E
eliasaph99
Guest
As an armchair historian, I have drawn the conclusion that Protestant denominations tend to become either more orthodox (i.e. closer to Catholic thought) or insufferably liberal over time.
The time period in question for each denomination or church is from the date of its founding. I know that many churches start out “very conservative, sir, very conservative” (as a Southern Fundamentalist Baptist Preacher once described himself to me), but the minute they are founded, the clock begins to tick.
I think this is because the theology they are founded with is usually to simplistic to deal with the world. It doesn’t answer hard and dilemma-like questions. As those questions arise, the sum of the churches responses pushes them towards orthodoxy or liberalism.
Anyone agree or care to comment?
The time period in question for each denomination or church is from the date of its founding. I know that many churches start out “very conservative, sir, very conservative” (as a Southern Fundamentalist Baptist Preacher once described himself to me), but the minute they are founded, the clock begins to tick.
I think this is because the theology they are founded with is usually to simplistic to deal with the world. It doesn’t answer hard and dilemma-like questions. As those questions arise, the sum of the churches responses pushes them towards orthodoxy or liberalism.
Anyone agree or care to comment?