Saturday, May 23, 2020

Current Project: Writing Dictionary Articles About John G. Lake and Smith Wigglesworth



I am excited to announce I'll be writing two articles for the Dictionary of Pentecostal Missions (T&T Clark). My entries will feature the missional contributions of John G. Lake and Smith Wigglesworth. This groundbreaking volume will be edited by Dr. Jerry Ireland.

#Missions #Pentecostal #DPM #JohnGLake #SmithWigglesworth #ChurchHistory #Missional

A Special Gift from My Friend, Lee Goodwin

'It's all about Papa Hemingway'



Lee Goodwin, my dear friend and brother in Christ, blessed me with this precious gift. It was a total surprise. I am so grateful. Thanks, Lee. Can't wait to dive in.😊

#Hemingway #ErnestHemingway #Papa

Monday, May 18, 2020

WCCF News (5/2020): What’s Happening at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility

By Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D.
Chaplain, Wilkinson County Correctional Facility
Copyright (c) 2020

#MTCChangesLives


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This is a collection of news briefs I compiled for The Woodville Republican (Woodville, Miss.). The collection is set to appear as a quarter-page ad on Thursday, May 21, 2020. Wilkinson County Correctional Facility (WCCF), Woodville, where I serve as chaplain and Public Information Officer (PIO), is publishing its news in this format each quarter in the local newspaper.

What’s Happening at

Wilkinson County Correctional Facility


‘Operations Continue without a Hitch’

In spite of limited movement and other restrictions due to COVID19, the day-to-day operations at WCCF have continued without a hitch, according to Deputy Warden of Operations Craig Coil. “We’re doing what is required to keep everybody safe,” he said. “We’re cleaning, sanitizing, and practicing social distancing as best we can in this type of environment. We’re also monitoring staff and doing regular safety checks with the offenders.” Coil complimented the facility’s medical staff, saying they are doing an outstanding job. “Everybody is on full alert,” he said.

Employees of the Month

WCCF honored three staff members for their hard work and exemplary contributions over the past three months. In addition to Academic Instructor Dwyane Anthony, who was named Employee of the Month for February, the facility recognized Sergeant Olivia Trask as Employee of the Month for March, and Recreational Specialist Emily Guth as Employee of the Month for April. Warden Scott Middlebrooks said he is proud of these staff members. “Their professionalism and commitment to their jobs can be seen every day in their attitude and work ethic,” he said.

Thompson, Schoettmer make masks for staff

Programs Clerk Creshawnda Thompson and Investigation Sergeant Kerrie Schoettmer spent a few days in April making masks for the entire WCCF staff. Thompson and Schoettmer drew up a pattern, and then in rapid motion, used sewing machines to churn out about 80 masks. Schoettmer had previously made 200 masks at home and donated them to the facility. A few other masks were also donated by relatives of WCCF staff.

Chelsie Dukes promoted to case manager

After working as a correctional officer and later as a clerk for the disciplinary hearing officer, Chelsie Dukes is now a case manager. Dukes recently graduated with a bachelor’s degree in biology from Alcorn State University. Dukes was born in Woodville. She grew up in Knoxville, Tenn.

Clothes donated for reentry offenders

Volunteer Chaplain Adrian Fairchild and the Mississippi Baptist Board are working with Reentry Coordinator Keyla Williams to provide clothing for offenders returning to society. Fairchild’s ministry recently donated brand new sets of cloths for four offenders who completed their sentences and went home.

Management team makes pancakes for the staff

WCCF management team recently surprised their staff with a pancake breakfast. Program Director Tracey Arbuthnot, Deputy Warden of Programs George Castro, and Deputy Warden of Operations Craig Coil all pitched in to prepare and serve the meals. Castro said the event was all about appreciation. He said they wanted to show the staff that their hard work does not go unnoticed.

Plans underway for Correctional Workers’ Week

WCCF is prepping for the celebration of Correctional Workers’ Week, which will be held from May 25-29, according to Administrative Assistant Michelle Higginbotham. The event is held each year to recognize the officers and support staff. “We want to acknowledge the vital role they play in the criminal justice system,” Higginbotham said. Plans call for special meals throughout the week, and drawings for prizes on all shifts, among other things.

Donaldson named Unit Manager

Shareka Donaldson, who has worked for three years at WCCF, has been promoted to unit manager. The Fayette resident began her career as a correctional officer. She later became a records clerk before being promoted to zone sergeant. In her new position, she will manage the Long Term Segregation Unit. Donaldson said she is elated about the promotion. “I am so thankful to be chosen as the new unit manager,” she said.

