Wikipedia | John Smyth |
Wikipedia | Thomas Helwys |
Wikipedia | Roger Williams |
Wikipedia | John Clarke |
Wikipedia | John Bunyan |
Wikipedia | Shubal Stearns |
Wikipedia | Andrew Fuller |
Wikipedia | Charles Spurgeon |
Wikipedia | D. N. Jackson |
Wikipedia | James Robinson Graves |
Wikipedia | William Bullein Johnson |
Wikipedia | William Carey |
Wikipedia | Luther Rice |
Wikipedia | Martin Luther King, Jr. |
Wikipedia | Billy Graham |
Wikipedia | William Tyndale (c. 1494–1536), first published use of the term evangelical in English (1531) |
Wikipedia | John Bunyan (1628–1688), persecuted English Puritan Baptist preacher and author of Pilgrim's Progress |
Wikipedia | Jonathan Edwards (1703–1758), American Puritan theologian and preacher in the First Great Awakening |
Wikipedia | John Wesley (1703–1791), English clergyman; founder of Methodism |
Wikipedia | Charles Wesley (1707–1788), English clergyman; brother of John Wesley, hymnwriter of Methodism |
Wikipedia | George Whitefield (1714–1770), English clergyman; early Methodist preacher and associate of John Wesley |
Wikipedia | Isaac Backus (1724–1806), advocate of the separation of church and state |
Wikipedia | Henry Venn (1725–1797), founder of the small, but highly influential Clapham Sect in Britain |
Wikipedia | Henry Venn (1796–1873), grandson of Henry Venn, pioneered the basic principles of indigenous church mission theory |
Wikipedia | John Newton (1725–1807), Scottish clergyman, author of Amazing Grace |
Wikipedia | William Cowper (1731–1800), English poet/author of numerous hymns, including "There Is a Fountain Filled with Blood" |
Wikipedia | Francis Asbury (1745–1816), founder of the Methodist Episcopal Church |
Wikipedia | William Wilberforce (1759–1833), worked to abolish slavery in the British Empire |
Wikipedia | Henry Thornton (1760-1815), banker, philanthropist, reformer and Member of Parliament |
Wikipedia | Richard Allen (1760–1831), founder of the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) denomination (1816) |
Wikipedia | Nathan Bangs (1778–1862), editor of the Christian Advocate, president of Wesleyan University |
Wikipedia | Charles Grandison Finney (1792–1875), preacher in the Second Great Awakening, advocate of "New Measures" |
Wikipedia | Robert Murray M'Cheyne (1813–1843), Scottish preacher and minister of St Peter's, Dundee |
Wikipedia | Joseph M. Scriven (1819–1886), Irish poet, moved to Canada and wrote What a Friend We Have in Jesus |
Wikipedia | Fanny Crosby (1820–1915), blind American writer of many famous hymns including "Blessed Assurance" |
Wikipedia | William Henry Green (1825–1900), chairman of the Old Testament committee for the American Standard Version (1901) |
Wikipedia | Robert Pearsall Smith (1827–1899) and Hannah Whitall Smith (1832–1911), leaders in the Holiness movement |
Wikipedia | James Hudson Taylor (1832–1905), British missionary to China and founder of the China Inland Mission |
Wikipedia | Charles Spurgeon (1834–1892), English Baptist preacher and advocate of Calvinism |
Wikipedia | Dwight L. Moody (1837–1899), American evangelist, pastor and educator |
Wikipedia | Phineas F. Bresee (1838–1915), founder of the Church of the Nazarene |
