Neo-orthodoxy is distinct from both
liberal Protestantism and
evangelicalism, but, notwithstanding some interpreters, it cannot properly be considered a mediating position between the two. Neo-orthodoxy draws from various
Protestant heritages (primarily
Lutheran and
Calvinist) in an attempt to rehabilitate
dogma outside the restraints of
Enlightenment thought. Unlike
confessionalist or
fundamentalist reactions to individualist approaches to the faith, however, neo-orthodox adherents saw no value in rehabilitating tradition for its own sake. Past Protestant doctrine is used only to the degree that it affirms the living Word of God in Jesus Christ. Propositions in and of themselves, whether from the Bible or not, are, to the neo-orthodox, insufficient to build theology upon. Also, in the pursuit of social justice, intellectual freedom, and honesty, the neo-orthodox, unlike the conservatives they were accused by detractors of resembling, often made practical alliances with liberals. Both groups shared a deep hostility to
authoritarianism of any kind, in both church and state. The breadth of the term
neo-orthodox, though, has led to its abandonment as a useful classification, especially after new emphases in mainline Protestant theology appeared during the 1960s. These included the "
Death of God" movement, which attacked the linguistic and cultural foundations of all previous theology, and a renewal of interest among Biblical scholars in the "
historical Jesus", something neo-orthodox theologians largely dismissed as irrelevant to serious Christian faith. Still, some of the movement's positions and worldviews would inform such later movements as
liberation theology during the 1970s and 1980s and
post-liberalism during the 1990s and 2000s—in spite of theological and ethical differences from both (i.e., liberationist use of
Marxist conceptual analysis and narrativist dependence upon
virtue theory). ==Influence upon American Protestantism==