A History of Fundamentalism in AmericaBob Jones University Press, 1973 - 415 pages In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, a massive attack was raised against the Bible and against its time-honored place as the verbally inspired and absolutely authoritative Word of God. Slowly but surely, that veneration was crumbling as scholars, teachers, denominational leaders, and educators within and without the Christian body joined to reject or redefine the historic truths of Christianity. This war swept away the spiritual foundations of our churches, our nation, and our heritage. In their place has come a new set of values, more scientific than scriptural, more man-centered than God-centered, more accommodating to the culture and political climate than the sound doctrine demanded by the Apostle Paul when he wrote Timothy that the time would come when they would not endure sound doctrine (2 Tim. 4:3). - Introduction. |
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Page 123
... Fort Worth , a seminary that has become the largest Protestant seminary in the world - Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary with some two thousand students . In 1909 he accepted the call to First Baptist in Fort Worth , Texas ...
... Fort Worth , a seminary that has become the largest Protestant seminary in the world - Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary with some two thousand students . In 1909 he accepted the call to First Baptist in Fort Worth , Texas ...
Page 131
... Fort Worth - everything depended on the pastor's power to raise the funds needed . The new church burned in 1929 at a loss of $ 300,000 , and the congregation greatly decreased . Norris took to building a new congregation , but also ...
... Fort Worth - everything depended on the pastor's power to raise the funds needed . The new church burned in 1929 at a loss of $ 300,000 , and the congregation greatly decreased . Norris took to building a new congregation , but also ...
Page 197
... Fort Worth as some had expected . Norris had a major part in the creation , indirectly , of new fellowships while detaching himself from national Fundamentalism in order to promote his work in Fort Worth . In 1934 he took over as pastor ...
... Fort Worth as some had expected . Norris had a major part in the creation , indirectly , of new fellowships while detaching himself from national Fundamentalism in order to promote his work in Fort Worth . In 1934 he took over as pastor ...
Contents
A Definition of Historic Fundamentalism | 11 |
I | 18 |
III | 39 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. J. Gordon American Baptist American Baptist Association apostasy Baptist Bible College Baptist Bible Union Baptist Church Baptist pastor Baptist Seminary Bible conference Bible schools Bible teacher Biblical Billy Bob Jones Boston Calif Calvary Baptist Carl McIntire Central Baptist Chicago Christ Christian Congregational Conservative Baptist Dallas Seminary denomination doctrine Editor Evangelicalism evangelist faith Fort Worth Fosdick Founder Frank Norris Free Will Baptist Fundamentalism Fundamentalists Gordon Gospel Graham Grand Rapids Ibid issue Jesus John leaders liberal Lord Machen Massee McIntire Methodist militant ministry Minneapolis Missionary Modernism Modernists Moody Bible Institute movement new-evangelical Northern Baptist Convention Ohio organized Orthodox pastor and educator Philadelphia preacher preaching premillennial Presbyterian Church president Professor prophecy pulpit radio Reformed religious Revelation Riley Scriptures Shields soulwinning Southern speaker spiritual Straton Sunday School teaching Tenn Testament Theological Seminary truth Union Wheaton Wheaton College William World Baptist Fellowship writer wrote York