Wikipedia | Albert Benjamin Simpson (1843–1919), preacher, writer, founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance |
Wikipedia | William Mitchell Ramsay (1851–1939), archaeologist known for his expertise in Asia Minor |
Wikipedia | Oswald Thompson Allis (1856–1930), co-founder of Westminster Theological Seminary |
Wikipedia | Robert Dick Wilson (1856–1930), linguist committed to defending the reliability of the Hebrew Bible |
Wikipedia | John George Govan (1861–1927), founder of the Faith Mission |
Wikipedia | Billy Sunday (1862–1935), American evangelist and proponent of Prohibition |
Wikipedia | William Irvine (1863–1947), founder of the Cooneyites and Two by Twos sects |
Wikipedia | Edward Cooney (1867–1960), evangelist and early leader of the Cooneyites and Go-Preachers sects |
Wikipedia | Harry Ironside (1876-1951), evangelist and Pastor of the Moody Church in Chicago (1930-1948). An ultra-conservative force in the Evangelical movement. |
Wikipedia | Karl Barth (1886–1968), leader of dialectical theology and author of Church Dogmatics |
Wikipedia | Aimee Semple McPherson (1890–1944), Pentecostal preacher and founder of Foursquare Church |
Wikipedia | William F. Albright (1891–1971), ceramics expert, founder of the biblical archaeology movement |
Wikipedia | Clarence Bouma (1891-1962), first president of the Evangelical Theological Society |
Wikipedia | Donald Barnhouse (1895–1960), former pastor of Tenth Presbyterian Church, founder of Eternity magazine |
Wikipedia | D.P. Thomson (1896-1974), Scottish evangelist, exponent of visitation and lay evangelism, Warden of the St Ninian's Training Centre, Crieff |
Wikipedia | Aiden Wilson Tozer (1897–1963), preacher, author of The Pursuit of God and The Knowledge of the Holy |
Wikipedia | Martyn Lloyd Jones (1899–1981), reformed preacher at Westminster Chapel |
Wikipedia | Frank E. Gaebelein (1899-1983), founder of The Stony Brook School, general editor of the Expositor's Bible Commentary |
Wikipedia | Frank Jenner (1903-1977), English Australian evangelist |
Wikipedia | Harold Ockenga (1905–1985), first president of the National Association of Evangelicals |
Wikipedia | William M. Branham (1909-1965), preacher and prophet, pacesetter and initiator of the Tent Revival Era of the 40's and 50's |
Wikipedia | Merrill Unger (1909–1980), Old Testament professor at Dallas Theological Seminary, defender of biblical inerrancy |
Wikipedia | F. F. Bruce (1910–1990), apologist, one of the founders of the modern evangelical understanding of the Bible |
Wikipedia | Francis Schaeffer (1912–1984), theologian, philosopher, founder of L'Abri, author of A Christian Manifesto |
Wikipedia | Carl F. H. Henry (1913–2003), founding editor of Christianity Today |
Wikipedia | Robert Pierce (1914–1978), founder of World Vision and Samaritan's Purse |
Wikipedia | Bruce M. Metzger (1914–2007), biblical scholar and translator who served on the board of the American Bible Society |
Wikipedia | Gleason Archer (1916–2004), theologian, educator, and author |
Wikipedia | Ralph D. Winter (1924–2009), founder of the U.S. Center for World Mission |
Wikipedia | D. James Kennedy (1930–2007), founder of Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church and Knox Theological Seminary |
