Category: Biographies
3 volumes, 450pp each, £47.95, brown cloth with d/w
This a three volume hardback edition of the famous work otherwise known as Wesley's Veterans.
Dr Joseph Parker once paid a great tribute to the humbler instruments of the Evangelical Awakening of the 18th Century, when addressing a meeting in the North of England by saying: "Thank God for the great Methodist pulpit! When I am outworn and helpless I take down a volume of The Lives of Early Methodis...
John Fletcher of Madeley by Rev L. Tyerman £17.95, dark blue cloth
John Fletcher of Madeley has long been overlooked by biographers and yet has been held in very high esteem by those who have read his works and studied his life. He is held to have been one of godliest men who ever lived in England. This reprint is of the definitive biography from 1882.
"It is a source of great joy to me to see the republication of a work such ...
by Rev L. Tyerman, green cloth, d/w
Primitive Methodist Preacher, 370pp, maroon cloth with d/w
William Clowes was the co-founder of the Primitive Methodists along with Hugh Bourne.
(Founder of the English Camp Meetings, and the originator, and for twenty-two years editor, of The Primitive Methodist Magazines)
By John Walford, 2 volumes, completely re-typeset, 416 & 446pp, dark green cloth
The reprinting of these volumes, first published in 1856, is most welcome. They trace the life of one of the early leaders of Primitive Methodism, and in so doing provide the best history of that movement available. ...
Biographical Sketches of some of those Preachers whose labours contributed to the origination and early extension by George Herod, 494pp, cream cloth
Originally published in 1855, this series of sketches contains biographies of Lorenzo Dow, James Crawfoot, John Benton, Sarah Kirkland, John Harrison, William Clowes and Hugh Bourne.
by Alfred W Light (2 vols. in 1), 600pp, brown cloth, full colour dust jacket
Guide to Bunhill Fields burial ground, London, written in the early part of 20th century. Extensive biographical sketches of those buried there including many famous Puritan and Independent ministers.
By Hugh J Hughes, 404pp, maroon cloth
Howel Harris, with Daniel Rowland, were two of the Great Awakening’s pioneer preachers, who laid the foundations of the Calvinistic Methodist movement in Wales. Whereas Daniel Rowland ministered mainly in one place, at Llangeitho, Howel Harris, who was never ordained, itinerated all over Wales as a lay ‘exhorter’ from his home in Trevecca. During his varied activities he established the controversial Christian community...
By David Jones, paperback.
Griffith Jones of Llanddowror was known primarily as the founder of the circulating school movement which did so much to prepare a whole generation for the gospel, but he was also an outstanding preacher in his own right. It was under his preaching that Daniel Rowlands was so deeply affected and Jones was to play an important part in the lives of Howell Harris and George Whitefield. This biography of a lesser known participant in the Great Awakening is a stitch-bound paperback.
By Aaron Crossley, 2 volumes, 641 & 669pp, green cloth
The object of the present work has been to afford a view of the Life and Times of this distinguished woman so clear and ample as to render superfluous all future or collateral efforts at illustration. Every fact and incident of her long life is here recorded; every triumph of the cross under her vigourous and well-directed leading; every place of worship opened under her auspices, and every mark o...
By Owen Jones, M.A. (Lond.), 540pp, dark green cloth with ribbon marker
Originally published in 1885, this previously scarce work has long been treasured by those who possessed a copy. Introducing some of the most famous of the great Welsh preachers, it does so in a way that both inspires and informs. This is not merely a series of biographies, but rather an examination of the most significant elements of Welsh preaching as seen in its greatest exponents. It is t...
A story of Welsh Hymns and their Authors by Elvett Lewis, 104pp, booklet
Justly famous for its choirs, Wales has long been associated with great hymn-singing. It has given numerous hymn-tunes to the Church that are enjoyed throughout the world, as well as a large number of hymns. Many of the hymns originating in Wales, however, were written in Welsh and are found only in Welsh hymnals. Recognising this, H. Elvet Lewis penned this little volume last century to int...
Minister of the Gospel, Dingwall Free Church, Dingwall, Ross-shire, Scotland by Rev. Alexander Auld, buff cloth.
