A. A. ALLEN - Was perhaps one of the most important revivalists to - TopicsExpress



          

A. A. ALLEN - Was perhaps one of the most important revivalists to emerge during the Voice of Healing revival... read more WILLIAM BRANHAM - Was beyond doubt a man of notable signs and wonders. From birth, supernatural manifestations marked his life… read more WILLIAM AND CATHERINE BOOTH - Grew up in a dark England at the dawn of the industrial revolution. Unemployment, homelessness, labor abuses, and child prostitution were rampant in the British Isles... read more JOHN CALVIN - Took the biblical truths that Wycliffe, Hus, and Luther had brought to light and created a worldwide movement... read more JACK COE - Was an independent and determined force for Christ. He had an unreserved faith in the Word of God... read more JOHN ALEXANDER DOWIE - Shook the world at the turn of the century with his passion for truth and zeal for the work of the Spirit. He brought to to the forefront… read more DAVID du PLESSIS - David du Plessis became the theological backbone of the Charismatic Renewal.. read more GEORGE FOX - When the Protestant Reformation seemed to be gaining ground toward the end of the 16th century—George Fox took reform to an entirely new level. read more JOHN HUS - If it can be said that John Wycliffe was the grandfather of the Reformation, then John Hus would be its father. read more JOHN KNOX - More than any other reformer, John Knox defied the Catholic Church and Europe’s aristocracies. read more KATHRYN KUHLMAN - In a time that was suspicious of both women ministers and Pentecostals, Kathryn Kuhlman shook twentieth-century Christianity back to its roots… read more JOHN G. LAKE - These words summarized the passion that propelled the life-long ministry of John G. Lake. He spoke these words in reference to the intensity of emotion he felt as his thirty-four year old sister lay dying… read more MARTIN LUTHER - Perhaps one of the most influential Germans ever to live, Martin Luther was instrumental in not only shaking loose fromthe foundations of the Catholic Church... read more AIMEE SEMPLE McPHERSON - Perhaps what Aimee Semple McPherson is most remembered for today is founding the Foursquare denomination that is still growing today… read more CHARLES PARHAM - In a time when divine healing and moves of the Spirit had scarcely been heard of, Charles Parham introduced the American church to the power available through pursuing a Spirit-filled life… read more EVAN ROBERTS - More than anything else, Evan Roberts was a man of prayer. Yes, the whole world felt the impact of revival that swept Wales from November 1904 through 1905... read more WILLIAM J. SEYMOUR - Best known for ushering in the Pentecostal Movement that began with the Azusa Street mission in 1906... read more WILLIAM ASHLEY “BILLY” SUNDAY - Began his career in the public eye as a professional baseball player, but he ended it as one of the most prominent and enigmatic evangelists in America in the early 1900s... read more CHARLES HADDON SPURGEON - With a voice that could captivate thousands, Charles Haddon Spurgeon’s eloquent and dynamic preaching brought understanding and freshness to the word of God for everyday people in nineteenth century London... read more SMITH WIGGLESWORTH - It is arguable that there is no more significant patriarch of the Pentecostal Movement than Smith Wigglesworth… read more MARIA WOODWORTH-ETTER - Within a short time after Maria Woodworth-Etter responded to God’s call to “go out in the highways and hedges and gather in the lost sheep,”... read more JOHN WYCLIFFE - Has been referred to as the “morning star” of the Great Reformation. read more JOHN WESLEY - During his ministry, John Wesley rode over 250,000 miles by horseback to preach the Gospel - a distance comparable to circling the globe ten times. He preached more than forty thousand sermons and published more than five thousand sermons, pamphlets, and books of all kinds. read more GEORGE WHITEFIELD - George Whitefield - known as the “Great Orator,” the “Divine Dramatist,” and the “Heavenly Comet” for his style and impact on all who heard him - was an evangelistic pioneer. read more JONATHAN EDWARDS - onathan Edwards was born in East Windsor, Connecticut, to Puritan parents Timothy and Esther Stoddard Edwards. Of their eleven children, he was the only son. read more FRANCIS ASBURY - On the frontier of scattered homesteads and small towns of the newborn United States that stretched towards the Mississippi River, news was scarce and churches even scarcer. read more JAMES MCGRADY - At the turn of the nineteenth century, America experienced its first Pentecost in the summers of 1800 and 1801 in the newly formed states of Kentucky and Tennessee. read more PETER CARTWRIGHT - It is said sometimes that hard times call for hard men, and this can certainly be said of Peter Cartwright. Peter’s dedication as a circuit rider on the American frontier not only helped establish Methodism as the way of revival in his time, but also saw roughly 10,000 converted. read more CHARLES FINNEY - Charles Finney’s life spanned nearly the entire first century of U.S. presidents - from George Washington to Ulysses S. Grant - and no single individual had more influence in the United States’ coming to be considered “A Christian Nation.” read more DWIGHT MOODY - Dwight Lyman Moody was the sixth child of Edwin and Betsy Moody in Northfield, Massachusetts. In the next four years, his parents would have three more children, and the last a set of twins. read more BILLY GRAHAM - In his lifetime, Billy Graham has preached in person to nearly 215 million people in over 185 countries and territories - more than any other person who has ever lived.
Posted on: Thu, 01 Aug 2013 22:20:15 +0000

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