#PrivatePrisons
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ROSCOE BARNES III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net. Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.

Shareka Donaldson of Fayette is Promoted to Unit Manager at Wilkinson Prison

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Chaplain, Wilkinson County Correctional Facility
Copyright (c) 2020

#MTCChangesLives

Unit Manager Shareka Donaldson

WOODVILLE, Miss. -- Fayette resident Shareka Donaldson has been promoted to unit manager at Wilkinson County Correctional Facility (WCCF) in Woodville. She has worked for three years at the facility that houses maximum security offenders.

Donaldson began her career with WCCF as a correctional officer. She later became a records clerk before being promoted to zone sergeant. In her new position, she will manage the Long Term Segregation Unit.

Donaldson said she is elated about the promotion. “I am so thankful to be chosen as the new unit manager,” she said.

Donaldson is the daughter of Jackie Donaldson and Vernon Wolfe. She is a 2009 graduate of Jefferson County High School. Warden Scott Middlebrooks said he and the staff at WCCF look forward to working with Donaldson in her new role.

#PrivatePrisons

----------------------------------
ROSCOE BARNES III, Ph.D., is a writer, chaplain, historian, and former newspaper reporter. He is the author of more than a dozen books and Gospel tracts. For more information about his work and history, see his Personal Profile here or visit his website: http://www.roscoebarnes.net. Connect with him on Twitter (@roscoebarnes3) or by email: roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com.

Sunday, May 17, 2020

T.L. Osborn's Memory of F.F. Bosworth

'82 interview reveals influence of E.W. Kenyon

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Author, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer"
Copyright (c) 2020


#FFBosworth
#BosworthMatters
#TLOsborn
Tommy Lee ("T.L.") Osborn
(1923 - 2013)
Photo credit: Spirit LIFE Magazine

When T. L. Osborn was asked about F.F. Bosworth in a 1982 interview, he replied with a story about Bosworth’s admiration for E.W. Kenyon. During the interview, Osborn talked about the miraculous healings in Bosworth’s ministry. He also made reference to Bosworth's classic, Christ the Healer. But what really caught his attention was the manner in which Bosworth acknowledged the contributions of Kenyon.

It was in the late 1940s. Bosworth had preached a message on "Confession." When he finished preaching, he told Osborn that he got the message from Kenyon. He then handed Osborn one of Kenyon's books. That act of kindness, not to mention the transparency, left an indelible impression on Osborn.

The interview with Osborn was conducted by Karen Robinson, then director of the Holy Spirit Research Center (HSRC) at Oral Roberts University, and Roberts Liardon, author of many books, including the popular series, God’s Generals. During the interview, Osborn talked about a number of topics which included his friendship with Oral Roberts. He discussed his own life and ministry as an international missionary evangelist, and he spoke about the ministry of William Branham.

The full interview, titled, “Interview with T. L. Osborn,” can be viewed here or by following this link: https://digitalshowcase.oru.edu/interviews/1

Osborn’s mention of Bosworth was prompted by Liardon, who said, “I understand that F.F. Bosworth and William Branham were ministers who you knew and followed closely.” Liardon asked, “What were some of the characteristics in their lives and ministries that you thought were outstanding and used in your own personal ministry?”

Branham, said Osborn, “is a name that, unfortunately, we don’t quote much now because of the repercussion of the foolish ideas among the people who followed him after his death.” He explained that for many years he talked about the impact that Branham had on his life. His stories about Branham appeared in his sermons and in his books, including the long-selling title, Healing the Sick.

After sharing a few anecdotes about Branham, Osborn talked about Kenyon. He said Kenyon “has given to the world the most wonderful, remarkable collection of books, next to the Bible, that exists.” He said Kenyon’s collection of books was his only Bible school. “I wasn’t fortunate enough to go to Bible school, so I read his books,” he said.

As for Bosworth, Osborn met with him at a Branham crusade, where Bosworth was teaching in the afternoon and evening services. Bosworth typically taught on divine healing to help prepare the audience for the healing services led by Branham. Osborn described Bosworth as “an old gentleman.” At that time, Osborn was only 25 and Bosworth was 75. Osborn recalled:

The thing that intrigued me, and impressed me about F.F. Bosworth … he preached a great sermon, for example, one day on confession. When he got all through with the sermon, everybody was thrilled. Everybody was convinced he made a great impact upon us. He chuckled in his lovely way, and said, “Now, you can get that from Brother Kenyon’s books. Here it is, I’ve just been preaching to you what Brother Kenyon wrote years ago.”

