All the -isms: Difference between revisions

From Cor ad Cor
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
m (Text replacement - "— >" to "-->")
 
(8 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 12: Line 12:
|align="center"|Enlightenment
|align="center"|Enlightenment
|Reason sets the boundaries to what can be believed.
|Reason sets the boundaries to what can be believed.
|-
|align="center"|humanism
|align="center"|Renaissance
|
|-
|-
|align="center"|positivism
|align="center"|positivism
|align="center"|
|align="center"|19th and 20th century
|
|
|-
|-
|align="center"|linguistic criticism
|align="center"|linguistic criticism
|align="center"|
|align="center"|20th century
|Better known as "linguistic analysis," but that doesn't fit the pigeonhole of "all the -isms."   
|Better known as "linguistic analysis," but that doesn't fit the pigeonhole of "all the -isms."   
|-
|-
Line 33: Line 37:
|
|
|-
|-
|align="center"|modernism
|align="center"|[[modernism]]
|align="center"|
|align="center"|20th century
|
|"The Church must conform to modernity."
|-
|-
|align="center"|[[egalitarianism]]
|align="center"|[[egalitarianism]]
Line 45: Line 49:
|
|
|-
|-
|align="center"|scientism
|align="center"|[[scientism]]
|align="center"|
|align="center"|
|
|
Line 137: Line 141:
|
|
|-
|-
|align="center"|creationism
|align="center"|[[creationism]]
|align="center"|
|align="center"|
|
|
Line 187: Line 191:
|align="center"|clericalism
|align="center"|clericalism
|align="center"|Modernity
|align="center"|Modernity
|"The essence of clericalism is a certain mindset, a way of thinking about persons, relationships, and roles within church settings. The clericalist mindset assumes that priests (and, to a lesser degree, religious) are always the people in charge—the natural decision-makers, direction-setters, and initiators of action in the Church. Lay people make up a permanent ecclesiastical under-class. They are by nature passive and subservient, in need of clerical direction. ... [Clericalism] takes for granted that the clerical state is intrinsically superior to all others (i.e., the consecrated life, the married state, the single lay state in the world)."<ref>[http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/does-the-church-have-too-many-secrets "Does the Church Have Too Many Secrets?"]</ref>  
|"The essence of clericalism is a certain mindset, a way of thinking about persons, relationships, and roles within church settings. The clericalist mindset assumes that priests (and, to a lesser degree, religious) are always the people in charge — the natural decision-makers, direction-setters, and initiators of action in the Church. Lay people make up a permanent ecclesiastical under-class. They are by nature passive and subservient, in need of clerical direction. ... [Clericalism] takes for granted that the clerical state is intrinsically superior to all others (i.e., the consecrated life, the married state, the single lay state in the world)."<ref>[http://www.catholic.com/magazine/articles/does-the-church-have-too-many-secrets "Does the Church Have Too Many Secrets?"]</ref>  
|-
|-
|align="center"|[[Triumphalism]]
|align="center"|[[Triumphalism]]
Line 194: Line 198:
|}
|}


<!-- blank entry
<!-- blank entry
|-
|-
|align="center"|
|align="center"|
|align="center"|
|align="center"|
|
|
-->
-->





Latest revision as of 12:22, 10 December 2022

position era
empiricism Enlightenment The only things that can be known are those composed of matter-energy in spacetime that are observable and measurable through the senses as extended by the instruments of science. Locke and Hume.
rationalism Enlightenment Reason sets the boundaries to what can be believed.
humanism Renaissance
positivism 19th and 20th century
linguistic criticism 20th century Better known as "linguistic analysis," but that doesn't fit the pigeonhole of "all the -isms."
pietism
Protestantism
Catholicism
modernism 20th century "The Church must conform to modernity."
egalitarianism
existentialism
scientism
evidentialism
pragmatism
scholasticism
mathematicism
idealism
liberalism
conservatism
traditionalism
Marxism
Kantianism
Thomism
gnosticism
agnosticism
fideism
fundamentalism
literalism
theism
pantheism
atheism
historicism
animism
monism
creationism
biblical criticism
terrorism
quietism
mysticism
nominalism
Jansenism
perfectionism
minimalism
materialism
spiritualism
rubricism
clericalism Modernity "The essence of clericalism is a certain mindset, a way of thinking about persons, relationships, and roles within church settings. The clericalist mindset assumes that priests (and, to a lesser degree, religious) are always the people in charge — the natural decision-makers, direction-setters, and initiators of action in the Church. Lay people make up a permanent ecclesiastical under-class. They are by nature passive and subservient, in need of clerical direction. ... [Clericalism] takes for granted that the clerical state is intrinsically superior to all others (i.e., the consecrated life, the married state, the single lay state in the world)."[1]
Triumphalism Nineteenth and twentieth centuries Triumphalists wrongly attribute to themselves the glory of Jesus and the saints in Heaven. As a consequence, they fail to fight well in the battles that God has given them to fight. Their sin of presumption prevents them from preaching the gospel effectively.


References

Links