16 Facts About Evangelical Christianity

1.

Evangelicalism, called evangelical Christianity or evangelical Protestantism, is a worldwide interdenominational movement within Protestant Christianity that affirms the centrality of being "born again", in which an individual experiences personal conversion, the authority of the Bible as God's revelation to humanity, and in spreading the Christian message.

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2.

Evangelical Christianity churches have been involved in the establishment of elementary and secondary schools.

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3.

Term "Open Evangelical Christianity" refers to a particular Christian school of thought or churchmanship, primarily in Great Britain .

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4.

Evangelical Christianity revivalism imbued ordinary men and women with a confidence and enthusiasm for sharing the gospel and converting others outside of the control of established churches, a key discontinuity with the Protestantism of the previous era.

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5.

Evangelical Christianity described receiving assurance of God's grace after a period of fasting, self-examination, and despair over his sins.

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6.

Evangelical Christianity preachers emphasized personal salvation and piety more than ritual and tradition.

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7.

Evangelical Christianity clergy networked together through societies such as the Eclectic Society in London and the Elland Society in Yorkshire.

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8.

In Nigeria the Evangelical Christianity Church Winning All is the largest church organization with five thousand congregations and over three million members.

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9.

In Kenya, mainstream Evangelical Christianity denominations have taken the lead in promoting political activism and backers, with the smaller Evangelical Christianity sects of less importance.

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10.

Daniel arap Moi was president 1978 to 2002 and claimed to be an Evangelical Christianity; he proved intolerant of dissent or pluralism or decentralization of power.

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11.

The rich and the poor remained traditional Catholics, while most Evangelical Christianity Protestants were in the new lower-middle class–known as the "C class" .

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12.

Evangelical Christianity escalated the war against leftist guerrilla insurgents as a holy war against atheistic "forces of evil".

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13.

Between 1910 and 1945, when Korea was a Japanese colony, Evangelical Christianity became in part an expression of nationalism in opposition to Japan's efforts to enforce the Japanese language and the Shinto religion.

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14.

The Evangelical Christianity Alliance, formed in 1846, was the first ecumenical evangelical body in the world and works to unite evangelicals, helping them listen to, and be heard by, the government, media and society.

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15.

Recurrent themes within American Evangelical Christianity discourse include abortion, evolution denial, secularism, and the notion of the United States as a Christian nation.

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16.

Particularly controversial doctrine within the Evangelical Christianity Churches is that of prosperity theology, which spread in the 1970s and 1980s in the United States, mainly through Pentecostal and charismatic televangelists.

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