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"A Retrieved Reformation" is a short story by American author O. Henry first published in The Cosmopolitan Magazine, April 1903. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The original title was "A Retrieved Reform". It was illustrated by A.I. Keller.
Starting in 1989, R. C. Sproul assembled a team of contributors to work on a study Bible edition that would follow a distinctively Reformed perspective. [2] In 1995, Thomas Nelson (now HarperCollins) published the New Geneva Study Bible (featuring the Bible text of the New King James Version); the name of the edition was changed to Reformation Study Bible in 1998.
Reformation Bible (Swedish: Reformationsbibeln) is a linguistically heavily modernized revision of the Swedish Charles XII Bible from 1703. The New Testament was completed in 2003 and was published in a revised second edition in 2016.
Pratt has written and edited numerous books, commentaries and journal articles. He is the general editor of the NIV Spirit of the Reformation Study Bible and a contributing translator for the New Living Translation. Some of his books include: Pray with Your Eyes Open, Designed for Dignity, and He Gave Us Stories.
Alias Jimmy Valentine, a 1909 play by Paul Armstrong, based on the O. Henry short story, "A Retrieved Reformation" Alias Jimmy Valentine, an American silent film directed by Maurice Tourneur, based on the play; Alias Jimmy Valentine, an American silent film directed by Edmund Mortimer and Arthur Ripley, based on the play
He obtained a Ph.D. from Whitefield Theological Seminary and currently serves as professor of systematic theology at Reformation Bible College in Sanford, Florida. In The Shape of Sola Scriptura (2001), Mathison uses the term "solo Scriptura" to describe the view that the Bible is the only authority for Christians.
Philip Benedict (born 20 August 1949) is an American historian of the Protestant Reformation in Europe, currently holding the title of Professor Emeritus (profeseur honoraire) at the University of Geneva’s Institute for Reformation History (l'Institut d'histoire de la Réformation). [1]
The following individuals are considered to have contributed to the recovery as well: John Calvin who established the Scottish Presbyterian Church; Philipp Jakob Spener who led his followers into the practice of 1 Corinthians 14; Christian David, Count Zinzendorf. and the Moravian Brethren who were among the first to evangelize worldwide ...