Wikipedia | Jerry Falwell (1933–2007), founder of Liberty University and the Moral Majority |
Wikipedia | James Montgomery Boice (1938–2000), former pastor of Tenth Presbyterian Church, author of The Doctrines of Grace: Rediscovering the Evangelical Gospel |
Wikipedia | Greg Bahnsen (1948–1995), minister, educator, apologist, and a major figure in Christian Reconstructionism |
Wikipedia | Carl Fredrik Wisløff (1908-2004), theologian, professor in church history, preacher in Norwegian Lutheran Mission |
Wikipedia | Robert Abbot |
Wikipedia | Joseph Alleine |
Wikipedia | Richard Alleine |
Wikipedia | William Ames |
Wikipedia | John Arrowsmith |
Wikipedia | Simon Ashe (Simeon Ashe) |
Wikipedia | Robert Baillie |
Wikipedia | John Ball |
Wikipedia | Henry Barrowe |
Wikipedia | Richard Baxter |
Wikipedia | Thomas Baylie |
Wikipedia | Lewis Bayly |
Wikipedia | Richard Bernard |
Wikipedia | Robert Bolton |
Wikipedia | Samuel Bolton |
Wikipedia | John Bond (Puritan) |
Wikipedia | Thomas Boston |
Wikipedia | William Bradford |
Wikipedia | William Bradshaw |
Wikipedia | Anne Bradstreet |
Wikipedia | William Bridge |
Wikipedia | John Brinsley the elder |
Wikipedia | Thomas Brooks (Puritan) |
Wikipedia | Hugh Broughton |
Wikipedia | Robert Browne |
Wikipedia | John Bunyan |
Wikipedia | Peter Bulkley |
Wikipedia | Anthony Burges |
Wikipedia | Cornelius Burgess |
Wikipedia | Jeremiah Burroughs |
Wikipedia | Henry Burton |
Wikipedia | Nicholas Byfield |
Wikipedia | Richard Byfield |
Wikipedia | Edmund Calamy |
Wikipedia | Richard Capel |
Wikipedia | Thomas Carter |
Wikipedia | Thomas Cartwright |
Wikipedia | Joseph Caryl |
Wikipedia | Thomas Case |
Wikipedia | Daniel Cawdrey |
Wikipedia | Thomas Cawton |
Wikipedia | Laurence Chaderton |
Wikipedia | William Chaderton |
Wikipedia | Stephen Charnock |
Wikipedia | Francis Cheynell |
Wikipedia | Thomas Coleman |
Wikipedia | Edward Corbet |
Wikipedia | John Cotton |
Wikipedia | Miles Coverdale |
Wikipedia | Oliver Cromwell |
Wikipedia | Thomas Danforth |
Wikipedia | John Darrell |
Wikipedia | John Davenport |
Wikipedia | Arthur Dent |
Wikipedia | John Dod |
Wikipedia | Philip Doddridge |
Wikipedia | John Downame |
Wikipedia | Calybute Downing |
Wikipedia | Thomas Dudley |
Wikipedia | John Dury |
Wikipedia | Theophilus Eaton |
Wikipedia | Jonathan Edwards, American heir of the Puritans who is often listed with them |
Wikipedia | Stephen Egerrton |
Wikipedia | Edward Taylor |
Wikipedia | Humphrey Fenn |
Wikipedia | John Field |
Wikipedia | William Fiennes, 1st Viscount Saye and Sele |
Wikipedia | John Flavel |
Wikipedia | John Foxe |
Wikipedia | William Fulke |
Wikipedia | Thomas Gataker |
Wikipedia | Anthony Gilby |
Wikipedia | George Gillespie |
Wikipedia | Bernard Gilpin |
Wikipedia | Christopher Goodman |
Wikipedia | Thomas Goodwin |
Wikipedia | William Gouge |
Wikipedia | Richard Greenham |
Wikipedia | William Greenhill |
Wikipedia | John Greenwood |
Wikipedia | William Guthrie |
Wikipedia | Edward Hake |
Wikipedia | Robert Harris |
Wikipedia | John Harvard |
Wikipedia | Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon |
Wikipedia | Thomas Hastings (colonist) |
Wikipedia | Alexander Henderson |
Wikipedia | Matthew Henry |
Wikipedia | Philip Henry |
Wikipedia | Charles Herle |
