revsdd
Well-Known Member
What is an evangelical? I'd agree with this definition. An evangelical is someone who holds the Bible to be their highest authority in Christian faith and practice, feels it is very important for them to encourage non-Christians to accept Jesus Christ as their personal Savior, believe that Jesus Christ's death on the cross is the only sacrifice that can remove the penalty of sin, and believe that only those who trust in Jesus Christ alone as their Savior receive God's gift of everlasting life.
Thank you for your definition. Was that so hard?
The definition comes (almost word for word) from a study commissioned by the National Association of Evangelicals and Life Way Research, based in Nashville, Tennessee. For the purposes of the study they identified what they considered to be evangelical leaders and theologians. That hand picked group narrowed down 17 possible statements to four and declared that to be the definition of "evangelical." There was then a 1000 person telephone survey which was not given options other than to agree or disagree with whether that was a reasonable definition of "evangelical," and a little more than half agreed with the definition. Not all who were surveyed were evangelicals. The study estimated that about 30% of Americans can be considered "evangelical" by that definition. Of course, the very process of developing this definition of "evangelical" which would fit the views of the organizations who wanted to define "evangelical" according to their own understanding then allows them (and those who agree with them) to exclude as "evangelical" anyone who doesn't fit their definition. And the definition certainly can't be questioned because Life Way Research itself declared the process to be valid and reliable. And if they say their own process is valid, then it must be valid. Right?
So your definition was developed by a relatively small, handpicked (and therefore likely biased) group of scholars, and then tested by 1000 people - a good number of whom weren't evangelicals, probably didn't really care all that much and were likely just willing to say "Sure. Sounds good to me." Who can argue with that?
(Most of my information about the survey comes from Christianity Today)