福音主義は聖書を究極の教義であり根拠とする思想で、キリスト教の核となる教義を共有するプロテスタントの教派に広くまたがります。世界最大の信徒数を誇り政治的な影響力を持つまでになった福音派の歩みを、18世紀の牧師の伝道集会をはじめ、19世紀の辺境での同人集会、20世紀の都市での大規模集会、そして21世紀のグローバル巨大教会に至るまで概括します。その特徴や今後の進展についても考察するほか、福音派現象の核心を検証することを試みます。
Evangelicalism has rapidly become one of the most significant religious movements in the modern world.
An umbrella term that encompasses many Protestant denominations that share core tenets of Christianity, evangelicalism is foremost defined by its disciples' consideration of the Bible as the ultimate moral and historical authority, the desire to evangelize or spread the faith, and the value of religious conversion known as being “born again.”
As the Evangelical movement has grown rapidly, so has its influence on the political stage. Evangelicals affect elections up and down the Americas and across Africa, provoke governments throughout Asia, fill up some of the largest church buildings, and possess the largest congregations of any religion in the world. Yet evangelicals are wildly diverse- from Canadian Baptists to Nigerian Anglicans, from South Sea Methodists to Korean Presbyterians, and from house churches in Beijing to megachurches in Saõ Paulo.
This Very Short Introduction tells the evangelical story from the preacher-led revivals of the eighteenth century, through the frontier camp meetings of the nineteenth, to the mass urban rallies of the twentieth and the global megachurches of the twenty-first. More than just a sketch of where evangelicals have come from, this volume aims to clearly examine the heart of evangelical phenomenon. Is there such a (single) thing as evangelicalism? What is its basic character? Where are the evangelicals going? And what in the world do they want?
Introduction
Chapter 1: Original evangelicalism
Chapter 2: Evangelicalism defined
Chapter 3: Evangelicalism expands
Chapter 4: The challenges of modernity
Conclusion
References
Further Reading
"The media . . . continue to view evangelicalism through the distorting lens of current American politics and religion. John Stackhouse's brilliant introduction to the topic will help the general reader to correct the distortion and grasp the multiple yet still distinctive ways in which evangelicals both think about their faith, and negotiate the social and political challenges of the modern world." - Brian Stanley, Professor of World Christianity, University of Edinburgh
"We now have an answer to 'Who is an evangelical?'John Stackhouse gives us the best summary of our history I've read: compelling, interesting, and critically helpful. In too many places recently, the label "evangelical" has been hijacked and abused. This book helps us rise above those skirmishes as Stackhouse knits together various strains, groups, movements, and moments in an ever-enlarging pattern, giving coherence and insight into this global Christian community. Evangelicals themselves should read this book, but everyone else who cares about understanding evangelicals will find it enormously helpful also." - Brian Stiller, World Evangelical Alliance
"This lucid and snappy introduction to evangelicalism guides us from deep and tangled historical roots through the contradictions and complexity of the modern global faith. Stackhouse captures the diversity of evangelicalism without losing the 500-year plotline—an amazing feat." - Molly Worthen, Associate Professor of History, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
"As a Canadian not caught up in the United States' religious-political partisanship and as an expert historian-theologian, John Stackhouse is perfectly situated to explain the history, development, and contemporary relevance of "evangelical Christianity." This excellent introduction is especially strong in its careful definition of terms and in its treatment of evangelicals around the world." - Mark Noll, author of America's Book: The Rise and Decline of a Bible Civilization, 1794-1911
ISBN : 9780190079680
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