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1 y

10-Year-Old Found With LOADED Gun At Los Angeles Elementary School
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10-Year-Old Found With LOADED Gun At Los Angeles Elementary School

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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
1 y

Biden’s Bold Gamble: Will A Former Trump Critic Save His Reelection Bid?
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Biden’s Bold Gamble: Will A Former Trump Critic Save His Reelection Bid?

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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
1 y

7 Ways to Unlock the Power of Saving Grace
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7 Ways to Unlock the Power of Saving Grace

People often confuse mercy and grace. Mercy is God’s favor in not giving us the punishment we deserve. Grace is God’s favor in giving us the power to live with him.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
1 y

Who Was the ‘Black Spurgeon’?
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Who Was the ‘Black Spurgeon’?

I was five years into my study of the African American theological tradition, nearly finished with my dissertation, when I first learned about the man affectionately known as the “Black Spurgeon.” Though he isn’t well known today, he was one of his generation’s greatest preachers and his story testifies to God’s faithfulness. From slavery to his vocational calling, Charles T. Walker’s life was filled with hardship. In June 1873, at age 15, he professed hope in Christ. Shortly after, Walker surrendered himself to church ministry. He was at prayer meetings, Sunday school, and church gatherings whenever the doors were open. God worked in his heart through the church to call him into gospel ministry like those who’d gone before him. According to his biographer, Silas Floyd, Walker “had not been long converted before he was deeply impressed with the thought that he was called of God to preach the Gospel.” In one sense, this wasn’t surprising—Walker was descended from a long line of preachers. In 1874, Walker enrolled in the Augusta Institute, Georgia, convicted he needed an education before formally entering ministry. However, he struggled to pay for school. Walker was on the verge of withdrawing to work when his fellow students united to help fund his studies. The entire black community benefited from the community’s investment in Walker’s theological education. Sadly, like many others from his class, Walker never graduated from the Augusta Institute, now known as Morehouse College. Nevertheless, he’s known as one of Morehouse’s most influential preachers. Local and Regional Ministry Walker was licensed to preach in September 1876 while still a student. Despite his youth, he was called to serve as pastor of his home church, Franklin Covenant Baptist Church, and was ordained into gospel ministry on the first Sunday of May in 1877. By 1879, when he reached his 21st birthday, Walker pastored four churches simultaneously. Walker also preached at revival meetings throughout Georgia, including one where more than 700 people professed faith in Christ. In 1883, Walker was called to Central Baptist Church in Augusta, but the congregation experienced a painful church split, which bogged the church down with public court battles. Walker remained with a group that assumed a donated church building, starting Beulah Baptist Church (later renamed Tabernacle Baptist Church). Walker pastored Tabernacle Baptist Church for 14 years. The church’s ministry was vibrant and Walker became known as “a pulpit orator, a sound theologian, a soul-winning evangelist, and a resourceful pastor.” During those years, God used Walker mightily. Church records highlight more than 2,000 souls saved, with more than 1,400 baptized and welcomed into fellowship at Tabernacle. Walker sought to bring his theological convictions into every area of life. In addition to