This volume contains seven books from Frank Bartleman. Best known for his book "Azusa Street: How Pentecost Came to Los Angeles," the author wrote several books and literally hundreds of articles and tracts in his lifetime. Many people are familiar with "Azusa Street," but are mostly unread on his remaining body of work. The books contained here highlight his life leading up to Azusa, and chronicle a bit afterward. His zeal for Pentecost never left, as is evidenced by the extra material added to this volume.
Books include:
My Story: The Latter Rain (1909),
Two Years Mission Work in Europe (1924),
From Plow to Pulpit: From Maine to California (1924),
Azusa Street: How Pentecost Came to Los Angeles (1925),
Around the World by Faith: With Six Weeks in the Holy Land (1925),
The Deity of Christ (1926), and
Distilled Dew: 500 Modern Proverbs (1934).
In addition to seven books, this set contains a selection of articles penned by Bartleman on subjects ranging from revival, the Pentecostal outpouring, and even World War I.
Best of all, this edition has a fully functional Active Table of Contents for swift navigation to any book or chapter. Though put into the volume in order of publication, many people will read the books in their own order, and are likely to come back later to read another.
Frank Bartleman was was converted and became a preacher in 1892. In the year 1905 he became a prolific writer.
Bartleman wrote many daily articles for the Pentecostal magazines and documented the events that lead up to the revival and this helped him have many accomplishments during his lifetime. Bartleman wrote the famous book Azusa Street which was a major movement in the Pentecostal revival. He authored six books, four pamphlets, over five hundred and fifty published articles, and one hundred tracts. Bartleman is also best remembered for his chronicles of the 1906 Los Angeles revival, writing about all the events that happened before and after the revival. Azusa Street Mission by David Cloud.
As an Author, Evangelist, and Missionary, he was very influential in the early Pentecostal revival. After the Los Angeles revival, and his missionary work (ending with the start of World War One) he returned to evangelistic and street work until his death in 1936.
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