OR we could all become Fundamentalists to annoy the Christians. But what would we do with the Christian Fundamentalists?
2007-01-06 09:16:11
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answer #1
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answered by guicho79 4
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Dude, they hate "bad Christians" almost as much as non-Christians. Fundies can make distinctions between "good" and "bad" Christians based on your particular beliefs...they root out people who don't believe the things they do like terriers and pounce on them.
Christianity is living like Christ. Being like Christ. There is no church that makes you a Christian...it's how you live. Jesus was a powerful, kind, passionate, caring person who loved the mentally ill, the outcasts, the downtrodden, women, poor people, outsiders...he was a great guy.
Christ wasn't judgmental.
You can be Christian and be...a Buddhist. A Pagan. Anything you want. It's all about the role model you choose and how you live. It's about the goodness you put into the world and the goodness that flows through you.
Not that you'd get any credit from fundies for it.
2007-01-06 09:17:19
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answer #2
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answered by SlowClap 6
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Why might want to you want to be a Christian Fundamentalist in case you do not easily have self assurance as they do. Fundamentalism really would not exist in Europe, because even the Protestants residing there fee a strong sound education alongside with strong seminatry education if one should be a pastor. Fundamentalism rose up in nineteenth century u.s. as an "answer" to what Protestants suggested as an encroachment of humanist concepts being integrated into Chrisitanity and diluting its truths. There are also Funbdamentalist Catholics who really decision from their Protestant brethren by basically believing issues the Protestants do not settle for. They really reject a extra actual looking Catholic "global-view"--which isn't compared to what Fundamentalist Protestants also reject among their extra mainline Protestant brethren. in the different case their stance on social subject matters is very nearly same.
2016-12-01 22:29:32
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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While I would agree that all should accept Jesus as Savior and Lord, and confess their sins to be forgiven by His blood shed on the cross, I am unclear what you mean by "fundamentalist." The original "fundamentalist" was the Christian who was insisting that a relationship with Jesus was predicated on the "fundamentals of faith" (which I included above.) This is a reaction against the attempts to dilute the gospel with evolution and politics. Thus, your question sounds contradictory without specifying what other "fundamentalist" you might intend.
2007-01-06 09:15:08
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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They wouldn't be annoyed, they'd be estatic. Besides, why would you want to change religions just to annoy someone? Plus, they'd still whine until we were all Born-Again Christians.
They would probably keep themselves busy trying to make sure you don't succumb to the devil again.
2007-01-06 09:14:20
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answer #5
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answered by Wisdom Lies in the Heart 3
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What you fail to realize is that there are some Christians that are annoyed with fundamentalists.
2007-01-06 09:16:44
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answer #6
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answered by <><><> 6
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Well, that is our hope. Jesus said John 3:17 "For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.
2007-01-06 09:14:49
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answer #7
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answered by oldguy63 7
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Hey dude there are fundamentalists Christians too.
2007-01-06 09:13:37
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answer #8
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answered by georgiabanksmartin 4
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One might hope that Christians don't set out to annoy anybody. That certainly is not my impression of what the religion is all about.
2007-01-06 09:17:11
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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If we were all the same it would be a boring world, and then what would we fight about , man needs something to grizzle about or at lease the majority do .
2007-01-06 09:17:11
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answer #10
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answered by bazbikes49 3
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