A person who preaches the Gospel or teaches Christian evangelical doctrine; someone dedicated to spreading Christian religious teachings.
From 'gospel' (good news, or Christian religious teachings) + the agent suffix -er (one who does), with roots in Old English 'godspell' (good tidings).
The word 'gospel' literally means 'good news'—so a gospeler is someone whose entire job is spreading good news, which is why evangelical preachers embraced this identity so enthusiastically.
Historically, gospel preaching and evangelical authority were male-dominated roles; 'gospeler' typically referred to ordained or recognized male preachers. Female preachers were often excluded from this title or faced resistance in claiming it.
Use 'gospel preacher', 'evangelist', or 'gospel speaker' to refer to anyone regardless of gender; alternatively, 'gospeler' is acceptable if recognized as gender-neutral in modern context.
["gospel preacher","evangelist","gospel speaker","gospel messenger"]
Women evangelists and preachers made substantial contributions to gospel movements (Phoebe Palmer, Catherine Booth, Carrie Judd Montgomery) but were systematically denied the title 'gospeler' in their own time.
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