The world mocks us evangelicals for saying we harangue men when we tell them they must go to Jesus Christ. |
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Why evangelicals should object to confessions of faith I am at a loss to understand. |
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Many evangelicals say they're just trying to satisfy demands not met by traditional churches. |
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Approximately one quarter of all evangelicals identify themselves as affiliated with a Pentecostal church or as part of the charismatic movement. |
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James Packer's essay on hermeneutics predates Anthony Thiselton's efforts to increase hermeneutical awareness among evangelicals. |
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Its early success was built upon a successful coalition among north-eastern evangelicals and north-western farmers. |
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However, the thing that evangelicals would add to the Apostles' Creed is their view of holy scripture. |
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They covered the bracken and clay and farms with houses that were built and sold to them by a coincidence of evangelicals. |
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Do you believe that evangelicals should strive to reach unreached peoples with the gospel? |
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He personally identifies with the born-again evangelicals within his own party. |
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Again, I must beware of the danger of speaking about evangelical doctrine of evangelicals in an unevangelical spirit. |
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Conservative evangelicals fear that a younger generation is straying from unbendable biblical truths. |
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Mr Sterk says that, when evangelicals first come in, the Tzotzils want to defend their spiritual world. |
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This book is the cornerstone of the fundamentalists, the evangelicals, and the millenarianists. |
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All this growth, plus the tithing many evangelicals encourage, is generating gushers of cash. |
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It also gave a first-hand account of the priorities of conservative evangelicals within the Anglican Communion. |
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When it comes to the life of the mind, in other words, we evangelicals continue to have our problems. |
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Now, evangelicals have filled churches with a gospel that lacks a call to repentance. |
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He begins his account by detailing the apparent triumph of the evangelicals within Quakerism during the early to mid-nineteenth century. |
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Lutherans, Anglicans, Baptists and evangelicals complete the broad tapestry. |
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After all, more than half of American evangelicals are either Baptists or non-denominational. |
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We're both evangelicals, and this therefore shouldn't be an issue that divides the church. |
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It is a commonplace to associate the low view of the episcopate not only with latitudinarians, but also with nineteenth-century evangelicals. |
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The concern about antinomianism shown by Schlissel, Shepherd and others should also be shown by other evangelicals. |
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The sad truth is that many evangelicals had no problems with what was said. |
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The contributors make the moves one expects from conservative evangelicals. |
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In one sense, the priority of the Word among evangelicals may be its most distinctive trait. |
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Such statements bear the mark of a wan hope that evangelicals and Pentecostals should be other than who they are. |
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These gatherings are a major event for professed evangelicals in the Church of England. |
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There are a lot of recovering evangelicals at the church, and many of them are friends from Bethel College. |
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It is sad that evangelicals have often despised the theology of the confessing churches. |
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Most evangelicals will respond to this basic thesis with hesitation, if only because of its novelty. |
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Yet enough evangelicals to fill a couple of hundred megachurches have read them. |
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Problems arise, however, when evangelicals and evangelical theology limit the gospel's view of salvation. |
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His study reveals that American evangelicals, on the other hand, tend to have higher denominational loyalty. |
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Today's evangelicals, like 16 th-century Protestants, seek to proselytize and convert in ways that today's mainline largely does not. |
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Here, evangelicals are at one with Pentecostals in their rejection of ecclesial institutionalism, hierarchicalism, and traditionalism. |
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But evangelicals and Pentecostals should, it is urged, give up their separatist ways. |
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Among Protestants, it's evangelicals, Pentecostals and other theological conservatives who account for nearly half the total. |
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Nevertheless, Pentecostals share with evangelicals a conservative approach to marriage and gender relations. |
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However, Driscoll is not alone among evangelicals wanting to improve their brand and increase sales. |
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Some American evangelicals export teen exorcists to the UK to fight the Harry Potter induced demonic infestation there. |
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Nevertheless, many evangelicals and High Churchmen still clung to the literal view of Genesis because it was exegetically the soundest interpretation. |
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This is an old-fashioned street fight in a state where the Tea Party, evangelicals, and the New South all intersect. |
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But in the aggregate, immigration reform is not a salient issue for white evangelicals. |
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Establishment figures, Tea Partiers, evangelicals, and libertarians will all be rubbing elbows at a single theater. |
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From Ann Coulter on Ebola to evangelicals on climate change, 2014 was full of award-worthy science denialism. |
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Nationwide in House races this year, 78 percent of white evangelicals voted Republican. |
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White evangelicals are slightly more skeptical, but the poll found that it made no difference in how ardently they support Romney. |
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For instance, while more people invoke God in terms of politics and policy, you see evangelicals and conservative Protestants spending less time focused on personal vices. |
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So, what pray tell is this crucial unavoidable question that all evangelicals must answer? |
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Unlike the traditionally socially conservative version of Southern Baptists, self-described evangelicals sometimes drink, dance, smoke or even vote the liberal line. |
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Within Protestantism, numerical growth and spiritual dynamism seem to have migrated to evangelicals, Pentecostals and charismatics, especially in non-Western countries. |
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At the same time, single women now rival evangelicals as a proportion of the electorate. |
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Contrary to popular opinion, not all evangelicals attend mega-churches. |
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In other words, Baptists and Southern Presbyterians are evangelicals. |
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Whatever the reason, and however absurd their beliefs may seem, American evangelicals are deadly serious. |
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Even those young evangelicals who still have qualms about gay marriage can find friends outside the wagon circling. |
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If the world is going to end, why are evangelicals so busy trying to save it? |
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In late 2007 Romney traveled to Texas AM to soothe evangelicals with a speech that downplayed the distinctiveness of Mormonism. |
