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It has been said that the opposite of faith is not doubt, but
certainty. Drawing on this notion, Stories of a Recovering
Fundamentalist: Understanding and Responding to Christian
Absolutism recounts the author's journey as a member of the
fundamentalist subculture as a child and his life among the Jesus
Freaks (Jesus Movement)-- a congregation of deserters from the
hippie drug culture of the late 1960's and early 1970's. This
movement, though of great importance in the culture of the times,
now largely goes unrecognized--although the Jesus Movement provided
the cover stories for many prominent secular magazines chronicling
the youth culture of the late 60's and early 70's. While, not
devoted to a history of the Jesus Movement, the book does a service
in bringing a discussion of the Jesus Freak phenomenon to the
attention of today's readers. The book goes on to recount the
author's eventual abandonment of fundamentalism. As the story
unfolds, critical research related to the psychology, sociology,
and history of the subculture provides a framework for
understanding Christian fundamentalism. Stories of a Recovering
Fundamentalist recounts a gripping personal pilgrimage-at times
both humorous and painful- that is rooted in honest reflection and
informed by theory and research. It offers worthwhile reading for
mainline Christians, curious evangelicals, recovering
fundamentalists or anyone wanting to understand this timely topic.
The papers in this volume reflect the richness and diversity of the
subject of dynamics. Some are lectures given at the three
conferences (Ergodic Theory and Topological Dynamics, Symbolic
Dynamics and Coding Theory and Smooth Dynamics, Dynamics and
Applied Dynamics) held in Maryland between October 1986 and March
1987; some are work which was in progress during the Special Year,
and some are work which was done because of questions and problems
raised at the conferences. In addition, a paper of John Milnor and
William Thurston, versions of which had been available as notes but
not yet published, is included.
It has been said that the opposite of faith is not doubt, but
certainty. Drawing on this notion, Stories of a Recovering
Fundamentalist: Understanding and Responding to Christian
Absolutism recounts the author's journey as a member of the
fundamentalist subculture as a child and his life among the Jesus
Freaks (Jesus Movement)-- a congregation of deserters from the
hippie drug culture of the late 1960's and early 1970's. This
movement, though of great importance in the culture of the times,
now largely goes unrecognized--although the Jesus Movement provided
the cover stories for many prominent secular magazines chronicling
the youth culture of the late 60's and early 70's. While, not
devoted to a history of the Jesus Movement, the book does a service
in bringing a discussion of the Jesus Freak phenomenon to the
attention of today's readers. The book goes on to recount the
author's eventual abandonment of fundamentalism. As the story
unfolds, critical research related to the psychology, sociology,
and history of the subculture provides a framework for
understanding Christian fundamentalism. Stories of a Recovering
Fundamentalist recounts a gripping personal pilgrimage-at times
both humorous and painful- that is rooted in honest reflection and
informed by theory and research. It offers worthwhile reading for
mainline Christians, curious evangelicals, recovering
fundamentalists or anyone wanting to understand this timely topic.
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