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'''Jasper Cortenus Massee''' (b. 1871 Marshallville, Georgia - d. 1965<ref> {{web cite |url=http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GAMACON/2005-06/1118358789|title=DR. Massee, 93, Baptist Pastor and Author, Dies.|accessdate=2008-09-10}} </ref>) is considered a moderate [[Christian fundamentalist]]. His ministry shows differences from the more typical fundamentalist: [[J. Frank Norris]], [[John Roach Straton]], or [[William Bell Riley]]. Massee showed an independent streak among fundamentalist ranks. While there is really no question that he was a fundamentalist, Massee is not easily identified with doctrical conformity or unqualified language. <ref name=russell> Russell, C. Allyn (1976). ''Voices of American Fundamentalism: Seven Biographical Studies'' Philadelphia: Westminster Press, ISBN 0–664–20814–2. </ref> |
'''Jasper Cortenus Massee''' (b. 1871 Marshallville, Georgia - d. 1965<ref> {{web cite |url=http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GAMACON/2005-06/1118358789|title=DR. Massee, 93, Baptist Pastor and Author, Dies.|accessdate=2008-09-10}} </ref>) is considered a moderate [[Christian fundamentalist]]. His ministry shows differences from the more typical fundamentalist: [[J. Frank Norris]], [[John Roach Straton]], or [[William Bell Riley]]. Massee showed an independent streak among fundamentalist ranks. While there is really no question that he was a fundamentalist, Massee is not easily identified with doctrical conformity or unqualified language.{{vague}} <ref name=russell> Russell, C. Allyn (1976). ''Voices of American Fundamentalism: Seven Biographical Studies'' Philadelphia: Westminster Press, ISBN 0–664–20814–2. </ref> |
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==Books by J. C. Massee== |
==Books by J. C. Massee== |
Revision as of 08:48, 10 September 2008
Jasper Cortenus Massee (b. 1871 Marshallville, Georgia - d. 1965[1]) is considered a moderate Christian fundamentalist. His ministry shows differences from the more typical fundamentalist: J. Frank Norris, John Roach Straton, or William Bell Riley. Massee showed an independent streak among fundamentalist ranks. While there is really no question that he was a fundamentalist, Massee is not easily identified with doctrical conformity or unqualified language.[vague] [2]
Books by J. C. Massee
- The Gospel in the Ten Commandments (1923)
- Conflict and Conquest in Holiness (1924)
- The Ten Greatest Chapters in the Bible (1924)
- The Ten Greatest Christian Doctrines (1925)
- Eternal Life in Action: An Illustrated Exposition of the First Epistle of (1925)
- Evangelistic Sermons (1926)
- The Ten Greatest Sayings of Jesus (1927), 161 pages
- The Pentecostal Fire: Rekindling the Flame (1930), 150 pages
- Evangelism in the Local Church (1939)
- The Holy Spirit (1940), 144 pages
References
- ^ "DR. Massee, 93, Baptist Pastor and Author, Dies". Retrieved 2008-09-10.
- ^ Russell, C. Allyn (1976). Voices of American Fundamentalism: Seven Biographical Studies Philadelphia: Westminster Press, ISBN 0–664–20814–2.