Citations:fundagelical

English citations of fundagelical

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1985 1993 1994 2011 2012 2014 2016 2018 2019
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  • 1985, R. Joseph Hoffman, "Rewriting History: The Jewishness of Jesus", Humanistic Judaism, Volumes 13-14, Issue 3, page 29:
    [] the second among students who rather liked seeing their fundagelical friends scandalized at the suggestion that Christianity somehow derived its religious consequence from the Judaism of Jesus and his followers; []
  • 1993, Delos Banning McKown, The Mythmaker's Magic: Behind the Illusion of "Creation Science", page 166:
    Its attempts at explaining the “Scientific Creationists” fail, however, because they do not focus sufficiently on the importance of soteriology in fundagelical religion.
  • 1994, Kent Gramm, Gettysburg: A Meditation on War and Values, page 32:
    It seems, in fact, that the chief product of the literalist, shall we say "fundagelical," engine is more fundagelicals.
  • 2011, Landon Whitsitt, Open Source Church: Making Room for the Wisdom of All, unnumbered page:
    Even now, years removed from my “fundagelical” upbringing, preaching the gospel through the lens of open source sometimes makes []
  • 2012, Gerhard O. Forde, "Radical Lutheranism", in Justification Is for Preaching: Essays by Oswald Bayer, Gerhard O. Forde, and Others (ed. Virgil Thompson), page 16:
    Shall we be conservative, liberal, confessional, orthodox, charismatic, neo-Pentecostal, fundamentalist, or “evangelical” (perhaps “fundagelical,” as someone recently put it)?
  • 2014, Jay Emerson Johnson, "Apocalypse Later", in Disquiet Time: Rants and Reflections on the Good Book by the Skeptical, the Faithful, and a Few Scoundrels (eds. Cathleen Falsani & Jennifer Grant), unnumbered page:
    Coming out as gay while also nestled in the bosom of fundagelical Christianity reveals more than sexual secrets.
  • 2015, Encyclopedia of Christian Education, Volume 3 (George Thomas Kurian & Mark A. Lamport), page 1382:
    Former English professor Kent Gramm has titled Wheaton during and after this period a fundagelical institution: one that has kept its identity in both religious fundamentalist and modern evangelical circles.
  • 2016, Jenell Williams Paris, The Good News About Conflict: Transforming Religious Struggle Over Sexuality, page 6:
    I was raised “fundagelical,” deeply internalizing the values of obedience and authority, male dominance, and the legalism of fundamentalism, and also evangelical elements such as the justice impulse, Christian music and material culture, and an emphasis on education.
  • 2018, Gene Likens & David Lindenmayer, Effective Ecological Monitoring, unnumbered page:
    Finally, we aimed to present our opinions without religious-like 'fundagelical' fervour.
  • 2019, Patricia Roberts-Miller, Rhetoric and Demagoguery, page 124:
    For instance, the narrow definition of correct in-group used by the New England Puritans (their very specific kind of dissenter, not including Baptists, Anglicans, Catholics, Quaker, let alone later groups like Methodists or Mormons) in the hands of twentieth-century fundagelical advocates of theocracy has become a vague notion of "Christian" []

Noun: "(sometimes derogatory) a person with beliefs and values characteristic of both evangelical and fundamentalist Christianity"

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1982 1994 2004 2006 2008 2012 2020
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1982, A View from the Loft, Volumes 5-8, page 11:
    In Alabama, Fundagelicals - our modern day moral majoritarians calling themselves Citizens for a Positive Education, banned the use of a social studies textbook on the grounds that it failed to extol the virtues of capitalism - competition, self-reliance, and the accumulation of wealth.
  • 1994, Kent Gramm, Gettysburg: A Meditation on War and Values, page 32:
    It seems, in fact, that the chief product of the literalist, shall we say "fundagelical," engine is more fundagelicals.
  • 2004, John Sutherland, "God save America...", The Guardian, 3 May 2004:
    What do fundagelicals instinctively oppose? Gay marriage, abortion, gun control, taxes, the UN (and the currently top-rated candidate for anti-Christ, Kofi Annan), withdrawal from Iraq, Michael Moore, Janet Jackson's left breast.
  • 2006, Athanasius Blalock, McZoot's Travels: A Journey to Zora Gora, page 91:
    "Uh, the rapture?" My eyebrows popped up a few inches. "As in God coming to collect all the fundagelicals and other Republicans before the Antichrist comes to abort all the babies and give everyone 666 tattoos and then God destroys the universe with fire?"
  • 2008, J. Douglas Kenyon, Forbidden Science: From Ancient Technologies to Free Energy, unnumbered page:
    The fundagelicals view the destruction of New Orleans as nothing less than divine retribution against the city for its institutionalized wickedness, []
  • 2012, Gerhard O. Forde, "Radical Lutheranism", in Justification Is for Preaching: Essays by Oswald Bayer, Gerhard O. Forde, and Others (ed. Virgil Thompson), page 19:
    Let us be radicals: not conservatives or liberals, fundagelicals or charismatics (or whatever other brand of something-less-than gospel entices), but radicals: radical preachers and practitioners of the gospel by justification by faith without the deeds of the law.
  • 2020, Katie Hays, We Were Spiritual Refugees: A Story to Help You Believe in Church, unnumbered page:
    Replace “Baptists” with the fundagelicals of your upbringing and it'll be funnier.