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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 11 page paper that begins with definitions of evangelism, including the four characteristics of evangelical Christians. This is followed by a history of evangelism including a discussion about how Luther, Zwingli and Calvin interpreted the Lord's Supper. The writer discusses the first missionaries to India and China and also comments on Billy Graham. Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Page Count:
11 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGevng4.RTF
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
we use the view these terms as spreading the new Words of Jesus, then, we must identify all of Christs Apostles and disciples as evangelical missionaries (Parks, 1999). They had
passion and zeal, they traveled to lands outside their own, they also preached within their own lands, they were committed and dedicated, they spread the Word of Jesus (Parks, 1999).
Normally, we discuss evangelicalism as beginning with Martin Luther and the Reformation (Robinson, 2006). The word comes from euangellismos, which means the Gospel or the Good News (Robinson, 2006). Martin
Luther used the term evangelische kirche to describe the movement he initiated (Robinson, 2006). The translation of evangelische kirche is evangelical church (Robinson, 2006). A number of years later, the
word evangelical was used as a synonym for every Protestant sect that emerged in Europe (Robinson, 2006). If we were to be very technical, we would have to identify the
Lutheran church as the true evangelical church. Billy Graham defines evangelism: "Evangelism is when the Gospel, which is good news, is preached or presented to all people" (Grossman, 2005).
Graham emphasizes the "all" in his definition because he is inclusive (Grossman, 2005). Graham draws a distinction between evangelical and evangelism, evangelical is " label often claimed by conservative Protestants"
(Grossman, 2005). David Bebbington said that evangelical Christians exhibit four specific characteristics (reprinted exactly as it appears): * Conversionism: the belief that lives of all humans need to be
changed by way of a "born again" decision to repent of their sins and accept Jesus as Lord and Savior (Robinson, 2006; Neuhaus, 2004). * Activism: the expression of the
gospel in various ways, including missionary outreach and social reform (Robinson, 2006; Neuhaus, 2004). * Biblicism: a particular regard for the Bible as the Word of God and the ultimate
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