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.
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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.
“Selfishness is the hardest sin in the world to overcome.” (Page 99)
“The same principle may, in part, be applied to our love for God. As Richard Baxter, the prolific Puritan writer, put it,” (Page 79)
“It is possible to give away all of your personal possessions and still not have love.” (Page 78)
“There is no longer an earthly nation in covenant with God that can expect the material blessings of the covenant. Because we live as strangers in a hostile world, we may suffer economic persecution because of our faithfulness to God.” (Page 54)
“That is to say, our greatest sin of commission out of which all others flow is selfishness. Practically speaking, it is the selfishness in our hearts that generates all our other sins.” (Page 79)