Christian movements
| Part of the series on Christianity | |
| Missing image Christian_cross.png | |
| History of Christianity | |
|
Christian theology | |
|
The Bible: | |
|
Christian Church: | |
|
Christian denominations | |
| Christian worship | |
|
Related faiths: | |
Christian movements are theological intepretations of Christianity that are not generally represented by a specific church, sect, or denomination.
Current movements include:
- Charismatic: those Christians who believe that the manifestations of the Holy Spirit are available to contemporary Christians.
- Christian ecumenism: the promotion of unity or cooperation between distinct religious groups or denominations of the Christian religion
- Evangelicalism: faith demonstrates all things that are implied in belief that Jesus is the savior.
- Fundamentalist Christianity
- Liberal Christianity
- Modernist Christianity: school of Christian thought which rose as a direct challenge to more conservative traditional Christian orthodoxy.
- Neo-orthodoxy: emphasis on the trancendence of God, the reality of sin, and an existentialist metaphysic.
- Paleo-Orthodoxy: attempting to emphasize the writings of the early Church.
- Pentecostalism: emphasis on the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
- Restorationism: a group of religious reform movements that sought to renew the whole Christian church; the movement is connected historically but not always doctrinally.
- Restoration Movement, also known as the "Stone-Campbell movement": a group of religious reform movements that sought to renew the whole Christian church, attempting to overcome the divisions between Catholicism and Protestantism; related to Restorationism historically though not doctrinally
