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Thomas Kennedy Ascol is an evangelical Christian pastor, author, and president of Founders Ministries. He is currently the senior pastor of Grace Baptist Church in Cape Coral , Florida , where he has served for 37 years as of June 2023.
The executive director is Thomas Ascol. The Southern Baptist Founders Conference was established in 1982, holding its first annual conference in 1983. [3] The organization which developed was renamed Founders Ministries in 1998. [4] As of 2007, there were 807 subscribing congregations in the United States. [5]
The statement grew out of a meeting of a group of evangelicals that took place on June 19, 2018, in Dallas, Texas, organized by Josh Buice. [3] Tom Ascol was given the responsibility to write the original draft, [3] which upon revision was signed first by the original summit attendees also including James White, John MacArthur, Voddie Baucham, and others.
Thomas Ascol (b. 1957): American author, Pastor of Grace Baptist Church in Cape Coral, FL, President of Founders Ministry; Voddie Baucham (b. 1969): American theologian, Former Pastor of Grace Family Baptist Church in Spring, TX, Professor at African Christian University in Lusaka, Zambia. Lived in Zambia from 2015 - 2024.
Thomas Ascol; Greg Bahnsen [1] Gregory Beale [2] Harold O. J. Brown; Steve Brown; Knox Chamblin; R. Scott Clark; Kevin DeYoung [3] Ligon Duncan, chancellor and John R. Richardson Chair of Systematic Theology; Sinclair Ferguson; John Frame [4] George C. Fuller; Richard C. Gamble; Frank A. James III, former Orlando campus president; Tim Keller ...
[2] Supporters of the book included Tom Ascol, [2] Doug Wilson, [2] and Eric Metaxas. [3] Daniel Gullotta, writing for National Review, suggests that the book "mirrors the growing divisions within the church." [6] Thomas Creedy, writing for Premier Christianity, notes that Shepherds for Sale "is a political book more than a religious one." [7]
Tom Ascol was given the responsibility to write the original draft, [7] which upon revision was signed first by the original summit attendees also including James White, John MacArthur, Voddie Baucham, and others. Over ten thousand churches or individuals have since added their signatures on the website that was for the statement. [8]
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