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A. A. ALLEN - Was perhaps one of the most important
revivalists to emerge during the Voice of Healing revival... |
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WILLIAM BRANHAM
- Was beyond doubt a man of notable signs and wonders. From birth, supernatural
manifestations marked his life… |
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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... |
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JOHN CALVIN
- Took the biblical truths that Wycliffe, Hus, and Luther had brought to
light and created a worldwide movement... |
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JACK COE
- Was an independent and determined force for Christ. He had an unreserved
faith in the Word of God... |
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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… |
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DAVID du PLESSIS
- David du Plessis became the theological backbone of the Charismatic
Renewal.. |
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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. |
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JOHN HUS
- If it can be said that John Wycliffe was the grandfather of the Reformation,
then John Hus would be its father. |
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JOHN KNOX
- More than any other reformer, John Knox defied the Catholic Church and
Europe’s aristocracies. |
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KATHRYN KUHLMAN
- In a time that was suspicious of both women ministers and Pentecostals,
Kathryn Kuhlman shook twentieth-century Christianity back to its roots… |
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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… |
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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... |
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AIMEE SEMPLE
McPHERSON - Perhaps what Aimee Semple McPherson is most remembered
for today is founding the Foursquare denomination that is still growing
today… |
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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… |
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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... |
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WILLIAM J. SEYMOUR
- Best known for ushering in the Pentecostal Movement that began with the
Azusa Street mission in 1906... |
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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... |
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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... |
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SMITH WIGGLESWORTH
- It is arguable that there is no more significant patriarch of the Pentecostal
Movement than Smith Wigglesworth… |
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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,”... |
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JOHN WYCLIFFE
- Has been referred to as the “morning star” of the
Great Reformation. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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.” |
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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. |
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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. |
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