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Evangelicalism in the United States

In the United States, evangelicalism is a movement among Protestant Christians who believe in the necessity of being born again, emphasize the importance of evangelism, and affirm traditional Protestant teachings on the authority as well as the historicity of the Bible.[1] Comprising nearly a quarter of the U.S. population, evangelicals are a diverse group drawn from a variety of denominational backgrounds, including Baptist, Mennonite, Methodist, Pentecostal, Plymouth Brethren, Quaker, Reformed and nondenominational churches.[2][3][4]

An event at Gateway Church, Texas

Evangelicalism has played an important role in shaping American religion and culture. The First Great Awakening of the 18th century marked the rise of evangelical religion in colonial America. As the revival spread throughout the Thirteen Colonies, evangelicalism united Americans around a common faith.[1] The Second Great Awakening of the early 19th century led to what historian Martin Marty calls the "Evangelical Empire", a period in which evangelicals dominated U.S. cultural institutions, including schools and universities. Evangelicals of this era in the northern United States were strong advocates of reform. They were involved in the temperance movement and supported the abolition of slavery, in addition to working toward education and criminal justice reform. In the southern United States, evangelicals split from their northern counterparts on the issue of slavery, establishing new denominations that opposed abolition and defended the practice of racial slavery[5] that the South's expanding cash-crops-for-export agricultural economy was built upon.[6][7][8] During the bloody Civil War, each side confidently preached in support of its own cause using Bible verses and Evangelical arguments, which exposed a deep theological conflict that had been brewing for decades and would continue long after Lee's surrender at Appomattox.[9]

By the end of the 19th century, the old evangelical consensus that had united much of American Protestantism no longer existed. Protestant churches became divided over ground-breaking new intellectual and theological ideas, such as Darwinian evolution and historical criticism of the Bible. Those who embraced these ideas became known as modernists, while those who rejected them became known as fundamentalists. Fundamentalists defended the doctrine of biblical inerrancy and adopted a dispensationalist theological system for interpreting the Bible.[10][11] As a result of the fundamentalist–modernist controversy of the 1920s and 1930s, fundamentalists lost control of the Mainline Protestant churches and separated themselves from non-fundamentalist churches and cultural institutions.[12]

After World War II, a new generation of conservative Protestants rejected the separatist stance of fundamentalism and began calling themselves evangelicals. Popular evangelist Billy Graham was at the forefront of reviving use of the term. During this time period, several evangelical institutions were established, including the National Association of Evangelicals, the magazine Christianity Today, and educational institutions such as Fuller Theological Seminary.[13] As a reaction to the 1960s counterculture and the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, many white evangelicals became politically active and involved in the Christian right,[14] which became an important voting bloc in the Republican Party. Recently, however, observers such as journalist Frances FitzGerald have noted that since 2005 the influence of the Christian right among evangelicals has been in decline.[15] Though less visible, some evangelicals identify as progressive evangelicals.[14]

Definition edit

Many scholars have adopted historian David Bebbington's definition of evangelicalism. According to Bebbington, evangelicalism has four major characteristics. These are conversionism (an emphasis on the new birth), biblicism (an emphasis on the Bible as the supreme religious authority), activism (an emphasis on individual engagement in spreading the gospel), and crucicentrism (an emphasis on Christ's sacrifice on the cross as the heart of true religion). However, this definition has been criticized for being so broad as to include all Christians.[16][17]

Historian Molly Worthen writes "history—rather than theology or politics—is the most useful tool for pinning down today's evangelicals."[18] She finds that evangelicals share common origins in the religious revivals and moral crusades of the 18th and 19th centuries. She writes, "Evangelical catchphrases like 'Bible-believing' and 'born again' are modern translations of the Reformers' slogan sola scriptura and Pietists' emphasis on internal spiritual transformation."[18]

Evangelicals are often defined in opposition to mainline Protestants. According to sociologist Brian Steensland and colleagues, "evangelical denominations have typically sought more separation from the broader culture, emphasized missionary activity and individual conversion, and taught strict adherence to particular religious doctrines."[19] Mainline Protestants are described as having "an accommodating stance toward modernity, a proactive view on issues of social and economic justice, and pluralism in their tolerance of varied individual beliefs."[20]

Historian George Marsden writes that during the 1950s and 1960s the simplest definition of an evangelical was "anyone who likes Billy Graham". During that period, most people who self-identified with the evangelical movement were affiliated with organizations that had some connection to Graham.[21] It can also be defined narrowly as a movement centered around organizations such as the National Association of Evangelicals and Youth for Christ.[17]

News media often conflate evangelicalism with "conservative Protestantism" or the Christian right. However, not every conservative Protestant identifies as evangelical, nor are all evangelicals political conservatives.[22]

Types edit

 
Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, California
 
The Goshen College Music Center (Mennonite Church USA) in Goshen, Indiana.

Scholars have found it useful to distinguish among different types of evangelicals. One scheme by sociologist James Davison Hunter identifies four major types: the Baptist tradition, the Holiness and Pentecostal tradition, the Anabaptist tradition, and the Confessional tradition (evangelical Anglicans, pietistic Lutherans, and evangelicals within the Reformed churches).[23][24]

Ethicist Max Stackhouse and historians Donald W. Dayton and Timothy P. Weber divide evangelicalism into three main historical groupings. The first, called "Puritan" or classical evangelicalism, seeks to preserve the doctrinal heritage of the 16th century Protestant Reformation, especially the Reformed tradition. Classical evangelicals emphasize absolute divine sovereignty, forensic justification, and "literalistic" inerrancy. The second, pietistic evangelicalism, originates from the 18th-century pietist movements in Europe and the Great Awakenings in America. Pietistic evangelicals embrace revivalism and a more experiential faith, emphasizing conversion, sanctification, regeneration, and healing. The third, fundamentalist evangelicalism, results from the Fundamentalist-Modernist split of the early 20th century. Fundamentalists emphasize certain "fundamental" beliefs against modernist criticism and often use an apocalyptic, premillennialist interpretation of the Bible. These three categories are more fluid than Hunter's, so an individual could identify with only one, any two, or all three.[25]

John C. Green, a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, used polling data to separate evangelicals into three broad camps, which he labels as traditionalist, centrist and modernist:[26]

  1. Traditionalist evangelicals, characterized by high affinity for certain Protestant beliefs, (especially penal substitutionary atonement, justification by faith, the authority of scripture, and the priesthood of all believers) which, when fused with the highly political milieu of Western culture (especially American culture), has resulted in the political disposition that has been labeled the Christian right, with public figures like Jerry Falwell and the television evangelist Pat Robertson among its most visible spokesmen.
  2. Centrist evangelicals, described as socially conservative and mostly avoiding politics, who still support much of traditional Christian theology.
  3. Modernist evangelicals, a small minority in the movement, who have lower levels of church attendance and "have much more diversity in their beliefs".[26]

History edit

18th century edit

The roots of American evangelicalism lie in the merger of three older Protestant traditions: New England Puritanism, Continental Pietism and Scotch-Irish Presbyterianism.[27] Within their Congregational churches, Puritans promoted experimental or experiential religion, arguing that saving faith required an inward transformation.[28] This led Puritans to demand evidence of a conversion experience (in the form of a conversion narrative) before a convert was admitted to full church membership.[29] In the 1670s and 1680s, Puritan clergy began to promote religious revival in response to a perceived decline in religiosity.[30] The Ulster Scots who immigrated to the American colonies in the early 18th century brought with them their own revival tradition, specifically the practice of communion seasons.[31] Pietism was a movement within the Lutheran and Reformed churches in Europe that emphasized a "religion of the heart": the ideal that faith was not simply acceptance of propositional truth but was an emotional "commitment of one's whole being to God" in which one's life became dedicated to self-sacrificial ministry.[32] Pietists promoted the formation of cell groups for Bible study, prayer, and accountability.[33]

 
Jonathan Edwards was the most influential evangelical theologian in America during the 18th century.[34]

These three traditions were brought together with the First Great Awakening, a series of revivals in Britain and its American Colonies during the 1730s and 1740s.[35] The Awakening began within the Congregational churches of New England. In 1734, Jonathan Edwards' preaching on justification by faith instigated a revival in Northampton, Massachusetts. Earlier Puritan revivals had been brief, local affairs, but the Northampton revival was part of a larger wave of revival that affected the Presbyterian and Dutch Reformed churches in the middle colonies as well.[36] There the Reformed minister Theodore Frelinghuysen and Presbyterian minister Gilbert Tennent led revivals.[34]

The English evangelist George Whitefield was responsible for spreading the revivals through all the colonies. An Anglican priest, Whitefield had studied at Oxford University prior to ordination, and there he befriended John Wesley and his brother Charles, the founders of a pietistic movement within the Church of England called Methodism. Whitefield's dramatic preaching style and ability to simplify doctrine made him a popular preacher in England, and in 1739 he arrived in America preaching up and down the Atlantic coastline. Thousands flocked to open-air meetings to hear him preach, and he became a celebrity throughout the colonies.[37]

The Great Awakening hit its peak by 1740,[38] but it shaped a new form of Protestantism that emphasized, according to historian Thomas S. Kidd, "seasons of revival, or outpourings of the Holy Spirit, and converted sinners experiencing God's love personally" [emphasis in original].[39] Evangelicals believed in the "new birth"—a discernible moment of conversion—and believed that it was normal for a Christian to have assurance of faith.[40] While the Puritans had also believed in the necessity of conversion, they "had held that assurance is rare, late and the fruit of struggle in the experience of believers".[41] Emphasis on the individual's relationship to God gave evangelicalism an egalitarian streak as well, which was perceived by anti-revivalists as undermining social order. Radical evangelicals ordained uneducated ministers (sometimes nonwhite men) and sometimes allowed nonwhites and women to serve as deacons and elders. They also supported laypeople's right to dissent from their pastors and form new churches.[42]

 
Jonathan Edwards' 1741 sermon "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God"

The Awakening split the Congregational and Presbyterian churches over support for the revival movement, between Old and New Lights, leading to the Old Side–New Side controversy. Ultimately, the evangelical New Lights became the larger faction among both Congregationalists and Presbyterians. The New England theology, based on Edwards' work, would become the dominant theological outlook within Congregational churches.[43][37] In New England, radical New Lights broke away from the established churches and formed Separate Baptist congregations. In the 1740s and 1750s, New Side Presbyterians and Separate Baptists began moving to the southern colonies and establishing churches. Many traveled along the difficult Great Wagon Road on their way to the southern colonies. There they challenged the Anglican religious establishment, which was identified with the planter elite. In contrast, evangelicals tended to be neither very rich nor very poor, but hardworking farmers and tradesmen who disapproved of worldliness they saw in the planter class. In the 1760s, the first Methodist missionaries came to America and focused their ministry in the South as well. By 1776, evangelicals outnumbered Anglicans in the South.[44]

During and after the American Revolution, the Anglican Church (now known as the Episcopal Church) experienced much disruption and lost its special legal status and privileges. The four largest denominations were the Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and Methodists. In the 1770s and 1780s, the Baptists and Methodists had experienced dramatic growth. In 1770, there were only 150 Baptist and 20 Methodist churches, but in 1790 there were 858 Baptist and 712 Methodist churches. These two evangelical denominations were most successful in the southern states and along the western frontier. They also appealed to African slaves; on the Delmarva Peninsula, for example, over a third of Methodists were black. In the 1790s, evangelical influence on smaller groups such as Quakers, Lutherans, and the Dutch and German Reformed was still limited. Because of cultural and language barriers, the Dutch and German churches were not a major part of this era's evangelical revivals.[45]

19th century edit

In the 19th century, evangelicalism expanded as a result of the Second Great Awakening (1790s–1840s).[46] The revivals of the Second Great Awakening influenced all the major Protestant denominations, and turned most American Protestants into evangelicals.[47] From the 1790s until the 1860s, evangelicals were the most influential religious leaders in the United States.[16] For context, the U.S. population was 2.6 million in 1776. By 1860 it had grown to 31.5 million. Between 1790 and 1840, over four million people (more than the entire population in 1776) had moved west of the Appalachian Mountains.[48]

There were three major centers of revival in the Second Great Awakening. Revival in the Cumberland River Valley of western frontier states Tennessee and Kentucky started as early as 1800. In New England, a major revival began among Congregationalists by the 1820s, led by Edwardsian preachers such as Timothy Dwight, Lyman Beecher, Nathaniel Taylor, and Asahel Nettleton. In western New York—the so-called "burned-over district" along the Erie Canal—the revival was mainly led by Congregationalists and Presbyterians, but Baptists and Methodists were also involved.[49]

 
Depiction of a camp meeting

Unlike the East Coast, where revivals tended to be quieter and more solemn, western revivals tended to be more emotional and dramatic.[50] Presbyterian minister James McGready led the Revival of 1800, also known as the Red River Revival, in southwestern Kentucky's Logan County. It was here that the traditional Scottish communion season began to evolve into the American camp meeting.[51] In northeastern Kentucky's Bourbon County a year later, the Cane Ridge Revival led by Barton Stone lasted a week and drew crowds of 20,000 people from the thinly populated frontier. At Cane Ridge, many converts experienced religious ecstasy and "bodily agitations".[52] Some worshipers caught holy laughter, barked like dogs, experienced convulsions, fell into trances, danced, shouted or were slain in the Spirit. Similar responses had occurred in other revivals, but they were more intense at Cane Ridge. This revival was the origin of the Stone-Campbell Movement, from which the Churches of Christ and Disciples of Christ denominations originate.[53][52]

During the Second Great Awakening, the Methodist Episcopal Church was most successful at gaining converts. It enthusiastically adopted camp meetings as a regular part of church life, and devoted resources to evangelizing the western frontier. Itinerant ministers known as circuit riders traveled hundreds of miles each year to preach and serve scattered congregations. The Methodists took a democratic and egalitarian approach to ministry, allowing poor and uneducated young men to become circuit riders. The Baptists also expanded rapidly. Like the Methodists, Baptists also sent out itinerant ministers, often with little education.[54]

 
Charles Grandison Finney, the most prominent revivalist of the Second Great Awakening

The theology behind the First Great Awakening had been largely Calvinist.[55] Calvinists taught predestination and that God only gives salvation to a small group of the elect and condemns everyone else to hell. The Calvinist doctrine of irresistible grace denied to humans free will or any role in their own salvation.[56] The Second Great Awakening was heavily influenced by Arminianism, a theology that allows for free will and gives humans a greater role in their own conversion.[55] The Methodists were Arminians and taught that all people could choose salvation. They also taught that Christians could lose their salvation by backsliding or returning to sin.[56]

The most influential evangelical of the Second Great Awakening was Charles Grandison Finney. He is best known for preaching from 1825 to 1835 in Upstate New York,[57] which experienced a population boom after the Erie Canal opened in 1825.[58] Though ordained by the Presbyterian Church, Finney deviated from traditional Calvinism. Finney taught that neither revivals nor conversion occurred without human effort. While divine grace is necessary to persuade people of the truth of Christianity, God does not force salvation upon people. Unlike Edwards, who described revival as a "surprising work of God", Finney taught that "revival is not a miracle" but "the result of the right use of the appropriate means."[59] Finney emphasized several methods to promote revival that became known as the "new measures" (even though they were not new but had already been in use among the Methodists): mass advertising, protracted revival meetings, allowing women to speak and testify in revival meetings, and the mourner's bench where potential converts sat to pray for conversion.[60] Finney was also active in social reforms, particularly the abolitionist movement. He frequently denounced slavery from the pulpit, called it a "great national sin," and refused Holy Communion to slaveholders.[61]

Evangelical views on eschatology (the doctrine of the end times) have also changed over time. The Puritans were premillennialists, which means they believed Christ would return before the Millennium (a thousand years of godly rule on earth). But the First Great Awakening convinced many evangelicals that the millennial kingdom was already being established before Christ returned, a belief known as postmillennialism. During the Second Great Awakening, postmillennialism (with its expectation that society would become progressively more Christianized) became the dominant view, since it complemented the Arminian emphasis on self-determination and the Enlightenment's positive view of human potential.[62]

 
Collection box for the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, circa 1850

This postmillennial optimism inspired a number of social reform movements among northern evangelicals,[63] including temperance (as teetotalism became "a badge of honor" for evangelicals),[64] abolitionism, prison reform, and educational reform.[62] They launched a campaign to end dueling.[65] They built asylums for the physically disabled and mentally ill, schools for the deaf, and hospitals for treating tuberculosis. They formed organizations to provide food, clothing, money, and job placement to immigrants and the poor.[66] In order to "impress the new nation with an indelibly Protestant character," evangelicals founded Sunday schools, colleges, and seminaries. They published millions of books, tracts, and Christian periodicals through organizations such as the American Tract Society and the American Bible Society.[65] This network of social reform organizations is referred to as the Benevolent Empire.

