The important fact to be aware of here is that "formal system" and "logical system" are not really technical terms.
Many a textbook in the area of mathematical logic or formal systems will contain something that looks in broad terms more or less like
Definition. By a formal system we mean a set $A$ of "judgments" together with a set of "inference rules" which are such-and-such things ...
However, textbook authors will usually not make any particular effort to make sure their definition matches (or is even equivalent to) the definition of "formal system" in the next textbook over. This is because the purpose of the definition is not to define a crisp class of mathematical objects for which properties can be proved in generality. It's there simply to suggest to the reader a way to think about the similarities and differences between the few concrete formal systems that it is the real goal of the textbook to present.
The definition is phrased in mathematical language because readers of formal logic textbooks are assumed to be "mathematically mature" enough that such a description will be easier for someone to grasp intuitively than a purely verbal prose discussion of what the similar features between different systems are.
However, people don't in general go around proving things like
Theorem. Let $\mathscr F$ be a formal system. Then such-and-such holds.
or
Theorem. Assume such-and-such. Then there exists a formal system $\mathscr F$ such that this-and-that.
In actual usage, "formal system" is mostly an informal concept of the I-know-one-when-I-see-one variety. The textbook attempts to define the term are usually rather broader than the class of things workers in the field are actually interested in, but that doesn't really bother anyone.
(Of course some people do prove theorems like the above ones, especially if they're writing about computer implementations of symbolic deduction systems. However, in that case they will be using a carefully constructed definition for "formal system" that's tailored to match the capabilities of the system they're talking about. Their notion may be broader or narrower than the informal notion of formal systems that is used outside their special context, such as in general logic textbooks).
All of the above about "formal system" hold true for "logical system" too.
Due to the nature and procedures of Wikipedia, it tends to latch on to the "definitions" in textbooks and present them as if they were more universal facts than they actually are (it is difficult for editors who know that the reality is more fluid than that to get text removed which can after all be sourced to respectable published textbooks!)
Internal consistency between different Wikipedia articles about such fluid terms-that-look-techincal-at-first-glance-but-really-aren't is more than anyone has a right to expect.