Wikipedia | Richard Heyrick |
Wikipedia | Gasper Hickes |
Wikipedia | Francis Higginson |
Wikipedia | Arthur Hildersham |
Wikipedia | Robert Hill (clergyman) |
Wikipedia | Thomas Hooker |
Wikipedia | John Howe |
Wikipedia | Joshua Hoyle |
Wikipedia | Laurence Humphrey |
Wikipedia | Anne Hutchinson |
Wikipedia | Henry Ireton |
Wikipedia | James Janeway |
Wikipedia | Francis Johnson |
Wikipedia | Solomon Kane |
Wikipedia | John Lathrop |
Wikipedia | Alexander Leighton |
Wikipedia | John Ley |
Wikipedia | John Lightfoot |
Wikipedia | Morgan Llwyd (Arminian) |
Wikipedia | Christopher Love |
Wikipedia | Thomas Manton |
Wikipedia | Francis Marbury |
Wikipedia | Stephen Marshall |
Wikipedia | Walter Marshall (Puritan) |
Wikipedia | Cotton Mather |
Wikipedia | Increase Mather |
Wikipedia | Richard Mather |
Wikipedia | John Maynard (MP) |
Wikipedia | John Mayo (minister) |
Wikipedia | Joseph Mede |
Wikipedia | Walter Mildmay |
Wikipedia | John Milton |
Wikipedia | John More |
Wikipedia | Payton Murphy |
Wikipedia | Matthew Newcomen |
Wikipedia | John Norton (Puritan divine) |
Wikipedia | Nicholas Noyes |
Wikipedia | Philip Nye |
Wikipedia | John Owen |
Wikipedia | Herbert Palmer |
Wikipedia | Robert Parker |
Wikipedia | Thomas Parker |
Wikipedia | John Penry |
Wikipedia | William Perkins |
Wikipedia | Andrew Perne |
Wikipedia | William Phelps |
Wikipedia | Matthew Poole |
Wikipedia | John Preston |
Wikipedia | John Rainolds |
Wikipedia | Mary Rowlandson |
Wikipedia | Edward Reynolds |
Wikipedia | Edmund Rice |
Wikipedia | Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick |
Wikipedia | John Robinson |
Wikipedia | John Rogers |
Wikipedia | Rev. John Russell, Jr of Hadley, Mass. |
Wikipedia | Samuel Rutherford |
Wikipedia | Thomas Sampson |
Wikipedia | Henry Scudder |
Wikipedia | Lazarus Seaman |
Wikipedia | Obadiah Sedgwick |
Wikipedia | Jeremiah Shepard |
Wikipedia | Thomas Shepard |
Wikipedia | Richard Sibbes |
Wikipedia | Sidrach Simpson |
Wikipedia | Peter Smart |
Wikipedia | William Spurstowe |
Wikipedia | Edmund Staunton |
Wikipedia | Peter Sterry |
Wikipedia | Solomon Stoddard |
Wikipedia | Thomas Taylor (clergyman) |
Wikipedia | James Temple |
Wikipedia | Robert Titus |
Wikipedia | Walter Travers |
Wikipedia | Thomas Tregosse |
Wikipedia | William Twisse |
Wikipedia | John Udal |
Wikipedia | Nicholas Upsall |
Wikipedia | Richard Vines |
Wikipedia | Thomas Vincent |
Wikipedia | George Walker |
Wikipedia | Nehemiah Wallington |
Wikipedia | John Wallis |
Wikipedia | Nathaniel Ward |
Wikipedia | Samuel Ward (minister) |
Wikipedia | Samuel Ward (scholar) |
Wikipedia | Thomas Watson |
Wikipedia | Isaac Watts |
Wikipedia | Paul Wentworth |
Wikipedia | Peter Wentworth |
Wikipedia | John Wheelwright |
Wikipedia | Jeremiah Whitaker |
Wikipedia | John White |
Wikipedia | David Whitehead |
Wikipedia | William Whittingham |
Wikipedia | Giles Wigginton |
Wikipedia | Michael Wigglesworth |
Wikipedia | John Wilson |
Wikipedia | John Winthrop |
Wikipedia | Roger Williams (theologian) |
Wikipedia | George Wither (became Puritan from c. 1620) |
Wikipedia | John Woodbridge |
Wikipedia | Benjamin Woodbridge |
Wikipedia | Robert Woodford |
Tue Oct 1 03:15:29 2024
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