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Maria Woodworth-Etter was a lady born out of due time. Her powerful Pentecostal ministry pre-dates the beginning of the Pentecostal Movement which started over 20 years after her ministry began in 1876. Her meetings were filled with supernatural phenomena. Prostrations, speaking and singing in tongues, falling under the power of the Spirit, trances and visions and, of course, abundant miracles of healing, were commonplace. Tens of thousands were converted as a result of her tireless service. Wherever she went she laid hands on the ministers, believing that the anointing could be passed from one to another. It is astounding, that in the late 19th century the perceptions and practices of the most significant movement of history - Pentecostalism at the end of the 20th century - would be so eloquently and effectively proclaimed. She laboured in this ministry for over 40 years. This is her most widely read book with 584 pages. '"I believe with all my heart that God's blessing will be upon an undertaking like this, and, if you are able to go through with it, that it will be the means of inspiring God's children with faith and power so that they will readily get into the deep things of God, and get to the place where they will have power with Him." Maria Woodworth-Etter
Aimee Semple McPherson was a gifted missionary and healing evangelist, editor, author and founder of the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel that today has over 25,000 churches and over 3 million members. She became internationally famous as the leader of the 5,300-seat Angelus Temple in Echo Park, Los Angeles, where she conducted church in an attractive theatre-style. Her services became known for divine healing, where repentants would walk without crutches, regain lost eyesight, be healed of broken bones and leave their wheelchairs to walk home. Thousands flocked to her services. This remarkable autobiography of 800 pages was first published in 1923 and includes her authentic history, many pictures and over 200 pages of her sermons. 800 pages in total.
En 1876, 20 ans avant le mouvement pentecôte, Maria Woodworth Etter exerçait déjà un puissant ministère. Des phénomènes surnaturels se produisaient régulièrement pendant ses réunions: Chants et parler en langues, prostrations, personnes tombant sous la puissance de l'Esprit, extases et visions et une multitude de guérisons miraculeuses.Par son ministère endurant, des dizaines de milliers de personnes se sont converties. Convaincue de la transmission de son onction, elle ne manquait pas d'imposer les mains sur tous les leaders qu'elle rencontrait. Cette femme du XIXe siècle fut précurseur en vivant déjà la réalité du grand mouvement pentecôtiste qui viendrait quelques années plus tard. Elle a exercé son ministère pendant plus de 40 ans.Son livre le plus connu est de 584 pages, il s'intitule "Signes et prodiges". Pour contourner les restrictions d'import après-guerre et pour rendre le livre accessible au peuple français il a été réimprimé en abrégée (90 pages). Voici donc l'ouvrage...
Raymond Richey was born in 1893 into a family that believed in prayer and had some considerable success praying for sick family members. In 1901 the Richie family heard John Alexander Dowie and they were baptized by him and became members of his church, moving to Zion in 1904. When he was blinded in an accident he suffered a mental breakdown, finally giving his life to God when he was prayed for and healed through a visiting Baptist evangelist in 1911. For some years he joined his father in a pastoral ministry but when the war broke out he was called to evangelise the troops. Soon his passionate prayers began to be answered and he saw thousands saved and by 1921 he began to see extraordinary healings in his ministry. Though this book was written in 1925 his ministry continued through the mid-50's and extended to nations across the world.A very inspiring book!
Charles Fox Parham, well deserves the name Father of the Pentecostal Movement.' This young itinerant evangelist, born on June 4, 1873 in Muscatine, Iowa , experienced a miraculous healing and began his evangelistic ministry in 1891. His famous healing home was started in Topeka in 1898. It was here that the baptism in the Holy Spirit with speaking in tongues was first experienced. From then on Parham continued to see extraordinary visitations of power through his ministry, particularly at Galena, Texas in 1903, when the blind, lame, deaf and all manner of diseases were marvellously healed and great numbers saved. Thereafter he began the Houston Bible School from where William J. Seymour graduated and later was instrumental in birthing the Azusa Street revival. A great book about a truly apostolic pioneer. 452 pages.
The life story of F. F. Bosworth, 1877-1958 is one of the most inspiring stories of the early healing evangelists that is available today. Raised in J. A. Dowie's Zion City, he witnessed many astounding miracles of healing along with his close friend John G. Lake, later also famed as a healing evangelist. Influenced by Charles Parham the two friends visited Azusa Street and entered the Pentecostal experience.As an Assemblies of God pastor, Bosworth hosted Maria Woodworth-Etter in 1912 and he was soon to join the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Houston, Texas, as an itinerant healing evangelist. This continued until his retirement, when he worked alongside William Branham. His book "Christ the Healer" is considered a classic and will soon be available in the Revival Library.
