The True Believer: Character, Duty, and Privileges

الغلاف الأمامي
Whitaker House, 23‏/04‏/2014 - 288 من الصفحات
Famed educator, pastor, and abolitionist Asa Mahan wrote his classic book The True Believer as a response to the question: What are the true character, duties, and privileges of a child of God in this life?
In it, Mahan addresses such topics as…
  • The confidence of the believer
  • Attaining the fullness of joy
  • The glory conferred from heaven
  • The doctrine of perfection
  • Receiving instruction from the Holy Spirit
Whether you are a new or longtime believer, Mahan’s zeal and reasoned teaching on the Christian walk will build your faith and deepen your understanding of your relationship with God. 
 
 

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المحتوى

Title Page Copyrite Page Preface
The Gospel Plan
The Believers Confidence
Fullness of
Life Eternal
Christs Witnesses
The Glory Conferred upon the Believer
Taking Thought for the Morrow
Growing in Grace
A Word Fitly Spoken
Christian Admonition
Difficulties Connected with the Doctrine of Imperfection
Teachings of the Spirit
Inquirer Directed
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نبذة عن المؤلف (2014)

Asa Mahan (1799–1889) experienced a religious conversion as a young man and retained a preoccupation with personal salvation and sin. After his ordination in 1829, he was installed as minister of the Sixth Presbyterian Church in Cincinnati, Ohio.
In 1835, rebellion broke out in Cincinnati among the students of Lane Seminary, a hotbed of abolitionism. Mahan supported the students as the lone antislavery advocate among the trustees. The “Lane rebels,” as they were known, transferred to the Oberlin Collegiate Institute, and Mahan was asked to become Oberlin’s first president. There, he was also named Professor of Moral and Intellectual Philosophy and Associate Professor of Theology. Mahan used his new base at Oberlin to champion the claims of emancipation and equal co-education. He became an aggressive fighter for more reasonable faith in religion, and a greater justice in the social realm. The faculty of Oberlin quarreled frequently with the highly religious Mahan, and in 1850 they voted unanimously to relieve him of his position. In his place, famed abolitionist and preacher Charles Finney was named president of the college. Mahan then gathered a small band of friends and students and founded Cleveland University. Later, he was also named the first president of Adrian College, in Adrian, Michigan.
In 1874, Mahan moved to England, where he published frequently until his death.

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