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・ Americium(III) fluoride
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Americanism (heresy)
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・ Americanist
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・ Americanization (foreign culture and media)
・ Americanization (immigration)
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・ Americanization School
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・ Americano (2011 film)
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Americanism (heresy) : ウィキペディア英語版
Americanism (heresy)

Coined in the nineteenth century, in Roman Catholic use the term Americanism referred to a group of related views, claimed to be heresies, tending to the endorsement of the separation of church and state, which were alleged to be prevalent among some American Catholics. European "continental conservative" (see Ancien Régime) clerics thought they detected signs of modernism or classical liberalism of the sort the Pope had condemned in the Syllabus of Errors in 1864. They feared that these doctrines were held by and taught by many members of the Catholic hierarchy in the United States in the 1890s. Catholic leaders in the U.S., however, denied that they held these views.〔Frank K. Flinn and J. Gordon Melton, ''Encyclopedia of Catholicism'' (2007) p 19〕
The Americanist heresy is characterized as an insistence upon individual initiative which the Vatican judged to be incompatible with what was considered to be a fundamental principle of Catholicism: obedience to authority. Moreover, the continental conservatives were anti-republicans who distrusted and disliked the democratic ideas that were dominant in America.〔(Isaac Thomas Hecker ), ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' (1911)]〕
Pope Leo XIII wrote against these ideas in his encyclical ''Testem benevolentiae nostrae'' to Cardinal James Gibbons. In 1898, Leo XIII lamented an America where church and state are "dissevered and divorced" and wrote of his preference for a closer relationship between the Catholic Church and the State along European lines.〔(''Testem benevolentiae nostrae'' by Pope Leo XIII (1899) ) Retrieved 2010-08-20.〕
The long-term result was that the Irish Catholics who largely controlled the Catholic Church in the United States increasingly demonstrated their total loyalty to the Pope, and traces of liberal thought in the Catholic colleges were suppressed. At bottom it was a cultural conflict, as the continental conservative Europeans, angered at the heavy attacks on the Catholic church in Germany, France and other countries, did not appreciate the active individualism, self-confidence, and optimism of the American church.〔James Hennessy, S.J., ''American Catholics: A history of the Roman Catholic community in the United States'' (1981) pp 194-203〕
==Americanism in Europe==
During the French Third Republic, which began in 1870, the power and influence of French Catholicism steadily declined. The French government passed laws bearing more and more stringently on the Church, and the majority of French citizens did not object. Indeed, they began to look toward legislators and not to the clergy for guidance.〔
Observing this, and encouraged by the action of Pope Leo XIII, who, in 1892 called on French Catholics loyally to accept the Republic, several young French priests set themselves to stop the decline in Church power. They determined that because the Church was predominantly sympathetic to the monarchists and hostile to the Republic, and because it held itself aloof from modern philosophies and practices, people had turned away from it. The progressive priests believed that the Church did too little to cultivate individual character, and put too much emphasis on the routine side of religious observance. They also noted that Catholicism was not making much use of modern means of propaganda, such as social movements, the organization of clubs, or the establishing of settlements. In short, the Church had not adapted to modern needs, and these priests endeavored to correct this. They began a domestic apostolate which had for one of its rallying cries, "Allons au peuple." ("Let us go to the people.") They agitated for social and philanthropic projects, for a closer relationship between priests and parishioners, and for general cultivation of personal initiative, both in clergy and in laity. Not unnaturally, they looked for inspiration to America. There they saw a vigorous Church among a free people, with priests publicly respected, and with a note of aggressive zeal in every project of Catholic enterprise.〔

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