Are Evangelicals the Christian wahhabi?
It's more like extreme Shia with the whole preachers can act as God and cure disease thing
>>3215448
Even with all the fire and brimstone nonsense, Billy Graham wasn't too bad a guy.
>>3215478
he hated jews, though
>>3215460
That's more of a Pentecostal and charismatic thing, though
>>3215490
he had a pretty average feeling towards the jews for his era
and he now denies he was ever antisemetic
>>3215661
Very true
Gotta admire a charismatic man doing what he believed would earnest help people
I'll listen to his sermons every once and a while because of how good of a speaker he was
>>3215448
That would be fundamentalists although Evangelicalism has been influenced by them and they in turn have had an effect on Protestantism and all of Christianity. Anabaptist radicals were also a closer equivalent to Muslim radicals.
No. Evangelicals are more of a loose culture and voting bloc than a single religious tradition. Evangelicals are more bound by a sort of public moralism that isn't attached to any particular doctrinal commitments, excepting perhaps a "born again" experience, and possibly a vague commitment to biblical inerrancy. Wahhabism, on the other hand, is distinguishable pretty much solely by its theological commitments: particularly to the interpretation of tawheed as laid out in the book "Kitaab At-Tawheed." There isn't really a very good analogue of Wahhabism in Christianity that I'm aware of. Probably the closest thing would be hardcore fundamentalists, but again, the similarities are really very superficial.
>>3215448
No, Mormons are.
>>3216676
This.