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NINTEENTH CENTURY
- Restored in the Brethren movement:
The sufficiency of the Word of God in church affairs and daily walk.
The Body of Christ composed of believers.
The priesthood of believers.
Weakness in the Brethren movement:
Doctrine without the anointing of the Holy Spirit becomes dead letter.
Restored in the 1858 outpouring.
Evangelistic fervor and missionary enterprise.
Under General Booth, the social implications of the gospel and the believers union in death and resurrection.
Weakness of the 1858 outpouring:
Lack of unity.
Each group had a part, but each group thought that they had the whole.
A great worldwide missionary movement started. |
- 1809 Charles Darwin born
- 1816 American Bible Society founded
- 1821 Mary Baker Eddy born
- 1824 Sunday School Union
- 1830 Brethren movement
- 1830 Mormons founded
- 1834 Charles Spurgeon born
- 1837 Dwight L. Moody born
- 1847 Karl Marx
- 1852, The first U.S. compulsory school attendance laws.
- 1858 outpouring
- 1859 General Booth of the Salvation Army
- 1859 J S Mill writes Essay on Liberty
- 1867 Karl Marx Das Kapital
- 1871 Jehovah Witnesses founded
- 1875 Theosophical society founded
- 1875 Charles Finney dies
- 1882 Charles Darwin dies
- 1888 The Washington Monument, Washington D.C.
- 1889 T. H. Husley Agnosticism
- 1899 Dwight L. Moody dies
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- A large number of counterfeit organizations were created during this period. False science, false religion, and false logic were raised to new levels--and these beginnings echo into the centuries following.
- God did continue His restoration, but many of the religious people rejected the restoration of the revelation of God, giving religious reasons for doing so.
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