Frank Bartleman's personal and exciting eye-witness accounts of the events at the Azusa Street Revival in 1906 are here presented in vivid detail. It is generally accepted that Charles Fox Parham was the father of the early Pentecostalism and that William J. Seymour was the catalyst of the new Pentecostal movement. But what is not sufficiently recognized is the journalistic ministry of Frank Bartleman, whose personal diary and regular reports in the holiness press constitute the most complete and reliable record of what actually happened in Los Angeles from 1906-1909. In addition to being a journalist, he was also an intercessor, prophet and participant of this extraordinary move of God.
Dowie's 'Zion's Holy War' subtitled '.....Against the Hosts of hell in Chicago,' consists of a series of addresses given by Dowie at four of his 'Tabernacles' in Chicago, Illinois, during the months of October, November and December, 1899. Rightly regarded as the father of the 20th century Healing Movement, John Alexander Dowie ploughed a furrow of ministry which others in the Pentecostal revival, later took up in the early years of the twentieth century. His teaching on healing laid a great foundation for the new spirit-filled churches to build on. We hope to have a selection of Dowie's works on a single CD by this autumn.330pp
This is the major life story of Dowie who was correctly regarded as the father of the 20th century Healing Movement. He ploughed a furrow of ministry which others in the Pentecostal revival, later took up in the early years of the twentieth century. His teaching on healing laid a great foundation for the new spirit-filled churches to build on. We hope to have a selection of Dowie's works on a single CD by this autumn.204pp
Maria Woodworth-Etter was a lady born out of due time. Her powerful Pentecostal ministry pre-dates the beginning of the Pentecostal Movement which started over 20 years after her ministry began in 1876. Her meetings were filled with supernatural phenomena. Prostrations, speaking and singing in tongues, falling under the power of the Spirit, trances and visions and, of course, abundant miracles of healing, were commonplace. Tens of thousands were converted as a result of her tireless service. Wherever she went she laid hands on the ministers, believing that the anointing could be passed from one to another. It is astounding, that in the late 19th century the perceptions and practices of the most significant movement of history - Pentecostalism at the end of the 20th century - would be so eloquently and effectively proclaimed. She laboured in this ministry for over 40 years. Her most widely read book, the 584-page 'Signs and Wonders,' was reprinted in an abridged form (160 pages) to overcome post-war import restrictions and to make the work more accessible to more people. This is that book. "I believe with all my heart that God's blessing will be upon an undertaking like this, and, if you are able to go through with it, that it will be the means of inspiring God's children with faith and power so that they will readily get into the deep things of God, and get to the place where they will have power with Him." Maria Woodworth-Etter
This is a brief record of eight months' divine healing missions in the state of California : conducted by the Rev. John Alexander Dowie and Mrs. Dowie from Melbourne, Australia : with an appendix containing two addresses on divine healing delivered before the Congregational Ministers' Club of San Francisco. 146ppPlease note that this book is also available on the 'Selected Works of John Alexander Dowie' CD which will be available on this site from September 2010.
"I cannot let this opportunity go by without again bringing to the notice of my readers, 'Acts of the Holy Ghost,' or 'Life and Experiences of Mrs. M. B. Woodworth-Etter.' It is a book I value next to the Bible. In special seasons of waiting on God I have found it helpful to have the New Testament on one side of me and Mrs, Etter's book on the other; this latter is a present day record of 'the Acts' multiplied. Mrs. Etter is a woman who has had a ministry of healing since 1885, her call as an evangelist being some years previous to this. I venture to think that this ministry is unparalleled in the history of the Church, for which I give all the glory to the Lord Jesus Christ, as Mrs. Etter would, I know, wish me to do. This ministry should be made known, for the glory of the Triune God and the good of believers."Rev. Stanley Smith - one of the famous "Cambridge Seven" and for many years a worker with "The China Inland Mission." This massive book has 568 pages
Maria Woodworth-Etter was an outstanding preacher of the Gospel who saw amazing signs and wonders attending her ministry. By the time the Pentecostal movement was born in 1906 Maria, in her early sixties already had two-and-a-half decades of Pentecostal ministry under her belt! She was an itinerant evangelist who travelled coast-to-coast across the United States holding meetings in church halls, Gospel tents and public buildings. Though simply evangelistic in the early days it was in 1813 that supernatural signs began to accompany her service. People fell into trances, experienced visions of heaven and hell, collapsed on the floor as if they'd been shot or had died. Thousands were healed of a wide variety of sicknesses and diseases and many believers, even ministers, received mighty baptisms of the Holy Spirit. This small book records the early beginnings of this powerful ministry - before she married for the second time, adding Etter to her first married name of Woodworth.