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The Beliefnet Guide to Evangelical Christianity (Beliefnet Guides) [Paperback]

Wendy Murray Zoba (Author), Philip Yancey (Introduction)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

June 14, 2005 Beliefnet Guides (Book 2)
Has Evangelical Christianity become a political entity?
What is the difference between “evangelical” and “evangelism”?
Do evangelicals literally believe the Bible?

Thirty-five percent of Americans today are evangelical Christians, yet many people are uncertain of what that term actually means. The Beliefnet® Guide to Evangelical Christianity offers a clear, unbiased description of evangelical beliefs and practices—including how they have changed throughout history and what they are now. It also dispels many current misconceptions about this faith group and its followers.

The Beliefnet® Guide to Evangelical Christianity addresses topics such as evangelical Christians’ approach to the accuracy of the Bible, their relationship with Jesus Christ, and the connection to conservative politics. Its nuts-and-bolts approach will appeal both to evangelicals who want to know more about the history of their religion and community and to general readers who want to understand the rise of evangelicalism over the past decades.

From the premier source of information on religion and spirituality, the Beliefnet® Guides introduce you to the major traditions, leaders, and issues of faith in the world today.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Here we have evangelical Christianity in a nutshell, written by a former Time and Christianity Today journalist who describes herself as an evangelical. Using Beliefnet's characteristically breezy and accessible writing style, Zoba tells the truth about evangelical Christians. They are not all in agreement on political issues such as abortion and homosexuality; they don't all reject the theory of evolution; and while most believe in the inerrancy of the Bible ("when scripture says something, it is telling the truth"), they interpret scripture in a variety of ways. This guide claims that evangelicals share certain core religious values: they believe humans must have a "born again" experience to become Christians, emphasize a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, trust in the reliability of the Bible and "feel obliged to share their faith in Jesus (which they believe saves them from eternal damnation) with other people, in order to save them, too, from eternal damnation." The book works overtime to rescue evangelical Christianity from the notion that it promotes only individual concerns, with Zoba emphasizing the many ways evangelicals are working hard toward social justice and the alleviation of poverty. This guide delivers what it promises—a broad view of evangelicalism designed to help readers be more tolerant and accepting of this branch of Christianity. (June 14)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Citing a 2003 poll, Zoba reports common knowledge: "Americans generally" dislike evangelicals "more than any other social sector, except for prostitutes." In response, she says she will dispel confusion about evangelicals and point out evangelical strengths. She lists four evangelical essentials and thereafter sketches evangelicals' spin on Christian theology and evangelical history. The four basics are the born-again experience, a personal relationship with Jesus, the ultimate authority of the Bible, and sharing the faith to promote others' salvation. Really, she says later, the four are shared by virtually all Christians, certainly including Catholics, Orthodox Christians, and mainstream Protestants. By then, she has so illuminated evangelical perspectives and history--especially the fact that, since the Reformation, there have been, besides the expected Baptists and Anabaptists, evangelical Lutherans, Presbyterians, Anglicans, and even Catholics--that it seems perverse not to concur without dumping Christianity, or at least theism, altogether. She has also shown that the apoplectic anti-abortion and anti-gay demonstrators so beloved by the media are a waning phenomenon, and that evangelicals modestly doing good works vastly outnumber them. Ray Olson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Three Leaves; First edition (June 14, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385514522
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385514521
  • Product Dimensions: 5.6 x 0.3 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #784,167 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Questionable Usefulness, August 17, 2007
This review is from: The Beliefnet Guide to Evangelical Christianity (Beliefnet Guides) (Paperback)
The Beliefnet® Guide to Evangelical Christianity presents an overview of Evangelical Christianity covering evangelicalism's definition, beliefs, history, and current status politically and culturally. It includes a glossary of "church-speak" and a very good reading list. The book comes across in a friendly manner and is claimed to be written by an insider. Zoba does well in her attempt to dispel the negative stereotypes surrounding Evangelicalism, although she does not flinch from reporting its more embarrassing features. She also prefaces the book by stating that she does not speak for all evangelicals, a welcome admission considering some of her later statements.

