Sentences with phrase «radical reformers»

"Radical reformers" refers to individuals or groups who advocate for significant and far-reaching changes to existing systems and institutions. They seek to challenge and transform traditional practices and beliefs in order to create a more progressive or alternative society. Full definition
But these reforms will contribute little to affirming the new leadership's credibility as radical reformers.
Payment might be by the hour, for each student successfully served, or in some other fashion — but it requires systemic redesign that even radical reformers have yet to undertake.
I think our reputation has been damaged by radical reformers trying to destroy religion.
Although some of the more radical reformers offered opportunities for women to exercise key roles, for the most part an evangelical woman's place was in the home.
According to Pinkston, the reform frenzy brought on in part by RTTT also brought into Tennessee «a lot of radical reformers who believed, «This is our time.»»
That is not a road that the Catholic Church should pursue; it is certainly not the road even so radical a reformer as Francis of Assisi would urge us to pursue.
Radical reformers committed to constitutional change and those opposed to state power in its current form have tended to be caught up in the politics of nostalgia.
Otherwise, they are in danger of looking like conservatives with Osborne and Cameron placed as the great radical reformers.
They're graciously taking on the case pro bono, but it's mutually beneficial — because California's Parent Trigger law is at the forefront of an ed - reform battle raging hotly across America, pitting charter operators and radical reformers against powerful teachers unions.
Often viewed as Radical Reformers, these Christians were convinced that the reforms of Luther, Zwingli and Calvin didn't go far enough in their attempts to decentralize power.
Unlike the radical reformers, the Lutherans, and to a lesser degree the Calvinists, saw themselves in continuity with the great tradition of Western Catholicism - its teachers, its creeds, and its dogmatic decisions.
It could also be viewed in the Radical Reformers insistence on the new birth as a powerful baptism in the Spirit.
These radical reformers were so committed to the new medium of communication that they saw art as competing with their use of the printed Bible.
The only exceptions in the 16th century were among the radical reformers involved in the Peasant's Revolt (1524 - 25), and the militant Anabaptists of Muenster (1534)
Since ALL the Churches ACROSS the spectrum confess an allegiance to the ecumenical creeds [except some radical reformers, but I digress], the definition would certainly not be creedal or ecclesial.
The opinions of traditionalists, moderates, liberals, and radical reformers are dutifully recorded - even to the point of tedium.
The excursus on «The Legacy of the Reformation» devotes paragraphs to Luther, Calvin, Henry VIII and the radical reformers, and concludes with a recognition of the reform within Roman Catholicism: «The Roman Church worked to get back to its roots in scripture and tradition.
However, radical reformers» adherence to the principle of annual parliaments swelled against the background of hardening party lines, ever more apparent after 1832.
This edition of Fabian Review focuses on whether the European left can make a comeback with Philippe Marliere on France's radical reformer and Eunice Goes on social democracy's renewal, plus Kate Murray interviews Angela Rayner MP.
He also cannily used the expenses scandal that rocked Westminster to portray himself as a radical reformer bent on cleaning up politics.
We allowed ourselves to be painted as the resistant establishment rather than the radical reformers.
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