Postmillennialism also led to an increase in missionary work.[62] Many of the major missionary societies in the U.S. were founded around this time. Missionary efforts by northern evangelicals included the influential American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM), founded in 1810, which sent missionaries overseas, placed missionaries with American Indian tribes in the Southeastern United States, and had established missions among the Cherokee, for example, by 1820. The ABCFM fought against U.S. Indian removal policies in general and against the Indian Removal Act of 1830 in particular.[67] In 1836 the ABCFM sent Marcus and Narcissa Whitman west from Upstate New York to preach to the Cayuse people in Oregon Country.[68][69]

The Third Great Awakening that began in 1857-1858 also gathered much of its strength from the postmillennial belief that the Second Coming of Christ would occur after mankind had reformed the entire Earth. It was affiliated with the Social Gospel movement, which applied Christianity to social issues.[70]

Dispensationalism edit

 
John Nelson Darby, considered to be the father of modern Dispensationalism

The spread of dispensationalism in late 19th-century America led many Evangelicals to return to the more pessimistic premillennialist point of view. According to scholar Mark Sweetnam, dispensationalists are evangelical, premillennialist and apocalyptic, insist on a literal interpretation of Scripture, identify distinct stages ("dispensations") in God's dealings with humanity, and expect Christ's imminent return to rapture His saints.[71] As B. M. Pietsch notes, their leaders have built intricate new methods of text analysis to "unlock" the Bible's meaning.[72]

John Nelson Darby was an austere 19th-century Anglo-Irish Bible teacher and former Anglican clergyman who devised and promoted dispensationalism. This new and controversial method of interpreting the Bible,[73][74] which does not reconcile easily with findings from recent mainstream archaeological and textual research,[75][76][77] was incorporated into the development of modern Evangelicalism.[78] First taught in the 1830s by Darby and the Plymouth Brethren in England, dispensationalism was introduced to American evangelical leaders during Darby's missionary journeys to the U.S. and Canada in the 1860s and 1870s.[79] The Niagara Bible Conference was organized in 1876 to teach dispensationalist ideas;[80] these ideas came to dominate the fundamentalist movement within a few decades.[11][81]

 
Dwight Moody, founder of the Moody Bible Institute

Dwight L. Moody played a key role in this transformation. In the latter half of the 19th century, Moody became the most important evangelical figure of the era, weaving ideas from business and religion into a compelling new form of evangelical Protestantism and reaching very large audiences with his powerful preaching.[82][83][84][85] Focused on the city of Chicago and active in the Sunday School movement and Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) from 1858 in his early ministry, Moody had relentlessly sought financial contributions from rich evangelical businessmen such as John Farwell and Cyrus McCormick. Moody's approach was rough, blunt and unconventional, but wealthy philanthropists could see he truly cared for the urban poor and he found effective ways to improve their lot.[86][83] During an 1867 visit to England, Moody became acquainted with a group of pragmatic Brethren dispensationalists who shared many of his own concerns and approaches to charitable work.[87] After the Great Chicago Fire in 1871 destroyed his church, his home and the Chicago YMCA, Moody left local church work for a new career as a traveling revivalist.[83] Convinced now that the world would be changed not by social work but by Christ's return and the establishment of His millennial kingdom on Earth, Moody abandoned his own previous postmillennialist views.[83] His revivals accelerated the spread of dispensationalist beliefs, and he was influential in preaching the imminence of the Kingdom of God that is so important to dispensationalism.[88]

Enlisting philanthropic support from the business community was one of several enduring innovations Moody had introduced into the conduct of revival campaigns.[83] Like many clergymen in the Gilded Age that followed soon after the Civil War, Moody supported the business community's values. He helped forge the union between the evangelical mind and the business mind that came to be a hallmark of later popular revivalists.[89] Moody's religious individualism fit neatly with the rugged individualism of Gilded Age businessmen.[90] Moody radiated optimism when he spoke about how Christian conversion would impact a poor man's life.[91] He believed Christian conversion would make lazy, poor men into energetic men who would then work hard and prosper.[91] At his revival meetings Moody would look around at the wealthy men who sat on the platform with him, such as McCormick, William E. Dodge, and John Wanamaker, comment that they were all devout church members, all born again Christians, and say that few of the poor in the slums of Chicago, London, or New York attended church services.[91] Moody also viewed industrialism and its ills through the same lens of Christian conversion. As he saw it, the fix was simple and obvious: believe in God, and the problems will vanish soon.[92]

 
Cyrus Scofield, author of the Scofield Reference Bible

American evangelical minister and Moody associate Cyrus Scofield also promoted the spread of dispensationalism, starting with a pamphlet published in 1888, then by weaving extensive interpretive commentary into prominent notes on the pages of his ambitious Scofield Reference Bible. First published in 1909, the Scofield Bible became a popular one-volume reference used widely by independent Evangelicals in the United States.[93] It did much to popularize dispensationalism early in the 20th century, as Evangelicals sought to make sense of calamities like World War I, the 1918 influenza pandemic, the 1929 stock market crash, the Great Depression and Dust Bowl in the 1930s, and World War II. By 1945, more than 2 million copies had been published in the United States.[94]

 
Scofield Reference Bible, 1917 edition

Evangelicals also launched a network of independent Bible institutes which soon became the nucleus for the spread of American dispensationalism.[95] Notable examples include the Moody Bible Institute[96] and the Bible Institute of Los Angeles.[97] By the early 1930s there were as many as fifty such Bible institutes serving fundamentalist constituencies.[95]

Holiness Movement edit

In the late 19th century, the revivalist Holiness movement promoted the doctrine of entire sanctification, and while many adherents remained within mainline Methodism, those associated with it also formed new denominations, such as the Free Methodist Church and Wesleyan Methodist Church.[98] In urban Britain the holiness message was less censorious, and did not face as much opposition.[99]

The Princeton Theologians edit

From the 1850s to the 1920s, a more advanced theological perspective came from the Princeton Theologians, such as Charles Hodge, Archibald Alexander, and B. B. Warfield,[100] who strove to defend traditional doctrines they found in the Bible against rival claims from other learned scholars, including claims based on higher criticism.[101]

20th century edit

 
Lyman Stewart, co-founder of Union Oil

By the 1890s, most American Protestants belonged to evangelical denominations, except for high church Episcopalians and German Lutherans. In the early 20th century, a divide opened up between fundamentalists and the mainline Protestant denominations, chiefly over inerrancy of the Bible. After 1910, evangelicalism was dominated by fundamentalists who rejected liberal theology, emphasized inerrancy of Scripture, and taught a dispensationalist interpretation of the Bible to support their views of human history and mankind's future.

Pastors, theologians, and laity shaped the course of early fundamentalism, but wealthy businessmen also played a crucial role.[102][103] For example, Union Oil co-founder Lyman Stewart was instrumental in establishing the Bible Institute of Los Angeles.[97][104] He also anonymously funded publication and distribution of The Fundamentals (groups of essays by multiple authors published quarterly in twelve volumes from 1910 through 1915), which became the foundation document of Christian fundamentalism, published as a set in 1917,[103][105][106] and he ensured that its many individual authors promoted premillennialist dispensationalism.[103][105] The essays were written by 64 different authors, representing most of the major Protestant Christian denominations. It was mailed free of charge to ministers, missionaries, professors of theology, Sunday school superintendents, YMCA and YWCA secretaries, and other Protestant religious workers in the United States and other English-speaking countries. Over three million volumes (250,000 sets) were sent out.[105]

Dispensationalism led fundamentalist evangelicals to see the world as a battleground in a deadly conflict between God and the Devil that would sweep all unbelievers to perdition very soon, so that they must focus on saving souls, with reform of society as a strictly secondary concern.[107] Adoption of this "lifeboat" theology also made the fundamentalists' message more welcome among American groups and communities who opposed reform of their own cherished institutions (such as violent enforcement of racial segregation by local authorities and by self-appointed vigilante groups) and business practices (ruthless exploitation of industrial workers,[108] redlining, and the Jim Crow economy).[109]

Dispensationalism also led fundamentalists to fear that new trends in modern science were pulling people away from what they saw as essential truth, and to believe that modernist parties in Protestant churches had surrendered their Evangelical heritage by accommodating secular views and values. Among these fundamentalist evangelicals, a favored way of resisting modernism was to prohibit teaching evolution as fact in public schools, a movement that reached a peak in the Scopes trial of 1925. The sting of this public embarrassment led fundamentalists to retreat further into separatism. Protestant modernists criticized fundamentalists for their separatist self-isolation and for their rejection of the Social Gospel that had been developed by Protestant activists in the previous century. By this time, modernists had largely abandoned the term "evangelical," and tolerated evolutionary theories in modern science and even in Biblical studies. In the 1930s, fundamentalist pastors and parishioners who rejected modernist viewpoints put forward by their own denominations turned more and more to the dispensationalist Bible institutes for guidance and community.[110] As the largest of these schools, the Moody Bible Institute set the pace, providing a wide variety of fundamentalist outreach services, from guest speakers and extension courses to Bible conferences, magazines and radio programs.[110][111]

 
Congregation at Angelus Temple during 14-hour Holy Ghost service led by Aimee Semple McPherson in Los Angeles, California, in 1942

During and after World War II, white evangelicals formed new organizations and expanded their vision to include the entire world. There was a great expansion of Evangelical activity within the United States, "a revival of revivalism." The doctrine of dispensationalism, with its intense focus on end times and the rapture, continued to be a major theme. Many earlier evangelists had preached in tents to small-town audiences on the "sawdust trail," but the new evangelicals sought ways to save souls in the big cities that had come to dominate American life.[112] Youth for Christ was formed in 1940 to help make the evangelical message attractive to soldiers, sailors, and urban teenagers;[113] it later became the base for Billy Graham's post-war revival crusades.[114][115] The National Association of Evangelicals was formed in 1942 as a response to the mainline Federal Council of Churches, which had been organized in 1908.[112] Charles Fuller had started broadcasting the Old-Fashioned Revival Hour in 1937; by 1943 it had a record-setting national radio audience, with twenty million weekly listeners.[112]

But a split also developed among evangelicals in this era, as they disagreed among themselves about how a Christian ought to respond to an unbelieving world. Many evangelicals urged that Christians must engage contemporary culture directly and constructively,[116] and they began to express reservations about being known to the world as fundamentalists. As Kenneth Kantzer put it at the time, the name fundamentalist had become "an embarrassment instead of a badge of honor".[117] Fuller Theological Seminary founding president Harold Ockenga coined the term neo-evangelicalism in 1947 to identify a distinct movement he saw within fundamentalist Christianity. This new generation of evangelicals sought to pursue a more open, non-judgmental dialogue with other traditions. They also called for greater application of the gospel to sociology, politics, and economics. Many fundamentalists responded by separating their opponents from the "fundamentalist" name and by seeking to distinguish themselves from the more open group, which they often characterized derogatorily by Ockenga's term "neo-Evangelical", or simply "evangelicals".

Growth during the Cold War edit

 
Services at the Pentecostal Church of God in Lejunior, Kentucky, in 1946
 
Faculty of Science at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas.

The end of World War II in 1945 and the onset of the Cold War by 1948 provided new opportunities for evangelical expansion. The Second World War ended in August 1945 after the U.S. used two nuclear bombs to destroy the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Even nonreligious people groped for religious language to express those bombs' nearly unimaginable destructive power.[118] And the end of the war affected almost everyone in America: millions of men returned from the armed forces, while millions of women left their temporary wartime industrial jobs. The marriage rate and the birth rate soared, accelerating a baby boom that had begun while the war was still being fought.[119] As young American families crowded into new churches, their ministers, priests, and rabbis led them in fervent prayers for a world in upheaval.[119] No one in the U.S. voiced fears for the world's future with more fervor than evangelical and fundamentalist preachers. A key element in their preaching had always been that the Second Coming of Christ could happen at any moment and that everyone must be ready for the end of the world.[119]

In September 1949, 30-year-old evangelist Billy Graham set up circus tents in a Los Angeles parking lot for a series of revival meetings. A tall, handsome, spellbinding preacher from North Carolina with a piercing gaze, Graham aimed to fill his listeners first with dread that they were lost sinners in a world rushing headlong into disaster, then with a deep longing to turn their lives around, trust Jesus, and be saved.[113] The crusade started on September 25, 1949,[120] and it was scheduled to last three weeks, from September 25 to October 17.[121] Two days before the start of the revival, in a statement released on September 23, 1949, President Truman revealed to the public that the communist Soviet Union had built and successfully detonated its own nuclear bomb on August 29.[122] Six days after the revival started, mainland China fell to Mao Zedong's communist Red Army.[123] Newspaper headlines that reported these shocking Cold War events put much of the nation into an anxious, apocalyptic mood. Then in October, media tycoon[124] William Randolph Hearst sent a telegram to all editors in his conservative Hearst chain of newspapers: "Puff Graham."[125][126] As a result, within five days Graham gained national coverage.[127][128] Planned to last three weeks, the event ran for eight weeks. Graham became a national figure with heavy coverage from the wire services and national magazines, and he went on to become the most influential American evangelist of the 20th century.

