
Contents
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Post-war Charismatic Renewal Post-war Charismatic Renewal
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Scripture and Charismatic Experience Scripture and Charismatic Experience
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Charismatics and Millennialism Charismatics and Millennialism
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Charismatic Ecumenism and Separatism Charismatic Ecumenism and Separatism
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Charismatics and the Cessationist Backlash Charismatics and the Cessationist Backlash
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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References References
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10 Fundamentalism and Charismatic Renewal
Get accessJohn Maiden is Senior Lecturer and Head of Department for Religious Studies at The Open University. He researches the history of global evangelical, Pentecostal, and charismatic cultures and networks. He is the author of Age of the Spirit: Charismatic Renewal, the Anglo-World and Global Christianity, c.1945–1980 (2022) and co-editor of Transatlantic Charismatic Renewal, c.1950–2000 (2021).
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Published:20 November 2023
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Abstract
This chapter examines the complex relationships between fundamentalism and charismatic renewal. In some ways, charismatic renewal was a pushing back against intellectual and social aspects of mid-century fundamentalism and Pentecostalism. However, there were also continuities between these movements and the ecumenical dynamic of charismatic renewal—as ‘Pentecostalism outside of Pentecost’—allowed the shifting of some fundamentalistic traits beyond evangelicalism, for example into Roman Catholicism. By the end of the twentieth century, furthermore, some sections of evangelicalism traditionally associated with the legacy of B. B. Warfield and cessationism had been profoundly impacted by charismatic renewal, and made arguments from Scripture for the continuation of the supernatural gifts in the Church.
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