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From a novel of Brooklyn neuroses to what happens when evangelicals take over an Alaskan national park. |
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In the past century, evangelicals overemphasized verbal proclamation and underemphasized deeds of love and signs of God's presence and power. |
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Historian Asa Briggs finds that the religious efforts by evangelicals, led to a genuine improvement in morals and manners during the French wars. |
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Mason Gallagher, one founding minister, argued that the true episcopate had come through the 1785 line of evangelicals. |
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At lively talkbacks some accused the show of overly sympathetic attitudes toward evangelicals, while others said it mocked the faithful. |
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Plus, talking of culture is a nice way to dog-whistle to evangelicals. |
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Younger and suburban evangelicals may be more or less conservative, but they do not share the ideological fervor of the Moral Majoritarians. |
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Charismatics distrusted Falwell, fundamentalists disliked Robertson, and mainstream evangelicals and Southern Baptists were skeptical of both. |
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White evangelicals and latter-day Saints are uniformly in the GOP camp. |
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Growth of the nones is a hot topic among American evangelicals. |
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Most American evangelicals are premillennial dispensationalists. |
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Everyone from liberal mainliners to most traditional evangelicals today would balk at this kind of attribution of suffering to God, especially the suffering of children. |
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Evangelicals often referred to having accepted Christ as the most consequential moment in their lives. |
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As Evangelicals, we know that the divine inspiration of the Scriptures is fundamental. |
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In Latin America, we see some decline because of inroads by Evangelicals and Pentecostals. |
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Contemporary Evangelicals applaud Whitefield's eirenic sentiments, but have forgotten why he wrote the letter in the first place. |
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The creedal issue has revived as well, as the Evangelicals have recently called for a formulation of a confession of faith. |
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It is the fastest growing section of the Anglican Church, with more than one third of Anglican churchgoers claiming to be Evangelicals. |
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Upwardly mobile Evangelicals used to mark their arrival in the local establishment by joining the Episcopalian or Presbyterian Church. |
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Humanitarians and Evangelicals sought to abolish pastimes such as cock-fighting and bear-baiting. |
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I don't buy that this about Evangelicals suspicious of the Anglo-Catholic Romanist leanings. |
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Roughly half of black Protestants and white Evangelicals believe that creation is purely for human benefit. |
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Small religious groups of Evangelicals and Pentecostals grew while the dominant churches dramatically shrank in the first half of the 20th Century. |
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Following Christ's example, Evangelicals will seek to live sacrificially. |
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Recently the has rancour subsided except among conservative Evangelicals. |
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It is a subject on which Evangelicals hold differing opinions. |
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Studies over the past ten years of the older High Churchmen, the Tractarians, and the Evangelicals have shown the complexity of the crosscurrents within Anglicanism. |
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Today, Evangelicals are found across many Protestant branches, as well as in various denominations not subsumed to a specific branch. |
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Pray to God to save you from the various Jehovists, Adventists, Baptists, Evangelicals, Methodists, and other similar sects. |
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The first Broad Church, in her view, included Coleridge, Arnold, Kingsley, and Maurice, and was spiritual in the same way as the Evangelicals. |
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Underlying this was the split between the Calvinism of the Evangelicals and the more Enlightenment tone of the Moderates. |
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These differed especially on the question of lay patronage, which the Evangelicals rejected. |
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Conversely, many clergy in the parishes were Evangelicals, as a result of the revival led by John Wesley and others. |
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Revivalist Evangelicals tend to place greater emphasis on religious experience than their confessional counterparts. |
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Fundamentalism arose among Evangelicals in the 1920s to combat modernist or liberal theology in mainline Protestant churches. |
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Over the years, less conservative Evangelicals have challenged this mainstream consensus to varying degrees. |
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Evangelicals are also represented within the Anabaptist, Anglican and Lutheran traditions. |
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Many Evangelicals believe in biblical inerrancy, while other Evangelicals believe in biblical infallibility. |
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All Evangelicals believe in biblical inspiration, though they disagree over how this inspiration should be defined. |
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Among Evangelicals, individuals have testified to both sudden and gradual conversions. |
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To Evangelicals, the central message of the gospel is justification by faith in Christ and repentance, or turning away, from sin. |
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In the United Kingdom, Evangelicals are represented mostly in the Methodist Church, Baptist communities, and among evangelical Anglicans. |
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The North American branch of Evangelical Friends Church International is a member church of the National Association of Evangelicals. |
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The National Association of Evangelicals formed in 1942 as a counterpoise to the mainline Federal Council of Churches. |
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By the late 19th to early 20th century, most American Protestants were Evangelicals. |
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The Evangelicals in the Clapham Sect included figures such as William Wilberforce who successfully campaigned for the abolition of slavery. |
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Progressive Evangelicals commonly advocate for women's equality, pacifism and social justice. |
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Evangelicals have been socially active throughout US history, a tradition dating back to the abolitionist movement of the Antebellum period and the prohibition movement. |
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Rather separate from the abolitionist campaign, although likewise led by anglophone Evangelicals, was a sudden upwelling of commitment to worldwide mission. |
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During and after World War II, Evangelicals became increasingly organized. |
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The Americas, Africa and Asia are home to the majority of Evangelicals. |
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Operation World estimates the number of Evangelicals at 550 million. |
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Crucicentrism is the centrality that Evangelicals give to the Atonement, the saving death and resurrection of Jesus, that offers forgiveness of sins and new life. |
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Evangelicals believed activism in government and the social sphere was an essential method in reaching the goal of eliminating sin in a world drenched in wickedness. |
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The association, formerly known as Headway, was formed about 20 years ago when the Methodist Revival Fellowship and Conservative Evangelicals in Methodism merged. |
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In response to the threat, the Evangelicals presented to parliament a Claim, Declaration and Protest anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session. |
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The Alliance was formed in 1951 by Evangelicals from 21 countries. |
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