Evangelicals' international missionary activity also expanded in the postwar era. White evangelicals found new enthusiasm and self-confidence after the nation's victory in the world war. Many came from poor rural districts that had struggled during the Great Depression of the 1930s, but wartime and postwar prosperity had dramatically increased the funding resources available for missionary work. Overseas missionaries began to prepare for their postwar role, in organizations such as the Far Eastern Gospel Crusade. After Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan had been defeated, the newly mobilized evangelicals prepared to combat perceived threats from atheistic communism, secularism, Darwinism, liberalism, Catholicism, and (in overseas missions) paganism.[129]

 
Billy Graham preaching in Duisburg, Germany, 1954

While mainline Protestant denominations cut back on their missionary activities from 7,000 overseas workers in 1935 to only 3,000 in 1980, evangelicals tripled their career foreign missionary force in the same period: from 12,000 in 1935 to 35,000 in 1980. At Youth for Christ's 70,000-person rally on Memorial Day 1945 in Chicago's Soldier Field football stadium (seating capacity 74,000), soldiers and nurses marched along with missionary representatives who paraded in costumes representing all the nations still awaiting the dispensationalist gospel.[113][130] North Americans had sent out only 41% of all the world's Protestant missionaries in 1936, but their contribution rose to 52% in 1952 and 72% in 1969. Denominations expanding their overseas missionary efforts after the war included the United Pentecostal Church International, formed in 1945, and the Assemblies of God, which nearly tripled from 230 missionaries in 1935 to 626 in 1952. Southern Baptist missionaries more than doubled from 405 to 855, as did those sent by the Church of the Nazarene, from 88 to 200.[131]

The post-war period also saw growth of the ecumenical movement and the founding of the World Council of Churches (1948), which was generally regarded with suspicion by the evangelical community.[132] During the 1950s, the number of church members in America grew from 64.5 million to 114.5 million. By 1960, more than 60% of the nation belonged to a church.[133] Following the Welsh Methodist revival, the Azusa Street Revival in 1906 had begun the spread of Pentecostalism in North America. The Charismatic movement began in the 1960s and led to Pentecostal theology and practices being introduced into many mainline denominations. Charismatic groups such as Newfrontiers and the Association of Vineyard Churches trace their roots to this period.

21st century edit

 
Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville (Baptist Health network) in Jacksonville, Florida.

A 2018 report of polls conducted from 2003 to 2017 of 174,485 random-sample telephone interviews by ABC News and The Washington Post show significant shifts in U.S. religious identification in those 15 years, including a decline in the share of Americans who identify as Protestants (both evangelical and non-evangelical) and a rise in the share of Americans who say they have no religion.[134] According to reports in the New York Times, some evangelicals have sought to expand their movement's social agenda to include reducing poverty, combating AIDS in the Third World, and protecting the environment: "a push to better this world as well as save eternal souls."[135] This has been highly contentious within the evangelical community, because evangelicals of a more conservative stance believe this trend compromises important issues, and values popularity and consensus too highly: "a 'capitulation' to the broader culture."[135] Personifying this division in the early 21st century were the evangelical leaders James Dobson and Rick Warren. Dobson warned of dangers, from his point of view, of a victory by Democratic Party presidential candidate Barack Obama in 2008.[136] Warren declined to endorse either major candidate, on the grounds that he wanted the church to be less politically divisive and that he agreed substantially with both Obama and Republican Party candidate John McCain.[137]

 
TheCall rally in 2008, Washington, D.C., near the United States Capitol

Demographics edit

 
Socially conservative evangelical Protestantism has a major cultural influence in the Bible Belt, covering almost all of the Southern United States, including all states that fought against the Union in the Civil War.
 
Wheaton College campus, Illinois

Anywhere from 6 to 35% of the United States population is evangelical, depending on how "evangelical" is defined.[138] A 2008 study reported that in 2000, about 9% of Americans attended an evangelical service on any given Sunday.[139] A 2014 Pew Research Center survey of religious life in the United States reported that 25.4% of the population were evangelical, while Roman Catholics were 20.8% and mainline Protestants were 14.7%.[140] In 2020, mainline Protestants were reported to outnumber predominantly-white Evangelical churches.[141][142] In 2021, Pew Research Center reported that "24% of U.S. adults describe themselves as born-again or evangelical Protestants."[143]

In 2007 Barna Group reported that 8% of adult Americans were born-again evangelicals, defined as those surveyed in 2006 who answered yes to these nine questions:[144][138]

  • "Have you made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in your life today?"
  • "Do you believe that when you die you will go to Heaven because you have confessed your sins and have accepted Jesus Christ as your savior?"
  • "Is your faith very important in your life today?"
  • "Do you have a personal responsibility to share your religious beliefs about Christ with non-Christians?"
  • "Does Satan exist?"
  • "Is eternal salvation possible only through grace, not works?"
  • "Did Jesus Christ live a sinless life on earth?"
  • "Is the Bible accurate in all that it teaches?"
  • "Is God the all-knowing, all-powerful, perfect deity who created the universe and still rules it today?"

In 2012, The Economist estimated that "over one-third of Americans, more than 100 million, can be considered evangelical," arguing that the percentage is often undercounted because many African Americans espouse evangelical theology but refer to themselves as "born again Christians" rather than "evangelical."[145] As of 2017, according to The Economist, white evangelicals overall account for about 17% of Americans, while white evangelicals under the age of 30 represent about 8% of Americans in that age group.[146]

In 2016, Wheaton College's Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals estimated that about 30 to 35% (90 to 100 million people) of the U.S. population is evangelical. These figures include white and black "cultural evangelicals" (Americans who do not regularly attend church but identify as evangelicals).[147] Similarly, a 2019 Gallup survey asking respondents whether they identified either as "born-again" or as "evangelical" found that 37% of respondents answered in the affirmative.[148]

Sometimes members of historically black churches are counted as evangelicals, and at other times they are not. When analyzing political trends, pollsters often distinguish between white evangelicals (who tend to vote for the Republican Party) and African American Protestants (who share religious beliefs in common with white evangelicals but have tended to vote for the Democratic Party).[138][149]

Politics and social issues edit

Political ideology among American Evangelicals[150]

  Conservative (55%)
  Moderate (27%)
  Liberal (13%)
  Don't know (6%)

Evangelical political influence in America was first evident in the 1830s with movements such as the prohibition movement, which closed saloons and taverns in state after state until it succeeded nationally in 1919.[151] The Christian Right is a coalition of numerous groups of traditionalist and observant church-goers of many kinds: especially Catholics on issues such as birth control and abortion, plus Southern Baptists, Missouri Synod Lutherans, and others.[152] Since the early 1980s the Christian Right has been associated with several political and issue-oriented organizations, including the Moral Majority, the Christian Coalition, Focus on the Family, and the Family Research Council.[153][154]

In the 2016 presidential election, exit polls reported that 81% of white evangelicals voted for Donald Trump,[155] despite criticism from some conservative evangelicals.[156][157][158]

Most African Americans who identify as Christians belong to Baptist, Methodist or other denominations that share evangelical beliefs, but they are firmly in the Democratic coalition, and (with the possible exception of issues involving abortion and homosexuality) are generally liberal in politics.[159][149]

Evangelical political activists are not all on the right. There is also a small group of liberal white Evangelicals.[14][160][161] Some Evangelical leaders, such as Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council, object to equating the term Christian Right with theological conservatism and Evangelicalism. Although white evangelicals constitute the core constituency of the Christian Right within the United States, not all evangelicals fit that political description. Secular media do frequently conflate the Christian Right with theological conservatism, but this becomes complicated when the label religious conservative or conservative Christian is also applied to other religious groups who are theologically, socially, and culturally conservative but do not have overtly political organizations associated with them. Some of these Christian denominations may best be described as indifferent toward politics.[162][163] Tim Keller, an Evangelical theologian and Presbyterian Church in America pastor, has argued that Conservative Christianity (theology) predates the Christian Right (politics), that being a theological conservative doesn't necessitate being a political conservative, and that some politically progressive views around economics, racial diversity, helping the poor, and the redistribution of wealth are compatible with theologically conservative Christianity.[164][165] Rod Dreher, a senior editor for The American Conservative, a secular conservative magazine, argues for the same distinctions, even claiming that a "traditional Christian," a theological conservative, can be an economic progressive or even a socialist while maintaining traditional Christian beliefs.[166]

On the other hand, a Pew Research report published in September 2022 reported that "70% of adults who were raised Christian but are now unaffiliated are Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents, compared with 43% of those who remained Christian and 51% of U.S. adults overall. Some scholars argue that disaffiliation from Christianity is driven by an association between Christianity and political conservatism that has intensified in recent decades."[167]

Evolution edit

Evangelicals are often stereotyped as Christians who reject mainstream scientific views out of concern that those views contradict traditional "young earth" chronologies and certain verses in the Bible. This is true for many Scofield-inspired dispensationalists and for other fundamentalists who also reject evolution in favor of creation science and flood geology (both of which contradict the scientific consensus and the well-established geologic time scale).[168] Their influence has led to high-profile court cases over whether public schools can be forced to teach either creationism or intelligent design (which is the claim that the complexity and diversity of life can only be explained by the direct intervention of God or some other active intelligence).[169][170]

However, many other evangelicals have found evolution to be compatible with Christianity. For example, prominent evangelicals such as Billy Graham, B. B. Warfield, and John Stott believed the theory could be reconciled with Christian teaching.[171] Careful study by the American Scientific Affiliation, an organization for evangelicals who are professional scientists,[172] led it to reject "strict" creationism in favor of theistic evolution, encouraging acceptance of evolution among evangelicals.[173] The BioLogos Foundation is an evangelical organization that advocates for evolutionary creation, a belief that God brings about his plan through processes of evolution.[174] BioLogos expresses the belief that God is the source of all life and that life expresses the will of God. BioLogos represents the view that science and faith co-exist in harmony.[175]

Abortion edit

Since 1980, a central issue motivating conservative evangelicals' political activism has been abortion. The 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade by the Supreme Court, which legalized abortion at a federal level, proved to be decisive in bringing Catholics and evangelicals together in a political coalition, which became known as the Christian Right when it successfully mobilized its voters behind presidential candidate Ronald Reagan in 1980.[176]

Separation of church and state edit

 
Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell with President Ronald Reagan in 1983

Supreme Court decisions that outlawed organized prayer in public schools and restricted church-related schools (e.g., preventing them from engaging in racial discrimination while also receiving a tax exemption) also played a role in mobilizing the Christian Right.[177] Survey data published in 2002 indicate that "between 31 and 39% do not favor a 'Christian Nation' amendment," but that 60 to 75% of Evangelicals consider Christianity and political liberalism to be incompatible.[178]

A study conducted in May 2022 showed that the strongest support for declaring the United States a Christian Nation comes from Republicans who identify as Evangelical or born-again Christians.[179][180] Of this demographic group, 78% are in favor of formally declaring the United States a Christian nation, versus 48% of Republicans overall.[179][181]

Climate change edit

The Evangelical Climate Initiative is a campaign by U.S. church leaders and organizations to promote market based mechanisms to mitigate global warming. The Evangelical Climate Initiative was launched in February 2006 by the National Association of Evangelicals, who worked with the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School to bring scientists and evangelical Christian leaders together for the project.[182] Young Evangelicals for Climate Action "educates and mobilizes young evangelical Christians across the country to take action to address the climate crisis."[183][184][185][186][187]

Influence on U.S. foreign policy edit

Evangelicals have had a significant impact on U.S. foreign policy. They have worked in coalitions with other religious and secular groups to press for action on matters like ending Sudan's civil war, addressing the AIDS crisis in Africa, and combating human trafficking.[188] Evangelicals played a key role in passing the International Religions Freedom Act, which made freedom of religion and conscience a top objective of U.S. foreign policy. The act established an agency to monitor countries' performance on religious freedom and allowed for potential sanctions against those with poor grades.[189] Evangelicals were also involved in the passing of the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004, which required the appointment of a special envoy for human rights in North Korea and emphasized the importance of human rights in future negotiations with the country.[188] Evangelicals also supported the Trafficking Victims Protection Act, which aimed to deter human trafficking, punish traffickers, and protect and rehabilitate victims.[188]

Evangelicals generally view the Middle East through a dispensationalist biblical lens and strongly support Israel. They believe that God gave the land of Israel to the Jews and that the U.S. will be blessed if it blesses Israel. However, there are variations in views among Evangelicals, with some holding more rigid stances than others. Some have supported Israeli settlements in the occupied territories, while others disagree with certain peace initiatives involving territorial compromises.[190]

See also edit

Notes edit

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  186. ^ Page, Erika (September 13, 2022). "Young Evangelicals seek to save the Earth – and their church". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  187. ^ "Young Evangelicals for Climate Action". YECA. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
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  190. ^ Kirkpatrick, David D. (November 14, 2006). "For Evangelicals, Supporting Israel Is 'God's Foreign Policy'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 26, 2023.

