Halloween and Definitions

If indeed an evangelical is a fundamentalist who dresses up for Halloween, a definition I accept with eagerness, we can expand on the list already given to further clarify what we have in common and what still divides us:Apologetics:- an evangelical in the Van Til (presuppositionalist) tradition: . . . . Continue Reading »

Should We Drop Out?

Of the culture that is?This post has me thinking .  . . but I cannot see totally dropping out for three reasons.First, there is some good stuff being produced that is easier to find if one is not a total drop out.Second, as a teacher I would find it even harder to understand the cultural . . . . Continue Reading »

The Theological Core of Evangelicalism

Joe Carter started this discussion by asking, “How would the bloggers here at Evangel define the term? What is is that we all have in common that allows us to share the label?” Timothy George provides a helpful short and concise summary:At its heart [evangelicalism] is a theological core . . . . Continue Reading »

Is it fair to say . . .

given the vast theological and social differences between those people who call themselves evangelicals that an evangelical is a traditional Christian who wants you to be one too? Or is it merely (to paraphrase a student) a fundamentalist who watches The . . . . Continue Reading »

Why We are Called Evangelical

Allow me to pick out one common thread among the various posts today on this topic:  Dr. Moore isn’t much interested in whether he’s actually an evangelical or not, pointing out that its meaning is largely contextualized.  Frank Turk grants that some people need the label for . . . . Continue Reading »

A One-Sentence Definition of Evangelical

“Evangelical” is a theological term shaped by historical events. Since Joe asked us to define the word, I’ll define evangelicalism at its best, rather than at its worst. An evangelical is someone who embraces the solas of the Reformation (salvation by grace alone, through faith . . . . Continue Reading »

Moving Beyond Simple Criticism

When I was a kid, I loved the sight gags in the old Adam West “Batman” series. One in particular used to crack me up: in the Bat Cave, the equipment was labeled with large signs, no matter how obvious it was what the item was. “Bat poles.” “Bat phone.” Etc. Ever . . . . Continue Reading »