Methodist Revival (Great Britain) and Pietist Movement (Germany), but especially the first and second Great Awakenings (United States)
Resolving the Fundamentalist controversy (Late 1930s): conservatives who stuck with the old Protestant churches but who did not really support the growing modernist approach wanted a name for themselves in the Americas: Neo-Evangelicals, soon shortened to Evangelicals
Term was used to distinguish followers of Martin Luther (Lutherans/Evangelicals) from the Reformers who followed John Calvin
We believe in the deity of our Lord Jesus Christ, in His virgin birth, in His sinless life, ... in His bodily resurrection, in His ascension to the right hand of the Father, and in His personal return in power and glory.
We believe in the resurrection of both the saved and the lost; they that are saved unto the resurrection of life and they that are lost unto the resurrection of damnation.
We believe in the spiritual unity of believers in our Lord Jesus Christ.
Very oriented towards personal transformation: the need for a conversion experience, a personal relationship with Jesus, and a reliance on the Bible as the sole standard for faith and practice
Working to lead others to Christ is part of being a good Evangelical. (Similar to Catholicism)
Specific personal conversion in which they are "born again" or "saved."
One large difference: Evangelicals believe that people can do nothing to earn their way to heaven: Believers must do "good works in grateful response to our pardon, not to cause it."
Christ's Second Coming (the Rapture): Most, though not all, Evangelicals believe that in the end times the church will be "caught up with Christ before the Great Tribulation, leaving nonbelievers behind to suffer on earth."
In 2014 Pope Francis met with the general secretary of the World Evangelical Alliance
- WEA general secretary Dr. Geoff Tunnicliffe said: "We acknowledge the differences between our traditions, yet also affirm the common tasks we have shared in the past and pray that we can build on those.”
Personal group opinion: The emphasis on the conversion experience makes Evangelicals a very apt group to use proclamation and personal testimony in ecumenism.
The document "Evangelicals and Catholics Together" was the collaborative effort of fifteen religious writers who were either Evangelical or Catholic (some are even converts from one denomination to the other). This document dissects the primary similarities and differences among the Evangelicals and Catholics; the text then explores how the separation between the two can be mended back together. This is extremely important to the modern-day ecumenical movement between Evangelicals and Catholics. (Refer to diagram.)