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The Gospel Advocate is a religious magazine published monthly in Nashville, Tennessee for members of the Churches of Christ. The Advocate enjoyed uninterrupted publication since 1866 until the COVID-19 pandemic. The Gospel Advocate was founded by Nashville-area Restoration Movement preacher Tolbert Fanning in 1855.
His greatest influence was as much from his successful publications The Christian Review and Gospel Advocate, as much as from his circuit preaching. The most influential publication he founded, Gospel Advocate, inspired a former Franklin college student, David Lipscomb, who would follow Fanning as its editor. Fanning’s magazine provided a ...
John Thomas Hinds (1866–1938) was a gospel preacher, teacher and evangelist for the Churches of Christ. From 1934 until his death in 1938 he was the editor of the Gospel Advocate . A year before his death in 1937, he published his own commentary on the Book of Revelation .
Nashville: Gospel Advocate. n.d.) "Grace and Law: Legalism and Liberalism" (a series of articles that originally ran in the Gospel Advocate in 1955.) Firm Foundation reprinted some of these articles [12] in 1992-93. "Read this Book," Gospel Advocate 75 (11 May 1933): 434. (Brewer's book review of K. C. Moser's The Way of Salvation [13]
Robert Henry Boll (June 7, 1875 – April 13, 1956 [1]) was a German-born American preacher in the Churches of Christ.Boll is most known for advancing a premillennialist eschatology within the Churches of Christ, in articles written during his editorship of the front page of the Gospel Advocate from 1909 to 1915 and after 1915 in Word and Work, leading to a dispute which was a significant ...
The Gospel Advocate was founded by Nashville-area Restoration Movement preacher Tolbert Fanning in 1855. [1] William Lipscomb, who was a student of Fanning, served as co-editor until the American Civil War forced them to suspend publication in 1861. [1]