She gives a good definition of this difficult-to-define movement which can be summarized as those Christians having: an emphasis on a born again experience, a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, belief in a reliable and authoritative Bible, and an obligation to share their faith. This is followed by a very good section on just what the gospel is and why it was necessary for Christ to die for sin. The book is certainly not perfect, however. While no single error necessarily makes the book completely unacceptable, there are many of them and taken together make the book of questionable value.

While the author often distinguishes between those doctrinal features of Evangelicalism that fall within a range of acceptable possibilities and those that do not, she makes questionable or even false claims in other areas that she implies are fairly unanimous. One troublesome assertion is her explanation of the Trinity which smacks of heretical Modalism. There is also a repeated referral to a "strangely warming" sensation that Evangelicals allegedly equate with the influence of the Holy Spirit. I have been an Evangelical for over 15 years and the only time I have heard a phrase like this referring to God's interaction with us was from Mormons. A somewhat vague Charismaticism is assumed without mention of those who hold to Cessationism. Some important questions are also left open making it appear as though Evangelicalism is still struggling with issues that have actually been adequately answered (e.g. the fate of those who never heard the gospel is said to be a "mystery beyond human reckoning").

Her sections on morality leave much to be desired as well. The homosexual issue is considered to be more of an marketing problem for Evangelicals than a true moral dilemma, and the abortion debate is relegated to politics. In her section on the former she allows the ridiculous question "How did homosexuality leap over murder and adultery?" to stand as an assessment of culture's influence on Evangelicalism rather than its reliance on Scripture. She even makes the bizarre conclusion from Romans 1:26-27 that "the seemingly really bad sins as well as innocuous ones carry the same result" (which is the opposite of Paul's discussion here). Other statements like "the evangelical approach to justice [is] restorative, not retributive" are also less than representative.

It would have been better to simply state only her views (as such) or always include all options. Mixing the two without notice paints an inaccurate picture of the evangelical landscape. The uninformed reader will likely be far more confused after a perusal of this "premier source of information" than they were before they began.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Moderately helpful..., September 28, 2009
By 
Chad Oberholtzer (Boalsburg, PA, USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Beliefnet Guide to Evangelical Christianity (Beliefnet Guides) (Paperback)
I decided to read Wendy Murray Zoba's "Evangelical Christianity" without really knowing what to expect. An evangelical Christian myself, I thought it might be interesting to see what a good author like Murray Zoba would have to say about evangelicalism, as I have appreciated her work in the evangelical standard-bearer magazine, "Christianity Today."

Ultimately, I would say that she does a reasonable job of summarizing a diverse, amorphous, hard-to-define movement like evangelical Christianity. The book hits all of the major points (high regard for Scripture, emphasis on personal conversion experience, etc.), without obsessing about any peripheral issues. It is even-handed, fair-minded, and appropriately critical of some of the foibles of evangelicalism, while also offering sympathetic explanations of some of the evangelical positions that befuddle outsiders. And the writing style is very readable, neither overly academic nor dumbed-down.

However, as much as I generally appreciated the style and content of the book, I wasn't particularly engaged. Maybe this disconnect is due to my familiarity with evangelicalism, but I'm not sure that I gained much from reading this book. As an evangelical insider, my primary response to the book was simply, "Yup, that's about right." But I can't say that I really learned anything significant or that I was particularly challenged or inspired.

So, the value of this book really rests on its audience and their expectations. For those outside the evangelical world, this book could function well as a primer. Though guilty of occasional over-generalization or over-simplification (and I'm not sure you could write a book about something as nebulous as evangelical Christianity without some of this), Murray Zoba offers a helpful summary of evangelicals that is accessible, informative, and thoughtfully written. I'm not inclined to recommend it to my evangelical friends, but it can definitely serve a purpose of educating the non-evangelical world about who we evangelicals are.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
A friend of mine who runs an inner-city shelter for drug addicts and homeless people and is tantalizingly hard to place on any theological map made this observation: "I love evangelicals. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Holy Spirit, Billy Graham, New Testament, Old Testament, Christian Coalition, United States, New York, Charles Colson, Jesus Christ, Martin Luther, Pat Robertson, Apostle Paul, Protestant Reformation, World Relief, John Wesley, Jonathan Edwards, Roman Empire, White House, World War, Bill Bright, Charles Finney, God the Father, Nicene Creed, Ralph Reed, South Africa
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