from Part II: - The contexts of evangelical theology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2007
Though the evangelical movement has become a diverse, worldwide movement, there has been consistency in attitudes toward culture. Throughout their history evangelicals have displayed ambivalence toward their cultural context. The world was either something to be won over in the name of Christ, or to be avoided as a source of temptation, but it could also represent a resource to be exploited in pursuit of their evangelical calling. As a result, their relationship with culture has been ambiguous, marked more often by vigorous campaigns against particular evils believed to threaten Christian living - whether liquor, polygamy or slavery, or, more recently, abortion and gay marriage - than by thoughtful engagement with the complexities of culture. In this respect views of culture reflect the unique historical and theological character of the movement, with its roots in the Reformation, and the revival and missionary movements emanating from Europe and North America. In this article we will use “culture” to refer to artifacts, practices, and institutions by which a people expresses its identity; in theological terms, what humans make of God's good creation.
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