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Essential guidance for a lifestyle of sharing God's good news with a lost world. What exactly does it mean to "evangelize" in a Christian sense? And how is such evangelizing supposed to be done? Longtime pastor, evangelist, and professor of evangelism Timothy K. Beougher answers these questions and more from theological, historical, and practical perspectives. Beougher demonstrates God's goodness in evangelism through relatable anecdotes, Bible teaching, and encouraging instruction. Invitation to Evangelism welcomes believers into the experience of stepping out in faith of behalf of people God loves. Most Christians know that they should be sharing the good news of Jesus Christ with nonbelie...
Puritan religious experience was centred on conversion, the "new birth" of the soul - the essence of Puritanism. Tim Beougher forensically dissects Baxter's writings and life so that we see how he constructs a "systematic theology of conversion."
Since the first century, believers have worked diligently to find the most effective means of evangelizing. In every age there have been great teachers who have excelled in their abilities to show others how best to communicate the good news of Christ. Roy Fish, Professor of Evangelism at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, has inspired generations of evangelists who have learned his balanced, biblical methodology. These essays written in his honor discuss personal evangelism, preaching, discipleship, great spiritual awakenings, contemporary spirituality, worship, mission work, and related topics. Included are contributions by scholars and preachers such as Jimmy Draper, Calvin Miller, Robert Coleman, and Rick Warren. This collection is a must for evangelists, students of theology, pastors, Bible teachers, or anyone interested in effective outreach.
In the spring of 1995, prayer and the Spirit of God wrought great changes in the halls of academia. Through a series of revivals which began at Baptist churches in Brownwood and Santa Anna, Texas, God moved across the face of American campuses. From Texas to Minnesota, from Massachusetts to Oregon, lives were touched and schools and churches were turned upside down. While focusing on Wheaton College, this book chronicles the events as they affected many schools and students. You will find here the characteristics of revivals and a history of campus awakenings. You will read firsthand accounts of how the Wheaton revival affected students and how it spread to other campuses and churches. This touching report gives readers a glimpse of what happens when God's spirit moves in a dramatic way among His people.
Since the first century, believers have worked diligently to find the most effective means of evangelizing. In every age there have been great teachers who have excelled in their abilities to show others how best to communicate the good news of Christ. Roy Fish, Professor of Evangelism at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary, has inspired generations of evangelists who have learned his balanced, biblical methodology. These essays written in his honor discuss personal evangelism, preaching, discipleship, great spiritual awakenings, contemporary spirituality, worship, mission work, and related topics. Included are contributions by scholars and preachers such as Jimmy Draper, Calvin Miller, Robert Coleman, and Rick Warren. This collection is a must for evangelists, students of theology, pastors, Bible teachers, or anyone interested in effective outreach.
In the spring of 1995, prayer and the Spirit of God wrought great changes in the halls of academia. Through a series of revivals which began at Baptist churches in Brownwood and Santa Anna, Texas, God moved across the face of American campuses. From Texas to Minnesota, from Massachusetts to Oregon, lives were touched and schools and churches were turned upside down. While focusing on Wheaton College, this book chronicles the events as they affected many schools and students. You will find here the characteristics of revivals and a history of campus awakenings. You will read firsthand accounts of how the Wheaton revival affected students and how it spread to other campuses and churches. This touching report gives readers a glimpse of what happens when God's spirit moves in a dramatic way among His people.
Richard Baxter (1615–1691) was arguably the greatest English Puritan of the seventeenth century. He is well known for his ministerial manual "The Reformed Pastor", in which he expressed the unusual conviction that parish ministers were better off unmarried. And yet, Baxter seemed to contradict himself by marrying one of his parishioners, Margaret Charlton. Though Baxter claimed to be happily married, he continued to champion celibacy for the rest of his life. This book explores Baxter's argument for clerical celibacy by placing it in the context of his life and the turbulent events of seventeenth-century England. His viewpoint was shaped by several factors, including the Puritan literature he read, the context of his parish ministry, his burdensome model of soul care, and the formative life experiences shaping his theology and perspective. These factors not only explain why Baxter became the only Puritan to champion clerical celibacy but also why he continued to do so even after marrying.
For more than forty years, Robert E. Coleman's bestselling The Master Plan of Evangelism has been the standard in evangelism literature. But what is the theology behind evangelism? And why is it important for Christians to understand? The Heart of the Gospel offers a systematic theology of evangelism that will ground and inform our practice of spreading the Good News. Each chapter covers a major biblical doctrine, explains its various evangelical interpretations, treats misconceptions that adversely affect evangelism, and offers practical applications of the doctrine. Based on decades of classroom teaching, this comprehensive work is aimed at ministry readers interested in evangelism and outreach.