Protestant Fundamentalistic Thought: Its Incompatibility with the Orthodox Ethos and its Deviation from the Founding Principles of American Culture
Father James Thornton
Publication data: Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 1998
Format: softcover
Number of pages: 31
Dimensions (l × w × h): 21.3 cm × 13.8 cm × 0.2 cm
Additional information: black-and-white illustrations
Father James Thornton
Number XXXII of Monographic Supplement Series
“When one is familiar with the traditions of the Orthodox Church, its way of life, its manner of worship, its body of doctrine, its style of organization, its art, its architecture, its music, its forms of piety and devotion, its insistence that men must be humble, and obedient, and Christ–like—in other words, when one apprehends the culture created by Orthodox Christianity—and then compares all of this to the corresponding forms in the fundamentalist camp, one is hard–pressed indeed to conceive how the two things can be grouped together under the heading ‘Christianity.’ If one represents Christianity, the other seems like the product of a totally different planet.”
—“Protestant Fundamentalistic Thought: Its Incompatibility with the Orthodox Ethos and its Deviation from the Founding Principles of American Culture”
CONTENTS
About the Author
Protestant Fundamentalistic Thought: Its Incompatibility with the Orthodox Ethos and its Deviation from the Founding Principles of American Culture
Format: softcover
Number of pages: 31
Dimensions (l × w × h): 21.3 cm × 13.8 cm × 0.2 cm
Additional information: black-and-white illustrations
Father James Thornton
Number XXXII of Monographic Supplement Series
“When one is familiar with the traditions of the Orthodox Church, its way of life, its manner of worship, its body of doctrine, its style of organization, its art, its architecture, its music, its forms of piety and devotion, its insistence that men must be humble, and obedient, and Christ–like—in other words, when one apprehends the culture created by Orthodox Christianity—and then compares all of this to the corresponding forms in the fundamentalist camp, one is hard–pressed indeed to conceive how the two things can be grouped together under the heading ‘Christianity.’ If one represents Christianity, the other seems like the product of a totally different planet.”
—“Protestant Fundamentalistic Thought: Its Incompatibility with the Orthodox Ethos and its Deviation from the Founding Principles of American Culture”
CONTENTS
About the Author
Protestant Fundamentalistic Thought: Its Incompatibility with the Orthodox Ethos and its Deviation from the Founding Principles of American Culture
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