Moderate
evangelical Christianity emerged in the 1940s in the United States in response to the
fundamentalist movement of the 1910s. In the late 1940s, evangelical theologians from
Fuller Theological Seminary founded in
Pasadena, California, in 1947, championed the Christian importance of social
activism. The study of the
Bible has been accompanied by certain disciplines such as
Biblical hermeneutics,
Biblical exegesis and
apologetics. Moderate theologians have become more present in
Bible colleges and more moderate theological positions have been adopted in
evangelical churches. In this movement called neo-
evangelicalism, new organizations, social agencies, media and
Bible colleges were established in the 1950s. ==See also==