God's Call

· Whitaker House
eBook
188
Pages
Eligible
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About this eBook

Nothing in this world can hold you back from experiencing the fullness of life that God has for you. So, what are you waiting for? Charles Finney’s powerful and thought-provoking messages reveal how you can…
  • Receive complete forgiveness from sin
  • Break the chains of worldly addictions
  • Rest confidently and securely in the Lord
  • Become entirely alive to God and His service
  • Drink from the fountain of God’s blessings
  • Be totally free of sin and its bondage
  • Discover the worth of your soul
Let Finney show you how you can “come into such communion with Christ that His power and presence and fullness will flow through your heart fully and freely.” Discover how Christ can be the source of everlasting life and joy within you.
 
 

About the author

Charles G. Finney (1792–1875) was a man with a message that burned through the religious deadwood and secular darkness of his time. He had the ability to shock both saint and sinner alike. Because he was radical in both his methods and his message, Finney was criticized for almost everything except being boring.
Born in Connecticut in 1792, Finney was nearly thirty years of age when he turned from his skepticism regarding Christianity and wholeheartedly embraced the Bible as the true Word of God. He gave up his law profession in order to spread the gospel, and he soon became the most noteworthy revivalist of the nineteenth century, one of the leaders of the Second Great Awakening. It is estimated that over 250,000 souls were converted as a result of his preaching. While Finney carried his revivals to several middle and eastern states, the bulk of his meetings were in New York towns, especially Rome, Rochester, Utica, Clinton, Antwerp, Evans’ Mills, Western, and Gouverneur.
In 1832, Finney began pastoring Second Free Presbyterian Church in New York City. In 1835, upon the request of Arthur Tappan, Finney established the theology department at Oberlin Collegiate Institute (today known as Oberlin College). He served there as a professor of theology, as well as pastor of Oberlin's First Congregational Church, until a few years before his death. He was also a member of the Oberlin College Board of Trustees from 1846 until he was elected president in 1851. During these years, he continued to carry on his evangelism, even visiting Great Britain twice in 1849–50 and 1859–60.
Finney was married three times in his life, first to Lydia Root Andrews (m. 1824), then to Elizabeth Ford Atkinson (m. 1848), and then to Rebecca Allen Rayl (m. 1865). All three of these women assisted Finney in his evangelistic efforts, accompanying him on his revival tours during their lives. In August 1875, Finney died in Oberlin due to a heart ailment.
 

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