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Awakening the Evangelical Mind: An Intellectual History of the Neo-Evangelical Movement

DOC Awakening the Evangelical Mind: An Intellectual History of the Neo-Evangelical Movement by Owen Strachan in History

Description

Prayer to the Great Mystery is a historic publishing event; a remarkable coup that presents 93 newly discovered photographs--along with 150 others--taken by Edward S. Curtis. Deeply human and symphathetic; these images embody Curtis's attempt to preserve the character is Native American Cultural life before its erosion by the nineteenth-century flood of American expansion. Accompanying the photographs is a poignant series of myths; abridged from Curtis's ethnographic writings. Prayers to the Great Mystery is a stunning account of a vanished era; and a seminal book for understanding our rich Native American legacy.


#414684 in Books HarperCollins Christian Pub. 2015-10-06 2015-10-06Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.25 x .79 x 6.38l; .90 #File Name: 0310520797240 pagesAwakening the Evangelical Mind An Intellectual History of the Neo Evangelical Movement


Review
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful. The Christian Mind UnleashedBy Dr. David SteeleIn the late 1940’s; V.W. Steele resigned as the Senior pastor at Bethel Baptist in Everett; Washington. He stepped away from his pulpit at the height of a revival as he felt prompted by God to move to another ministry. He loaded up the car with his young family made the long journey to Los Angeles. Providentially; he was commissioned by Charles Fuller to partner together and preach the gospel in Idaho; Montana and North Dakota. Pastor Steele was my grandfather; so I have a particular interest in his venture with Charles Fuller; the popular preacher on the Old Fashioned Revival Hour radio broadcast.My grandfather pastored churches in a day where the battle lines were drawn. He lived in a day when men were willing to lose life and limb for the sake of doctrinal convictions. But he also lived in a day when the church was in a titanic struggle against the cultural monster of modernism.Dr. Owen Strachan’s book; Awakening the Evangelical Mind provides an invaluable service for the church as he explores where the battle lines were drawn and introduces readers to the key players. These neo-evangelicals; including Harold Ockenga; Carl Henry; Billy Graham; and others helped establish the Christian mind in a culture awash in a sea of modernism.Strachan traces the evangelical trajectory of these seminal thinkers by guiding readers through key historical turning points and decisions that were decisive for the establishment of the Christian mind in America. The author demonstrates how select Christian colleges and Seminaries were launched and the men who envisioned them. These are important historical details that the author skillfully tells; stories that have either been forgotten or worse yet; never heard!R.C. Sproul and Mark Noll have both lamented about the decline of the Christian mind. Strachan’s excellent work is a much-needed corrective and salve for the soul. Strachan is eager to prop up the long history of the evangelical mind and optimistic about its future: “If the evangelical mind is not always appreciated; this simply cannot be because it does not exist. It does exist; and its contributions over two millennia are monumental.”The author argues that evangelicals face some important decisions in the days ahead:The church faces a profound choice: it can retreat and huddle; nursing its wounds as it accepts its intellectual marginalization. Or; it can learn once more from Ockenga; Henry; Graham; and the Cambridge evangelicals; and promote outstanding education that not only engages the questing heart but freshly awakens the evangelical mind.Awakening the Evangelical Mind is a call to the next generation of Christian leaders to lead with biblical conviction and bold courage; to continue the legacy that was established by some great men of the faith.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Good book; great bibliographyBy Roger WatkinsI was a student of Dr. Strachan's a few years ago and can't recommend him more highly. However; if you have read several books about modern church history; especially books relating to the Neo-evangelicals; then this book won't have very many new insights for you. Even so; his bibliography has a great number of book recommendations to further your understanding of modern church history. I'd especially recommend it to new readers of the discipline. I must say; though; that I see more flaws with Neo-evangelicals and their institutions than Strachan. I find much more wisdom and hope in the work of local churches and ecclesiastical partnerships than I do parachurches and institutional endeavors.3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. It has a lot of good information; but I didn't find it very interestingBy MichaelThe book focuses on a history of how the evangelical movement has been formed by intellectuals and specifically intellectuals attached to higher education. It's kinda the passing of the conservative baton from fundamentalism to evangelicalism and how the conservative movement created an evangelical education cornerstone. Even though I've been blessed by this movement in the education I have and the books that are available to me; I found this book rather dry. But it does do a good job in teaching where the evangelical movement came from through intellectual circles. Just don't expect a page turner!

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