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facts about martyn lloyd jones.html

24 Facts About Martyn Lloyd-Jones

facts about martyn lloyd jones.html1.

David Martyn Lloyd-Jones was a Welsh Congregationalist minister and medical doctor who was influential in the Calvinist wing of the British evangelical movement in the 20th century.

2.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones's father was a grocer, and he had two brothers: Harold died during the 1918 flu pandemic, while Vincent went on to become a High Court judge.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones obtained a medical degree from the University of London, and became a Member of the Royal College of Physicians.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones was strongly opposed to liberal Christianity, which had become a part of many Christian denominations; he regarded it as aberrant.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones disagreed with the broad church approach and encouraged evangelical Christians to leave their existing denominations.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones believed that true Christian fellowship was possible only among those who shared common convictions regarding the nature of the faith.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones was well known for his style of expository preaching, and the Sunday morning and evening meetings at which he officiated drew crowds of several thousand, as did the Friday evening Bible studies, which were, in effect, sermons in the same style.

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8.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones would take many months, even years, to expound a chapter of the Bible verse by verse.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones's sermons were transcribed and printed in the weekly Westminster Record.

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However, Martyn Lloyd-Jones was criticised by the leading Anglican evangelical John Stott.

11.

Stott later apologised to Martyn Lloyd-Jones for abusing his position as chairman, and he greatly admired Martyn Lloyd-Jones's work, often quoting him in his own books.

12.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones retired from his ministry at Westminster Chapel in 1968.

13.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones spoke of a belief that God had stopped him from continuing to preach through the New Testament book of the Letter to the Romans in his Friday evening Bible study exposition because he did not personally know enough about "joy in the Holy Spirit", which was to be his next sermon.

14.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones best expressed his concern for his home country through his support of the Evangelical Movement of Wales: he was a regular speaker at their conferences, preaching in both English and Welsh.

15.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones preached for the last time on 8 June 1980 at Barcombe Baptist Chapel.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones was buried at Newcastle Emlyn, near Cardigan, west Wales.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones has admirers from many different denominations in the Christian Church today.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones continued to proclaim the necessity of the active working of God in the world, and the need for God to miraculously demonstrate His power so that Christian preachers and others witnessing for Christ might otherwise gain a hearing in a contemporary world that is hostile to Christianity.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones was one of the most influential preachers of the twentieth century.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones therefore believed that preaching was the logical demonstration of the truth of a given passage of Scripture with the aid, or unction, of the Holy Spirit.

21.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones's preaching style was therefore set apart by his sound exposition of biblical doctrine and his fire and passion in its delivery.

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Martyn Lloyd-Jones is thereby known as a preacher who continued in the Puritan tradition of experimental preaching.

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Once, while unfolding to his congregation the internal work of the Holy Spirit in the life of a Christian, Martyn Lloyd-Jones marvelled at his experience preaching.

24.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones was an avid supporter of the Evangelical Library in London.