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Its just that i have noticed that hardly any mainstream religious people answer the questions... maybe fundamentalism is the new mainstream

2006-11-12 23:14:50 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

And i mean christians too, nearly every sensible question gets an "i am right and everyone else is going to hell response"

2006-11-12 23:26:03 · update #1

6 answers

Because the die hards are the only ones passionate enough to come here and argue about their religion? If they weren't fundementalists, they wouldn't care enough either way to post.

2006-11-12 23:43:13 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In the past decade almost all Islamic revivalist movements have been labeled fundamentalists, whether they be of extremist or moderate origin. The widespread impact of the term is obvious from the following quotation from one of the most influential Encyclopedias under the title 'Fundamentalist': "The term fundamentalist has ... been used to describe members of militant Islamic groups." Why would the media use this specific word, so often with relation to Muslims?
Before the term fundamentalist was branded for Muslims, it was, and still is, being used by certain Christian denominations. Most of them are radical Baptist, Lutheran and Presbyterian groups. The Southern Baptist Convention is one such group, they take pride in being called the Fundamentalists. Because, according the them, they have gone back to the fundamentals of Christianity. They preach absolute Biblical inerrency and Millenarianism (belief in the physical return of Christ to establish a 1000 year reign). These radical groups form only a minute minority of the total Christian population, although they may be the most vocal. They want the Church to be the only authority. This reminds the modern man of the Dark Ages in Europe when the Church was in fact supreme.
What most of these groups don't realize is that the term Fundamentalist is actually derived from a series of essays published from 1910 to 1915 under the title The Fundamentals by British and American evangelists. The purpose of this 12-volume collection was to determine which churches, according to the authors, held up to genuine Christian doctrine and the ones that did not. Nevertheless the term Fundamentalist, in the Christian world, is synonymous with the 'Bible Thumpers' and the tele evangelists.

To apply the same terminology to Muslims is neither fair nor valid. Because in the case of Islam all Muslims believe in absolute inerrency of the Quran, since it is a basic Islamic tenet. Therefore the media would have to use the word fundamentalist for all Muslims! which it does not do. It only uses the word Fundamentalist for both the extremist and terrorist groups, and the true moderate Islamic revivalist movements. Both these definitions are incompatible with each other. Using the word fundamentalist for the former may be acceptable, since it does have some parallel to the Christian definition. But if that definition is to be used, however, then using the same word to describe the latter would be erroneous and completely unacceptable. It is this dual definition that is unfair to the Islamic faith. Therefore the media should either stop using the word Fundamentalist to describe any and all Islamic organizations, or be much more careful in its usage.

2006-11-12 23:21:45 · answer #2 · answered by Proud Muslim 3 · 0 2

Mainstream religious people aren't really that religious. They're almost closet agnostics. They don't really care about why they believe what they do. They go for mostly social reasons and have their own vague idea of what God is.

Religion, in general, discourages people from thinking too much about why they believe. Fundamentalists are the ones who are so into their religion, that they've studied it and have, therefore, thought about it to some degree. They're the ones who are most affected by a good atheist argument. They feel they have to respond, while the mainstream religious people are satisfied with "God moves in mysterious ways".

2006-11-12 23:17:44 · answer #3 · answered by nondescript 7 · 1 0

In reality there is no such thing as a mainstream Christian. You are either Hot or cold. Mainstream would be luke warm at best. That does not mean you cannot love everyone and be tolerant of them, it simply means you should answer things honestly as your religion requires.

2006-11-12 23:22:10 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Friend I am not a fundamentalist nor a denomination, I am Just a True Born Again Christian & I have been for over 36 yrs.

2006-11-12 23:17:55 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Some of the questions do not deserve an answer.
True Christians don't argue about their beliefs.
They only give information to the unsaved.

2006-11-12 23:24:09 · answer #6 · answered by Cal 5 · 0 2

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