That simple acknowledgment by Bosworth is what moved Osborn. “I felt that was humility,” he said. “I felt that was credibility. It impressed me. He wasn’t claiming anything special. He was just passing on truth. He said, ‘I got it from him, you can get it from me.’”

Speaking further, Osborn said that in addition to having seen Jesus in a vision, he saw Jesus in a man when he saw Branham praying for the sick. “In Bosworth,” he said, “I saw Jesus in simplicity, in compassion, in love, in teaching, in powerful teaching.”

Osborn pointed to Luke 5:17, where it is stated, “It came to pass as Jesus was teaching, the power for the Lord was present to heal.” That expression of power is what Osborn saw in Bosworth. “As he (Bosworth) was teaching, hundreds of people were healed,” he said.

Like Bosworth, Osborn also witnessed miracles as he was teaching. In fact, he said, he had witnessed “great miracles” in almost 70 countries. Interestingly, he added, most of the miracles did not happen because of his personal prayers for individuals. Instead, they happened en masse. “For in all those years, I have practically never laid my hands on the sick,” he said. “The miracles have taken place as we taught the Word publicly to the people.”

Osborn apparently followed Bosworth's example in giving credit to whom it is due. Not only did he acknowledge Kenyon and other writers in books, but he did so in his preaching as well. For example, while speaking at a major word of faith convention in the 1980s, Osborn cited Kenyon's definition of "Righteousness." He defined it as the ability to stand in the presence of God without the sense of guilt, inferiority, or condemnation. After sharing the definition, Osborn said, "I got that from E.W. Kenyon."

Further Reading:

"F.F. Bosworth’s Endorsement of T.L. Osborn’s Most Famous Book: Letter of Support Appeared in Healing the Sick and Casting Out Devils." See here.

"F.F. Bosworth Mentioned in T.L. Osborn Biography: Book Recounts Origin of 'Mass Miracle' Concept." See here.

"T.L. Osborn's Mention of Billy Graham: Ideas Presented for Success in Ministry." See here.

"F.F. Bosworth Mentioned in Dr. Daniel C. King’s article, ‘Healing En Masse.’" See here.

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Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred

Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can be purchased here with a 25% discount. Use the discount code: BOSWORTH25.

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Want to know more
about F.F. Bosworth?

Follow the Bosworth Matters blog!

Visit here:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and @Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Did Bosworth Go Too Far?

Paul Rader and other Alliance leaders initially accused him of placing too much emphasis on divine healing

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Author, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer"
Copyright (c) 2020

#PaulRader
#FFBosworth
#BosworthMatters

Paul Rader
(1878 - 1938)

Photo credit: hymntime.com/tch

In the 1920s, a time when F.F. Bosworth saw unprecedented growth in his salvation-healing ministry, prominent leaders in the Christian and Missionary Alliance (C&MA) began to question certain aspects of his ministry. Alliance President Paul Rader voiced concern about the emphasis on healing, according to Dr. Paul L. King. In his book, Genuine Gold (Word & Spirit Press, 2006), King noted "some tension arose in the Alliance" after reports of dramatic healings in meetings held by Bosworth and his brother. King cited C&MA historian Lindsay Reynolds, who said Rader "felt that the Bosworths were making a dangerous mistake in giving healing the prominence they did." With this conviction, King wrote, "Rader discouraged Alliance churches in Canada from inviting them back."

Rader, however, was not alone with this view. King identified Alliance Home Secretary E.J. Richards as another critic of the Bosworth brothers. Richards warned Alliance members about the thrust of their ministry. Without actually naming the Bosworths, Richards cautioned that “a few individuals in our ranks” emphasized “the spectacular” while magnifying “certain phases of truth out of just proportion to the other part of our testimony.”

Details of how Rader and others came to believe Bosworth was in error are not known. Did Bosworth preach more about healing than he did salvation? Did he devote an unusual amount of time in his meetings to praying for the sick? Did he teach as if healing of the body was more important than healing of the soul?

Whatever it was that happened, the two of them apparently worked out their differences. It is possible that they simply came to an agreement or mutual understanding. Or they might have made a compromise in the interest of fellowship and the saving of souls. It is also possible that Bosworth might have modified, in some way, his method of ministry. King observed:

Less than two years later ... Rader’s concerns were evidently alleviated and their relationship was reconciled, as Rader welcomed the Bosworths warmly to his new church in Chicago. Rader continued to invite Bosworth to be a speaker at his Chicago Gospel Tabernacle through the end of the decade.

Was he guilty of being extreme?