References edit

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  • Chartier, Myron Raymond (1969), The Social Views of Dwight L. Moody and Their Relation to the Workingman of 1860-1900. Fort Hays Studies Series. 40., Hays, Kansas: Fort Hays State University
  • Collins, Francis S (2006). The Language of God: a Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-8639-1.
  • Dayton, Donald W. (2001). The Variety of American Evangelicalism. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
  • Dorrien, Gary J. (1998). The Remaking of Evangelical Theology. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 978-0-664-25803-0.
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  • Emerson, Michael O.; Smith, Christian (2001). Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-1951-4707-3.
  • Finkelstein, Israel (2013). The Forgotten Kingdom: The Archaeology and History of Northern Israel (Ancient Near East Monographs). Atlanta: Society of Biblical Literature. ISBN 978-1-5898-3912-0.
  • FitzGerald, Frances (2017). The Evangelicals: The Struggle to Shape America. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-4391-3133-6.
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  • Grem, Darren E (2016). The Blessings of Business: How Corporations Shaped Conservative Christianity. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  • Harden, Blaine (2021). Murder at the Mission. Viking.
  • Himmelstein, Jerome L. (1990), To The Right: The Transformation of American Conservatism, University of California Press
  • Hiett, Peter (2003). Eternity Now! Encountering the Jesus of Revelation. Nashville: Thomas Nelson.
  • Hummel, Daniel G. (2023). The Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism: How the Evangelical Battle over the End Times Shaped a Nation. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-802-87922-6.
  • Johnson, Paul E. (2004). A Shopkeeper's Millennium: Society and Revivals in Rochester, New York, 1815-1837. New York: Hill and Wang. ISBN 0-8090-1635-4.
  • Johnson, Walter (2013). River of Dark Dreams: Slavery and Empire in the Cotton Kingdom. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-04555-2.
  • Kidd, Thomas S. (2007). The Great Awakening: The Roots of Evangelical Christianity in Colonial America (Amazon Kindle). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11887-2.
  • Lantzer, Jason S. (2012). Mainline Christianity: The Past and Future of America's Majority Faith. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-5330-9.
  • Longfield, Bradley J. (2013), Presbyterians and American Culture: A History, Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster John Knox Press
  • Lovelace, Richard F (2007), The American Pietism of Cotton Mather: Origins of American Evangelicalism, Wipf & Stock, ISBN 978-1-55635-392-5
  • Marsden, George M. (1991). Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism. Grand Rapids, MI: W.B. Eerdmans. ISBN 0-8028-0539-6.
  • Marsden, George M. (2006). Fundamentalism and American Culture. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Martin, William (1996), With God on Our Side: The Rise of the Religious Right in America, New York: Broadway Books, ISBN 0-7679-2257-3
  • Mathews, Mary Beth Swetnam (2017). Doctrine and Race: African American Evangelicals and Fundamentalism between the Wars. Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press. ISBN 978-0-8173-5918-8.
  • McLoughlin, William G. (1980). Revivals, Awakenings, and Reform: An Essay on Religion and Social Change in America, 1607-1977. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Miller, Christopher L. (2003), Prophetic Worlds: Indians and Whites on the Columbia Plateau, Seattle: University of Washington Press
  • Miller, Steven P. (2014). "Left, Right, Born Again". The Age of Evangelicalism: America's Born-Again Years. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 32–59. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199777952.003.0003. ISBN 978-0-19-977795-2. LCCN 2013037929. OCLC 881502753.
  • Miller-Davenport, Sarah (2013). "'Their blood shall not be shed in vain': American Evangelical Missionaries and the Search for God and Country in Post–World War II Asia". Journal of American History. 99 (4): 1109–32. doi:10.1093/jahist/jas648. JSTOR 44307506.
  • Mohler, Albert (2011), "Confessional Evangelicalism", in Naselli, Andrew; Hansen, Collin (eds.), Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, ISBN 978-0-310-55581-0
  • Noll, Mark A. (1987). Between Faith and Criticism: Evangelicals, Scholarship and the Bible in America. HarperCollins.
  • Noll, Mark A. (2001). American Evangelical Christianity: An Introduction. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 978-0-631-21999-6.
  • ——— (2002). America's God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-803441-5.
  • ——— (2003). The Rise of Evangelicalism: The Age of Edwards, Whitefield and the Wesleys. A History of Evangelicalism. Vol. 1. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 1-84474-001-3.
  • Noll, Mark A. (2006). The Civil War As a Theological Crisis. University of North Carolina Press.
  • Numbers, Ronald (November 30, 2006). The Creationists: From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design, Expanded Edition. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-02339-0.
  • Olson, David T. (2008). The American Church in Crisis. Grand Rapids: Zondervan.
  • Olson, Roger (2011), "Postconservative Evangelicalism", in Naselli, Andrew; Hansen, Collin (eds.), Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, ISBN 978-0-310-55581-0
  • Pietsch, B. M. (2015). Dispensational Modernism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-1902-4408-8.
  • Reimer, Sam (2003). Evangelicals and the Continental Divide: The Conservative Protestant Subculture in Canada and the United States. McGill-Queen's Press.
  • Römer, Thomas; Geuss, Raymond (2015). The Invention of God. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-6745-0497-4.
  • Sandeen, Ernest R (1970), The Roots of Fundamentalism: British and American Millenarianism, 1800–1930, Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  • Shantz, Douglas H (2013), An Introduction to German Pietism: Protestant Renewal at the Dawn of Modern Europe, JHU, ISBN 978-1-4214-0830-9
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  • Stanley, Brian (2013). The Global Diffusion of Evangelicalism: The Age of Billy Graham and John Stott. IVP Academic. ISBN 978-0-8308-2585-1.
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  • Sutton, Matthew Avery. American Apocalypse: A History of Modern Evangelicalism (Cambridge: Belknap Press, 2014). 480 pp. online review
  • Swartz, David R. (2012). Moral Minority: The Evangelical Left in an Age of Conservatism. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-2306-4.
  • Sweeney, Douglas A. (2005). The American Evangelical Story: A History of the Movement. Baker Academic. ISBN 978-1-58558-382-9.
  • Tomlinson, Dave (2007). The Post-Evangelical. Harper Collins. ISBN 978-0-310-25385-3.
  • Trueman, Carl (2011), The Real Scandal of the Evangelical Mind, Moody Publishers
  • Vickers, Jason E. (2013). The Cambridge Companion to American Methodism. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-43392-2.
  • Winn, Christian T. Collins (2007). From the Margins: A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W. Dayton. Eugene, Oregon: Wipf and Stock. ISBN 978-1-4982-4917-1.
  • Wolffe, John (2007). The Expansion of Evangelicalism: The Age of Wilberforce, More, Chalmers and Finney. A History of Evangelicalism. Vol. 2. InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-2582-0.
  • Woodberry, Robert D.; Smith, Christian S. (1998). "Fundamentalism et al: Conservative Protestants in America". Annual Review of Sociology. Annual Reviews. 24: 25–56. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.24.1.25. JSTOR 223473.
  • Worthen, Molly (2014). Apostles of Reason: The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-989646-2.
  • Youngs, J. William T. (1998). The Congregationalists. Denominations in America. Vol. 4 (Student ed.). Westport, Connecticut: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-96441-2.

Further reading edit

  • American Evangelicalism and Islam: From the Antichrist to the Mahdi, Germany: Qantara.
  • Balmer, Randall Herbert (2010), The Making of Evangelicalism: From Revivalism to Politics and Beyond, Baylor University Press, ISBN 978-1-60258-243-9.
  • Beale, David O (1986), In Pursuit of Purity: American Fundamentalism Since 1850, Greenville, SC: Bob Jones University: Unusual, ISBN 0-89084-350-3.
  • Borg, Marcus J. (2003). The Heart of Christianity: Rediscovering a Life of Faith. HarperOne. ISBN 978-0-060-52676-4.
  • Carpenter, Joel A. (1980), "Fundamentalist Institutions and the Rise of Evangelical Protestantism, 1929–1942", Church History, 49 (1): 62–75, doi:10.2307/3164640, JSTOR 3164640, S2CID 145632415.
  • Carter, Heath W. and Laura Rominger Porter, eds. Turning Points in the History of American Evangelicalism (Eerdmans, 2017). xviii, 297 pp
  • Chapman, Mark B., "American Evangelical Attitudes Toward Catholicism: Post-World War II to Vatican II," U.S. Catholic Historian, 33#1 (Winter 2015), 25–54.
  • Compton, John W. 2020. The End of Empathy: Why White Protestants Stopped Loving Their Neighbors. Oxford University Press.
  • Grainger, Brett. Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America (Harvard UP, 2019) online review
  • Griffith, R. M. (2017). Moral combat: how sex divided American Christians and fractured American politics. New York: Basic Books, ISBN 9780465094769. History of sexual politics in the United States, 1920–2017, and how it has influenced the formation of political identities in American Christian denominations.
  • Knox, Ronald (1950), Enthusiasm: a Chapter in the History of Religion, with Special Reference to the XVII and XVIII Centuries, Oxford, Eng: Oxford University Press, p. viii, 622 pp.
  • Loveland, Anne C. (1981). Southern Evangelicals and the Social Order, 1800-1860. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 9780807107836.
  • Luhrmann, Tanya (2012) When God Talks Back-Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God, Knopf
  • Maas, David (1990), "The Life & Times of D. L. Moody", Christian History (25).
  • Marsden, George M (1987), Reforming Fundamentalism: Fuller Seminary and the New Evangelicalism, Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans.
  • Menikoff, Aaron (2014). Politics and Piety: Baptist Social Reform in America, 1770–1860. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-63087-282-3.
  • Naselli, A. D., and Collin Hansen, eds (2011), Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism, Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan. ISBN 9780310293163.
  • Noll, Mark A (1992), A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada, Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans, pp. 311–89, ISBN 0-8028-0651-1.
  • Noll, Mark A; Bebbington, David W; Rawlyk, George A, eds. (1994), Evangelicalism: Comparative Studies of Popular Protestantism in North America, the British Isles and Beyond, 1700–1990.
  • Pierard, Richard V. (1979), "The Quest For the Historical Evangelicalism: A Bibliographical Excursus", Fides et Historia, 11 (2): 60–72.
  • Price, Robert M. (1986), "Neo-Evangelicals and Scripture: A Forgotten Period of Ferment", Christian Scholars Review, 15 (4): 315–30.
  • Rawlyk, George A; Noll, Mark A, eds. (1993), Amazing Grace: Evangelicalism in Australia, Britain, Canada, and the United States.
  • Schafer, Axel R (2011), Countercultural Conservatives: American Evangelicalism From the Postwar Revival to the New Christian Right, U. of Wisconsin Press, 225 pp; covers evangelical politics from the 1940s to the 1990s that examines how a diverse, politically pluralistic movement became, largely, the Christian Right.
  • Smith, Timothy L (1957), Revivalism and Social Reform: American Protestantism on the Eve of the Civil War
  • Spencer, Michael (March 10, 2009), "The Coming Evangelical Collapse", The Christian Science Monitor.
  • Sutton, Matthew Avery. American Apocalypse: A history of modern evangelicalism (2014)
  • Turchin, Peter (2023). End Times: Elites, Counter-Elites, and the Path of Political Disintegration. New York: Penguin Press. ISBN 978-0-593-49050-1.
  • Utzinger, J. Michael (2006), Yet Saints Their Watch Are Keeping: Fundamentalists, Modernists, and the Development of Evangelical Ecclesiology, 1887–1937, Macon: Mercer University Press, ISBN 0-86554-902-8.
  • Ward, WR, Early Evangelicalism: A Global Intellectual History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Wigger, John H; Hatch, Nathan O, eds. (2001), Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture (essays by scholars).
  • Williams, Daniel K. The Election of the Evangelical: Jimmy Carter, Gerald Ford, and the Presidential Contest of 1976 (University Press of Kansas, 2020) online review

External links edit

  • "Evangelical Protestant Denominations". Association of Religion Data Archives. 2010. A list of 146 evangelical Protestant denominations in the US.
  • Institute for the Study of American Evangelicalism.
  • Operation World – Statistics from around the world including numbers of Evangelicals by country.

