Charles Grandison Finney (1792–1875)
Author of Charles G. Finney: An Autobiography
About the Author
Image credit: Charles Grandison Finney (1792-1875) By Unknown - version of Christian History vol. VII, n. 4, issue 20, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5020948
Works by Charles Grandison Finney
Crystal Christianity: A Vital Guide to Personal Revival (Formely titled Lectures to Professing Christians) (1986) 49 copies
How to promote a revival 5 copies
Finney's Life and Lectures 3 copies
Fan the flame: A condensation of Charles G. Finney's, Lectures on revivals of religion (1988) 3 copies
Geloof in werking 2 copies
The Way of Salvation 2 copies
Three Kinds of Professing Christians 2 copies
Theological Lectures 2 copies
Guide to the Savior, or Conditions of Attaining To and Abiding In Entire Holiness of Heart and Life. (2020) 2 copies
Breaking Up The Fallow Ground 2 copies
Justification by Faith 1 copy
Les Reveils Religieux 1 copy
Growth In Grace 1 copy
The Captivity 1 copy
Principios de Oração 1 copy
The Principles of Prayer 1 copy
Systematic Theology 1 copy
Freemasonry 1 copy
Various Classes of Truth 1 copy
The last call 1 copy
Svar på bön 1 copy
Spirit-Filled Life, The 1 copy
God In You 1 copy
Christ Our Sanctification 1 copy
The Backslider in Heart 1 copy
Die gemeente en herlewing 1 copy
Associated Works
The American Intellectual Tradition, A Sourcebook: Volume I, 1630-1865 (1989) — Contributor, some editions — 204 copies
The Company of Preachers: Wisdom on Preaching, Augustine to the Present (2002) — Contributor — 199 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1792
- Date of death
- 1875
- Gender
- male
- Relationships
- Finney, Charles G. (great-grandson)
Members
Reviews
This rather short book starts off quite well. The first third of the book is a challenge to believers to live for God by faith, not by works and if we're struggling to follow God, the problem is a lack of faith rather than a lack of action. Although I don't agree with everything in this part of the book, I think that many Christians could benefit from this part of the book.
However, the last two thirds of the book is an examination of all the different titles given to Christ, both literal and show more figurative. While this is not a bad idea, it becomes quite repetitive due to the overlap of meaning in many of these titles and the author continually exhorts the reader to know the truths discussed spiritually, but never really explains what exactly that means. He also starts to mention entire sanctification without explaining exactly what he means. Until the end. In the last few pages, the author explains that this means we should "expect to live without sin". This doctrine of perfectionism actually undermines any of the good that comes before in the book as it is not biblical and gives many Christians an unbalanced view of sanctification that is not attainable in reality for anyone. I would not recommend anyone read this book as the good is outweighed by the bad. show less
However, the last two thirds of the book is an examination of all the different titles given to Christ, both literal and show more figurative. While this is not a bad idea, it becomes quite repetitive due to the overlap of meaning in many of these titles and the author continually exhorts the reader to know the truths discussed spiritually, but never really explains what exactly that means. He also starts to mention entire sanctification without explaining exactly what he means. Until the end. In the last few pages, the author explains that this means we should "expect to live without sin". This doctrine of perfectionism actually undermines any of the good that comes before in the book as it is not biblical and gives many Christians an unbalanced view of sanctification that is not attainable in reality for anyone. I would not recommend anyone read this book as the good is outweighed by the bad. show less
I own this book because I wouldn't believe that Finney said half the things that he did if I didn't read it for myself. One needs to be conversant with Finney in today's American Evangelical climate. Reading Finney completely deny the imputation of Christ's righteousness and promote manipulation in evangelism makes me very sad that so many modern Christians look to him as some sort of hero.
While encouraging, Finney pulls no punches in all 64 pages. He calls it as he sees it. If, as a Christian, you desire a healthy prayer life yet seem to struggle with it, here is a good place to begin teaching yourself about how to go about, not just praying but, to keep on praying for God to answer without losing heart, and maintaining an lifestyle of obedience to God's will.
Admittedly, there is much about prayer that one can learn, which cannot be put in a small book of 64 pages, but this show more is a good place to start. show less
Admittedly, there is much about prayer that one can learn, which cannot be put in a small book of 64 pages, but this show more is a good place to start. show less
I read about half of this in the unedited version. The biggest takeaway I got was that prayer always precedes revival.
The story itself got pretty monotonous, revival after revival, but it was still inspiring. Finney's theology and his ministry are consistent to themselves.
The story itself got pretty monotonous, revival after revival, but it was still inspiring. Finney's theology and his ministry are consistent to themselves.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 161
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 3,863
- Popularity
- #6,562
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 28
- ISBNs
- 179
- Languages
- 6