Without evidence, one obviously cannot speak with certainty about the matter in question. However, there is still room for speculation that is guided by what is commonly known about Bosworth. Even though little to nothing is known about the tension that arose -- and what might have transpired in personal talks between Rader and Bosworth, an informed opinion, based on a review of Bosworth's life history, might offer insight into the situation.

Did Bosworth go too far? It seems unlikely given his history. For instance, Bosworth has been consistent in his belief that healing, while necessary, is not as important as the salvation of the soul. He taught that salvation includes healing of the body as well as healing of the soul, but he also taught that the promotion of healing can draw multitudes into the kingdom of God. In short, he believed that healing was a tool, God’s method of advertisement, to bring people to faith in Christ.

Bosworth’s position on this matter can be seen throughout his ministry. He wrote about it in his books. He mentioned it in his sermons. He also demonstrated this belief via actual ministry. His position on the role of healing can be seen in this excerpt from his classic, Christ the Healer:

If Christ and His apostles could not draw the multitudes without miracles, does He expect more from us? Instead of the “ministry of healing” diverting from the more important matter of salvation for the souls, we have seen more happy conversions in a single week than we ever saw in a whole year of evangelistic during the thirteen years before the Lord led us to preach this part of the Gospel in a bolder and more public way. As soon as our revivals get under way, hundreds nightly crowd forward to give their hearts and lives to God, and whole cities are put to talking about Jesus. Other evangelists who have visited our revivals are now proving this to be true in their own meetings.

Bosworth admitted in Christ the Healer that some people opposed his ministry of healing, but he maintained that he was simply following the instructions and examples in the Bible. “What is the matter?” he asked. “Is there anything wrong in obeying the Lord’s command to ‘make known His deeds among the people?’” Miraculous healings were so effective in Bosworth’s meetings they had an ecumenical impact on the community. Not infrequently the healings drew people from many different faith groups. “I have never seen anything that would so break down all the barriers, and bring the people from every quarter, as the manifestation of the Lord’s compassion in healing the sick,” Bosworth said. He also boasted of thousands of people coming to Christ in a single meeting.

During intense revival meetings in 1921 in Toronto, Canada, thousands of people attended the services, filling Massey Hall to capacity. Hundreds were turned away. Reynolds recounted the news as follows: “Day after day, newspapers printed long reports of the meetings, listing names and addresses of those claiming to have been healed at the meetings. At one service, a doctor from Brantford testified that one of his patients had been ‘absolutely cured of cancer of the breast.’”

Newspapers captured the drama of the meetings and reported on Bosworth’s preaching: “Evangelist Bosworth places the main emphasis on spiritual blessing, urging men to seek first the Kingdom of God and Christ as their Saviour, and then look to Him as the bearer of their infirmities and healer of their sicknesses.” Even the Alliance Weekly noted his balanced approach to ministry. The magazine commented: “As is known, Brother Bosworth emphasizes salvation and sanctification in their proper order, and hundreds are saved, in addition to those who are healed as a result of the prayer of faith.”

Why the opposition?

So, if the Bosworth brothers were not guilty of going too far, then what prompted Rader and others to accuse them of such? Perhaps it was simply a misunderstanding or the perception of things gone awry because of the excitement in the Bosworth meetings. Admittedly, some of the headlines for the healing testimonies were quite sensational. To some, no doubt, they were simply unbelievable or probably too good to be true. Even so, the reports of healing caught the attention of many. “Because of the numerous healings at Bosworth campaigns, the media usually featured this aspect of their ministry,” wrote Reynolds.

King, who is intimately familiar with C&MA history and charismatic movements, believes it is possible that Rader judged the meetings from a distance and based his opinion on secondhand sources. King presented his view in an email dated April 28, 2020:

From the information I have, I would venture to guess that Rader's tension with Bosworth was probably not from a personal encounter, but from other reports to Rader about Bosworth. Apparently, some in the Canadian Alliance group at the time were not fully "Alliance," not necessarily fully believing the Alliance positions on healing and the baptism in the Spirit, particularly R.V. Bingham, who eventually left the Alliance.

King suggested there also might have been “apparent Pentecostal excesses” that made people uncomfortable. He explained they “may have associated Bosworth with those excesses even though he had left the Assemblies of God for the Alliance.”

“John Salmon, the founder of the Alliance in Canada and VP of the Alliance for several years, had passed away,” King wrote, adding Salmon had been active in the Pentecostal movement. “Perhaps after his passing, the Canadian Alliance began to back off for a while, although in the mid-1920s, there was a resurgence of charismatic manifestations in the Canadian Alliance (in part stirred by Bosworth, and by Charles Price and T.J. McCrossan.”

