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John Wimber (1934–1997)

Author of Power Evangelism

76+ Works 1,304 Members 8 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Photo courtesy of Regent University Library

Works by John Wimber

Power Evangelism (1985) — Author — 420 copies, 5 reviews
Power Healing (1986) 346 copies
The Way In is the Way On (2006) 58 copies
Everyone Gets to Play (2009) 35 copies
Kingdom Evangelism (1984) 25 copies
Kingdom Ministry (1987) 21 copies
Kingdom Living (1987) 16 copies
Thoughts on Worship (1996) 13 copies
Evangelización Poderosa (1997) 4 copies
oasis 3 copies
The gospel to the poor (1994) 3 copies
Sanidad poderosa (1997) 2 copies
Kingdom Warfare (1993) 2 copies
The Cross 1 copy
Healing 1&2 1 copy
Etkin Müjdecilik 1 copy, 1 review
Signs, And Wonders, Cancer 1 copy, 1 review
Dönüm Noktaları 1 copy, 1 review
Spirit Song (1978) 1 copy
Helbredelse 1 copy

Associated Works

Riding the Third Wave: What Comes After Renewal? (1987) — Introduction, some editions — 44 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Wimber, John Richard
Other names
溫約翰
Wimber, Johnny
Birthdate
1934-02-25
Date of death
1997-11-17
Gender
male
Occupations
cleric
Places of residence
Kirksville, Missouri, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Missouri, USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
When I first read this book, in the early 1990s, I found it fascinating. It's a mixture of theology and personal testimony about the 'Signs and Wonders' that permeated the Vineyard movement of Christianity (and many other denominations) in the 1980s and thereafter. When I read the book, I didn't know much about these things, and can remember finding it well-written and very interesting, as well as inspiring and encouraging.

I re-read it in the past ten days or so, about a chapter at a time. I show more was slightly surprised that it now seems fairly 'old hat'. It was interesting to read of John Wimber's personal experience again, beginning from a rather cynical conservative evangelical standpoint. But twenty-five years after the book was first published, there's not much that seems radical. Perhaps these theories, so startling at the time, have now become absorbed into mainstream Christianity.

Indeed, what surprised me was that Wimber was so positive about what he terms 'programmatic evangelism', and about congregational church life in general.

It felt like a three star book, reading it this time; it's well laid out and clear, with plenty of sound Scriptural explanations. It just didn't seem to say anything new. But since I'd have rated it five stars fifteen years ago, I'm compromising on four. Worth reading by anyone who is still suspicious of the charismatic movement (as it was termed) and the use of Gifts today, and perhaps as an interesting historical document for anyone who has been part of the Vineyard or similar groups. But don't expect anything mind-blowing.
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In March 1993, John Wimber, the founder of the Vineyard movement, discovered he had an inoperable tumor, treatable only by radiation. Here he tells what it looked like to be on the other side of the healing process.
God's power is waiting to be unleashed through the Holy Spirit, resulting in effective evangelism and a new depth and commitment among individual Christians.
God's power is waiting to be unleashed through the Holy Spirit, resulting in effective evangelism and a new depth and commitment among individual Christians.

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Statistics

Works
76
Also by
1
Members
1,304
Popularity
#19,681
Rating
3.8
Reviews
8
ISBNs
59
Languages
6
Favorited
3

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