evangelicalism, united, states, united, states, evangelicalism, movement, among, protestant, christians, believe, necessity, being, born, again, emphasize, importance, evangelism, affirm, traditional, protestant, teachings, authority, well, historicity, bible,. In the United States evangelicalism is a movement among Protestant Christians who believe in the necessity of being born again emphasize the importance of evangelism and affirm traditional Protestant teachings on the authority as well as the historicity of the Bible 1 Comprising nearly a quarter of the U S population evangelicals are a diverse group drawn from a variety of denominational backgrounds including Baptist Mennonite Methodist Pentecostal Plymouth Brethren Quaker Reformed and nondenominational churches 2 3 4 An event at Gateway Church TexasEvangelicalism has played an important role in shaping American religion and culture The First Great Awakening of the 18th century marked the rise of evangelical religion in colonial America As the revival spread throughout the Thirteen Colonies evangelicalism united Americans around a common faith 1 The Second Great Awakening of the early 19th century led to what historian Martin Marty calls the Evangelical Empire a period in which evangelicals dominated U S cultural institutions including schools and universities Evangelicals of this era in the northern United States were strong advocates of reform They were involved in the temperance movement and supported the abolition of slavery in addition to working toward education and criminal justice reform In the southern United States evangelicals split from their northern counterparts on the issue of slavery establishing new denominations that opposed abolition and defended the practice of racial slavery 5 that the South s expanding cash crops for export agricultural economy was built upon 6 7 8 During the bloody Civil War each side confidently preached in support of its own cause using Bible verses and Evangelical arguments which exposed a deep theological conflict that had been brewing for decades and would continue long after Lee s surrender at Appomattox 9 By the end of the 19th century the old evangelical consensus that had united much of American Protestantism no longer existed Protestant churches became divided over ground breaking new intellectual and theological ideas such as Darwinian evolution and historical criticism of the Bible Those who embraced these ideas became known as modernists while those who rejected them became known as fundamentalists Fundamentalists defended the doctrine of biblical inerrancy and adopted a dispensationalist theological system for interpreting the Bible 10 11 As a result of the fundamentalist modernist controversy of the 1920s and 1930s fundamentalists lost control of the Mainline Protestant churches and separated themselves from non fundamentalist churches and cultural institutions 12 After World War II a new generation of conservative Protestants rejected the separatist stance of fundamentalism and began calling themselves evangelicals Popular evangelist Billy Graham was at the forefront of reviving use of the term During this time period several evangelical institutions were established including the National Association of Evangelicals the magazine Christianity Today and educational institutions such as Fuller Theological Seminary 13 As a reaction to the 1960s counterculture and the U S Supreme Court s 1973 Roe v Wade decision many white evangelicals became politically active and involved in the Christian right 14 which became an important voting bloc in the Republican Party Recently however observers such as journalist Frances FitzGerald have noted that since 2005 the influence of the Christian right among evangelicals has been in decline 15 Though less visible some evangelicals identify as progressive evangelicals 14 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Types 2 History 2 1 18th century 2 2 19th century 2 2 1 Dispensationalism 2 2 2 Holiness Movement 2 2 3 The Princeton Theologians 2 3 20th century 2 3 1 Growth during the Cold War 2 4 21st century 3 Demographics 4 Politics and social issues 4 1 Evolution 4 2 Abortion 4 3 Separation of church and state 4 4 Climate change 4 5 Influence on U S foreign policy 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksDefinition editMany scholars have adopted historian David Bebbington s definition of evangelicalism According to Bebbington evangelicalism has four major characteristics These are conversionism an emphasis on the new birth biblicism an emphasis on the Bible as the supreme religious authority activism an emphasis on individual engagement in spreading the gospel and crucicentrism an emphasis on Christ s sacrifice on the cross as the heart of true religion However this definition has been criticized for being so broad as to include all Christians 16 17 Historian Molly Worthen writes history rather than theology or politics is the most useful tool for pinning down today s evangelicals 18 She finds that evangelicals share common origins in the religious revivals and moral crusades of the 18th and 19th centuries She writes Evangelical catchphrases like Bible believing and born again are modern translations of the Reformers slogan sola scriptura and Pietists emphasis on internal spiritual transformation 18 Evangelicals are often defined in opposition to mainline Protestants According to sociologist Brian Steensland and colleagues evangelical denominations have typically sought more separation from the broader culture emphasized missionary activity and individual conversion and taught strict adherence to particular religious doctrines 19 Mainline Protestants are described as having an accommodating stance toward modernity a proactive view on issues of social and economic justice and pluralism in their tolerance of varied individual beliefs 20 Historian George Marsden writes that during the 1950s and 1960s the simplest definition of an evangelical was anyone who likes Billy Graham During that period most people who self identified with the evangelical movement were affiliated with organizations that had some connection to Graham 21 It can also be defined narrowly as a movement centered around organizations such as the National Association of Evangelicals and Youth for Christ 17 News media often conflate evangelicalism with conservative Protestantism or the Christian right However not every conservative Protestant identifies as evangelical nor are all evangelicals political conservatives 22 Types edit nbsp Saddleback Church in Lake Forest California nbsp The Goshen College Music Center Mennonite Church USA in Goshen Indiana Scholars have found it useful to distinguish among different types of evangelicals One scheme by sociologist James Davison Hunter identifies four major types the Baptist tradition the Holiness and Pentecostal tradition the Anabaptist tradition and the Confessional tradition evangelical Anglicans pietistic Lutherans and evangelicals within the Reformed churches 23 24 Ethicist Max Stackhouse and historians Donald W Dayton and Timothy P Weber divide evangelicalism into three main historical groupings The first called Puritan or classical evangelicalism seeks to preserve the doctrinal heritage of the 16th century Protestant Reformation especially the Reformed tradition Classical evangelicals emphasize absolute divine sovereignty forensic justification and literalistic inerrancy The second pietistic evangelicalism originates from the 18th century pietist movements in Europe and the Great Awakenings in America Pietistic evangelicals embrace revivalism and a more experiential faith emphasizing conversion sanctification regeneration and healing The third fundamentalist evangelicalism results from the Fundamentalist Modernist split of the early 20th century Fundamentalists emphasize certain fundamental beliefs against modernist criticism and often use an apocalyptic premillennialist interpretation of the Bible These three categories are more fluid than Hunter s so an individual could identify with only one any two or all three 25 John C Green a senior fellow at the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life used polling data to separate evangelicals into three broad camps which he labels as traditionalist centrist and modernist 26 Traditionalist evangelicals characterized by high affinity for certain Protestant beliefs especially penal substitutionary atonement justification by faith the authority of scripture and the priesthood of all believers which when fused with the highly political milieu of Western culture especially American culture has resulted in the political disposition that has been labeled the Christian right with public figures like Jerry Falwell and the television evangelist Pat Robertson among its most visible spokesmen Centrist evangelicals described as socially conservative and mostly avoiding politics who still support much of traditional Christian theology Modernist evangelicals a small minority in the movement who have lower levels of church attendance and have much more diversity in their beliefs 26 History edit18th century edit The roots of American evangelicalism lie in the merger of three older Protestant traditions New England Puritanism Continental Pietism and Scotch Irish Presbyterianism 27 Within their Congregational churches Puritans promoted experimental or experiential religion arguing that saving faith required an inward transformation 28 This led Puritans to demand evidence of a conversion experience in the form of a conversion narrative before a convert was admitted to full church membership 29 In the 1670s and 1680s Puritan clergy began to promote religious revival in response to a perceived decline in religiosity 30 The Ulster Scots who immigrated to the American colonies in the early 18th century brought with them their own revival tradition specifically the practice of communion seasons 31 Pietism was a movement within the Lutheran and Reformed churches in Europe that emphasized a religion of the heart the ideal that faith was not simply acceptance of propositional truth but was an emotional commitment of one s whole being to God in which one s life became dedicated to self sacrificial ministry 32 Pietists promoted the formation of cell groups for Bible study prayer and accountability 33 nbsp Jonathan Edwards was the most influential evangelical theologian in America during the 18th century 34 These three traditions were brought together with the First Great Awakening a series of revivals in Britain and its American Colonies during the 1730s and 1740s 35 The Awakening began within the Congregational churches of New England In 1734 Jonathan Edwards preaching on justification by faith instigated a revival in Northampton Massachusetts Earlier Puritan revivals had been brief local affairs but the Northampton revival was part of a larger wave of revival that affected the Presbyterian and Dutch Reformed churches in the middle colonies as well 36 There the Reformed minister Theodore Frelinghuysen and Presbyterian minister Gilbert Tennent led revivals 34 The English evangelist George Whitefield was responsible for spreading the revivals through all the colonies An Anglican priest Whitefield had studied at Oxford University prior to ordination and there he befriended John Wesley and his brother Charles the founders of a pietistic movement within the Church of England called Methodism Whitefield s dramatic preaching style and ability to simplify doctrine made him a popular preacher in England and in 1739 he arrived in America preaching up and down the Atlantic coastline Thousands flocked to open air meetings to hear him preach and he became a celebrity throughout the colonies 37 The Great Awakening hit its peak by 1740 38 but it shaped a new form of Protestantism that emphasized according to historian Thomas S Kidd seasons of revival or outpourings of the Holy Spirit and converted sinners experiencing God s love personally emphasis in original 39 Evangelicals believed in the new birth a discernible moment of conversion and believed that it was normal for a Christian to have assurance of faith 40 While the Puritans had also believed in the necessity of conversion they had held that assurance is rare late and the fruit of struggle in the experience of believers 41 Emphasis on the individual s relationship to God gave evangelicalism an egalitarian streak as well which was perceived by anti revivalists as undermining social order Radical evangelicals ordained uneducated ministers sometimes nonwhite men and sometimes allowed nonwhites and women to serve as deacons and elders They also supported laypeople s right to dissent from their pastors and form new churches 42 nbsp Jonathan Edwards 1741 sermon Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God The Awakening split the Congregational and Presbyterian churches over support for the revival movement between Old and New Lights leading to the Old Side New Side controversy Ultimately the evangelical New Lights became the larger faction among both Congregationalists and Presbyterians The New England theology based on Edwards work would become the dominant theological outlook within Congregational churches 43 37 In New England radical New Lights broke away from the established churches and formed Separate Baptist congregations In the 1740s and 1750s New Side Presbyterians and Separate Baptists began moving to the southern colonies and establishing churches Many traveled along the difficult Great Wagon Road on their way to the southern colonies There they challenged the Anglican religious establishment which was identified with the planter elite In contrast evangelicals tended to be neither very rich nor very poor but hardworking farmers and tradesmen who disapproved of worldliness they saw in the planter class In the 1760s the first Methodist missionaries came to America and focused their ministry in the South as well By 1776 evangelicals outnumbered Anglicans in the South 44 During and after the American Revolution the Anglican Church now known as the Episcopal Church experienced much disruption and lost its special legal status and privileges The four largest denominations were the Congregationalists Presbyterians Baptists and Methodists In the 1770s and 1780s the Baptists and Methodists had experienced dramatic growth In 1770 there were only 150 Baptist and 20 Methodist churches but in 1790 there were 858 Baptist and 712 Methodist churches These two evangelical denominations were most successful in the southern states and along the western frontier They also appealed to African slaves on the Delmarva Peninsula for example over a third of Methodists were black In the 1790s evangelical influence on smaller groups such as Quakers Lutherans and the Dutch and German Reformed was still limited Because of cultural and language barriers the Dutch and German churches were not a major part of this era s evangelical revivals 45 19th century edit In the 19th century evangelicalism expanded as a result of the Second Great Awakening 1790s 1840s 46 The revivals of the Second Great Awakening influenced all the major Protestant denominations and turned most American Protestants into evangelicals 47 From the 1790s until the 1860s evangelicals were the most influential religious leaders in the United States 16 For context the U S population was 2 6 million in 1776 By 1860 it had grown to 31 5 million Between 1790 and 1840 over four million people more than the entire population in 1776 had moved west of the Appalachian Mountains 48 There were three major centers of revival in the Second Great Awakening Revival in the Cumberland River Valley of western frontier states Tennessee and Kentucky started as early as 1800 In New England a major revival began among Congregationalists by the 1820s led by Edwardsian preachers such as Timothy Dwight Lyman Beecher Nathaniel Taylor and Asahel Nettleton In western New York the so called burned over district along the Erie Canal the revival was mainly led by Congregationalists and Presbyterians but Baptists and Methodists were also involved 49 nbsp Depiction of a camp meetingUnlike the East Coast where revivals tended to be quieter and more solemn western revivals tended to be more emotional and dramatic 50 Presbyterian minister James McGready led the Revival of 1800 also known as the Red River Revival in southwestern Kentucky s Logan County It was here that the traditional Scottish communion season began to evolve into the American camp meeting 51 In northeastern Kentucky s Bourbon County a year later the Cane Ridge Revival led by Barton Stone lasted a week and drew crowds of 20 000 people from the thinly populated frontier At Cane Ridge many converts experienced religious ecstasy and bodily agitations 52 Some worshipers caught holy laughter barked like dogs experienced convulsions fell into trances danced shouted or were slain in the Spirit Similar responses had occurred in other revivals but they were more intense at Cane Ridge This revival was the origin of the Stone Campbell Movement from which the Churches of Christ and Disciples of Christ denominations originate 53 52 During the Second Great Awakening the Methodist Episcopal Church was most successful at gaining converts It enthusiastically adopted camp meetings as a regular part of church life and devoted resources to evangelizing the western frontier Itinerant ministers known as circuit riders traveled hundreds of miles each year to preach and serve scattered congregations The Methodists took a democratic and egalitarian approach to ministry allowing poor and uneducated young men to become circuit riders The Baptists also expanded rapidly Like the Methodists Baptists also sent out itinerant ministers often with little education 54 nbsp Charles Grandison Finney the most prominent revivalist of the Second Great AwakeningThe theology behind the First Great Awakening had been largely Calvinist 55 Calvinists taught predestination and that God only gives salvation to a small group of the elect and condemns everyone else to hell The Calvinist doctrine of irresistible grace denied to humans free will or any role in their own salvation 56 The Second Great Awakening was heavily influenced by Arminianism a theology that allows for free will and gives humans a greater role in their own conversion 55 The Methodists were Arminians and taught that all people could choose salvation They also taught that Christians could lose their salvation by backsliding or returning to sin 56 The most influential evangelical of the Second Great Awakening was Charles Grandison Finney He is best known for preaching from 1825 to 1835 in Upstate New York 57 which experienced a population boom after the Erie Canal opened in 1825 58 Though ordained by the Presbyterian Church Finney deviated from traditional Calvinism Finney taught that neither revivals nor conversion occurred without human effort While divine grace is necessary to persuade people of the truth of Christianity God does not force salvation upon people Unlike Edwards who described revival as a surprising work of God Finney taught that revival is not a miracle but the result of the right use of the appropriate means 59 Finney emphasized several methods to promote revival that became known as the new measures even though they were not new but had already been in use among the Methodists mass advertising protracted revival meetings allowing women to speak and testify in revival meetings and the mourner s bench where potential converts sat to pray for conversion 60 Finney was also active in social reforms particularly the abolitionist movement He frequently denounced slavery from the pulpit called it a great national sin and refused Holy Communion to slaveholders 61 Evangelical views on eschatology the doctrine of the end times have also changed over time The Puritans were premillennialists which means they believed Christ would return before the Millennium a thousand years of godly rule on earth But the First Great Awakening