MEMBER LOGIN




Search First Things

Advanced Search

RSS

Masthead

Recent Comments

The Top Ten Books That Have Influenced Mr. Benson’s View of the World (6)
Alison: Christopher, I have not read...

What Books Have Most Influenced You? (17)
Alison: Thanks for the response, Joe. Here are my books: 1. Marjorie...

What Books Have Most Influenced You? (17)
orthodoxdj: Holly, I have up in my classroom (I teach philosophy and...

What Books Have Most Influenced You? (17)
Joe Carter: orthodoxdj The Giver by Lois Lowry That was a great book. The...

The Top Ten Books That Have Influenced Mr. Benson’s View of the World (6)
Christopher Benson: Kyle: Yes, the...

The Top Ten Books That Have Influenced Mr. Benson’s View of the World (6)
Holly Ordway: Postman’s Amusing...

Archives

Categories

Monthly


« Previous  |Home|  Next »         

Monday, October 19, 2009, 6:30 PM

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 shaped by the Trinitarian and Christological consensus of the early church, the formal and material principles of the Reformation, the missionary movement that grew out of the Great Awakening and the new movements of the Spirit that indicate “surprising works of God” are still happening today (“Foreword,” in The Advent of Evangelicalism).

I like the fact that George starts with the early church and its foundational theology, which is not something we always do well as evangelicals, but I often wonder how Trinitarian we really are in practice. How many of us open our worship service in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit? Or have any confession of the Triune name during worship? Hmm…



Related posts:

  1. Assumed Evangelicalism, and why to bother talking about it
  2. Stott on the Essence of Evangelicalism
  3. What is Evangelicalism?
  4. A confessional core versus pragmatism
  5. Post-Evangelicalism is Dead

Comments are closed.