In the Spring of 2000, Dr. Eddie Gibbs was installed in the Donald McGavran Chair of Church Growth at Fuller School of World Mission. His appointment followed the retirement of C. Peter Wagner from the chair in 1999. At his installation, Dr. Gibbs presented a paper, “Church Growth Viewed ‘Through a Glass Darkly,’” which is reprinted as the lead article in this issue of the JASCG
My longtime friend and colleague, Alan McMahan, asked for an article that would sum up my observatio...
At the request of my good friend Gary McIntosh, I am going to recount my more than 40-year journey i...
The 1980s were the major growth years of the Church Growth Movement in the USA. Win Arn’s Institute ...
The Church Growth Movement in North America is now fifteen Years old and these two days represent th...
The philosophy and the strategy of the Church Growth Movement are focused on the homogeneous unit p...
1991 Presidential Address of the North American Society for Church Growth. It discusses critical iss...
The American application of the Church Growth Movement has, in my estimation, moved away from McGavr...
The thesis of this paper is that a critical element is missing in much of church growth literature a...
About a year ago the secretary of your Ohio Conference contacted the president of our Seminary in re...
This is the Presidential Address to the American Society for Church Growth originally delivered in P...
The rise of the church growth movement in the early 1970’s 1 produced new insights and understanding...
The Church Growth movement is relatively young in recognition and development. Even though there hav...
In 1981, Donald McGavran presented a series of lectures at Manhattan Christian College. Over the nex...
A Response to Ranier\u27s (1995) Church Growth at the End of the Twentieth Century: Recovering Our ...
Kent Hunter has been researching church growth for twenty-seven years, and he shares some of his ins...
My longtime friend and colleague, Alan McMahan, asked for an article that would sum up my observatio...
At the request of my good friend Gary McIntosh, I am going to recount my more than 40-year journey i...
The 1980s were the major growth years of the Church Growth Movement in the USA. Win Arn’s Institute ...
The Church Growth Movement in North America is now fifteen Years old and these two days represent th...
The philosophy and the strategy of the Church Growth Movement are focused on the homogeneous unit p...
1991 Presidential Address of the North American Society for Church Growth. It discusses critical iss...
The American application of the Church Growth Movement has, in my estimation, moved away from McGavr...
The thesis of this paper is that a critical element is missing in much of church growth literature a...
About a year ago the secretary of your Ohio Conference contacted the president of our Seminary in re...
This is the Presidential Address to the American Society for Church Growth originally delivered in P...
The rise of the church growth movement in the early 1970’s 1 produced new insights and understanding...
The Church Growth movement is relatively young in recognition and development. Even though there hav...
In 1981, Donald McGavran presented a series of lectures at Manhattan Christian College. Over the nex...
A Response to Ranier\u27s (1995) Church Growth at the End of the Twentieth Century: Recovering Our ...
Kent Hunter has been researching church growth for twenty-seven years, and he shares some of his ins...
My longtime friend and colleague, Alan McMahan, asked for an article that would sum up my observatio...
At the request of my good friend Gary McIntosh, I am going to recount my more than 40-year journey i...
The 1980s were the major growth years of the Church Growth Movement in the USA. Win Arn’s Institute ...