convinced many evangelicals that the millennial kingdom was already being established before Christ returned a belief known as postmillennialism During the Second Great Awakening postmillennialism with its expectation that society would become progressively more Christianized became the dominant view since it complemented the Arminian emphasis on self determination and the Enlightenment s positive view of human potential 62 nbsp Collection box for the Massachusetts Anti Slavery Society circa 1850This postmillennial optimism inspired a number of social reform movements among northern evangelicals 63 including temperance as teetotalism became a badge of honor for evangelicals 64 abolitionism prison reform and educational reform 62 They launched a campaign to end dueling 65 They built asylums for the physically disabled and mentally ill schools for the deaf and hospitals for treating tuberculosis They formed organizations to provide food clothing money and job placement to immigrants and the poor 66 In order to impress the new nation with an indelibly Protestant character evangelicals founded Sunday schools colleges and seminaries They published millions of books tracts and Christian periodicals through organizations such as the American Tract Society and the American Bible Society 65 This network of social reform organizations is referred to as the Benevolent Empire Postmillennialism also led to an increase in missionary work 62 Many of the major missionary societies in the U S were founded around this time Missionary efforts by northern evangelicals included the influential American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions ABCFM founded in 1810 which sent missionaries overseas placed missionaries with American Indian tribes in the Southeastern United States and had established missions among the Cherokee for example by 1820 The ABCFM fought against U S Indian removal policies in general and against the Indian Removal Act of 1830 in particular 67 In 1836 the ABCFM sent Marcus and Narcissa Whitman west from Upstate New York to preach to the Cayuse people in Oregon Country 68 69 The Third Great Awakening that began in 1857 1858 also gathered much of its strength from the postmillennial belief that the Second Coming of Christ would occur after mankind had reformed the entire Earth It was affiliated with the Social Gospel movement which applied Christianity to social issues 70 Dispensationalism edit nbsp John Nelson Darby considered to be the father of modern DispensationalismThe spread of dispensationalism in late 19th century America led many Evangelicals to return to the more pessimistic premillennialist point of view According to scholar Mark Sweetnam dispensationalists are evangelical premillennialist and apocalyptic insist on a literal interpretation of Scripture identify distinct stages dispensations in God s dealings with humanity and expect Christ s imminent return to rapture His saints 71 As B M Pietsch notes their leaders have built intricate new methods of text analysis to unlock the Bible s meaning 72 John Nelson Darby was an austere 19th century Anglo Irish Bible teacher and former Anglican clergyman who devised and promoted dispensationalism This new and controversial method of interpreting the Bible 73 74 which does not reconcile easily with findings from recent mainstream archaeological and textual research 75 76 77 was incorporated into the development of modern Evangelicalism 78 First taught in the 1830s by Darby and the Plymouth Brethren in England dispensationalism was introduced to American evangelical leaders during Darby s missionary journeys to the U S and Canada in the 1860s and 1870s 79 The Niagara Bible Conference was organized in 1876 to teach dispensationalist ideas 80 these ideas came to dominate the fundamentalist movement within a few decades 11 81 nbsp Dwight Moody founder of the Moody Bible InstituteDwight L Moody played a key role in this transformation In the latter half of the 19th century Moody became the most important evangelical figure of the era weaving ideas from business and religion into a compelling new form of evangelical Protestantism and reaching very large audiences with his powerful preaching 82 83 84 85 Focused on the city of Chicago and active in the Sunday School movement and Young Men s Christian Association YMCA from 1858 in his early ministry Moody had relentlessly sought financial contributions from rich evangelical businessmen such as John Farwell and Cyrus McCormick Moody s approach was rough blunt and unconventional but wealthy philanthropists could see he truly cared for the urban poor and he found effective ways to improve their lot 86 83 During an 1867 visit to England Moody became acquainted with a group of pragmatic Brethren dispensationalists who shared many of his own concerns and approaches to charitable work 87 After the Great Chicago Fire in 1871 destroyed his church his home and the Chicago YMCA Moody left local church work for a new career as a traveling revivalist 83 Convinced now that the world would be changed not by social work but by Christ s return and the establishment of His millennial kingdom on Earth Moody abandoned his own previous postmillennialist views 83 His revivals accelerated the spread of dispensationalist beliefs and he was influential in preaching the imminence of the Kingdom of God that is so important to dispensationalism 88 Enlisting philanthropic support from the business community was one of several enduring innovations Moody had introduced into the conduct of revival campaigns 83 Like many clergymen in the Gilded Age that followed soon after the Civil War Moody supported the business community s values He helped forge the union between the evangelical mind and the business mind that came to be a hallmark of later popular revivalists 89 Moody s religious individualism fit neatly with the rugged individualism of Gilded Age businessmen 90 Moody radiated optimism when he spoke about how Christian conversion would impact a poor man s life 91 He believed Christian conversion would make lazy poor men into energetic men who would then work hard and prosper 91 At his revival meetings Moody would look around at the wealthy men who sat on the platform with him such as McCormick William E Dodge and John Wanamaker comment that they were all devout church members all born again Christians and say that few of the poor in the slums of Chicago London or New York attended church services 91 Moody also viewed industrialism and its ills through the same lens of Christian conversion As he saw it the fix was simple and obvious believe in God and the problems will vanish soon 92 nbsp Cyrus Scofield author of the Scofield Reference BibleAmerican evangelical minister and Moody associate Cyrus Scofield also promoted the spread of dispensationalism starting with a pamphlet published in 1888 then by weaving extensive interpretive commentary into prominent notes on the pages of his ambitious Scofield Reference Bible First published in 1909 the Scofield Bible became a popular one volume reference used widely by independent Evangelicals in the United States 93 It did much to popularize dispensationalism early in the 20th century as Evangelicals sought to make sense of calamities like World War I the 1918 influenza pandemic the 1929 stock market crash the Great Depression and Dust Bowl in the 1930s and World War II By 1945 more than 2 million copies had been published in the United States 94 nbsp Scofield Reference Bible 1917 editionEvangelicals also launched a network of independent Bible institutes which soon became the nucleus for the spread of American dispensationalism 95 Notable examples include the Moody Bible Institute 96 and the Bible Institute of Los Angeles 97 By the early 1930s there were as many as fifty such Bible institutes serving fundamentalist constituencies 95 Holiness Movement edit In the late 19th century the revivalist Holiness movement promoted the doctrine of entire sanctification and while many adherents remained within mainline Methodism those associated with it also formed new denominations such as the Free Methodist Church and Wesleyan Methodist Church 98 In urban Britain the holiness message was less censorious and did not face as much opposition 99 The Princeton Theologians edit From the 1850s to the 1920s a more advanced theological perspective came from the Princeton Theologians such as Charles Hodge Archibald Alexander and B B Warfield 100 who strove to defend traditional doctrines they found in the Bible against rival claims from other learned scholars including claims based on higher criticism 101 20th century edit nbsp Lyman Stewart co founder of Union OilBy the 1890s most American Protestants belonged to evangelical denominations except for high church Episcopalians and German Lutherans In the early 20th century a divide opened up between fundamentalists and the mainline Protestant denominations chiefly over inerrancy of the Bible After 1910 evangelicalism was dominated by fundamentalists who rejected liberal theology emphasized inerrancy of Scripture and taught a dispensationalist interpretation of the Bible to support their views of human history and mankind s future Pastors theologians and laity shaped the course of early fundamentalism but wealthy businessmen also played a crucial role 102 103 For example Union Oil co founder Lyman Stewart was instrumental in establishing the Bible Institute of Los Angeles 97 104 He also anonymously funded publication and distribution of The Fundamentals groups of essays by multiple authors published quarterly in twelve volumes from 1910 through 1915 which became the foundation document of Christian fundamentalism published as a set in 1917 103 105 106 and he ensured that its many individual authors promoted premillennialist dispensationalism 103 105 The essays were written by 64 different authors representing most of the major Protestant Christian denominations It was mailed free of charge to ministers missionaries professors of theology Sunday school superintendents YMCA and YWCA secretaries and other Protestant religious workers in the United States and other English speaking countries Over three million volumes 250 000 sets were sent out 105 Dispensationalism led fundamentalist evangelicals to see the world as a battleground in a deadly conflict between God and the Devil that would sweep all unbelievers to perdition very soon so that they must focus on saving souls with reform of society as a strictly secondary concern 107 Adoption of this lifeboat theology also made the fundamentalists message more welcome among American groups and communities who opposed reform of their own cherished institutions such as violent enforcement of racial segregation by local authorities and by self appointed vigilante groups and business practices ruthless exploitation of industrial workers 108 redlining and the Jim Crow economy 109 Dispensationalism also led fundamentalists to fear that new trends in modern science were pulling people away from what they saw as essential truth and to believe that modernist parties in Protestant churches had surrendered their Evangelical heritage by accommodating secular views and values Among these fundamentalist evangelicals a favored way of resisting modernism was to prohibit teaching evolution as fact in public schools a movement that reached a peak in the Scopes trial of 1925 The sting of this public embarrassment led fundamentalists to retreat further into separatism Protestant modernists criticized fundamentalists for their separatist self isolation and for their rejection of the Social Gospel that had been developed by Protestant activists in the previous century By this time modernists had largely abandoned the term evangelical and tolerated evolutionary theories in modern science and even in Biblical studies In the 1930s fundamentalist pastors and parishioners who rejected modernist viewpoints put forward by their own denominations turned more and more to the dispensationalist Bible institutes for guidance and community 110 As the largest of these schools the Moody Bible Institute set the pace providing a wide variety of fundamentalist outreach services from guest speakers and extension courses to Bible conferences magazines and radio programs 110 111 nbsp Congregation at Angelus Temple during 14 hour Holy Ghost service led by Aimee Semple McPherson in Los Angeles California in 1942During and after World War II white evangelicals formed new organizations and expanded their vision to include the entire world There was a great expansion of Evangelical activity within the United States a revival of revivalism The doctrine of dispensationalism with its intense focus on end times and the rapture continued to be a major theme Many earlier evangelists had preached in tents to small town audiences on the sawdust trail but the new evangelicals sought ways to save souls in the big cities that had come to dominate American life 112 Youth for Christ was formed in 1940 to help make the evangelical message attractive to soldiers sailors and urban teenagers 113 it later became the base for Billy Graham s post war revival crusades 114 115 The National Association of Evangelicals was formed in 1942 as a response to the mainline Federal Council of Churches which had been organized in 1908 112 Charles Fuller had started broadcasting the Old Fashioned Revival Hour in 1937 by 1943 it had a record setting national radio audience with twenty million weekly listeners 112 But a split also developed among evangelicals in this era as they disagreed among themselves about how a Christian ought to respond to an unbelieving world Many evangelicals urged that Christians must engage contemporary culture directly and constructively 116 and they began to express reservations about being known to the world as fundamentalists As Kenneth Kantzer put it at the time the name fundamentalist had become an embarrassment instead of a badge of honor 117 Fuller Theological Seminary founding president Harold Ockenga coined the term neo evangelicalism in 1947 to identify a distinct movement he saw within fundamentalist Christianity This new generation of evangelicals sought to pursue a more open non judgmental dialogue with other traditions They also called for greater application of the gospel to sociology politics and economics Many fundamentalists responded by separating their opponents from the fundamentalist name and by seeking to distinguish themselves from the more open group which they often characterized derogatorily by Ockenga s term neo Evangelical or simply evangelicals Growth during the Cold War edit nbsp Services at the Pentecostal Church of God in Lejunior Kentucky in 1946 nbsp Faculty of Science at Baylor University in Waco Texas affiliated with the Baptist General Convention of Texas The end of World War II in 1945 and the onset of the Cold War by 1948 provided new opportunities for evangelical expansion The Second World War ended in August 1945 after the U S used two nuclear bombs to destroy the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Even nonreligious people groped for religious language to express those bombs nearly unimaginable destructive power 118 And the end of the war affected almost everyone in America millions of men returned from the armed forces while millions of women left their temporary wartime industrial jobs The marriage rate and the birth rate soared accelerating a baby boom that had begun while the war was still being fought 119 As young American families crowded into new churches their ministers priests and rabbis led them in fervent prayers for a world in upheaval 119 No one in the U S voiced fears for the world s future with more fervor than evangelical and fundamentalist preachers A key element in their preaching had always been that the Second Coming of Christ could happen at any moment and that everyone must be ready for the end of the world 119 In September 1949 30 year old evangelist Billy Graham set up circus tents in a Los Angeles parking lot for a series of revival meetings A tall handsome spellbinding preacher from North Carolina with a piercing gaze Graham aimed to fill his listeners first with dread that they were lost sinners in a world rushing headlong into disaster then with a deep longing to turn their lives around trust Jesus and be saved 113 The crusade started on September 25 1949 120 and it was scheduled to last three weeks from September 25 to October 17 121 Two days before the start of the revival in a statement released on September 23 1949 President Truman revealed to the public that the communist Soviet Union had built and successfully detonated its own nuclear bomb on August 29 122 Six days after the revival started mainland China fell to Mao Zedong s communist Red Army 123 Newspaper headlines that reported these shocking Cold War events put much of the nation into an anxious apocalyptic mood Then in October media tycoon 124 William Randolph Hearst sent a telegram to all editors in his conservative Hearst chain of newspapers Puff Graham 125 126 As a result within five days Graham gained national coverage 127 128 Planned to last three weeks the event ran for eight weeks Graham became a national figure with heavy coverage from the wire services and national magazines and he went on to become the most influential American evangelist of the 20th century Evangelicals international missionary activity also expanded in the postwar era White evangelicals found new enthusiasm and self confidence after the nation s victory in the world war Many came from poor rural districts that had struggled during the Great Depression of the 1930s but wartime and postwar prosperity had dramatically increased the funding resources available for missionary work Overseas missionaries began to prepare for their postwar role in organizations such as the Far Eastern Gospel Crusade After Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan had been defeated the newly mobilized evangelicals prepared to combat perceived threats from atheistic communism secularism Darwinism liberalism Catholicism and in overseas missions paganism 129 nbsp Billy Graham preaching in Duisburg Germany 1954While mainline Protestant denominations cut back on their missionary activities from 7 000 overseas workers in 1935 to only 3 000 in 1980 evangelicals tripled their career foreign missionary force in the same period from 12 000 in 1935 to 35 000 in 1980 At Youth for Christ s 70 000 person rally on Memorial Day 1945 in Chicago s Soldier Field football stadium seating capacity 74 000 soldiers and nurses marched along with missionary representatives who paraded in costumes representing all the nations still awaiting the dispensationalist gospel 113 130 North Americans had sent out only 41 of all the world s Protestant missionaries in 1936 but their contribution rose to 52 in 1952 and 72 in 1969 Denominations expanding their overseas missionary efforts after the war included the United Pentecostal Church International formed in 1945 and the Assemblies of God which nearly tripled from 230 missionaries in 1935 to 626 in 1952 Southern Baptist missionaries more than doubled from 405 to 855 as did those sent by the Church of the Nazarene from 88 to 200 131 The post war period also saw growth of the ecumenical movement and the founding of the World Council of Churches 1948 which was generally regarded with suspicion by the evangelical community 132 During the 1950s the number of church members in America grew from 64 5 million to 114 5 million By 1960 more than 60 of the nation belonged to a church 133 Following the Welsh Methodist revival the Azusa Street Revival in 1906 had begun the spread of Pentecostalism in North America The Charismatic movement began in the 1960s and led to Pentecostal theology and practices being introduced into many mainline denominations Charismatic groups such as Newfrontiers and the Association of Vineyard Churches trace their roots to this period 21st century edit nbsp Baptist Medical Center Jacksonville