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A critical biography of Andrew Fuller to coincide with the
bicentenary of his death. Baptist minister, theologian and
missionary statesman Andrew Fuller (1754-1815) was a hugely
significant figure - he was instrumental in the rise of the modern
missionary movement and the spread of the gospel around the world,
and important in the revival of eighteenth-century Baptist life.
This new work shows how faith and trust in God enables us to move
mountains of unbelief to see the Holy Spirit come in power and
conviction.
Examines the key aspects of the life and thought of Andrew Fuller
(founder of the Baptist Missionary Society). Andrew Fuller
(1754-1815) was one of the foremost English Baptist ministers of
his generation, whose influence was to spread to North America and,
indeed, around the world. This study uses considerable primary
material to examine the central aspects of Fuller's life and
thought, including his work as a theologian and missionary
statesman. Despite his importance, Fuller has been largely
neglected by both theologians and historians of the Evangelical and
Baptist movements. This in-depth yet accessible study seeks to
redress the balance. It shows Fuller to be a significant figure,
one whose life and work have continuing relevance today.
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Missions (Hardcover)
Andrew Fuller; Edited by Peter Morden
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R3,576
Discovery Miles 35 760
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Andrew Fuller (1754-1815) was a pastor whose ministry coincided
with the revitalization of the English Calvinistic Baptist
denomination of which he was a distinguished member. He was a
pathbreaking theologian, apologist, and spiritual biographer, who
throughout his career remained rooted in the local church. Yet
despite his multiple achievements, Fuller was probably best known
at the end of his life as a pioneering missionary statesman. He was
one of the founders and principal advocates of the Baptist
Missionary Society, serving as the new society's secretary from its
inception in 1792 until his death. His Apology for the Late
Christian Missions to India was published in 1808 to defend the BMS
missionaries from those who wanted them recalled from 'British
India' for damaging colonial interests. In the Apology, Fuller
shares his passion for overseas cross-cultural mission, a passion
which came to define his ministry for many of his contemporaries
and also, to a significant degree, for subsequent generations. In
the Apology Fuller advocates on their behalf. This new edition of
the Apology includes a 30,000-word introduction setting the
context, and full notes on the text itself. It is of interest to
theologians and missiologists as well as specialists in the history
of Christian cross-cultural mission, colonialism, and the
intersection between the two.
Soon after Jesus began his public ministry, he called his first
`disciples'. He would teach and train them and then, after his
death and resurrection, commission and empower them to go to the
`nations' to make more `followers' of himself. The risen Jesus is
still calling and sending disciples today. If we heed his call the
result can be just as transformative and as exciting as it was for
the first disciples. While there are no explicit occurrences of the
term `disciple' outside the Gospels and Acts, with only two further
biblical references to `followers' of Jesus, it is Peter Morden's
conviction that we need the whole Bible if we are going to be
whole-life disciples. He reflects on Scripture and asks the primary
question, `How do we live as committed disciples of Jesus today?'
He explores the foundations, the resources and the practice of
discipleship, from a range of Old and New Testament texts. The
result is a well-rounded and satisfying picture of Christian
discipleship, one that is wonderfully attractive as well as deeply
challenging.
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