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Paul David Washer (born 1961) is an American Christian Evangelist and author whose theology is rooted in Calvinism. [4] Biography. Washer reports converting to ...
Paul Washer (born 1961) Willie James Jennings (born 1961) Paul Copan (born 1962) Elizabeth Stuart (born 1963) Michael Horton (born 1964) Seung-Moo Ha (하승무, born 1963) David Bentley Hart (born 1965) Thomas Jay Oord (born 1965) R. C. Sproul, Jr. (born 1965) Ken Schenck (born 1966) Mikael Mogren (born 1969) Robert Arp (born 1970) Timothy ...
The films adopt a Reformed theological perspective. [2] They feature interviews with Voddie Baucham, Alistair Begg, Matt Chandler, Bryan Chapell, Alisa Childers, R. Scott Clark, Ray Comfort, Mark Dever, Kevin DeYoung, Costi Hinn, Michael Horton, Jackie Hill Perry, Julius Kim, John F. MacArthur, Nabeel Qureshi (who died in 2017, before the first film was released), and Paul Washer.
Sproul served as co-pastor at Saint Andrew's Chapel, a congregation in Sanford, Florida. [12] [22] He was ordained as an elder in the United Presbyterian Church in the USA in 1965, but left that denomination around 1975 and joined the Presbyterian Church in America. He was also a Council member of the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals.
From 2014 until May 2019, [6] [7] [8] White was senior pastor of New Destiny Christian Center, in Apopka, Florida, a nondenominational, multicultural megachurch. White was formerly the co-pastor of Without Walls International Church in Tampa, Florida, a church she co-founded with pastor and then-husband Randy White in 1991.
Leonard Ravenhill (18 June 1907 – 27 November 1994) was a British Christian evangelist and author who focused on the subjects of prayer and revival.He is best known for challenging western evangelicalism (through his books and sermons) to compare itself to the early Christian Church as chronicled in the Book of Acts. [1]
The Good News International Ministries (GNIM), also known as the Good News International Church and the Servant P. N. Mackenzie Ministries, and commonly referred to as the Shakahola cult, is an apocalyptic Christian new religious movement which was founded by Paul Nthenge Mackenzie and his first wife in 2003. [1]
A few months prior to his death, Tozer had submitted the manuscript for The Christian Book of Mystical Verse, which was released in 1964 as his final book. His official publisher, Christian Publications, released many titles after his death, based on his magazine articles and sermon transcriptions. These continue in print with Moody Publishers.