Baptist Health network in Jacksonville Florida A 2018 report of polls conducted from 2003 to 2017 of 174 485 random sample telephone interviews by ABC News and The Washington Post show significant shifts in U S religious identification in those 15 years including a decline in the share of Americans who identify as Protestants both evangelical and non evangelical and a rise in the share of Americans who say they have no religion 134 According to reports in the New York Times some evangelicals have sought to expand their movement s social agenda to include reducing poverty combating AIDS in the Third World and protecting the environment a push to better this world as well as save eternal souls 135 This has been highly contentious within the evangelical community because evangelicals of a more conservative stance believe this trend compromises important issues and values popularity and consensus too highly a capitulation to the broader culture 135 Personifying this division in the early 21st century were the evangelical leaders James Dobson and Rick Warren Dobson warned of dangers from his point of view of a victory by Democratic Party presidential candidate Barack Obama in 2008 136 Warren declined to endorse either major candidate on the grounds that he wanted the church to be less politically divisive and that he agreed substantially with both Obama and Republican Party candidate John McCain 137 nbsp TheCall rally in 2008 Washington D C near the United States CapitolDemographics edit nbsp Socially conservative evangelical Protestantism has a major cultural influence in the Bible Belt covering almost all of the Southern United States including all states that fought against the Union in the Civil War nbsp Wheaton College campus IllinoisAnywhere from 6 to 35 of the United States population is evangelical depending on how evangelical is defined 138 A 2008 study reported that in 2000 about 9 of Americans attended an evangelical service on any given Sunday 139 A 2014 Pew Research Center survey of religious life in the United States reported that 25 4 of the population were evangelical while Roman Catholics were 20 8 and mainline Protestants were 14 7 140 In 2020 mainline Protestants were reported to outnumber predominantly white Evangelical churches 141 142 In 2021 Pew Research Center reported that 24 of U S adults describe themselves as born again or evangelical Protestants 143 In 2007 Barna Group reported that 8 of adult Americans were born again evangelicals defined as those surveyed in 2006 who answered yes to these nine questions 144 138 Have you made a personal commitment to Jesus Christ that is still important in your life today Do you believe that when you die you will go to Heaven because you have confessed your sins and have accepted Jesus Christ as your savior Is your faith very important in your life today Do you have a personal responsibility to share your religious beliefs about Christ with non Christians Does Satan exist Is eternal salvation possible only through grace not works Did Jesus Christ live a sinless life on earth Is the Bible accurate in all that it teaches Is God the all knowing all powerful perfect deity who created the universe and still rules it today In 2012 The Economist estimated that over one third of Americans more than 100 million can be considered evangelical arguing that the percentage is often undercounted because many African Americans espouse evangelical theology but refer to themselves as born again Christians rather than evangelical 145 As of 2017 according to The Economist white evangelicals overall account for about 17 of Americans while white evangelicals under the age of 30 represent about 8 of Americans in that age group 146 In 2016 Wheaton College s Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals estimated that about 30 to 35 90 to 100 million people of the U S population is evangelical These figures include white and black cultural evangelicals Americans who do not regularly attend church but identify as evangelicals 147 Similarly a 2019 Gallup survey asking respondents whether they identified either as born again or as evangelical found that 37 of respondents answered in the affirmative 148 Sometimes members of historically black churches are counted as evangelicals and at other times they are not When analyzing political trends pollsters often distinguish between white evangelicals who tend to vote for the Republican Party and African American Protestants who share religious beliefs in common with white evangelicals but have tended to vote for the Democratic Party 138 149 Politics and social issues editPolitical ideology among American Evangelicals 150 Conservative 55 Moderate 27 Liberal 13 Don t know 6 Main articles Christian right Evangelical left and Christian left Evangelical political influence in America was first evident in the 1830s with movements such as the prohibition movement which closed saloons and taverns in state after state until it succeeded nationally in 1919 151 The Christian Right is a coalition of numerous groups of traditionalist and observant church goers of many kinds especially Catholics on issues such as birth control and abortion plus Southern Baptists Missouri Synod Lutherans and others 152 Since the early 1980s the Christian Right has been associated with several political and issue oriented organizations including the Moral Majority the Christian Coalition Focus on the Family and the Family Research Council 153 154 In the 2016 presidential election exit polls reported that 81 of white evangelicals voted for Donald Trump 155 despite criticism from some conservative evangelicals 156 157 158 Most African Americans who identify as Christians belong to Baptist Methodist or other denominations that share evangelical beliefs but they are firmly in the Democratic coalition and with the possible exception of issues involving abortion and homosexuality are generally liberal in politics 159 149 Evangelical political activists are not all on the right There is also a small group of liberal white Evangelicals 14 160 161 Some Evangelical leaders such as Tony Perkins of the Family Research Council object to equating the term Christian Right with theological conservatism and Evangelicalism Although white evangelicals constitute the core constituency of the Christian Right within the United States not all evangelicals fit that political description Secular media do frequently conflate the Christian Right with theological conservatism but this becomes complicated when the label religious conservative or conservative Christian is also applied to other religious groups who are theologically socially and culturally conservative but do not have overtly political organizations associated with them Some of these Christian denominations may best be described as indifferent toward politics 162 163 Tim Keller an Evangelical theologian and Presbyterian Church in America pastor has argued that Conservative Christianity theology predates the Christian Right politics that being a theological conservative doesn t necessitate being a political conservative and that some politically progressive views around economics racial diversity helping the poor and the redistribution of wealth are compatible with theologically conservative Christianity 164 165 Rod Dreher a senior editor for The American Conservative a secular conservative magazine argues for the same distinctions even claiming that a traditional Christian a theological conservative can be an economic progressive or even a socialist while maintaining traditional Christian beliefs 166 On the other hand a Pew Research report published in September 2022 reported that 70 of adults who were raised Christian but are now unaffiliated are Democrats or Democratic leaning independents compared with 43 of those who remained Christian and 51 of U S adults overall Some scholars argue that disaffiliation from Christianity is driven by an association between Christianity and political conservatism that has intensified in recent decades 167 Evolution edit Main article Creation evolution controversy Evangelicals are often stereotyped as Christians who reject mainstream scientific views out of concern that those views contradict traditional young earth chronologies and certain verses in the Bible This is true for many Scofield inspired dispensationalists and for other fundamentalists who also reject evolution in favor of creation science and flood geology both of which contradict the scientific consensus and the well established geologic time scale 168 Their influence has led to high profile court cases over whether public schools can be forced to teach either creationism or intelligent design which is the claim that the complexity and diversity of life can only be explained by the direct intervention of God or some other active intelligence 169 170 However many other evangelicals have found evolution to be compatible with Christianity For example prominent evangelicals such as Billy Graham B B Warfield and John Stott believed the theory could be reconciled with Christian teaching 171 Careful study by the American Scientific Affiliation an organization for evangelicals who are professional scientists 172 led it to reject strict creationism in favor of theistic evolution encouraging acceptance of evolution among evangelicals 173 The BioLogos Foundation is an evangelical organization that advocates for evolutionary creation a belief that God brings about his plan through processes of evolution 174 BioLogos expresses the belief that God is the source of all life and that life expresses the will of God BioLogos represents the view that science and faith co exist in harmony 175 Abortion edit Main article Christianity and abortion Since 1980 a central issue motivating conservative evangelicals political activism has been abortion The 1973 decision in Roe v Wade by the Supreme Court which legalized abortion at a federal level proved to be decisive in bringing Catholics and evangelicals together in a political coalition which became known as the Christian Right when it successfully mobilized its voters behind presidential candidate Ronald Reagan in 1980 176 Separation of church and state edit Main article Separation of church and state nbsp Moral Majority founder Jerry Falwell with President Ronald Reagan in 1983Supreme Court decisions that outlawed organized prayer in public schools and restricted church related schools e g preventing them from engaging in racial discrimination while also receiving a tax exemption also played a role in mobilizing the Christian Right 177 Survey data published in 2002 indicate that between 31 and 39 do not favor a Christian Nation amendment but that 60 to 75 of Evangelicals consider Christianity and political liberalism to be incompatible 178 A study conducted in May 2022 showed that the strongest support for declaring the United States a Christian Nation comes from Republicans who identify as Evangelical or born again Christians 179 180 Of this demographic group 78 are in favor of formally declaring the United States a Christian nation versus 48 of Republicans overall 179 181 Climate change edit The Evangelical Climate Initiative is a campaign by U S church leaders and organizations to promote market based mechanisms to mitigate global warming The Evangelical Climate Initiative was launched in February 2006 by the National Association of Evangelicals who worked with the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School to bring scientists and evangelical Christian leaders together for the project 182 Young Evangelicals for Climate Action educates and mobilizes young evangelical Christians across the country to take action to address the climate crisis 183 184 185 186 187 Influence on U S foreign policy edit Evangelicals have had a significant impact on U S foreign policy They have worked in coalitions with other religious and secular groups to press for action on matters like ending Sudan s civil war addressing the AIDS crisis in Africa and combating human trafficking 188 Evangelicals played a key role in passing the International Religions Freedom Act which made freedom of religion and conscience a top objective of U S foreign policy The act established an agency to monitor countries performance on religious freedom and allowed for potential sanctions against those with poor grades 189 Evangelicals were also involved in the passing of the North Korean Human Rights Act of 2004 which required the appointment of a special envoy for human rights in North Korea and emphasized the importance of human rights in future negotiations with the country 188 Evangelicals also supported the Trafficking Victims Protection Act which aimed to deter human trafficking punish traffickers and protect and rehabilitate victims 188 Evangelicals generally view the Middle East through a dispensationalist biblical lens and strongly support Israel They believe that God gave the land of Israel to the Jews and that the U S will be blessed if it blesses Israel However there are variations in views among Evangelicals with some holding more rigid stances than others Some have supported Israeli settlements in the occupied territories while others disagree with certain peace initiatives involving territorial compromises 190 See also editBiblical literalism Broad church Child evangelism movement List of evangelical Christians List of evangelical seminaries and theological collegesPortals nbsp Christianity nbsp Evangelical Christianity nbsp Religion nbsp United StatesNotes edit a b FitzGerald 2017 p 3 Angell Stephen Ward Dandelion Pink April 19 2018 The Cambridge Companion to Quakerism Cambridge University Press p 290 ISBN 978 1 107 13660 1 Contemporary Quakers worldwide are predominately evangelical and are often referred to as the Friends Church FitzGerald 2017 p 2 Vickers 2013 p 27 FitzGerald 2017 p 4 5 Emerson amp Smith 2001 pp 26 27 Johnson 2013 p 10 Hannah Jones 2021 p 16 Noll 2006 pp 1 7 FitzGerald 2017 p 5 a b Hummel 2023 p 1 Marsden 1991 pp 3 4 FitzGerald 2017 pp 5 6 a b c Miller 2014 pp 32 59 FitzGerald 2017 pp 8 10 a b Noll 2002 p 5 a b Defining the Term in Contemporary Context Defining Evangelicalism Wheaton College Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals archived from the original on June 14 2016 retrieved June 29 2016 a b Worthen 2014 p 4 Steensland et al 2000 p 249 Steensland et al 2000 p 248 Marsden 1991 p 6 Woodberry amp Smith 1998 pp 25 26 Dorrien 1998 p 2 Ellingsen 1991 p 234 Dorrien 1998 pp 2 3 a b Luo Michael April 16 2006 Evangelicals Debate the Meaning of Evangelical The New York Times Balmer 2002 pp vii viii Sweeney 2005 p 31 Youngs 1998 pp 40 41 Kidd 2007 Chapter 1 Amazon Kindle location 148 152 Kidd 2007 p 31 Kidd 2007 pp 24 25 Sweeney 2005 p 34 a b Sweeney 2005 p 44 Sweeney 2005 p 27 FitzGerald 2017 p 14 18 a b FitzGerald 2017 p 18 Sweeney 2005 pp 44 48 Kidd 2007 p xiv Kidd 2007 Introduction Amazon Kindle location 66 Bebbington 1993 pp 43 Kidd 2007 Introduction Amazon Kindle location 79 82 Sweeney 2005 p 59 FitzGerald 2017 pp 22 25 Wolffe 2007 pp 40 41 Wolffe 2007 p 47 FitzGerald 2017 p 25 Sweeney 2005 p 189 Sweeney 2005 pp 66 71 Wolffe 2007 pp 62 63 Wolffe 2007 p 58 a b FitzGerald 2017 p 26 Sweeney 2005 p 72 FitzGerald 2017 pp 26 27 a b Sweeney 2005 p 66 a b FitzGerald 2017 p 31 Johnson 2004 pp 3 5 Johnson 2004 p 13 Sweeney 2005 pp 67 68 Balmer 2002 p 491 FitzGerald 2017 p 40 a b c Balmer 1999 p 47 48 Johnson 2004 pp 5 8 Sweeney 2005 p 75 a b Sweeney 2005 p 74 FitzGerald 2017 p 45 Andrew 1992 p unknown Miller 2003 pp 79 84 Harden 2021 McLoughlin 1980 p unknown Sweetnam Mark S 2010 Defining Dispensationalism A Cultural Studies Perspective Journal of Religious History 34 2 191 212 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 2010 00862 x Pietsch 2015 p 4 Pietsch 2015 p 2 Gloege 2015 pp 29 31 Finkelstein 2013 pp 162 163 Sivertsen 2009 pp 1 9 Romer amp Geuss 2015 pp 9 23 and p 293 note 1 Grem 2016 pp 21 22 Sandeen 1970 pp 70 79 Dayton 2001 p 11 Hiett 2003 pp 6 7 Gloege 2015 p 3 a b c d e Maas 1990 p unknown Bebbington David W 2005 Dominance of Evangelicalism The Age of Spurgeon and Moody Findlay James F 1969 Dwight L Moody American Evangelist 1837 1899 Gloege 2015 p 24 Gloege 2015 p 30 Kee Howard Clark Emily Albu Carter Lindberg J William Frost Dana L Robert 1998 Christianity A Social and Cultural History Upper Saddle River NJ Prentice Hall p 484 Grem 2016 pp 19 21 Chartier 1969 p 24 a b c Chartier 1969 p 22 Chartier 1969 p 28 Pietsch 2015 pp 4 5 Allis 1945 p 267 a b Carpenter 1999 pp 16 17 Grem 2016 p 20 a b Grem 2016 p 38 Winn Christian T Collins 2007 From the Margins A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W Dayton Wipf and Stock Publishers p 115 ISBN 978 1 63087 832 0 In addition to these separate denominational groupings one needs to give attention to the large pockets of the Holiness movement that have remained within the United Methodist Church The most influential of these would be the circles dominated by Asbury College and Asbury Theological Seminary both in Wilmore KY but one could speak of other colleges innumerable local camp meetings the vestiges of various local Holiness associations independent Holiness oriented missionary societies and the like that have had great impact within United Methodism A similar pattern would exist in England with the role of Cliff College within Methodism in that context Bebbington David W 1996 The Holiness Movements in British and Canadian Methodism in the Late Nineteenth Century Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society 50 6 203 28 Hoffecker W Andrew 1981 Piety and the Princeton Theologians Nutley Presbyterian amp Reformed v Noll 1987 pp 20 22 Gloege 2015 p 2 a b c Grem 2016 p 21 History and Heritage Biola University retrieved November 19 2022 a b c Marsden 2006 pp 118 119 Sandeen 1970 p unknown Allitt 2003 pp 12 13 Gloege 2015 pp 60 61 Mathews 2017 p 1 a b Carpenter 1999 p 17 Gloege 2015 pp 227 228 a b c Allitt 2003 p 13 a b c Allitt 2003 p 14 Grem 2016 p 14 Encyclopaedia Britannica Billy Graham biography britannica com retrieved October 22 2021 Henry Carl FH August 29 2003 1947 The Uneasy Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism reprint ed Grand Rapids Eerdmans p xvii ISBN 0 8028 2661 X Zoba Wendy Murray The Fundamentalist Evangelical Split Belief net retrieved July 1 2005 Allitt 2003 p 1 a b c Allitt 2003 p 12 Barry M Horstmann June 27 2002 Billy Graham A Man With A Mission Impossible Special Section Cincinnati Post Archived from the original on August 29 2011 Retrieved August 18 2007 Billy Graham Greater Los Angeles Campaign Washington at Hill Christ for Greater Los Angeles 1949 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Statement by President Truman in Response to First Soviet Nuclear Test September 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Today August 30 1963 August 30 1963 p unknown retrieved October 27 2022 Sweeney 2005 p 199 De Jong Allison May 10 2018 Protestants decline more have no religion in a sharply shifting religious landscape POLL The nation s religious makeup has shifted dramatically in the past 15 years ABC News Retrieved December 21 2020 a b Kirkpatrick David D October 28 2007 The Evangelical Crackup The New York Times Magazine Edge Boss PDF Akamai Archived from the original PDF on October 31 2008 Retrieved August 2 2010 Vu Michelle A July 29 2008 Rick Warren Pastors Shouldn t Endorse Politicians The Christian Post Retrieved October 25 2011 a b c Kurtzleben Danielle December 19 2015 Are You An Evangelical Are You Sure NPR Archived from the original on February 28 2020 Retrieved February 28 2020 Olson 2008 p 240 America s Changing Religious Landscape Pew Research Center May 12 2015 Archived from the original on March 30 2020 Retrieved March 30 2020 The Unlikely Rebound of Mainline Protestantism The New Yorker July 16 2021 Retrieved July 19 2021 Survey White mainline Protestants outnumber white evangelicals while nones shrink Religion News Service July 8 2021 Retrieved July 19 2021 About Three in Ten U S Adults Are Now