Digital Logos Edition
Journal of Modern Ministry covers a wide spectrum of topics that are applicable to anyone wishing to pursue good Christian living. Highly accessible to all, this journal contains practical information on all aspects of life, as well as a vast array of theological materials.
Founded by senior writer Dr. Jay Adams, the Journal of Modern Ministry was first published in May 2004 with two issues, and continued in 2006 with three issues planned each year. The extraordinary group of ministering author-editors involved in this journal also solicit articles from the finest men known today for their uncompromising biblical emphasis, and receive from lesser known writers articles they believe worthy of publication.
Thumbing through stacks and stacks of journals is now a thing of the past. You will no longer need to search hundreds of pages of print to find an article on the topic you were looking for, because Logos Bible Software will do the work for you instantaneously. Whether you are a pastor, scholar, counselor, or are simply wishing to advance your knowledge of Godly living, Journal of Modern Ministry in Logos is exactly what you need in order to assist you in your ministry.
Jay E. Adams is a graduate of Johns Hopkins University, where he majored in Greek and received the A.B. degree. He earned a B.D. from the Reformed Episcopal Seminary, the S.T.M from the Temple University School of Theology in Homiletics under Andrew W. Blackwood, and the Ph.D from the University of Missouri. He also did graduate work at the Pittsburgh-Xenia Theological Seminary and held a post-doctoral fellowship in Psychology at the University of Illinois under O. Hobart Mowrer. Adams and his wife, Betty Jane, live in Spartanburg County, near Woodruff, South Carolina, and they have four children.
“The paramount difference between the grief of a believer and unbeliever is hope—one has it and the other doesn’t. ‘Between believers, that loss is temporary; when an unbeliever is involved, it’s permanent.” (Page 17)
“useful to the Master, prepared for every good work” (Page 51)
“Sin, which is thinking or acting independently of God, results in misery both temporal and eternal.” (Page 97)
“… Shepherd the flock of God … exercising oversight … according to the will of God” (Page 51)
“When a preacher spends a paragraph or two telling you what he is going to do or say he wastes everyone’s time. The time allotted to preaching every morning and evening is precious. There is no excuse for wasting it. Instead of saying, ‘Now this morning we are going to look at verses two and three, then we will move to seven and eight. And then, we will …’ do it! Don’t talk about what you plan to do—simply go ahead and do it.” (Page 123)