I can't really cite things I've heard said verbally in churches or at talks and I don't tend to read
books by fundamentalist Christians — not many anyway.
Not exact matches
The FACT that the US is destined to support their «prophecy» stems from self - educated, self - appointed
fundamentalist religious authorities who interpreted the sections of a
book that seem to be easily misinterpreted
by their largely uneducated followers.
If you are a
fundamentalist Christian, you will probably be offended at the humorous approach Steve Wells takes in his
book, Drunk With Blood,
by pointing out all the violence of Scripture, but I think that humor is the only way to write a 300 - page
book detailing all the violence in the Christian Scriptures.
The reason why Muslim
fundamentalists have become so judgmental of western secular culture is well described in a
book by Benjamin Barber, entitled Jihad versus McWorld.
The most interesting new
book on the theotokos in terms of its form is Mary; A Catholic - Evangelical Debate,
by two graduates of the
fundamentalist Bob Jones University, one now an evangelical Episcopalian and the other a Catholic convert and professional apologist (2003).
Reading is a skill or at least an activity, and few ventures are as disheartening as trying to get through
books on the Bible
by Southern Baptist
Fundamentalists, such as Harold Lindsell's The Battle for the Bible (I 976).
Despite all such criticism — some of which will be used
by fundamentalists to avoid the impact of Barr's
book — it must be clearly said that Barr is generally «right on.»
Her
book is also about an entertainment icon that has been attacked
by fundamentalists, Buffy has been assailed for championing occult figures like vampires and slayers and for its openness about adolescent sexuality.
She notes how the
books assume that the mass global conversions expected to take place during the tribulation will be of the Protestant
fundamentalist sort, engineered
by giant «Promise Keeper — like rallies in sports stadiums» that, the authors presume, «the entire world finds as captivating as Americans do.»
Virginia Stem Owens in her
book The Total Image notes how the mass - cultural acquiescence seen in the paid - time religious broadcasters is part of a broader infatuation
by evangelical and
fundamentalist Christianity with mass commercial and advertising culture.
When the match race takes its place in racing's history
books, the
fundamentalists will almost inevitably give decisive weight to the circumstance mentioned
by Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons elsewhere in this issue: over an off track (in patches slow) Nashua and Swaps raced together at killing early speed: five - eighths of a mile in 58 seconds, three - quarters of a mile in 1:10 2/5 — two seconds faster than Swaps's time at the same point in the Kentucky Derby over a fast track.
There's a subplot involving Tatiana's crush on Denny (Jackson Beard), a
fundamentalist Christian who likes reading
books with graphic descriptions of Hell, writes heavy metal songs about his beliefs, and, in one scene, displays a twisted way of atoning for his sins (attempting to carve a cross on his chest, before he's interrupted
by his father).
Not surprisingly, progressive types leaned toward unschooling and conservative Protestants trended toward formal curricula, usually provided
by fundamentalist private schools, the most popular being A Beka
Book, Bob Jones Complete, and Christian Liberty Academy Satellite Schools.
Success - eg Bruce Olson (from Wikki), faith challenged - remaining Christian but no longer exclusivist
fundamentalist - more liberal - eg blog
by Lana Hope in Missions from an unfundamentalist Christian some put Christianity to aside and became atheist in response to their experiences eg Daniel Everett - in the articles about his
book «Don &» t Sleep, There are Snakes.
A 2017 analysis of the texts used
by Indiana private schools that receive vouchers
by the Huffington Post found that many of the Christian
fundamentalist schools receiving vouchers used texts from either A Beka
Books, which is associated with the ultra-conservative Pensacola Christian College, or Bob Jones University Press.
Every single
fundamentalist movement that I have studied in this
book is inspired
by a dread of annihilation.
The Federation also gives Freedom to Publish Award to a publisher, who shows courage to publish controversial
books without fear of the wrath of the
fundamentalists or any action
by the state.