Religiously Unaffiliated Pew Research Center December 14 2021 Retrieved September 22 2023 Survey Explores Who Qualifies As an Evangelical barna com The Barna Group Retrieved April 9 2019 Lift every voice The Economist May 5 2012 The evangelical divide The Economist October 12 2017 How Many Evangelicals Are There Wheaton College Institute for the Study of American Evangelicals archived from the original on January 30 2016 retrieved June 29 2016 Religion Gallup Historical Trends Gallup 2019 Retrieved November 9 2020 a b Mathews 2017 p iii Political ideology among Evangelical Protestants Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Clark Norman H 1976 Deliver Us from Evil An Interpretation of American Prohibition The Triumph of the Religious Right The Economist November 11 2004 Himmelstein Jerome L 1990 To The Right The Transformation of American Conservatism University of California Press Martin William 1996 With God on Our Side The Rise of the Religious Right in America New York Broadway Books ISBN 0 7679 2257 3 Goldberg Michelle Donald Trump the Religious Right s Trojan Horse New York Times January 27 2017 January 27 2017 Bean Alan A thing that money could buy How corporate evangelicalism elected a president Baptist News Global January 20 2017 retrieved November 17 2022 Wehner Peter The Evangelical Church is breaking apart Christians must reclaim Jesus from his church The Atlantic October 24 2021 retrieved November 12 2022 Bean Alan Understanding the evangelical civil war Baptist News Global November 8 2021 retrieved November 12 2022 Heineman God is a Conservative pp 71 2 173 Swartz 2012 p 7 Shields Jon A 2009 The Democratic Virtues of the Christian Right pp 117 121 Deckman Melissa Marie 2004 School Board Battles The Christian Right in Local Politics Washington D C Georgetown University Press p 48 ISBN 978 1 58901 001 7 Retrieved April 10 2014 More than half of all Christian Right candidates attend evangelical Protestant churches that are more theologically liberal A relatively large number of Christian Right candidates 24 percent are Catholics however when asked to describe themselves as either progressive liberal or traditional conservative Catholics 88 percent of these Christian Right candidates place themselves in the traditional category Joireman Sandra F 2009 Anabaptism and the State An Uneasy Coexistence In Joireman Sandra F ed Church State and Citizen Christian Approaches to Political Engagement Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 73 91 ISBN 978 0 19 537845 0 LCCN 2008038533 S2CID 153268965 Archived from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved February 26 2022 Dr Timothy Keller at the March 2013 Faith Angle Forum Ethics amp Public Policy Center Retrieved January 19 2023 Doctrine and Race African American Evangelicals and Fundamentalism between the Wars The Gospel Coalition Retrieved January 20 2023 Dreher Rod July 24 2014 What Is Traditional Christianity Anyway The American Conservative Retrieved January 19 2023 How U S religious composition has changed in recent decades Pew Research Center September 13 2022 Retrieved January 31 2023 Noll 2001 pp 154 164 Ten Major Court Cases about Evolution and Creationism National Center for Science Education 2001 ISBN 978 0 385 52526 8 Retrieved March 21 2015 Branch Glenn March 2007 Understanding Creationism after Kitzmiller BioScience 57 3 278 284 doi 10 1641 B570313 ISSN 0006 3568 S2CID 86665329 Kramer Brad August 8 2018 Famous Christians Who Believed Evolution is Compatible with Christian Faith biologos org Archived from the original on January 6 2020 Retrieved March 28 2019 Noll 2001 p 163 Numbers 2006 pp 180 181 Sullivan Amy May 2 2009 Helping Christians Reconcile God with Science Time Archived from the original on September 6 2019 Retrieved April 10 2020 Collins 2006 p 203 Dudley Jonathan 2011 Broken Words The Abuse of Science and Faith in American Politics Crown Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 385 52526 8 Retrieved February 24 2015 Heineman Kenneth J 1998 God is a Conservative Religion Politics and Morality in Contemporary America pp 44 123 ISBN 978 0 8147 3554 1 Smith Christian 2002 Christian America What Evangelicals Really Want p 207 a b Rouse Stella Telhami Shibley September 21 2022 Most Republicans Support Declaring the United States a Christian Nation Politico Archived from the original on September 27 2022 Retrieved September 27 2022 Nichols John September 23 2022 Republicans Are Ready to Declare the United States a Christian Nation The Nation Archived from the original on September 27 2022 Retrieved September 27 2022 Smietana Bob September 23 2022 78 of Republican evangelicals want U S declared a Christian nation The Salt Lake Tribune Archived from the original on September 27 2022 Retrieved September 27 2022 Root Tik March 9 2016 An Evangelical Movement Takes On Climate Change Newsweek Retrieved December 23 2022 Subramaniam Meera November 11 2018 Generation Climate Can Young Evangelicals Change the Climate Debate InsideClimate News Retrieved December 23 2022 Meyaard Schaap Kyle September 29 2020 Young evangelicals are defying their elders politics CNN Retrieved December 23 2022 Holcomb Sarah April 15 2021 Why Young Christians Are Pursuing Climate Action as an Urgent Calling Christianity Today Retrieved December 23 2022 Page Erika September 13 2022 Young Evangelicals seek to save the Earth and their church The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved December 23 2022 Young Evangelicals for Climate Action YECA Retrieved December 23 2022 a b c Christian Evangelicals and U S Foreign Policy Council on Foreign Relations Retrieved July 26 2023 Conceptualizing Evangelical Influence in U S Foreign Policy Caught between Structural Realism and Neoliberal Institutionalism Kirkpatrick David D November 14 2006 For Evangelicals Supporting Israel Is God s Foreign Policy The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 26 2023 References editAllis Oswald T 1945 Prophecy and the Church Philadelphia Presbyterian amp Reformed Allitt Patrick 2003 Religion in America Since 1945 A History Columbia University Press ISBN 0 2311 2154 7 Andrew John A III 1992 From Revivals to Removal Jeremiah Evarts the Cherokee Nation and the Search for the Soul of America Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1427 7 Balmer Randall 1999 Blessed Assurance A History of Evangelicalism in America Beacon Press ISBN 0 8070 7710 0 2002 Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism Louisville KY Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 22409 7 Bauder Kevin 2011 Fundamentalism in Naselli Andrew Hansen Collin eds Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism Grand Rapids MI Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 55581 0 Bebbington David W 1993 Evangelicalism in Modern Britain A History from the 1730s to the 1980s London Routledge Carpenter Joel A 1999 Revive Us Again The Reawakening of American Fundamentalism Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512907 5 Chartier Myron Raymond 1969 The Social Views of Dwight L Moody and Their Relation to the Workingman of 1860 1900 Fort Hays Studies Series 40 Hays Kansas Fort Hays State University Collins Francis S 2006 The Language of God a Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 8639 1 Dayton Donald W 2001 The Variety of American Evangelicalism Knoxville University of Tennessee Press Dorrien Gary J 1998 The Remaking of Evangelical Theology Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 25803 0 Ellingsen Mark 1991 Lutheranism in Dayton Donald W Johnston Robert K eds The Variety of American Evangelicalism Knoxville TN The University of Tennessee Press ISBN 1 57233 158 5 Emerson Michael O Smith Christian 2001 Divided by Faith Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 1951 4707 3 Finkelstein Israel 2013 The Forgotten Kingdom The Archaeology and History of Northern Israel Ancient Near East Monographs Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 5898 3912 0 FitzGerald Frances 2017 The Evangelicals The Struggle to Shape America Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4391 3133 6 Gloege Timothy E W 2015 Guaranteed Pure The Moody Bible Institute Business and the Making of Modern Evangelicalism Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 3343 5 Grem Darren E 2016 The Blessings of Business How Corporations Shaped Conservative Christianity New York Oxford University Press Hannah Jones Nikole 2021 The 1619 Project A New Origin Story New York Random House ISBN 978 0 5932 3057 2 Harden Blaine 2021 Murder at the Mission Viking Himmelstein Jerome L 1990 To The Right The Transformation of American Conservatism University of California Press Hiett Peter 2003 Eternity Now Encountering the Jesus of Revelation Nashville Thomas Nelson Hummel Daniel G 2023 The Rise and Fall of Dispensationalism How the Evangelical Battle over the End Times Shaped a Nation Grand Rapids MI Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 802 87922 6 Johnson Paul E 2004 A Shopkeeper s Millennium Society and Revivals in Rochester New York 1815 1837 New York Hill and Wang ISBN 0 8090 1635 4 Johnson Walter 2013 River of Dark Dreams Slavery and Empire in the Cotton Kingdom Cambridge Massachusetts The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04555 2 Kidd Thomas S 2007 The Great Awakening The Roots of Evangelical Christianity in Colonial America Amazon Kindle New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11887 2 Lantzer Jason S 2012 Mainline Christianity The Past and Future of America s Majority Faith New York NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 5330 9 Longfield Bradley J 2013 Presbyterians and American Culture A History Louisville Kentucky Westminster John Knox Press Lovelace Richard F 2007 The American Pietism of Cotton Mather Origins of American Evangelicalism Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 55635 392 5 Marsden George M 1991 Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism Grand Rapids MI W B Eerdmans ISBN 0 8028 0539 6 Marsden George M 2006 Fundamentalism and American Culture New York Oxford University Press Martin William 1996 With God on Our Side The Rise of the Religious Right in America New York Broadway Books ISBN 0 7679 2257 3 Mathews Mary Beth Swetnam 2017 Doctrine and Race African American Evangelicals and Fundamentalism between the Wars Tuscaloosa The University of Alabama Press ISBN 978 0 8173 5918 8 McLoughlin William G 1980 Revivals Awakenings and Reform An Essay on Religion and Social Change in America 1607 1977 Chicago University of Chicago Press Miller Christopher L 2003 Prophetic Worlds Indians and Whites on the Columbia Plateau Seattle University of Washington Press Miller Steven P 2014 Left Right Born Again The Age of Evangelicalism America s Born Again Years New York Oxford University Press pp 32 59 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199777952 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 977795 2 LCCN 2013037929 OCLC 881502753 Miller Davenport Sarah 2013 Their blood shall not be shed in vain American Evangelical Missionaries and the Search for God and Country in Post World War II Asia Journal of American History 99 4 1109 32 doi 10 1093 jahist jas648 JSTOR 44307506 Mohler Albert 2011 Confessional Evangelicalism in Naselli Andrew Hansen Collin eds Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism Grand Rapids MI Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 55581 0 Noll Mark A 1987 Between Faith and Criticism Evangelicals Scholarship and the Bible in America HarperCollins Noll Mark A 2001 American Evangelical Christianity An Introduction Blackwell Publishers ISBN 978 0 631 21999 6 2002 America s God From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 803441 5 2003 The Rise of Evangelicalism The Age of Edwards Whitefield and the Wesleys A History of Evangelicalism Vol 1 InterVarsity Press ISBN 1 84474 001 3 Noll Mark A 2006 The Civil War As a Theological Crisis University of North Carolina Press Numbers Ronald November 30 2006 The Creationists From Scientific Creationism to Intelligent Design Expanded Edition Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 02339 0 Olson David T 2008 The American Church in Crisis Grand Rapids Zondervan Olson Roger 2011 Postconservative Evangelicalism in Naselli Andrew Hansen Collin eds Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism Grand Rapids MI Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 55581 0 Pietsch B M 2015 Dispensational Modernism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1902 4408 8 Reimer Sam 2003 Evangelicals and the Continental Divide The Conservative Protestant Subculture in Canada and the United States McGill Queen s Press Romer Thomas Geuss Raymond 2015 The Invention of God Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 6745 0497 4 Sandeen Ernest R 1970 The Roots of Fundamentalism British and American Millenarianism 1800 1930 Chicago University of Chicago Press Shantz Douglas H 2013 An Introduction to German Pietism Protestant Renewal at the Dawn of Modern Europe JHU ISBN 978 1 4214 0830 9 Sivertsen Barbara J 2009 The Parting of the Sea How Volcanoes Earthquakes and Plagues Shaped the Story of Exodus Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13770 4 Stanley Brian 2013 The Global Diffusion of Evangelicalism The Age of Billy Graham and John Stott IVP Academic ISBN 978 0 8308 2585 1 Steensland Brian Park Jerry Z Regnerus Mark D Robinson Lynn D Wilcox W Bradford Woodberry Robert D September 2000 The Measure of American Religion Toward Improving the State of the Art Social Forces Oxford University Press 79 1 291 318 doi 10 2307 2675572 JSTOR 2675572 Sutton Matthew Avery American Apocalypse A History of Modern Evangelicalism Cambridge Belknap Press 2014 480 pp online review Swartz David R 2012 Moral Minority The Evangelical Left in an Age of Conservatism Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 2306 4 Sweeney Douglas A 2005 The American Evangelical Story A History of the Movement Baker Academic ISBN 978 1 58558 382 9 Tomlinson Dave 2007 The Post Evangelical Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 310 25385 3 Trueman Carl 2011 The Real Scandal of the Evangelical Mind Moody Publishers Vickers Jason E 2013 The Cambridge Companion to American Methodism Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 43392 2 Winn Christian T Collins 2007 From the Margins A Celebration of the Theological Work of Donald W Dayton Eugene Oregon Wipf and Stock ISBN 978 1 4982 4917 1 Wolffe John 2007 The Expansion of Evangelicalism The Age of Wilberforce More Chalmers and Finney A History of Evangelicalism Vol 2 InterVarsity Press ISBN 978 0 8308 2582 0 Woodberry Robert D Smith Christian S 1998 Fundamentalism et al Conservative Protestants in America Annual Review of Sociology Annual Reviews 24 25 56 doi 10 1146 annurev soc 24 1 25 JSTOR 223473 Worthen Molly 2014 Apostles of Reason The Crisis of Authority in American Evangelicalism Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 989646 2 Youngs J William T 1998 The Congregationalists Denominations in America Vol 4 Student ed Westport Connecticut Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96441 2 Further reading editAmerican Evangelicalism and Islam From the Antichrist to the Mahdi Germany Qantara Balmer Randall Herbert 2010 The Making of Evangelicalism From Revivalism to Politics and Beyond Baylor University Press ISBN 978 1 60258 243 9 Beale David O 1986 In Pursuit of Purity American Fundamentalism Since 1850 Greenville SC Bob Jones University Unusual ISBN 0 89084 350 3 Borg Marcus J 2003 The Heart of Christianity Rediscovering a Life of Faith HarperOne ISBN 978 0 060 52676 4 Carpenter Joel A 1980 Fundamentalist Institutions and the Rise of Evangelical Protestantism 1929 1942 Church History 49 1 62 75 doi 10 2307 3164640 JSTOR 3164640 S2CID 145632415 Carter Heath W and Laura Rominger Porter eds Turning Points in the History of American Evangelicalism Eerdmans 2017 xviii 297 pp Chapman Mark B American Evangelical Attitudes Toward Catholicism Post World War II to Vatican II U S Catholic Historian 33 1 Winter 2015 25 54 Compton John W 2020 The End of Empathy Why White Protestants Stopped Loving Their Neighbors Oxford University Press Grainger Brett Church in the Wild Evangelicals in Antebellum America Harvard UP 2019 online review Griffith R M 2017 Moral combat how sex divided American Christians and fractured American politics New York Basic Books ISBN 9780465094769 History of sexual politics in the United States 1920 2017 and how it has influenced the formation of political identities in American Christian denominations Knox Ronald 1950 Enthusiasm a Chapter in the History of Religion with Special Reference to the XVII and XVIII Centuries Oxford Eng Oxford University Press p viii 622 pp Loveland Anne C 1981 Southern Evangelicals and the Social Order 1800 1860 Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press ISBN 9780807107836 Luhrmann Tanya 2012 When God Talks Back Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God Knopf Maas David 1990 The Life amp Times of D L Moody Christian History 25 Marsden George M 1987 Reforming Fundamentalism Fuller Seminary and the New Evangelicalism Grand Rapids William B Eerdmans Menikoff Aaron 2014 Politics and Piety Baptist Social Reform in America 1770 1860 Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 63087 282 3 Naselli A D and Collin Hansen eds 2011 Four Views on the Spectrum of Evangelicalism Grand Rapids MI Zondervan ISBN 9780310293163 Noll Mark A 1992 A History of Christianity in the United States and Canada Grand Rapids Wm B Eerdmans pp 311 89 ISBN 0 8028 0651 1 Noll Mark A Bebbington David W Rawlyk George A eds 1994 Evangelicalism Comparative Studies of Popular Protestantism in North America the British Isles and Beyond 1700 1990 Pierard Richard V 1979 The Quest For the Historical Evangelicalism A Bibliographical Excursus Fides et Historia 11 2 60 72 Price Robert M 1986 Neo Evangelicals and Scripture A Forgotten Period of Ferment Christian Scholars Review 15 4 315 30 Rawlyk George A Noll Mark A eds 1993 Amazing Grace Evangelicalism in Australia Britain Canada and the United States Schafer Axel R 2011 Countercultural Conservatives American Evangelicalism From the Postwar Revival to the New Christian Right U of Wisconsin Press 225 pp covers evangelical politics from the 1940s to the 1990s that examines how a diverse politically pluralistic movement became largely the Christian Right Smith Timothy L 1957 Revivalism and Social Reform American Protestantism on the Eve of the Civil War Spencer Michael March 10 2009 The Coming Evangelical Collapse The Christian Science Monitor Sutton Matthew Avery American Apocalypse A history of modern evangelicalism 2014 Turchin Peter 2023 End Times Elites Counter Elites and the Path of Political Disintegration New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 0 593 49050 1 Utzinger J Michael 2006 Yet Saints Their Watch Are Keeping Fundamentalists Modernists and the Development of Evangelical Ecclesiology 1887 1937 Macon Mercer University Press ISBN 0 86554 902 8 Ward WR Early Evangelicalism A Global Intellectual History Cambridge Cambridge University Press Wigger John H Hatch Nathan O eds 2001 Methodism and the Shaping of American Culture essays by scholars Williams Daniel K The Election of the Evangelical Jimmy Carter Gerald Ford and the Presidential Contest of 1976 University Press of Kansas 2020 online reviewExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Evangelicalism in the United States Evangelical Protestant Denominations Association of Religion Data Archives 2010 A list of 146 evangelical Protestant denominations in the US Institute for the Study of American Evangelicalism Operation World Statistics from around the world including numbers of Evangelicals by country Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelicalism in the United States amp oldid 1193183815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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