leading a thriving church ministry, he was the business manager for the Augusta Sentinel, a weekly community newspaper. It offered him a platform to publish accounts of his trip to Europe and the Holy Land, which would later be collected and republished as A Colored Man Abroad. Walker sought to bring his theological convictions into every area of life. While in London, Walker described Charles Spurgeon’s Metropolitan Tabernacle as “the greatest church on earth,” offering a detailed account of the generous welcome he met there. He was thoroughly impressed by the scope of Spurgeon’s ministry, which included “a Baptist college, perfect in its every appointment” in addition to “a missionary society, a tract society, a place for the poor, an orphan home,” and more. National Ministry Walker’s influence expanded beyond Augusta and into Baptist life in Georgia. He served as a board member of the Walker Baptist Institute and Atlanta Baptist College, and he spoke widely at Baptist association meetings, Baptist schools, and within the newly formed National Baptist Convention (NBC). His leadership in the NBC left him with a reputation as “a strong man in a crisis.” Based on his persuasive call for racial reconciliation at the 1889 NBC in Indianapolis, Walker was awarded an honorary doctor of divinity from the State University of Kentucky. With a growing reputation came more opportunities to preach throughout the country. Walker preached in New York on multiple occasions, until he was called in 1899 to the pastorate of Mount Olivet Baptist Church in New York City. Walker’s preaching drew the attention of the major New York papers, who publicly labeled him the “Black Spurgeon.” He conducted revival services at Antioch Baptist Church and St. Mark’s M. E. Church in New York City. He preached at large-scale revival meetings in Houston, Kansas City, St. Louis, Boston, Philadelphia, Nashville, Louisville, and Atlanta. In some cities, like Atlanta, Walker preached to racially integrated crowds where thousands of people had to be turned away because so many wanted to hear his preaching. Walker was considered by many to be the most popular black preacher of his day. Walker’s stay in New York City was short-lived; he returned to Augusta in 1901. However, in the two years of his ministry in New York, the church grew by 1,400 members and Walker baptized 700 people. Longing for home, he returned and finished his ministry and life in Augusta, expanding his earlier work in the community. Walker’s Enduring Significance His ministry reminds young pastors that God can use people from any background, but that preparation is important. Walker demonstrated commitment to theological education in preparation for ministry, despite his financial uncertainty. Although Walker’s ministry training didn’t follow a straight line, God used him significantly to influence Georgia and the United States because he’d studied well. Walker preached to racially integrated crowds where thousands of people had to be turned away because so many wanted to hear his preaching. Walker exemplifies faithful pastoral ministry through public gospel proclamation and action to meet his community’s social needs. The former slave, soldier, and chaplain fulfilled his ministry by integrating his theological convictions into all of life. He served beyond the church’s walls, reaching into the community to establish a YMCA, work at a newspaper, and invest in primary and secondary education institutions. Walker’s ministry illustrates the value of investing in the preaching craft. His fidelity to the Bible still encourages pastors to rightly handle Scripture while eloquently applying it to our audiences. He was a forerunner to John Stott’s vision of preaching as done with the Bible in one hand and the newspaper in the other. The world needs more men like the “Black Spurgeon,” whose legacy lives on to the present.
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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
1 y

