I can offer a bit of history.
Once upon a time, there was TECO, a supercharged relation to what you might know, today, as 'ed'. Folks built a set of macros for teco that knew how to use the necessary escape sequences to do a WYSIWYG editor on a terminal. These macros grew into the first Emacs. It was not open source. It was not closed source. No one thought in those terms; it was just a thing at MIT.
Then, a friend of mine was inspired by this to build a version for Multics written in Lisp. Thus was born Multics Emacs, written (in part) in Lisp. Stallman, who was the primary author of the ITS TECO version, riffed off of it to create GNU Emacs, also in Lisp. GNU Emacs was a very early example of Stallman's FLOSS efforts; it was very widely used, because, well, it was useful. Because it was widely used, it was influential.