different between evangelical vs evangelicalness

evangelical

English

Etymology

evangelic +? -al, from Old French evangelique, from Latin evangelium, from Ancient Greek ?????????? (euangélion, good news)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /i?væn?d??l?k?l/

Adjective

evangelical (comparative more evangelical, superlative most evangelical)

  1. Pertaining to the doctrines or teachings of the Christian gospel or Christianity in general.
  2. Pertaining to the gospel(s) of the Christian New Testament.
  3. Protestant; specifically Lutheran and Calvinist churches in continental Europe as well as their offshoots in North America.
  4. Pertaining to a movement in Protestant Christianity that stresses personal conversion and the authority of the Bible (evangelicalism).
  5. Pertaining to Islamic groups that are dedicated to dawah and preaching the Quran and sunnah.
  6. Zealously enthusiastic.

Usage notes

While evangelical may have all the above meanings, it is often used now for meaning 4.

Evangelic has only the meanings 1-3 and is now used often to differentiate these meanings from evangelicalism.

Synonyms

  • evangelic

Antonyms

  • antievangelical
  • nonevangelical

Translations

Noun

evangelical (plural evangelicals)

  1. A member of an evangelical church
  2. An advocate of evangelicalism

Derived terms

  • evangelicalism
  • evangelically
  • evangelicalness

Related terms

  • evangel
  • evangelise
  • evangeliser
  • evangelism
  • evangelist
  • evangelistic
  • evangelistical
  • evangelistically
  • evangelize
  • evangelizer

References

  • Evangelical on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

evangelical From the web:

  • what evangelicals believe
  • what's evangelical mean
  • what does evangelicals believe
  • what do the evangelicals believe


evangelicalness

English

Etymology

evangelical +? -ness

Noun

evangelicalness (uncountable)

  1. The quality of being evangelical.

evangelicalness From the web:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like