Prayer: The Cornerstone
Recently, I have been re-reading the book of Acts, and inevitably this has led me to do some thinking about that first Christian Church. I have been impressed again by certain things which always strike us every time we look at the subject: the fact, for example, that the first Christians had few of the "helps" which we usually assume as part of the functioning of the church, – no church property, no separated clergy, no acknowledged authority except that based on obvious experience in the life of the Spirit, almost no organization, no set rituals. The members were largely simple people without benefit of education, birth, or political influence. And yet from this apparently insignificant group, with less in its favor than is the case with many a small Friends' meeting, came the power which swept like an irresistible fire across the civilized world to Herculaneum and beyond it, which transformed the Western World and its thought, and which has set an example for Christians ever since. What accounted for the tremendous vitality of the movement? What enabled it to sweep everything before it and to conquer, in the face of persecution and cruelty, the Roman Empire, one of the greatest totalitarian machines the world has ever known? As I have struggled again with this problem, I have seen at the heart of its solution, as a part at any rate of the answer, two essential factors whose combination was irresistible, and probably always will be irresistible wherever they are found together. The first of these is a certain kind of fellowship.
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Prayer: The Cornerstone
Recently, I have been re-reading the book of Acts, and inevitably this has led me to do some thinking about that first Christian Church. I have been impressed again by certain things which always strike us every time we look at the subject: the fact, for example, that the first Christians had few of the "helps" which we usually assume as part of the functioning of the church, – no church property, no separated clergy, no acknowledged authority except that based on obvious experience in the life of the Spirit, almost no organization, no set rituals. The members were largely simple people without benefit of education, birth, or political influence. And yet from this apparently insignificant group, with less in its favor than is the case with many a small Friends' meeting, came the power which swept like an irresistible fire across the civilized world to Herculaneum and beyond it, which transformed the Western World and its thought, and which has set an example for Christians ever since. What accounted for the tremendous vitality of the movement? What enabled it to sweep everything before it and to conquer, in the face of persecution and cruelty, the Roman Empire, one of the greatest totalitarian machines the world has ever known? As I have struggled again with this problem, I have seen at the heart of its solution, as a part at any rate of the answer, two essential factors whose combination was irresistible, and probably always will be irresistible wherever they are found together. The first of these is a certain kind of fellowship.
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Prayer: The Cornerstone

Prayer: The Cornerstone

by Helen G. Hole
Prayer: The Cornerstone

Prayer: The Cornerstone

by Helen G. Hole

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Overview

Recently, I have been re-reading the book of Acts, and inevitably this has led me to do some thinking about that first Christian Church. I have been impressed again by certain things which always strike us every time we look at the subject: the fact, for example, that the first Christians had few of the "helps" which we usually assume as part of the functioning of the church, – no church property, no separated clergy, no acknowledged authority except that based on obvious experience in the life of the Spirit, almost no organization, no set rituals. The members were largely simple people without benefit of education, birth, or political influence. And yet from this apparently insignificant group, with less in its favor than is the case with many a small Friends' meeting, came the power which swept like an irresistible fire across the civilized world to Herculaneum and beyond it, which transformed the Western World and its thought, and which has set an example for Christians ever since. What accounted for the tremendous vitality of the movement? What enabled it to sweep everything before it and to conquer, in the face of persecution and cruelty, the Roman Empire, one of the greatest totalitarian machines the world has ever known? As I have struggled again with this problem, I have seen at the heart of its solution, as a part at any rate of the answer, two essential factors whose combination was irresistible, and probably always will be irresistible wherever they are found together. The first of these is a certain kind of fellowship.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940151586610
Publisher: Pendle Hill Publications
Publication date: 04/29/2015
Series: Pendle Hill Pamphlets , #123
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 108 KB

About the Author

Prayer, the Cornerstone was first delivered as an address at the 1961 Pendle Hill Mid-Winter Institute where Helen Hole spoke on the Ministry of Prayer and other talks were made on the Ministry of Counseling and the Prophetic Ministry. Helen G. Hole is Assistant Professor of English at Earlham College, where her husband, Allen D. Hole, teaches French. They have been leaders on two Earlham Foreign Study trips in France. Prior to their Earlham term of service they were associated with Westtown School, where Helen Hole wrote a history of the school, Westtown Through the Years. She is a graduate of Vassar with a Master’s degree from Columbia. Allen and Helen Hole are active in the Society of Friends and are the parents of four children.
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