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Various; Harold Lindsell; Charles Jahleel Woodbridge - Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith (1957) LP 20 tracks, 00:00
Categories GENDER-Male; GENRE-Speaking
Index 2738
Collection Status In Collection
Track List
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
77
01 Why Believe The Bible Harold Lindsell -
78
02 God The Father Harold Lindsell -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
79
01 God The Son Harold Lindsell -
80
02 God The Holy Spirit Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
81
01 The Forgiveness Of Sins Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
82
02 The Virgin Birth Harold Lindsell -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
83
01 The Resurrection Of Christ Harold Lindsell -
84
02 The Ascension Of Christ Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
85
01 The Atonement Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
86
02 Redemption Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
87
01 Repentance Harold Lindsell -
88
02 Faith Harold Lindsell -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
89
01 Regeneration, The New Birth Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
90
02 Justification By Faith Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
91
01 Assurance Harold Lindsell -
92
02 Sanctification Harold Lindsell -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
93
01 The Life Of Victory Harold Lindsell -
94
02 The Believer And The World Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
Great Doctrines Of The Christian Faith
95
01 Man's Destiny Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
96
02 The Second Coming Of Christ Charles Jahleel Woodbridge -
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Harold Lindsell (December 22, 1913 – January 15, 1998[1]) was an evangelical Christian author and scholar. He is best known for his 1976 book The Battle for the Bible.[2]

Lindsell was born in New York City, and obtained degrees at Wheaton College, University of California, Berkeley and New York University.[1] He taught at Columbia Bible College, Northern Baptist Theological Seminary and Fuller Theological Seminary, before becoming editor of Christianity Today.[1] He served as President of the Evangelical Theological Society in 1971.[3]

Lindsell is credited with boosting the efforts of conservatives to wrest the Southern Baptist Convention away from moderates over the issue of biblical inerrancy.[1] Ruth Graham credited him with "being used by God to save her doubting faith" while she was a student at Wheaton.[2]

Lindell was diagnosed with polyneuropathy in 1991, and died of flu complications.[2]

References

1. "Harold Lindsell; Evangelical Scholar, Editor, Author". Los Angeles Times. 22 January 1998. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
2. Toalston, Art (22 January 1998). "Harold Lindsell dies at 84; authored 'Battle for the Bible'". Baptist Press. Retrieved 22 September 2012.
3. JETS, Volume 15.1.

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Charles Jahleel Woodbridge (1902 - 1980) was an American Presbyterian missionary, minister, seminary professor, founding member of the National Association of Evangelicals, and author of The New Evangelicalism.

Contents
1 Family and education
2 Career
3 Death
4 Publications
5 References

Family and education

Woodbridge was born in Chinkiang, China on January 24, 1902, to Presbyterian missionaries Samuel I Woodbridge and Jeanie Wilson Woodrow. His father traced his ancestors to John Woodbridge, a Lollard preacher in 15th century England; his mother was first cousin to U. S. President Woodrow Wilson).[1] He earned degrees at Princeton University, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Duke University, and was ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1927.[2] He was married in 1930 to Ruth Dunning.[1]

Career

Woodbridge served as pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Flushing, New York for several years before following the call to become a missionary to French Cameroons in 1932. Just a few years later, he was appointed by one of his seminary mentors, John Gresham Machen, to serve as secretary general for the newly formed Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions. Both he and Machen were later censured by the Presbyterian Church because of their defense of orthodoxy against liberal and modernist theology.[2] In 1937, Woodbridge became pastor at First Presbyterian Church of Salisbury, North Carolina, and in 1945 became pastor of Independent Presbyterian Church in Savannah, Georgia.[1] In 1947, he was one of the original prospects recruited for the newly founded Fuller Theological Seminary, and though he initially declined the offer, in 1950 he finally joined the faculty.[3] During the summers, he also served as a Bible teacher for Word of Life Fellowship in Schroon Lake.[2] In 1952, he served as president of the Evangelical Theological Society. In 1957, Woodbridge resigned his position at Fuller due to his conviction that the seminary was leaving Fundamentalism for the New Evangelicalism.[3] Woodbridge remained a staunch separatist and was critical of movements such as Billy Graham's preaching campaigns,[4] and Campus Crusade's Four Spiritual Laws.[5]

Death

Woodbridge died on July 16, 1995.

Publications
Standing on the Promises: Rich Truths from the Book of Acts (1947)
A Handbook of Christian Truth, co-authored with Harold Lindsell (1953)
Romans: The Epistle of Grace (1953)
Bible Prophecy (1962)
The New Evangelicalism (1969)

References

1. Maurice Possley, John Woodbridge (2011). Hitler in the Crosshairs: A GI's Story of Courage and Faith. Zondervan. ISBN 0310578558.
2. Randall Herbert Balmer (2002). Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism. Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 0664224091.
3. George M. Marsden (1995). Reforming Fundamentalism: Fuller Seminary and the New Evangelicalism. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 0802808700.
4. Charles Jahleel Woodbridge (1969). The New Evangelicalism. Bob Jones University Press.
5. Charles Jahleel Woodbridge (1970). Campus Crusade: Examined in the Light of Scripture. Bob Jones University Press.