Jeffrey K. Hadden
Department of Sociology
University of Virginia

Lecture:

Fundamentalism


Lecture Outline:

  • Fundamentalism and the evangelical tradition in American religious history
  • The numerical strength of evangelicalism in America today
  • Four distinct meanings of fundamentalism
  • Fundamentalism as a global phenomenon

Part I

Fundamentalism and the Evangelical Tradition in American History


Religious Vitality in 19th Century America

Factors contributing to religious vitality:

  1. Immigration
  2. Expanding frontiers
  3. Social unrest (civil war)
  4. Industrialization/urbanization
  5. Open religious economy

New Religions and New Ideas

  1. New religious ideas
    • Millennialism
    • Dispensationalism
  2. Organizational style
    • Revivalism

       

Millennialism

  • Millennium = 1,000 years
  • Millennialism in a generic sense refers to understanding the future
    • more specifically, it refers to the millennium of Christian prophecy
    • during the 19th century, Christians became profoundly concerned about the millennium
    • two radically different views arose:
      • postmillenarian
      • premillennial

Postmillennalism

 

  • Postmillennialism is rooted in optimism and perfectionism.
  • Christ's thousand year reign on earth will occur after the human race has created a world suitable for his return.
  • Postmillenarians viewed the American experience as the working out of God's plan on earth.

Premillennialism

    Premillennialists were guided by two factors:
    • belief that the world was becoming progressive more wretched; and
    • a theological perspective called dispensationalism
      • The second coming of Christ was imminent
      • This created a sense of urgency to save as many souls as possible before it was too late
      • Hence, revivalism became important fixture on the American scene.

Revivalism

  • Revivalism is the dominant force in nineteenth century American religious life.
  • We have already seen that it fueled the growth of Catholicism and the creation of the Mormon faith tradition.

    It also fueled scores of sectarian movements several of which survived to become important religious movements in the twentieth century.

Major sectarian movements:

  • Adventism
    • Millerites ------> Seventh Day Adentists
    • Jehovah's Witnesses
  • Holiness movements
  • Fundamentalism
  • Pentecostalism

Some Important Conceptual Language:

Evangelical

Part II
The Numerical Strength of Evangelicalism in America Today

Religious Affiliation in the USA

US Population = 239,000,000

Christians


Part III

Four Distinct Meanings of Fundamentalism

Fundamentalism has four distinct meanings

Fundamentalism as a theological movement

Fundamentalism as a political movement

Fundamentalism as a caricature

From the Scopes Trial forward, the press and writers of literature have presented an unbroken line of portraits of fundamentalists as small-town, culturally unenlightened fanatics preyed upon by unscrupulous preachers.

  • Sinclair Lewis' Elmer Gantry presents the classic stereotype that has been copied again and again.
    • With the advent of television, the fundy preachers moved from the revival tent to the television studio.

The only redeeming quality of this phenomenon was the certainty that these Babbitt-like souls would one day become extinct as education and reason eventually spread to the deepest hinterlands of America.

Caricature clouds a reality

The caricature that arose in the Scopes Trial carried a self-fulfilling prophecy, namely that this archaic religious phenomenon simply could not survive.

  • Believing that fundamentalism would die out, neither the press or scholars paid much attention.
  • Fundamentalism did not wane so much as it passed from public view.
  • In reality, fundamentalism has grown steadily through the entire century.
  • With the exception of Roman Catholics, it is the single largest religious group in America.

How could something this significant go virtually unnoticed?

  • No religious census
  • Secular press not interested in religion.
  • A large proportion of the fundamentalists reappropriated the name evangelical
  • Prone to schism which tends to mask growth
  • Greatest concentration is geographically out of the main population centers, i.e., South and Midwest

Rediscovering Fundamentalism

In 1976 Jerry Falwell began a series of "I Love America" rallies which would take him to the capital steps of every state in America.

  • In 1979 Falwell created a political groups called the Moral Majority.
  • On April 29, 1980 a Washington for Jesus rally drew a half-a-million souls to the Mall
  • August 22, 1980, presidential candidate Ronald Reagan endorses fundamentalist rally in Dallas

Fundamentalism as a global phenomenon

Part IV
Fundamentalism As a Global Phenomenon
The globalization of a stereotype

Initially the concept had little intellectual integrity.

Global fundamentalism amounted to little more than a label that combined the worst of the three versions of fundamentalism.

Is fundamentalism a global phenomenon?

The Fundamentalism Project Conclusion:

A sociological perspective on fundamentalism

Sociologically speaking, fundamentalism involves two basic premises:

Fundamentalism defined:

FUNDAMENTALISM is the proclamation of reclaimed authority over a sacred tradition which is to be reinstated as an antidote for a society that has strayed from its cultural moorings.

Unpacking the definition