Mainline Protestantism

(noun)

Mainline Protestant (also sometimes called "mainstream American Protestant") are certain Protestant churches in the United States that comprised a majority of Americans from the colonial era until the early 20th century.

Related Terms

  • Roman Catholicism
  • evangelicalism

Examples of Mainline Protestantism in the following topics:

  • Widespread Belief

    • That is, there are various denominations within Protestantism including Evangelicals, Methodists and Baptists.
    • Today, most Christian denominations in the United States are divided into three large groups: Evangelicalism, Mainline Protestantism and Roman Catholicism.
    • In typical usage, the term mainline is contrasted with evangelical.
  • Protestant Work Ethic and Weber

    • Weber proposed that ascetic Protestantism had an elective affinity with capitalism, bureaucracy, and the rational-legal nation-state in the Western world.
    • Additionally, Weber observed that both ascetic Protestantism and capitalism encouraged cultural practices that reinforced one another.
    • As evidence for his study, Weber noted that ascetic Protestantism and advanced capitalism tended to coincide with one another.
    • In contrast, Weber showed that certain types of Protestantism, notably Calvinism, supported worldly activities and the rational pursuit of economic gain.
    • Weber saw an elective affinity between capitalism and Protestantism, especially Calvinism.
  • Protestantism

    • Protestantism is one of the major umbrella religions in the U.S., and is constantly evolving in response to political and social changes.
    • Colonists from Northern Europe, primarily from Great Britain, introduced Protestantism to a number of areas, including Massachusetts Bay Colony, New Netherlands, the Virginia colony, the Carolina Colony, Newfoundland, Labrador, and Lower Canada.
    • Evangelicalism in Protestantism is difficult to both date and define.
    • Describe the various sects of Protestantism and four key moments in their history in the U.S., including any resitance to those moments
  • Religious Denominations

    • Christianity has different denominations such as Protestantism and Catholicism, among others.
    • The term describes various Christian denominations (for example, Eastern Orthodox, Anglicanism, and the many varieties of Protestantism).
  • Social Correlates of Religion

    • Believers of Catholicism and mainline Protestants were in the middle, and conservative Protestants accumulated the least wealth.
  • Characteristics of Members of Different Religions

    • Northern European peoples introduced Protestantism.
  • The Christian Church

    • Anglicans generally understand their tradition as a a middle path between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Christianity on one hand, and Protestantism on the other.
  • Religion and Other Social Factors

    • White Evangelical Christians are more likely to attribute black/white inequality it to innate biological inferiority or laziness than are white Mainline Christians and the non-religious.
  • Islam

    • Islam has similarities with other American-practiced religions, including Protestantism and Christianity.
  • Types of Governments

    • Theocratic tendencies have been found in several religious traditions including Judaism, Islam, Confucianism, Hinduism, and among Christianity: Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Protestantism, and Mormonism.
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