"Evangelicalism" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Settings of Dracula

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    With castles‚ hidden streets‚ waterways‚ recurring rainy weather‚ interesting European architecture‚ and mystique‚ London is the perfect location for Bram Stoker’s Dracula. London: The capital of Great Britain‚ and the center of attention in the nineteenth century‚ due to the many incidents that were going on at the time. The novel includes many daunting scenes‚ such as when Dracula heaves a sack withholding a deceased child before three female vampires. It is no surprise why he choose London to

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    Cold War United Nations Chiang Kai-Shek Mao Zedong “China Lobby” Containment Doctrine George Kennan Marshall Plan National Security Act of 1947 Central Intelligence Agency NATO Berlin Airlift Warsaw Pact NSC-68 Servicemen’s Readjustment Act – 1944 GI Bill Coal Strike – 1946 Fair Deal Labor Management Relations Act – 1947 Progressive Party Thomas Dewey Korean War Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur HUAC The Hollywood 10 Alger Hiss Whittaker Chambers Richard Nixon J. Edgar Hoover

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    THE NATURE OF THE SON’S SUBORDINATION The debates within evangelicalism over the subordination of the Son do not seem to have subsided with the passing of time or increase in knowledge of the Scriptures and in spite of the larger volume of scholarship‚ be it biblical‚ theological or historical‚ conducted by and available to the two sides‚ gradationists and equivalentionist‚ or complementarians and egalitarians. Summary - Equivalentists In summary‚ equivalentists agree with gradationists that there

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    The Oxford Movement and Jane Eyre The Victorian period from the mid to late 1800’s was a time of internal religious turmoil for England. In the Anglican Church there were many different groups competing to define the doctrine and practice of the national religion. The church was politically divided in three general categories following: the High Church‚ which was the most conservative; the Middle‚ or Broad Church‚ which was more liberal; and the Low Church‚ which was the Evangelical wing of

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    Close Reading Analysis of "Thoughts on the Works of Providence" In Phillis Wheatley’s poem "Thoughts on the Works of Providence"‚ the African American woman of the 1700’s utilizes her rare reading and writing skills in order to display the praise that she had developed for God when coming over to the Americas as a slave. Through the education that she was lucky enough to receive during her time as a slave for the Wheatley family‚ Phillis was able to write a number of poems throughout her lifetime

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    Examine how FLW represents a postmodern way of thinking. Postmodernism encompasses a reinterpretation of classical ideas‚ forms and practices and reflects and rejects the ideologies of previous movements in the arts. The postmodern movement has made way for new ways of thinking and a new theoretical base when criticising art‚ literature‚ sexuality and history. John Fowles’ 1969 historical bricolage‚ The French Lieutenant’s Woman‚ utilises the ideas of postmodern theorists such as Foucault‚

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    Slavery and the Status of Women after the Revolution During the American Revolution‚ the colonists were fighting for independence from the British because they felt that their “natural rights” were being violated through the numerous amounts of acts passed by parliament. The idea of “Natural rights” came from John Locke‚ an enlightenment thinker‚ who stated that everyone is born with these rights and born with a blank slate which is filled with knowledge from a person’s environment. Colonists took

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    In fact‚ the concept of Evangelicalism and Christianity in the contemporary world is directly linked to and related to the religious culture of the gospel of Jesus and the works of the apostles. The book has provided me with a consistent series of balanced‚ thoughtful‚ biblically informed

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    Social Reform

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    into religion and trying to make a difference. As soon as this was brought up‚ revivals starting springing up all over the United States. Especially in upper New York or the “Burned-Over District”. These revivals encouraged an effervescent evangelicalism that bubbled up into a number of areas in American life‚ including prison reform‚ the temperance movement‚ the womans rights movement‚ and the cause to abolish slavery. These revivals encouraged people like Dorthea Dix to help get the mentally

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    Often considered a catalyst of the Civil War‚ Uncle Tom’s Cabin is an anti-slavery book whose permanent impact‚ both positive and negative‚ on race relations within the United States are irrefutable. Published in 1852‚ Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel was written as a direct response to the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850; second of a pair of federal laws criminalizing the aiding and abetting of escaped slaves within the both slave and free states. Through Uncle Tom’s Cabin‚ Stowe denounces the Fugitive

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