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T. Austin-Sparks...
(1888 - 1971) was a student of Jessie Penn-Lewis whose ministry was
based in England. His writings emphasize the believers experience of the
resurrection life of Christ. |
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Robert Govett...
(1813 - 1901) was born in England and eventually became an Anglican
priest, but resigned that position when his conscience could no longer accept infant
baptism. He was the first to teach in a thorough way concerning the reward and discipline
of the believers in the millennial kingdom and the partial rapture view. |
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Madame Guyon...
(1648 - 1717) was one of the first to write extensively on the
Christian's experience of the inner life. For centuries her writings have served to bring
Christians, including many very prominent servants of the Lord, into a deeper relationship
with Christ. |
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Witness Lee...
(1905 - 1997) was the close co-worker of Watchman Nee for eighteen
years in China. His writings stress Christ being life to the believers as the Spirit
mingled with their spirit, which is for the building up of the Body of Christ in the local
churches. |
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F.B. Meyer...
(1847 - 1929) was a popular speaker at the Keswick Convention. He
was also the first pastor to welcome D.L. Moody to England, and was very active in
worldwide missions. |
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Andrew Murray...
(1828 - 1917) was a Dutch Reformed minister in South Africa and a
leader in the Keswick convention. He is most well-known today as the author of a number of
devotionals on various aspects of the inner life, such as Abide in Christ and Absolute
Surrender. |
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Watchman Nee...
(1900 - 1972) was born into a Christian family in China. The Lord
used him to raise up over 400 churches in China, but in 1952 he was imprisoned by the
communists, and he remained in prison until his death twenty years later. |
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D.M. Panton...
(1870 - 1955) succeeded Robert Govett as the pastor of Surrey
Chapel in Norwich, England, and continued Govetts line of teaching on the reward and
discipline of the believers and the partial rapture. For the last thirty years of his life
he published and edited The Dawn magazine. |
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G.H. Pember...
(1837 - 1910) apparently met with the Brethren, although his
writings are not generally grouped with theirs. He was a great student of Bible prophecy,
and was the first to systematically develop the view that there is a gap of time between
the first and second verses of Genesis 1, which accounts for the age of the earth. |
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Jessie Penn-Lewis...
(1861 - 1927) was born in South Wales and consecrated to the Lord by
her parents. She traveled widely giving conferences and was a frequent speaker at the
Keswick Convention. Her works stress the believers need of the experience of the
cross. Her most well-known student was T. A. Sparks. |
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James Reetzke...
is a brother who currently serves in the church in Chicago. His
published writings deal with church history, both contemporary and more ancient, and
include a number of short biographies of key figures in the Lords work throughout
the ages. |
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A.B. Simpson...
(1843 - 1919) was born in Canada but served as a Presbyterian pastor
at a number of congregations in America. In 1881 he left that denomination to begin a new
work, which eventually became the Christian and Missionary Alliance. His writings stress
that Christ is everything to the believers. |
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Charles Spurgeon...
(1834 - 1892) was born in England. After being saved he felt that he
needed to be baptized and joined the Baptist denomination. He became the most famous
preacher of his time, preaching to 6,000 people each week at his chapel in London,
England. By some accounts he is still the most widely quoted preacher today. |
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R.A. Torrey...
(1856 - 1928) had a long association with D.L. Moody, including as
the first superintendent of the Moody Bible Institute. He was also
pastor of the Church of
the Open Door in California. |
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A.W. Tozer...
(1897 - 1963) received very little formal education but read widely,
especially among Christians who stressed the inner life. He eventually entered the
pastorate of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. He became famous among evangelicals
with the publication of The Pursuit of God, and was regarded by many as a
prophetic voice in the 20th century decrying the decline of the church. |
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