originally posted by RubySera_Martin
Again, I don't know where you are getting your information. Protestants and fundamentalists are NOT the same thing. Anybody can be a fundamentalist regardless of religious persuasion. Very many Protestant Christians are NOT fundamentalists.
LOL... it seems like you and I haven't been able to communicate too effectively Ruby.
My goal was not to go into a in-depth history of Protestantism, citing every example of every aspect. I was certainly making a broad generalization, but I don't think that so far as generalizations go it was a particularly inaccurate one. Protestantism did,
BY AND LARGE, develop in "protest" to the Catholic Church's instituted interpretation of the Bible...it's that simple. Here's a dictionary definition:
Prot·es·tant (pr
t
-st
nt)
n.
- A member of a Western Christian church whose faith and practice are founded on the principles of the Reformation, especially in the acceptance of the Bible as the sole source of revelation, in justification by faith alone, and in the universal priesthood of all the believers.
- A member of a Western Christian church adhering to the theologies of Luther, Calvin, or Zwingli.
- One of the German princes and cities that supported the doctrines of Luther and protested against the decision of the second Diet of Speyer (1529) to enforce the Edict of Worms (1521) and deny toleration to Lutherans.
As far as my dates for religions, I really just went to sections for individual religions here at CR. Clearly, I made a mistake when I was writing BC/AD...sorry.
As for defining itself, every single Protestant group definitely defined itself. The defining mark of Protestantim may be said to be its appeal to the scripture alone for its authority. Because, as stated above, the Bible can be understood in so many different ways, the splintering of Protestantism has not stopped to the present day. The best antidote for the splintering that I see is interfaith and ecumenical movements.
Okay...that's really all I'm referring to...the continued splintering. In that respect, Protestantism as a categorization may be pretty defined, but the individual sects of Protestantism are anything but crystallized in their current form...thus, the splintering.
I don't think that Protestant is a cognate of fundamentalism...I didn't express that AT ALL...
whatsoever. Do I need to say "Not all Protestants" before I say anything and everything that someone might interpret negatively about Protestantism? Of course all Protestants aren't fundamentalists! Fundamentalists are a minority in all religions world-wide. Maybe I should've mentioned that first? It just seems like you are interpreting everything I mentioned in it's most negative possible light.
Ruby, you seem to think that I consider myself some kind of scholar...That isn't the case...I'm just an auto mechanic
. Though, I will tell you that my ideas are not anything new, and they are not entirely dreamed up by me. If you would like to read books on religion and philosophy that might explain some of the viewpoints I express I can recommend some titles for you.
-jiii