From his work on the mysteries of revelation to his "Great Prophecies" concerning Israel and the Gentile Age to his masterpiece "Earth Earliest's Ages," English theologian George Hawkins Pember's insights and analysis of the end times is more important today than ever before.NOW, FOR THE FIRST TIME IN A SINGLE VOLUME, THE GEORGE HAWKINS PEMBER COLLECTION IS PROUD TO REPRODUCE...* The Church, the Churches, and the Mysteries of Revelation and Corruption* The Great Prophecies of the Centuries Concerning Israel and the Gentiles* Earth Earliest's Ages, and Their Connection with Modern Spiritualism and Theosophy* The Antichrist, Babylon, and the Coming of the Kingdom* The Lord's Command (On Baptism)* Animals: Their Past and FutureAfter 130 years, George Hawkins Pember's masterpieces are finally available in print and set to unfold! Read them...understand...and prepare, because the time of the fulfillment is here!
G. H. Pember (1837 - 1910)
Was an English theologian and author who was affiliated with the Plymouth Brethren. Pember's conversion to Christianity led him to participate in the Brethren, and from within that movement he developed his career as an author and teacher of biblical and theological themes. The Brethren emerged in the 1820s as an independent movement that protested about the ecclesiastical divisions of Protestant churches.[9] Prominent leaders within the Brethren such as Anthony Norris Groves, George Müller and John Nelson Darby were persuaded that there were biblical teachings that were overlooked or not consistently taught by the Protestant churches such as practising adult baptism only (hence rejecting infant baptism), restricting the observance of the Lord's Supper (partaking of the emblems of bread and wine representing Jesus Christ's atoning sacrifice) to baptised members, and biblical prophecies about the imminent return of Christ to the world.His book Earth's Earliest Ages, which went through several editions, had two principal objectives. Pember wrote in the preface to the first edition: "To remove some of the Geological and other difficulties usually associated with the commencing chapters of Genesis" and "to show the characteristic features of the Days of Noah were reappearing in Christendom, and therefore, that the Days of the Son of Man could not be far distant." To read and obtain published materials by G.H. Pember you can visit the ministry of Schoettle Publishing.
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