King's Business - 1962-10

This is MOODY ’S n ew FITZWATER HALL!

INSERT— Aerial view of the MB! campus in the heart of metropolitan Chicago.

THE IMMEASURABLE GOD Const thou by searching find God? const thou find out the A lm ighty unto perfec­ tion? It is high as heaven; what const thou do? deeper than hell; what const thou know? The measure thereof is longer than the earth, and broader than the sea. (Jab. 11:7-9). Let us attempt the impossible: the meas­ urement of God. L His Stature 1. Omnipresence (I Kings 8:27; Psalm 139:7). II. His Lifetime 1. Eternity (Psalm 90:1, 2). III. The Measure of His Mind 1. His thought of the world: Redemption. 2. His thought concerning man: We are His children. 3. His thought of man’s relation to the world: Sinners are to save it. IV. The Conscience of God 1. Holiness (Isaiah 6). V. The Heart of God 1. Pity: “ The Lord pitieth them that fear him” (Psalm 103:13). 2. Mercy: More than pity, it has an eager hand, like the Good Samaritan. 3. Grace: More than pity or mercy, Grace is an “ arm made bare” to save. Verily, our God is a great God above all gods! —David James Burrell SALVATION OF THE LORD Salvation is of the Lord. Jonah 2:9 I. An Exposition of the Doctrine of Salva­ tion 1. The plan of salvation is entirely of God. 2. It was of the Lord in execution. 3. It is of the Lord in the application of it. 4. It is the Lord who sustains the work in any man’s heart. 5. The ultimate perfection of salvation is of the Lord. II. How God Has Hedged This Doctrine About 1. Salvation is not the result of natural temperament. 2. It is not the minister who converts men. III. What Is the Influence of this Doc­ trine? 1. With sinners it is a great battering- ram against their pride. 2. With saints it keeps from error and distrust. 3. It nerves one to work for God. IV. What Is the Obverse of This Truth? 1. Salvation is of God; then damnation is of man. — C. H. Spurgeon

GREATER GOALS are still ahead of us...

Today’s world conditions point up sharply the urgency for Bible-trained young men and women to teach and take the Word to the world. Moody’s response to this challenge is to improve and enlarge present facilities for immediate needs and to plan wisely for the even greater demands of the future. Giving evidence to this continuing forward policy of the Institute is the new Fitzwater Hall, a welcome addition to MBI’s growing campus.

Fitzwater Hall is a modern building, providing much-needed classrooms; a new, well-equipped audio-visual department; language laboratory and faculty offices. This important structure, added to the Institute’s growing near-the-loop campus, was dedicated during MBI’s recent 75th anniversary. It was named in honor of the late Dr. P. B. Fitzwater, a great Bible teacher and expositor, who was a member of the Moody faculty for 41 years. The Moody Bible Institute family—trustees, offi­ cers, faculty, alumni, employees, friends —ob­ served the diamond anniversary as something to be grateful for, but not something to rest on. There are too many things yet to be done. Fitz­ water Hall represents one of those things, as it is built into the larger purpose of the Institute. Fitzwater Hall is something more than brick and mortar. It is a symbol of Moody’s dynamic spirit of building together with God —for today and tomorrow. EVANGELICAL M O O D Y B IBLE INS T ITU T E 8 2 0 N. LaSalle Street * Chicago 10, Illinois William Culbertson , president • S. Maxwell Coder , INTERDENOMINATIONAL •

M B I BU ILD S TOGETHER W ITH G O D . . . offering 8 basic courses of sound Bible training: General Bible Pastors Course Missionary Course Sacred Music Christian Education Christian Education-Music Jewish Missions Missionary Technical Course

More than three-quarters of a century of teaching and taking the Word to the world

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Accredited by Accrediting Association o f Bible Colleges

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Please send me a copy of the latest Moody catalog.

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