|
|
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page.
|
Post-evangelicalism is a term used to describe former adherents of Evangelicalism. Post-evangelicalism is sometimes linked with the emerging church phenomenon, but includes a variety of people who have distanced themselves from mainstream evangelical Christianity for theological, political, or cultural reasons. Most who describe themselves as post-evangelical are still adherents of the Christian faith in some form.
|
Contents
|
Some post-evangelical criticisms of the evangelical church include but are not limited to:
Christianity Today[1] explains that post-evangelicals have become willingly disassociated with the mainstream evangelical belief system over difficulties with any combination of at least the following issues:
Publications identifying as post-evangelical include Recovering Evangelical, an online news and opinion portal for "evangelicals, post-evangelicals and those outside the church who still like Jesus", the blog Internet Monk, and Patrol Magazine.
Dave Tomlinson's book "The Post Evangelical"[3] and Graham Cray's "The Post Evangelical Debate"[4] are crucial texts to understand the movement and the debate surrounding it.
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)