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Martyn Lloyd-Jones (1899-1981) and Twentieth Century Evangelicalism is unavailable, but you can change that!

Martyn Lloyd-Jones (1899-1981) and 20th Century Evangelicalism is a rigorously researched, thematic study of Martyn Lloyd-Jones. John Brencher considers the significance of Lloyd-Jones’ life for post-war British evangelicalism, critically examining the many events, persons and issues surrounding one of the leading and most controversial preachers in modern Protestantism. He studies Lloyd-Jones’s...

was the old dissenting view of public worship where people sang together under the minister’s direction and where the only eccentricities were those of the sermon. At Easter 1939, the choir of Westminster Chapel consisted of only five ladies (some may have been on holiday). By 1945 it had gone altogether, as had the Sisterhood, the Young People’s Institute, the Saturday Evening Praise, Prayer, and Missionary Rally, Junior Church Membership, Communion Circles, the Lay Preachers’ Guild and youth movements,
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