"Evangelicalism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Evangelicals were beginning to ask questions concerning the ideas of Christianization and began embracing other ideas and arguments. These new ideas deconstructed the social expectations of those following the paradigms of this new millennial way of thinking with deconstructed expectations‚ challenging believers to consider the ideas of evangelical marginality. These new ideas lead to new expectations in missions and literal interpretation. Some of these arguments ultimately shattered denominational

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    (1)The Christian evangelist William Franklin Graham Jr.‚ Billy Graham‚ was born in Charlotte‚ NC. (3)Surprisingly‚ he would one day preach the Christian gospel to over 215 million people in over 185 countries. He was credited for preaching the gospel to more individuals than basically anyone in history. He attended Bob Jones University‚ but he while he was there he considered their rules to be intolerable. (5)While going to the Florida Bible Institute he became a Southern Baptist. (2) Along with

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    The author starts his book by introducing what the “new evangelicalism” is. He first gives a definition of evangelicalism: “a Protestant view of the “good news” (from the Greek word euangelion) of salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ” (XVI). Then he distinguishes evangelicalism and new evangelicalism says‚ “The term “new evangelicalism” applies to a strain of conservative‚ traditional‚ Protestant‚ religious thought that coalesced into a movement in the mid-twentieth century‚ purporting

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    Take America Back

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    1 Draft: Take America Back: The Christian Right and Major Players ’ Influence in the Values of Middle and Working Class America" " Introduction! " " It’s February 2011. Barack Obama is the president of the United States. Despite sagging poll numbers‚ a slowly recovering economy is supporting the push of health care reform. The Democratic Party controls the Senate. The Republicans‚ led by midterm-elected John Boehner‚ control the House. Progress is tedious‚ but moving. Disdain for

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    The Moral Majority

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    A once popular bumper sticker read‚ “The Moral Majority is Neither.” The fact that there was a bumper sticker criticizing the Moral Majority‚ measures how large of an impact they once had in politics in America. Led by Reverend Jerry Falwall‚ the Moral Majority was an ultra-conservative group that aimed to incorporate politics with strong conservative religious views. The mission itself was controversial which made their political agenda criticized even more. Falwell and the rest of the Moral Majority

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    Jesus Camp Essay

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    Laurie Grenier Dylan Kissane PHIL 130 Tuesday‚ April 7th 2015 Sociological issues displayed in Jesus Camp In 2009‚ more then 4.5 million evangelical memberships in the United States were recorded and between 2006 and 2013‚ the number of Evangelical Protestants –also called Born Again- rose by 11.2 percent. The evangelical population is part of a bigger group -the Protestants representing more then 50 percent of the American population- and represents almost 30 percent of this larger group (Frejka

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    Religious Fundamentalism.

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    Is Religious Fundamentalism always Totalitarian and Prone to Violence? Fundamentalism is “a belief in returning to the literal meanings of scriptural texts. Fundamentalism may arise as a response to modernization and rationalization‚ insisting on faith-based answers‚ and defending tradition by using traditional grounds.” Fundamentalists believe that their view is only one true view of the world which leaves no room for ambiguity and that this is the true correct belief (Giddens‚ 2009). Fundamentalist

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    In his Genealogy of Morals Nietzsche censures the members of the Judeo-Christian tradition for their "impotence." As a result of their impotence the descendents of this tradition (slaves‚ as I will call them to maintain some modicum of political correctness)‚ have developed a hatred "to monstrous and uncanny proportions" (33). This hatred has had the end result of squelching the happiness and will to power‹two truly laudable elements of humanity‹that a truly strong individual might otherwise develop

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    Jesus Camp

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    “Jesus Camp” A growing number of Evangelical Christians believe there is a revival underway in America that requires Christian youth to assume leadership roles in advocating the causes of their religious movement. “Jesus Camp” follows three home-schooled Missouri kids—12-year-old mullet-haired Levi‚ who was saved at 5; 10-year-old soldier ’s daughter Tory‚ who loves dancing to Christian heavy metal; and 9-year-old Rachael‚ who breathlessly approaches strangers to talk about Christ—to Pastor Becky

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    Movie Response

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    Melvin Williams Professor Hadden Cultural Psychology March 31‚ 2015 Movie Response: Jesus Camp In the documentary Jesus Camp young children are shown in their native environment to have very close relationships with the Lord. Jesus Camp focuses on young white evangelical Christians from the heartland of America who are all being home schooled by their mothers and taught to be zealous soldiers in God’s army fighting the Devil and the morally bankrupt and godless secular culture in what is called

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