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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Raymond W. Barber, Baptist pastor and president of the Baptist World Fellowship, wrote in 1982, “Fundamentalists have moved out of the storefront buildings on back alleys into beautiful sanctuaries fronting the freeways and boulevards that dissect the nation's biggest cities. No longer do fundamentalists operate from the closet of inferiority, but from the parlor of influence, affecting the spiritual and cultural life of America. The so-called “splinter-group” of yesterday has become a special vanguard of the truth whose influence is evidenced from the courthouse to the White House.”1
1. Barber, Raymond W., “Fundamentalism: A Coming Together,” Fundamentalist, 11/12 1982.Google Scholar
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22. Ibid.
23. Ibid.
24. Fundamentalist, 22 October 1948.
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26. Ibid.
27. Ibid.; also Weniger, G. Archer, Sword of the Lord, 3 01 1964;Google Scholar and Sword of the Lord, 10 01 1964, p. 3.Google Scholar
28. Ibid.
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42. Searchlight, 14 April 1922; and “Six Reasons Why Al Smith Should Not Be President,” Searchlight, 18 November 1927.
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44. Sword of the Lord, 18 September 1952.
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55. Dobson, Ed and Hindson, Ed, “Who Are the ‘Real’ Pseudo-Fundamentalists?” Fundamentalist Journal 2 (1983): 10–11.Google Scholar Emphasis mine.
56. Ibid.
57. Dobson, and Hindson, , “Guilt By Association or Burned by the Second Degree,” Fundamentalist Journal 2 (1983).Google Scholar
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