If clerico fascism counts, you had fascist SlovakiaIs it possible for a Christian fundamentalist country to emerge in the 20th century? If the answer is yes, where is it most likely and at what timepoint?
OK. I will give my standard.I think the term "Christian fundamentalism" technically refers only to a particular type of protestantism which purports to follow a literal reading of the Bible. It doesn't just mean any sort of conservative Christianity, though it does sometimes get used that way.
Perhaps @SgtRL-3 could clarify what his definition is for this thread.
Yep.
Spain come close as did Portugal.Is it possible for a Christian fundamentalist country to emerge in the 20th century? If the answer is yes, where is it most likely and at what timepoint?
That occurred to me too. A quick skim of wikipedia says that the ethnic group that the LRA drew from is very Christian, so the movement took on that character, but they were mostly just more factional fighters in a failed state, with little if any coherent ideology.If the Lord's Army took over Uganda?
I remember an anecdote from just after the Chilean coup of 1973, individual soldiers were cutting the inseam out of women's pants on the street, saying "women wear dresses now." (How would that even work, or make sense?) So some rank-and-file believed that the Pinochet regime was some reconstituted conservative Catholic moral order like that, and wanted to show who was boss.
If you count integralism as being "Christian fundamentalism", I'd say that Ireland and Quebec were arguably examples.
Cristero Mexico 1920es ?Is it possible for a Christian fundamentalist country to emerge in the 20th century? If the answer is yes, where is it most likely and at what timepoint?