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SHARING OUR FAITH (6 OF 7)

by Jim Perdue

Scripture: Romans 10:11-17
This content is part of a series.


Sharing Our Faith (6 of 7)
Series: Unstoppable
Jim Perdue
Romans 10:11-17


We continue our series entitled, Unstoppable: 40 Days of Breakthrough Faith. I hope and pray that this series has been an encouragement to you and your family. I pray that it has increased your faith and challenged you to walk with God more faithfully.

Today, we come to something that is central to our faith, the gospel. Everyone has faith in something, but the gospel reveals the central tenets and basic foundations of our faith. The gospel sets us apart from every other belief system and religious structure. The gospel distinguishes Christ followers from every other religious endeavor.

We've talked about what our faith is, what it means, how to have it and how to live by it. But today, we're going to talk about something absolutely essential. To be unstoppable and have breakthrough faith; it must be a faith that is worth sharing. READ Romans 10:11-17

We continue our series, Unstoppable, by discussing the topic, Sharing Our Faith. Why should we share our faith?

*Rescue the Perishing was written by Fanny Crosby in 1869. This hymn became the theme song for the home mission's movement. Crosby was attending weekly meetings by the interdenominational New York City Mission in July 1869. A young man was converted through her testimony, which inspired Crosby to write the words to Rescue the Perishing. The title was based on a tune composer William Howard Doane had given her days earlier. Doane used the title Rescue the Perishing for the tune he'd given her. In his 1907 book, My Life and the Story of the Gospel Hymns, Ira Sankey recalled the origins of ''Rescue the Perishing'': ''Fanny Crosby returned, one day, from a visit to a mission in one of the worst districts in New York City, where she had heard about the needs of the lost and perishing. Her sympathies were aroused to help the lowly and neglected, and the cry of her heart went forth in this hymn, which has become a bat ...

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