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Willtor said:Willtor's Classify Yourself Thread indicates that TEs are pretty well distributed.
Historicist interpretation of prophecy
Literal end-time tribulation and Antichrist
The Rapture
Dispensationalism
Pro-Israel policy
Brain dead (eg. Terri Schivo) should be kept alive by feeding tube
Home schooling
King James is the most reliable Bible version
Christians shouldnt drink alcohol or smoke
charityagape said:Not to sound stupid, but what do you mean by this?
vossler said:Ill go ahead and do the best I can to play along. My definition, and the one most commonly used to define a fundamentalist, says that I believe in the inerrancy of the Bible and its authority, the virgin birth of Christ, the doctrine of substitutionary atonement, the bodily resurrection of Jesus, and the authenticity of his miracles.
chaoschristian said:During my tenure homeschooling my son the vast majority of homeschooling families I encountered are/were fundementalist/very conservative non-denoms or Baptists. This was true for VA and PA.
Many, but not all, of these families (more so the ones in PA) also practiced a high degree of social seperation. In other words, their only real contact with the public was through the YMCA. All others needs were being met through private church and Christian family networks.
Co-Housing is another emergent area that seems to have strong shades of fundementalism/conservatism driving it.
Now that is what confused me about this poll. I would say historicism sees the Papacy throughout history, or the rise of Islam in Revelation, while futurism looks at the Pope, the United States, the UN, the European Union, global conspiracy or 'new world order' as the soon and coming fulfilment of Revelation. The Left Behind books are futurist and I would have thought them more closely associated with modern YEC rather than historicism.jereth said:To explain historicism, it will also help to explain the alternatives.
Preterism = All prophecy only relates to the immediate setting of the prophet
Historicism = Prophecy is a detailed synopsis of historical events from the prophet's time to the end of the world
Futurism = Prophecy only relates to the very last things, surrounding the return of Jesus
Idealism = Prophecy is based on the prophet's immediate setting, but has general application in every age
These terms are normally used in studies of Revelation. So preterism holds that all of Revelation's content is about events in 1st century Asia minor; historicism holds that Revelation is a chart of history from the 1st century till the return of Christ; futurism holds that Revelation 4 onwards is only about the very last things; idealism holds that Revelation can be applied in every age of church history.
Historicism is often (but not always) closely allied with premilennialism and dispensationalism. It was very popular from the Reformation until roughly the 19th century, when Preterism and Idealism came into vogue. Historicism has a tendency to find contemporary events (eg. the Pope, the United States, the UN, the European Union) in the book of Revelation.
In my experience, historicism has remained popular in churches that might be labelled "fundamentalist" - hence I included it in this poll. Neo-evangelicalism and neo-orthodoxy (especially outside the US) tend to be more idealist these days, while liberalism tends to be more preterist. (I acknowledge these are generalisations)
Pats said:This is a kind of nieve quesiton, but what is the differance between a fundalmentalist and a conservative belief system?
frankwernal said:YECs are only fundamentalist if they believe in the story of Adam and Eve; if they take that to be symbolic, then they can take many things in the Bible to be symbolic.
bullietdodger said:The problem is how any of us picture this could be completely wrong. The thing with prophecy is that we don't know how the prophecy looks exactly until it is fulfilled. Take the prophecys concerning Christ's first coming. Many people believe the prophecies concerning Christ to come, but they pictured Christ's coming differently than what actually was. Today we see that the prophecies concerning Christ have been fulfilled, but I suspect that if we were back in Jesus' day some of us could very well have been along side of those who wanted to crucify Him, and all because we were stuck on our own idea of what prophecy would look like.
Assyrian said:Now that is what confused me about this poll. I would say historicism sees the Papacy throughout history, or the rise of Islam in Revelation, while futurism looks at the Pope, the United States, the UN, the European Union, global conspiracy or 'new world order' as the soon and coming fulfilment of Revelation. The Left Behind books are futurist and I would have thought them more closely associated with modern YEC rather than historicism.
This is actually a very important insightbullietdodger said:I believe the return of Christ will happen literally how the Bible reccords it. The problem is how any of us picture this could be completely wrong. The thing with prophecy is that we don't know how the prophecy looks exactly until it is fulfilled. Take the prophecys concerning Christ's first coming. Many people believe the prophecies concerning Christ to come, but they pictured Christ's coming differently than what actually was. Today we see that the prophecies concerning Christ have been fulfilled, but I suspect that if we were back in Jesus' day some of us could very well have been along side of those who wanted to crucify Him, and all because we were stuck on our own idea of what prophecy would look like.
Pats said:This is a kind of nieve quesiton, but what is the differance between a fundalmentalist and a conservative belief system?
Assyrian said:This is actually a very important insight
But what you need to realise is that the early chapters of Genesis are also prophetic, God telling us what happened at a time when there were no human witnesses, in this case of past events, as Isaiah 53 was God's description of the coming Messiah that no one had seen yet, or Revelation is God's description of event leading to Christ's return, which again, no one had seen when the prophecy was given. It is only when we see how events work out, or rather, how God works the events out, that we can look back at the prophecy and say, ah yes, of course.
If Genesis 1 is prophecy, then we only really learn its meaning when we find out what actually happened during the creation. To that extent, YECs are like the Jews still waiting for God to send the Messiah the way they expect. YECs look for science to reject it's mistaken views and come up with a new explanation of the history of the universe that will fit their interpretation, rather than realise their interpretations need to change when we find out what God actually did.
Actually, most YEC's like me are not expecting "science" to change. Each scientist must make up their own mind. I just believe that the geologic and fossil record, etc. are much more consistent with a young earth, global flood interpretation than they are an evolutionary one. In terms of competing theories or models, I believe YEC fits the observed data much better than evolution -- even without including any reference to any Scripture. Sure, I believe that the Scripture is true -- but I also believe that truth can hold its own against any level of examination.Assyrian said:If Genesis 1 is prophecy, then we only really learn its meaning when we find out what actually happened during the creation. To that extent, YECs are like the Jews still waiting for God to send the Messiah the way they expect. YECs look for science to reject it's mistaken views and come up with a new explanation of the history of the universe that will fit their interpretation, rather than realise their interpretations need to change when we find out what God actually did.
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