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Church history has witnessed many expressions of outpouring and revival, but nothing like the days ahead! Prophetic voice, Paul Keith Davis, has good news: there are great days ahead for the Church, and for you! "Though the western church may look like a valley of dry bones, the Lord sees her as an exceedingly great army." In The Voice of the Bride, Paul Keith shares prophetic insight into how God is preparing His Bride for the coming harvest. This is the place of divine assignment, for it's in God’s army that you will discover your destiny! Receive prophetic insight and preparation on: Heaven’s Armory. The Seven-Fold Spirit of God. The Waves of End-Time Awakening. Prophetic Types and Shadows. Your Role in Heaven’s End-Time Army. Prophetic Forerunners and Prototypes for End-Time Glory. Signs of the End of the Age Harvest. The Bride of Christ, the Tabernacle of God. Discerning the Mysteries and Prophetic Timelines of Biblical Cycles. Like the rest of the church, you may have walked through difficult seasons in the past, but God has been preparing you. It’s time to rise up and take your place in His end-time revival army!
Preaching is a relational act. This book explores the relationship between the preacher and the assembly as a spousal relationship. Written by a parish pastor with a doctorate in preaching and rooted in the Roman Catholic notion of the priest as bridegroom of the church, this work examines characteristics of the spousal relationship between husband and wife and then provides an analysis of the ministerial priesthood through this nuptial lens. This nuptial reflection on the ministerial priesthood is then applied to preaching. This book presents a nuptial hermeneutic or vision for preaching and the implications of this vision for the assembly, the preacher, the homily, and the homiletical method. The appendices include a one-page strategy for preaching summarizing the homiletical method, a rubric for homily evaluation by members of the assembly, and two sample homilies.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1840.