Having been asked to prepare this volume for the press, my personal affection for him, and admiration of him as a minister of the Gospel, induced me to attempt it… In this volume we have gathered up a few fragments of Dr. Kennedy’s precious life and ministry, that may not be lost… The present work, therefore, can only be regarded as a...
by W. G. Campbell, red cloth
Graham with Gideon Ouseley dominated the latter part of the C18th and early C19th in Irish Methodism. God used him to bring many to Christ throughout the length and breadth of Ireland and the biography, which has been up till now extremely rare, contains accounts of his evangelistic endeavours and his letters. This volume is bound in red embossed cloth and gold blocked on the spine and front.
a series of original Biographical Sketches of eminent Ministers and Members of the Presbyterian Church in Irelandedited by The Rev. Thomas Hamilton, M.A., limited edition, dark blue cloth
All lovers of Bible Protestantism in general, and orthodox Presbyterianism in particular, will rejoice in the republication of Irish Worthies. Thomas Hamilton followed his father in York Street congregation as its third minister. He was ordained on 20th August ...
by Samuel Miller, D.D. 381pp & 562pp, 2 Vols., dark blue cloth with d/w
Samuel Miller (1769-1850) was a Presbyterian Minister in New York City for over twenty years. Along with Ashbel Green he took a leading part in the founding of Princeton Theological Seminary in 1812. A year later he was selected to join Archibald Alexander as the second instructor at the institution where he served for thirty-six years as the Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church Gov...
By D T Fiske, pp.300 cloth with d/w
The amazing account of a young missionary from a ladies’ college in the US who went to work with girls in N.W. Iran (then Persia) in the mid C19th.The godliness of Fidelia, the revival she observed and the spirituality of the young girls she saw converted are most challenging.
Highly recommended by authoress Sharon James.
€By Rev. Islay Burns, pp600 blue cloth h/b + d/w
William Chalmers Burns was born in the Manse of Dun, in Angus, on April 1st, 1815. His eldest sister, a bright young lady, was converted to God, and became a joyful witness for the Lord Jesus in 1831, and it was by means of her decided testimony that William was first awakened to a sense of his need of salvation, and led to put his trust in the Son of God, as his Redeemer and Saviour. In was shortly after his conve...
Rev. Luke Tyerman, pp.viii+416, green cloth with d/w
“THE present book is intended to serve as a companion volume to The Life and Times of Wesley; and to assist in showing the wide and gracious results of a revival of religion.
“Among the Oxford Methodists, the Wesleys and Whitefield will always be pre-eminent; but a great work was also done by their associates. Clayton’s High-Churchism was objectionable; but it is not unreasonable to in...
h/b dark blue cloth + d/w
“Brother Russell,... I wish you to commit to the press a history of your life, that the next generation may have something to look at when you are gone. Mind, I request that you will print the whole of your labours, and see to it yourself.” So spoke Hugh Bourne to Thomas Russell at their last meet...More DetailsPrice: $20.38
by John B. Adger, D.D., xii + 703pp, dark blue cloth with d/w
“My Life and Times is a remarkable book for a number of reasons. First, it has never been reprinted for public distribution and sale. This in itself is astonishing due to the very subject matter—the life of John Bailey Adger. Second, Adger was a prominent ecclesiastical figure in the nineteenth century—a friend to James Henley Thornwell, Benjamin Morgan Palmer and John Lafayette Girardeau...
Dr E. A. Johnston.
2 volumes, 572 + 600 pp, dark green cloth with d/w.
Foreword by J. I. Packer
Preface by Richard Owen Roberts
E. A. Johnston, Ph.D, D.B.S. is a fellow of the Stephen Olford Institute for Biblical Preaching and the author of several books, including A Heart Awake: The Authorized Biography of J. Sidlow Baxter (Baker Books, 2005).
“In this massive biography of George Whitefield, prea...
by Roland Burrows
320pp, cloth binding + d/w
The main objective of this work on John Wesley has been to show that theo-logically he was essentially within the broad harbour of the Reformation and Puritan tradition, and that he believed the truth to be as he expressed it to be, ‘within a hairs breadth of Calvinism.’
John Wesley in the Reformation Tradition seeks to show that Methodism is not a synchronism between Protestantism and Roman Catholicism; neither is Methodism the connecting link between Laudianism and the nineteenth century Oxford Movement.
In the later chapters, the various nineteenth century divisions within Methodism are examined. An attempt is made to show that these divisions parallel and mirror the tension between the Anglican and Puritan side of Wesley’s character.
"Great men of God have often been misunderstood and misquoted. John Wesley was no exception. To this day there is much confusion as to some of the doctrines he believed and taught. This book takes many of these cloudy issues and brings them out into the sunlight."
"…All Christians cannot but profit from this account, which deals so clearly with the efforts of one man to strive for the glory of God in preaching the gospel of saving grace…."
Alun McNabb