Evangelical Protestantism, as stated, 16th c.-present
Early Modern · stated scope
Evangelical Protestantism is a broad movement within Protestant Christianity characterized by emphasis on the authority of the Bible, the necessity of personal conversion, and active missionary activity. It emerged from the Reformation traditions of the 16th century and developed distinctively through 18th- and 19th-century revivals in Britain and North America, remaining globally active into the present.
Cluster:Faithful Observance
Sanctity & Transcendence is the strongest elevation, joined by Tradition & Continuity, Assigned Groups, and Non-Maleficence. The pattern is devout and role-ordered, with restraint. Elevated Non-Maleficence is what separates it from Ordered Tradition.
Full profile
All 22 dimensions in one fixed order, grouped by the contrast axis each feeds, so any two entities can be read side by side. Switch to “By axis” to group them by the axis each feeds.
Neighbors
- 1American Evangelicalism (contemporary), as stated, 2000-presentDistance: 16Compare
- 2Calvinism, as stated, 16th c.-presentDistance: 16Compare
- 3The Protestant Reformation, as realized, 16th c.Distance: 18Compare
- 4Distributism, as stated, 20th c.-presentDistance: 19Compare
- 5Gettysburg Address, as stated, 1863Distance: 19Compare
The Three Axes (Detail)
Each bar is one pole’s pull, pointing the way it pushes the result. The dot is where the two pulls add up.