Editor’s Pick: Summer Reading (2024)
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Editor’s Pick: Summer Reading (2024)

Summer is for reading. Actually, for many of us, all of life is for reading. It’s more of a physical need than a duty. But the different cadence of life during the summer invites a different sort of reading. I take great delight in having study as part of my vocation as a church elder. A lot of that reading tends to be high-content Christian books or deep cultural analysis. It’s necessary and good. And yet there are times when I want to read something beyond these genres. I need to find new illustrations and fill my imagination with new ideas. That sort of reading is perfect for summer. Summer is for beach reading, and you can’t take your systematic theology to the beach. The books cost too much and the risk of lingering sand in the binding of the latest Bavinck volume is too great. For many people, the ideal beach read includes sharks, potentially a mystery, and maybe a little romance. It’s a book with a peppy plot and not many cerebral requirements. But readers of The Gospel Coalition are discerning and want something between a paperback of Vampire Sharks Take Over the Mall and anything by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. This list of books I’ve read and enjoyed is meant for you. 1. Rebel to Your Will by Sean Demars (Christian Focus, 2024) I’m a sucker for a good conversion story, and Demars tells his in this little book. He highlights the way he was shaped by abuse and neglect as a child but how the gospel’s power has transformed him. Demars hits the right balance by sharing who he was before Christ without glorifying the mess. Most significantly, he demonstrates God’s power to save even those who are running as fast as they can in the wrong direction. 2. Skies of Thunder by Caroline Alexander (Viking, 2024) There are so many fascinating World War II stories we never hear about. Alexander digs into original sources to masterfully recount efforts by the United States to provide supplies to the Chinese to keep them in the war against Japan. The men who flew the large aircraft over the Himalayan mountains risked much. Many lives were lost for a mission whose value remains questionable to this day. But the interpersonal conflict, the danger, and the accounts of courage will draw readers in. Alexander’s narrative style keeps the story moving, making this an excellent poolside read. 3. Sailing Alone by Richard J. King (Viking, 2024) Part personal narrative, part historical account, this book reminds the sand-weary beachgoer that maybe the grit from staying on shore isn’t all bad. Though seafaring is nothing new, the ocean remains a wild frontier that calls adventurers suffering from fits of wanderlust. As it turns out, there has been an explosion of interest in solo sailing adventures in recent history. This book is engaging enough to draw you in and varied enough to allow for casual reading. 4. The Penguin Book of Pirates edited by Katherine Howe (Penguin Classics, 2024) I don’t have any vampire fiction on this list, but I certainly enjoyed The Penguin Book of Pirates. Howe collects original sources, updates some of the language, and provides short introductions for each offering. Most chapters are only a few pages long, which makes for easy reading. However, since I frequently dressed like a pirate for Halloween, these entertaining accounts about (mostly) real-life pirates satisfy my inner child. 5. Surprised by Oxford by Carolyn Weber (Thomas Nelson, 2013) This book isn’t new, but the screen adaptation is now widely available on streaming platforms after a limited theatrical release in 2023. (I was able to watch it free through my local library.) As Brett McCracken wrote in his film review, “It’s a faith-friendly film that’s actually good.” It’s an entertaining film, but as usual, the book is much richer as Weber details her movement from combative atheistic feminist to faithful Christian. The audiobook was well produced (note: it has a couple of curse words) and would be a pleasure to listen to on a summer road trip. 6. Knowing What We Know by Simon Winchester (Harper Perennial, 2024) Winchester may be best known for The Professor and the Madman, which tells the story of the Oxford English Dictionary. Knowing What We Know, just out in paperback, is an engaging read that “seeks to tell the story of how knowledge has been passed from its vast passel of sources into the equally vast variety of human minds, and how the means of its passage have evolved over the thousands of years of human existence.” That’s a big project and Winchester doesn’t entirely succeed, but he does explore the idea of knowledge and its transmission through narratives and anecdotes both informative and entertaining. The book is subdivided well, which makes it easy to read a few pages at a time while keeping an eye on the kids playing outside. 7. Make the Most of Your Productivity by Ana Ávila (TGC/Crossway, 2024) Sometimes vacation reading can be dual purpose. Ávila’s book isn’t groundbreaking, but she summarizes several popular streams of thinking on productivity while reminding readers of our work’s ultimate purpose: to glorify God. If you’re looking to jump-start your organizational efforts or find tips to encourage you to work hard for God’s glory, then Ávila offers a concise resource. 8. Get Better at Anything by Scott H. Young (Harper Business, 2024) Young’s first book, Ultralearning, offers lessons for being a better autodidact. Get Better at Anything moves into more general learning theory. Young summarizes recent research in problem solving, practice habits, and application of new skills. This is dangerously close to not being true summer reading because it’s potentially helpful in various ministry and business applications. However, the prose is so readable that the experience won’t detract from the idyllic reverie of summer.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

12 Survival Themed Books to Read to Your Children This Summer
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12 Survival Themed Books to Read to Your Children This Summer

The post 12 Survival Themed Books to Read to Your Children This Summer appeared first on Prepper Website.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

How to Preserve Strawberries: Keep Those Berries Fresh!
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How to Preserve Strawberries: Keep Those Berries Fresh!

The post How to Preserve Strawberries: Keep Those Berries Fresh! appeared first on Prepper Website.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Amending Soil for Better Harvests
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Amending Soil for Better Harvests

The post Amending Soil for Better Harvests appeared first on Prepper Website.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

A Simple “At-Home” Protocol for the Flu and Other Respiratory Issues
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A Simple “At-Home” Protocol for the Flu and Other Respiratory Issues

The post A Simple “At-Home” Protocol for the Flu and Other Respiratory Issues appeared first on Prepper Website.
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
1 y

Top 25 Tips for Starting a Necessary Fire 8
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Top 25 Tips for Starting a Necessary Fire 8

The post Top 25 Tips for Starting a Necessary Fire 8 appeared first on Prepper Website.
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