Alliance
Enforcer of the Republic
Originally posted by lil bitchiness
So, are those the ones which bomb abortions or however else it goes, threatening that everyone is going to hell?
Born Again is the real strong conservative evangelical movemetn in the US right now. I don't actually know stats on which groups bomb most, but yes, Born Agains are much more likely to support such actions.
Originally posted by lil bitchiness
Is any denomination evangelical or is that a particular type of Christians, ie, do Catholics go around converting people, or however the evangelical things work.
Ytse's defenition is a little too warm and fuzzy.
Evangelicism can be a liberal movement, especially in historically black churches. I personally think the movement is more headed in this direction with more attention to social responsibility, stewardship of the environment, anti-death penalty, and much more focus on the broad, main tenants of Christianity.
However, If i remember....about 2/3rds of people who are evangelicals describe themselves as conservative. Thier MAIN platforms are social issues, god, guns, gays, and abortions.
Evangelicals aren't a specific sect...its a broad term, but they often organize together, which has given them strong political power in the US, especially in the South (the "Bible Belt" or so it is called). I don't know if their main goal is conversion, but some definately like to shout at you and spend their afternoon on a streetcorner, moreso than other religions.
Evangelicism's decentralization makes it less doctrinal than other religions (as I said it was more a class, than a sect) but faith is still an important issue, despite Ytse's definition. Morality is based on faith, and the faithless are immoral. Evangelicism is not a "doctrinal" confession of faith (as Ytse's def suggested) but it is a confession of faith.