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MP3-format files of the sermons are available on the church's website [7] and Sunday services are streamed live from the website. Sunday services can also be watched live on Facebook or YouTube. The church is affiliated to Affinity and the FIEC Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches. The current pastors are James Muldoon and David ...
Audio recordings of Criswell's preaching began in December 1953, and over 4000 of his expository sermons are available free of charge in audio, video, and searchable transcript form at the W. A. Criswell Sermon Library website, one of the largest online collections by a single pastor in the world. It is sponsored and maintained by the non ...
Gavin Rutherford Ortlund [1] [independent source needed] (born June 30, 1983 [2] [3] [independent source needed]) is an American Reformed Baptist theologian pastor, [citation needed] and Christian apologist.
It was a prayer that turned into a mini-sermon about Parks’ contributions to society for Black America. “She sat there so we could sit in higher seats,” Adams said three minutes into his prayer.
Ben Christenson was raised Anglican — church every Sunday, a religious school, and Christian camp every summer. But Christenson, 27 of Fairfax, Virginia, always found himself longing for a more ...
Vines announced his retirement from First Baptist in May 2005 and preached his last sermon as pastor of the church in 2006 at the close of the 20th annual Pastors' conference. In 2017, Vines enrolled in the Ph.D program at the Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, TX. [1] He has since started his own ministry, Jerry Vines ...
David Charles Ammon Hillman was born to Baptist parents in Tucson, Arizona. By the time Hillman was 17, he was teaching Sunday school and preaching at a mission, as well as studying Koine Greek and Latin. He completed an undergraduate degree in classics at the University of Arizona, and spent three months at the Dallas Theological Seminary.
On Monday, May 17, 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional in the Brown v. Board of Education decision. [7] Rev. Carey Daniel, a proponent of segregation and pastor of First Baptist Church of West Dallas, Texas, wrote a response to the decision and delivered it as a sermon on Sunday, May 23,