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Interesting information.

The term “Evangelicalism” is a wide-reaching definitional “canopy” that covers a diverse number of Protestant groups. The term originates in the Greek word evangelion, meaning “the good news,” or, more commonly, the “gospel.” During the Reformation, Martin Luther adapted the Greek term, dubbing his breakaway movement the evangelische kirke, or “evangelical church”-a name still generally applied to the Lutheran Church in Germany.In the English-speaking world, however, the modern usage usually connotes the religious movements and denominations which sprung forth from a series of revivals that swept the North Atlantic Anglo-American world in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Key figures associated with these revivals included the itinerant English evangelist George Whitefield (1715-1770); the founder of Methodism John Wesley (1703-1791) ; and, the American philosopher and theologian, Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758). These revivals were particularly responsible for the rise of the Baptists and Methodists from obscure sects to their traditional position as America’s two largest Protestant denominational families.

Indeed, by the 1820s evangelical Protestantism was by far the dominant expression of Christianity in the United States. The concept of evangelism and the revival-codified, streamlined, and routinized by evangelists like Charles G. Finney (1792-1875)-became “revivalism” as evangelicals set out to convert the nation. By the decades prior to the War Between the States, a largely-evangelical “Benevolent Empire” (in historian Martin Marty’s words) was actively attempting to reshape American society through such reforms as temperance, the early women’s movement, various benevolent and betterment societies, and-most controversial of all-the abolition movement. After the war, the changes in American society wrought by such powerful forces as urbanization and industrialization, along with new intellectual and theological developments began to diminish the power of evangelicalism within American culture. Likewise, evangelical cultural hegemony was diminished in pure numeric terms with the influx of millions of non-Protestant immigrants in the latter 19th and early 20th-centuries. Nonetheless, evangelical Protestantism remained a powerful presence within American culture (as evidenced by the success of evangelists like Dwight L. Moody and Billy Sunday). Going into the 20th-century evangelicalism still held the status of an American “folk religion” in many sectors of the United States-particularly the South.

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Written by Guss

6 Responses to “Defining Evangelicalism”


  1. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    Great post! Thanks for taking the time to look up the information. :x


  2. Andrew Schlewitz Says:


    Visit Andrew Schlewitz

    This definition comes from Wheaton College’s Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals. The website also has helpful definitions of Fundamentalism, Pentacostalism, Charismatics, among other things.

    Find it at: http://www.wheaton.edu/isae/defining_evangelicalism.html.

    Here are two other sites that are helpful, though some might find the first a bit irreverent and the second off-putting since it doesn’t call any faith group a sect or cult.

    http://www.adherents.com/

    http://religiousmovements.lib.virginia.edu/

    In both, religion in the US is like a garden that’s gone wild, hundreds of varieties all tangled up, and some might see it as a mess, and others might think its beautiful.


  3. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    You went into comment moderation queue, Andrew, due to the number of links you had in your post.

    Spammers usually use multiple links in their spam bot programs and the system is set up to hold any comments with more than two comments.

    Apologies to you.


  4. Andrew Schlewitz Says:


    Visit Andrew Schlewitz

    No problem. So I must have hit “submit comment” twice? I’ll try not to do that in the future.


  5. ~J~ Says:


    Visit ~J~

    No, you didn’t hit submit comment twice. You just had 3 hyperlinks in the same post and it allows only 2.


  6. Andrew Schlewitz Says:


    Visit Andrew Schlewitz

    Okay, understood. Thanks.