Catholicism Protestantism In 1831, the
Presbyterian Mission Agency was founded by the
Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.
Evangelicalism , a music and evangelism festival at
Georgia Dome in
Atlanta, Georgia, United States, in 2013 Various evangelical mission organizations have specialized in evangelism throughout history. In 1792,
BMS World Mission was founded in
Kettering, England by
William Carey. In 1814, the
American Baptist International Ministries was founded by the
American Baptist Churches USA in United States. In 1865,
OMF International was founded by
Hudson Taylor in England. In 1893, in
Lagos in Nigeria,
SIM was founded by
Walter Gowans,
Rowland Bingham, and
Thomas Kent. Samuel E. Hill, John H. Nicholson, and William J. Knights founded
Gideons International, an organization which distributes free Bibles to hotels, motels, hospitals, military bases, prisons, schools, and universities, in
Janesville in Wisconsin, United States, in 1899. In 1922, Canadian evangelical evangelist
Aimee Semple McPherson, founder of the
Foursquare Church, was the first woman to use radio to reach a wider audience in the United States. In 1951, producer Dick Ross and
Baptist evangelist
Billy Graham founded the film production company
World Wide Pictures, which would make videos of his preaching and Christian films. In 1960, more than half of the Protestant American missionaries were evangelical. American and European
Pentecostal missionaries are also numerous, Pentecostalism can develop independently by non-foreign residents in various regions of the world, notably in Africa, South America, and Asia.
Youth with a Mission was founded in 1960 in United States by
Loren Cunningham and his wife Darlene. The
Christian Broadcasting Network was founded in 1961 in
Virginia Beach, United States, by Baptist minister
Pat Robertson. In 1974,
Billy Graham and the Lausanne Committee for World Evangelization organized the
First International Congress on World Evangelization in
Lausanne. In July 1999, TopChrétien, an evangelical Christian
web portal and
social network, was launched by Éric Célérier, pastor of the
Assemblies of God of France and Estelle Martin. In 2004, South Korea became the second-largest source of missionaries in the world, after the United States and ahead of England. In January 2007,
GodTube, a site for sharing videos related to Christianity, especially evangelical, was founded by Christopher Wyatt of
Plano, Texas, in the United States, then a student at Dallas Theological Seminary. In 2007, there were over 10,000
Baptist missionaries in overseas
missions around the world. == Controversies ==