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Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925 (Hardcover)
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Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925 (Hardcover)
Series: America's Baptists
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Scholars and journalists have paid significant attention to the
contemporary Fundamentalist tendencies of southern Protestantism.
However, many studies neglect to consider how the Fundamentalist
controversies that roiled the Baptists and Presbyterians of the
North during the 1920s affected the Southern Baptist Convention
schism of 1970-2000. Fundamentalism, Fundraising, and the
Transformation of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1919-1925
explores the scope and character of the interaction between
Southern Baptists and early Fundamentalism during the late 1910s
and early 1920s. By focusing more closely on the Southern Baptist
Convention, Andrew Christopher Smith examines the interaction
between the northernFundamentalist movement and southern religion
during the era. Though scholars agree that Fundamentalism is not
native to the South, no book thus far has considered the effects of
the Fundamentalist movement and how it influenced southern
Protestant denominational organizations, independent of southern
rejection of Fundamentalist-sponsored interdenominational
evangelistic and educational institutions. Smith proposes that
Fundamentalist ideas, lingering in the atmosphere of the South
after wafting there through hearsay, national religious
periodicals, and the secular press,likely influenced Southern
Baptist self-understanding during this critical period. Examining
documentary evidence, Smith explains that following the First World
War, Southern Baptists pushed toward bureaucratization. The
"Seventy-Five Million Campaign," a fundraising and
organization-building drive that the convention approved in 1919,
was the denominational movement through which the selective
appropriation of Fundamentalist ideas occurred. Exploring the
interplay of Southern Baptist claims and northern Fundamentalist
precepts, Smith fills a void in scholarly examination of
early-twentieth-century Baptist history.
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