre-Great Depression battles rooted in ethnic and religious prejudices -- battles about immigration, public education, prohibition and "blue laws" -- to find a time when voting patterns were influenced to the same degree by antipathy toward a specific religious group.
People argued about money for Catholic schools or whether the Vatican was trying to control American politics," said Bolce, who, with De Maio, teaches at Baruch College in the City University of New York.
By contrast, the rating "strong liberals" gave to "strong conservatives" was a moderate 47 degrees.
http://tmatt.gospelcom.net/column/2004/05/05

  
 Harding, S.F.: The Book of Jerry Falwell: Fundamentalist Language and Politics.
Her work should be required reading not only for students of American religion, but for anyone who wishes to study sympathetically and fruitfully a different religious culture."--Jonathan Moore, Christian Century
But she also explains how Falwell, and others like him, have brought the fundamentalist community into politics.
The Book of Jerry Falwell is a fascinating work of cultural analysis, a rare account that takes fundamentalist Christianity on its own terms and deepens our understanding of both religion and the modern world.
http://pup.princeton.edu/titles/6781.html

  
 PCA Historical Center Collection: Carl McIntire Collection
"The last of the 20th Century's Fighting Fundamentalists has been called to glory.
Born May 17, 1906, McIntire was just short of 96 at the time of his death.
The Christian Observer magazine issued the following news report on 20 March 2002:
http://www.pcanet.org/history/findingaids/mcintire.html

  
 Fundamentalist Foolishness by Laurence M. Vance
As a conservative Christian of the "fundamentalist" persuasion, I don’t need Jones to speak for me or any like-minded individuals in my small circle of influence.
Because I don’t know why he issued the letter, I will not comment on his motives, but I will say that Bob Jones III neither speaks for nor represents all conservative Christians.
Jones begins by congratulating Bush on receiving "the largest number of popular votes of any president in America’s history." This could be said after almost every presidential election since the population of the United States increases substantially every four years.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/vance/vance24.html

  
 The Seattle Times: Opinion: Bush's fundamentalism: the president as prophet
It is a modern form of political fundamentalism &; that is, the adaptation of a self-proclaimed conservative Christian rectitude, via strategic communications designed for a mass-media culture, into political policy.
Since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, however, the Bush administration has done something very different: It has converged a religious fundamentalist worldview with a political agenda — a distinctly partisan one, wrapped in the mantle of national interest but crafted by and for those who share its outlook.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2002043481_domke23.html

  
 Algeria: The Next Fundamentalist State?
This study is part of a series of studies the author has written for RAND on the subject of Islamic fundamentalism, or Islamism, in the Muslim world.
The Algerian "fundamentalist" movement, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS in French), is likely to gain a major voice in the power equation of the Algerian state within the next few years--although not necessarily absolute power.
The existing regime--basically a military junta--is intellectually and politically bankrupt; the country is racked by the bloody beginnings of what could yet be full-scale civil war.
http://www.rand.org/publications/MR/MR733

  
 GOP Hijacked by 'Fundamentalist Wackos,' Actor Says -- 07/29/2004
It was a direct reference to the GOP's stance on conservative social issues.
GOP Hijacked by 'Fundamentalist Wackos,' Actor Says -- 07/29/2004
"To me, the Republican Party is the real great tragedy of the last 25 years because there are lot of good and decent people and a lot of good political points [that have] come from the Republican Party in the post-war period, but it has been hijacked by these fundamentalist wackos," Baldwin said.
http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewCulture.asp?Page=\Culture\archive\200407\CUL20040729c.html

  
 How to think like a fundamentalist
Feel free to refer to other fundamentalist works, whether or not they have been supposedly "discredited", "refuted" or "demonstrated to be false" - the ICR website and publications, Jack Chick tracts, Dr.Dino's website and videos, Answers In Genesis, things you remember hearing from other fundies or as a child in Sunday School, and so on.
When comparing the works of God-fearing, Bible-believing Christians against deviant secular humanist scientists, who are you going to believe?
Don't forget what you've learned : return a week later and post exactly the same assertions that you started with.
http://www.abarnett.demon.co.uk/atheism/fundy.html

  
 The Rabid FUNdamentalist
Site Description: Religious humor: Writer/historian John Cowart, a Christian of sorts, pokes fun at his own faith even as he expounds it through books, newspaper columns, magazine articles and through a daily journal which he has kept for over 20 years.
Is he a fundamentalist or just a plain old fundament?
http://www.cowart.info

  
 ABCNEWS.com : If Elected, Support for Fundamentalist Iraq
— More than six in 10 Americans say the United States should permit Iraq to establish a fundamentalist Islamic government — provided that it's popularly elected.
If Elected, Most Say United States Should Back Fundamentalist Islamic Iraqi Government
But such support is conditional in another sense: Six in 10 Americans oppose allowing the creation of fundamentalist government if it were to demand that all U.S. forces leave Iraq.
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/us/World/iraq_poll030502.html

  
 The Pure Fundamentalist
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