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Evangelicalism vs. Fundamentalism vs. Liberalism


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23 Comments

  1. Adam1 says:

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    This is kind of uselss, except for telling us which side you think is best.

  2. Zachariah says:

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    What do the dots represent? A portion of believe in that category?

  3. Robert says:

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    Wow, evangelicals are so balanced! How could everyone else be so foolish.

  4. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1

    Who is to say that balanced is the best? You are assuming too much!

  5. Robert says:

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    Good point Michael.

  6. gaburkheimer says:

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    Labels please! At least in the center circles.

  7. Bruce says:

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    I like the concept but you can’t read tool much into it. Now let’s see that in a venn diagram. :)

  8. Cadis says:

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    Boo! Fundamentalists do not narrow in on essentials for salvation anymore than Evangelists.

  9. Cadis says:

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    Well ok , I take that back . It depends on how you define and who is included in the definition Evangelical

  10. Aaron says:

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    Wow, Im liberal, didn’t know that peanut butter wasnt essential for salvation.

  11. Curtis Poor says:

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    I find this diagrams very interesting, but I think a few paragraph explanation would be very helpful. I’m not quite sure the point you are trying to make with them. But I am very intrigued by it.

  12. Paul says:

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    Regarding liberals Paul (or Pauline school) says it all to Timothy, (2 Tim: 3: They will “have a form of godliness but deny its power…. 6 They are always learning but never able to come to a knowledge of the truth.

    If we look at the liberality in much of the US Episcopal Church there seems to be very little but a form of the tradition passed on!

  13. George Jenkins says:

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    with Adam1…………except for the part after the comma.

  14. Steve Martin says:

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    The center should be ‘Christ’ and everything else should be ‘us’.

    Of course, we want everything BUT Christ (alone) so the dots will be all over the map.

  15. Michael says:

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    Interesting idea. For Fundamentalists, I think that all but a few of the dots in the Essential for Salvation circle should be moved to the Essential for Orthodoxy circle.

  16. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1

    Please understand I am speaking about fundamentalist (more like an adj) not so much Fundamentalist (noun).

    The more fundamentalistic you are the more you will have everything essential for salvation. Maybe they would not explicitly put it this way, but their life, thoughts, and attitudes evidence this.

    Someone has said that they have never met a fundamentalistic type like that shown in the graph. They should get out more! It is simply called “legalism”. I have had people who doubt another’s salvation because they smoked, drank, went to movies, and (even) because they did not breast feed. I kid you not.

    But again, it is an attitude.

  17. Phil Wood says:

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    What the diagrams don’t show is movement. What direction are the dots travelling in? Given the Post-modernity is anti-institutional and anti-authoritarian I suspect that would be a factor pushing the ‘essential’ out to the edge. There again, there are reactionary centrifugal factors pulling the other way. I’m broadly on diagram three, mainly because there isn’t a diagram four which is even more extreme!

  18. Kyle says:

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    I really like this, and it seems pretty accurate, simple to understand, and great for clarity of what truly is reality. Doctrinal purity based on Scripture is always essential, vagueness within Scripture is rare but Scripture becomes all to vague when we start trying to put our feelings within Scriptural interpretation.

  19. Randy says:

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    Surprised how many are taking this a bit too seriously. I believe it’s posted tongue-in-cheek. But as with a lot of humor, there’s a little truth in there.

  20. Ronnie says:

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    Someone has said that they have never met a fundamentalistic type like that shown in the graph. They should get out more!

    Or just browse the web for a few minutes; “watchblogs” are a good place to start :) It’s amazing how many Christians that I respect have “abandoned the faith” according to some.

  21. david carlson says:

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    This post is kind of like an inside joke. Those of us who have followed this blog for years get it, because it is a continutation of a number of posts – the backstory, so to speak. If you walk in to this post without having the history, it is going to seem a little odd.

    Having said that, I love this post and plan on printing to keep with me to share with others in the future.

  22. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0

    [...] Evangelicalism vs. Fundamentalism vs. Liberalism. [...]

  23. Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0

    [...] Michael Patton makes sense of the differences between Fundamentalists, Evangelicals and Liberals with [...]

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(Latin, “received text”) The Textus Receptus (TR), or “received text,” refers to the first published Greek New Testament edited by Desiderius Erasmus in 1516 and later, with some changes, by Stephanus, Beza and Elzivir. This text was initially compiled using only seven late Greek manuscripts (11th-13th centuries). The TR became the underlying text for many [...] continue reading