Evangelist
Related Category: Protestant Christianity
(ĭvăn´jəlĭst) [Gr.,=Gospel], title given to saints Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. The four evangelists are often symbolized respectively by a man, a lion, an ox, and an eagle, on the basis of Rev. 4.610. In modern times the term is applied to Protestant preachers who go about preaching personal conversion. The greatest effort of evangelism was undoubtedly the
Great Awakening.
Methodism is essentially evangelical in its origins; John
Wesley and George
Whitefield were the great Methodist evangelists. George Fox, founder of the Quakers (see
Friends, Religious Society of), was also an evangelist. Dwight
Moody was a prominent 19th-century American evangelist. Billy
Graham is a notable modern example. See also
camp meeting;
revival, religious.