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Edited on Wed Dec-22-04 10:42 PM by ocelot
Fundamentalist theology is based mainly on the concept of personal salvation. Jesus is your *personal* savior; you have a *personal* relationship with him. God watches you all the time and knows exactly what you, individually, are thinking and doing. And if you do what God wants, you get to go to heaven and live with Jesus forever, but if you piss him off he will send you to hell. The best ways to piss God off are by committing personal (that is, sexual) sins, and by failing to worship Jesus unquestioningly. In contrast, most other Christian denominations emphasize community obligation -- love your neighbor because you don't want your neighbor to suffer, not because you are trying to rack up brownie points with God so you, personally, have a better shot at heaven. Hating or disapproving of other "sinners" (e.g., non-Christians, liberals, gays) serves to draw a distinction between the "good," God-fearing Christian who will personally go to heaven, and everybody else, who won't. Since it's all personal with the fundies, your good fortune or financial success is evidence that God approves of you. If you are poor, it's evidence that you must be bad and God doesn't like you.
The notion of personal salvation might explain why fundies are usually Republicans -- the notion that you are "personally" saved is fundamentally selfish. A person who cares only about ensuring his heavenly reward by collecting enough Jesus-points and buttering up God by rigidly following arbitrary rules and condemning those who don't, is showing that he cares only about what happens to him. Like the secular greed-head Republican, the fundie doesn't care about the community, the poor, the weak, the helpless, except to the extent it affects him. That theology fits the Republican ideology very nicely.
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