"Christianity is the story of how the rightful king has landed, you might say landed in disguise, and is calling us all to take part in a great campaign of sabotage."

- C. S. Lewis
Breaking News: Fundamentalists are Bad

A Historian finds the origins of "fundamentalism". (This story was on Yahoo's front page; how is this big news?)

The translation of the Bible into English marked the birth of religious fundamentalism in medieval times, as well as the persecution that often comes with radical adherence in any era, according to a new book.

The 16th-century English Reformation, the historic period during which the Scriptures first became widely available in a common tongue, is often hailed by scholars as a moment of liberation for the general public, as it no longer needed to rely solely on the clergy to interpret the verses.

But being able to read the sometimes frightening set of moral codes spelled out in the Bible scared many literate Englishmen into following it to the letter, said James Simpson, a professor of English at Harvard University.

"Reading became a tightrope of terror across an abyss of predestination," said Simpson, author of "Burning to Read: English Fundamentalism and its Reformation Opponents" (Harvard University Press, 2007).

"It was destructive for [Protestants], because it did not invite freedom but rather fear of misinterpretation and damnation," Simpson said.

It was Protestant reformer William Tyndale who first translated the Bible into colloquial English in 1525, when the movement away from Catholicism began to sweep through England during the reign of Henry VIII. The first printings of Tyndale's Bible were considered heretical before England's official break from the Roman Church, yet still became very popular among commoners interested in the new Protestant faith, Simpson said.

"Very few people could actually read," said Simpson, who has seen estimates as low as 2 percent, "but the Bible of William Tyndale sold very well—as many as 30,000 copies before 1539 in the plausible estimate of a modern scholar; that's remarkable, since all were bought illegally."

When Catholicism slowly became the minority in the 1540s and 50s, many who hadn't yet accepted Protestantism were berated for not reading the Bible in the same way, Simpson said.

"Scholarly consensus over the last decade or so is that most people did not convert to [Protestantism]. They had it forced upon them," Simpson told LiveScience.

Persecution and paranoia became the norm, Simpson said, as the new Protestants feared damnation if they didn't interpret the book properly. Prologues in Tyndale's Bible warned readers what lay ahead if they did not follow the verses strictly.

"If you fail to read it properly, then you begin your just damnation. If you are unresponsive … God will scourge you, and everything will fail you until you are at utter defiance with your flesh," the passage reads.

Without the clergy guiding them, and with religion still a very important factor in the average person's life, their fate rested in their own hands, Simpson said.

The rise of fundamentalist interpretations during the English Reformation can be used to understand the global political situation today and the growth of Islamic extremism, Simpson said as an example.

"Very definitely, we see the same phenomenon: newly literate people claiming that the sacred text speaks for itself, and legitimates violence and repression," Simpson said, "and the same is also true of Christian fundamentalists."


Yeah, it's easy to pile on the fundamentalists...until you realize that to the secular media, anyone who believes the Bible to be authoritative is a fundamentalist and that to them, Christian fundamentalists and "Islamic Extremists" are cut from the same cloth.

And here we see Yahoo! news perpetuating that myth.

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Comments on "Breaking News: Fundamentalists are Bad":
1. Alan - 12/11/2007 3:01 pm CST

The printing of Tyndale's translation was a revolutionary event (I recommend the book God's Bestseller about Tyndale & that time), but you're right that the author is going way overboard in putting contemporary labels on guys from 500 years ago.

Especially since, apart from the obvious historical distance, the labels don't quite fit. Guys like Tyndale weren't publishing the Bible and interpreting it as a license to kill. He was publishing the Bible and trying not to get himself killed in the process.

And as to why this is news, well, do you have a copy of Amusing Ourselves to Death handy?

2. Inklingstar - 12/11/2007 9:23 pm CST

"Without the clergy guiding them, and with religion still a very important factor in the average person's life, their fate rested in their own hands, Simpson said."

For so-called "progressives" taking responsibility for yourself is anathema. Hence the so-called "nanny state".

3. Knight's disciple - 12/12/2007 9:41 am CST

See, my thing with this article is...it's nothing really new. It seems like people who are actively non-Christian are always seeking to discredit, disparage, and just put down Christians. We preach a hard truth; it makes people uncomfortable, and uncomfortable people are more reactive...
I mean, this article is mildly interesting, in a vague sense, but I don't see any attitudes that are shining new (not that you're saying they are, mind you; just putting out my perspective).

4. Doug - 12/18/2007 7:48 am CST

I agree with Knight's Disciple. The opportunity to belittle and contemn Christian scholarship is something rarely missed by the secular world. Thanks for the reminder. I was recently in a bookstore wondering if I should be as concerned as I have become about who is recommending a book that looks interesting. Life's too short to waste time reading material that will only contradict and (attempt to) confuse. I DO want to know what the other side has to say, but when reading that I will be more alert and certainly not pay money for it. A couple years ago, I skimmed and bought a book on Calvinism, only to find when I started actually reading it that the author referred to God (the FATHER, SON and Holy Spirit) as She. I did not need to read further. That's why I would rather read Alan's recommendations than this book advertised (as "news") through Yahoo.

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