Author:
HOLMES ANDREW R.,MATHIESON STUART
Abstract
The American evangelist Dwight L. Moody visited Ulster on three occasions – 1874, 1883 and 1892 – and his modern, respectable version of revivalism offered a welcome alternative to the ambiguous legacy of the 1859 Ulster revival. Moody stimulated an outpouring of interdenominational activism and may have contributed to a fundamentalist impulse amongst Evangelicals. His legacy in Ulster, as elsewhere, was to energise Evangelicals but at the expense of weakening the ability, perhaps even the desire, of church members to adhere to denominational principles. In that sense, both so-called ‘fundamentalists’ and ‘modernists’ in Northern Ireland in the 1920s were Moody's heirs.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Religious studies,History
Reference15 articles.
1. Evangelicals and evolution: Henry Drummond, Herbert Spencer, and the naturalisation of the spiritual world;Moore;Scottish Journal of Theology,1985
Cited by
3 articles.
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