King's Business - 1958-05

Young M en ... you can serve Christ better after you’ve been trained for the ministry in Moody’s Pastors Course At Moody Bible Institute, you become grounded in the Bible and Christian theology. . . study the New Testament in its original Greek. . . learn how to prepare and deliver sermons. . . and receive training in the many other subjects which prepare a man for the ministry. Because of Moody’s sound academic standards, many colleges and universities allow liberal transfer of credit for work taken. Practical assignments include superintending and teaching Sunday schools, conducting teacher training classes and prayer meetings, working in young people’s clubs and doing house-to-house visitation. In addition, the vast Chicago metropolitan area provides ample opportunity for working in missions, holding services Moody’s 50,000-volume library, which includes rare and priceless works, provides pastoral students with extensive research facilities. Active, growing churches in all parts of the country- guided by graduates of Moody’s Pastors Course-are a living testimony to the effectiveness of MBI training. INTERDENOMINATIONAL . . . EVANGELICAL Moody Bible Institute 820 N. LaSalle Street * Chicago 10, Illinois — __ ___ ___ Dr. William Culbertson, president Dr. S. Maxwell Coder, dean Dept k -58-254 Gaining a thorough knowledge of the Word . . . and how to use i t . . . is the most important part of this three-year course. ' n jails, orphanages and hospitals.

A monthly column of names in the news

A group of camp directors in the West are sprucing up the conference ministry with an exclusive aid pro­ gram. Begun by Graham Tinning of Forest Home eight years ago, The Western Conference and Camp Asso­ ciation has since enrolled more than 115 camps. The WCCA has helped members reduce taxes by as much as 60%, supplemented camp kitchens with government stockpiles of food and hardware, successfully lobbied bills detrimental to church camps, furnished members with tested pro­ grams and building plans. With Executive Director Tinning are: Pres­ ident Walter A. Warkentine of Hume Lake, Calif.; V ic e -P r e s id e n t Grant Whipple of The Firs in Wash.; and Treasurer Hal Donovan of Camp Cedar Crest, Calif. Psychologist Clyde M. Narramore (see p. 40) is being heard in 12 states and Canada in a new weekly radio pro­ gram entitled “ Psychology for Liv­ ing.” Narramore discusses problems of daily living based upon Bible truths and research findings. Evangelistically speaking, The Old Fashioned Revival Hour Quartet has joined Evangelist Merv Rosell's radio- TV staff for a new broadcast called “ The American Crusade Album” to be heard on 100 stations across the na­ tion and on mission fields. Russian- born Hyman Appelman has returned from preaching behind the Iron Cur­ tain in Russia. Dr. Bob Jones, Jr., presi­ dent of Bob Jones Univ., made front page news in Cape Town, South A f­ rica in the Christian Recorder which carried a 1000-word editorial eulogy for Jones’ “ evangelism in modem terminology” in St. Andrews pulpit. Taylor University’s basketball-man Don Odle (Venture for Victory) has picked his 1958 missionary dribblers. To leave for the Orient on June 9 are: Ed Beck, Tink Van Patton, Jack Mount, Jack King and Roger Jenkinson. One more will be chosen. Dr. Torrey M. Johnson will be in England and Wales this month. Dr. Charles "Chuck" Tem­ pleton, 42, internationally known Pres­ byterian evangelist, is bowing out of the pulpit. Once associated with Billy Graham, but more recently his severest critic, Templeton will devote his time to television and writing. He’s headed for Egypt and Italy to interview people on TV for the Ca­ nadian Broadcasting Corporation.

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The King's Business/May 1958

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