It affirms
our common evangelical mission first to our lost brothers and sisters and secondly to construct together a Christian culture.
Not exact matches
As Colson and Neuhaus remarked in their 1995 volume,
Evangelicals and Catholics Together: Toward a
Common Mission, ECT was intended as «an invitation to reexamine stereotypes, prejudices and conventional ideas that have been entrenched, in some cases, for almost five hundred years.»
[1] Charles Colson and Richard John Neuhaus, eds.,
Evangelicals and Catholics Together: Toward a
Common Mission (Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1995), ix.
He is the author of fourteen books and coeditor of Toward a
Common Mission:
Evangelicals and Catholics Together (Word).
As a loose coalition of conservative Protestants, evangelicalism has always been a fragmented movement held together by a
common mission, and by organizations such as the National Association of
Evangelicals.
Evangelicals come from many churches, languages, and cultures, but we hold in
common a shared understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ, of the church's
mission, and of the Christian commitment to evangelism.»