King, who has written extensively about Alliance leaders, said he wondered if Rader’s ties to Moody Bible Institute might have also influenced him in some way. After all, he pointed out, Rader had been pastor of Moody Church in Chicago. That background initially might have made him “less open to the charismatic emphasis in the Alliance,” King explained.

There was also the issue of John Alexander Dowie, who had a history with A.B. Simpson and Bosworth. According to King, this history might have been another reason Alliance leaders had reservations about Bosworth’s ministry. King expressed this view as follows:


A.B. Simpson and early Alliance leaders had been concerned about keeping balance and had been concerned about healing crusades like those of John Alexander Dowie. Dowie had wanted Simpson to join him in healing crusades. Simpson told him no, saying that he had four wheels on his chariot (the Fourfold Gospel), not one. Dowie became more extreme and attacked Simpson verbally (Dowie was against all use of medicine; Simpson allowed it on occasions).

King mentioned an interesting incident that occurred when Simpson and Dowie were both speaking in Pittsburgh. Dowie had planned to criticize him, but he apparently “choked on a chicken bone at dinner and could not speak,” King said. “Someone told Simpson, and Simpson responded, ‘I left that man in God's hands a long time ago.’"

As for Bosworth, he “had come out of Dowie's Zion City ministry, and some may have negatively associated Bosworth with Dowie,” King said. At any rate, Rader and the Bosworths eventually became close. By the mid-1920s, they were ministering together. King surmised:

I expect that between his greater openness and seeing that Bosworth was not the wild Pentecostal that others may have portrayed him to be, and the fact that both Bosworth and Rader had a heart for evangelism, they became friends, along with Oswald J. Smith. In 1926, Rader preached for 3 months at Aimee Semple McPherson's Angeles Temple, when she had gone missing.

Conclusion

As has been shown, Bosworth was not the extremist that he was accused of being, and he did not go too far in his emphasis on divine healing. Contrary to what some had thought, he preached a message that was in line with Alliance teachings, and he stressed the need for salvation of the soul over the healing of the body. His balance in preaching the Gospel and leading people to faith in Christ was noted in newspapers and Christian periodicals.

It is commendable that he and Rader became close friends and fellow servants in the preaching of the Gospel. Their history presents important lessons in leadership. First, it shows the importance of personally engaging a person who has been accused of being in error. Instead of relying on hearsay and secondhand reports, it is necessary to meet with the accused. Second, their history is a reminder of the need for actual research into matters involving controversy, especially accusations against a brother or sister in Christ. After all, as the saying goes, there’s always two sides to a story. “The first one to speak sounds true until you hear the other side and they set the record straight.” (Proverbs 18:17, The Passion Translation) Third, this situation offers a model for ministries under fire. When Bosworth was criticized, he remained faithful. Instead of retaliating, he continued to do what he was called to do. Like Nehemiah, he was doing a great work, and he refused to stop (Nehemiah 6:3). He did not allow criticism or complaints to damper his enthusiasm for winning souls and praying for the sick.

Further reading

King, Paul L. Genuine Gold: The Cautiously Charismatic Story of the Early Christian and Missionary Alliance. Tulsa, OK: Word & Spirit Press, 2006.

Reynolds, Lindsay. Footprints: The Beginnings of The Christian & Missionary Alliance in Canada. Toronto, Canada: Christian & Missionary Alliance, 1982.

-----. Rebirth: The Redevelopment of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada, 1919-1983. Canada: Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada, 1992.


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Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred

Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can be purchased here with a 25% discount. Use the discount code: BOSWORTH25.


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Want to know more
about F.F. Bosworth?

Follow the Bosworth Matters blog!

Visit here:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and @Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters

Monday, May 4, 2020

My Book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind ‘Christ the Healer,’ is cited in ‘Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States’

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Author, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer"
Copyright (c) 2020

#FFBosworth
#BosworthMatters


(Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2016)

I was pleased to see my work on F.F. Bosworth cited in the Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2016). The book is edited by George Thomas Kurian and Mark A. Lamport. It has a Foreword by Martin E. Marty. IT apparently came out in 2016, but I just recently learned of the publication. My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind “Christ the Healer,” is mentioned under "References and Resources" (page 303) for the entry, “Bosworth, Fred Francis.” 

The Encyclopedia is part of a five-volume set. It has been described as “A marvelous new five-volume reference work...containing contributions from nearly 500 scholars, provides us with an 'Abbey to Zwemer' resource on people, denominations, and movements. This 2800-page publication...will serve ministers and students well for a decade or more.” -- Christianity Today

#BosworthMention

---------------------------

Reminder: "F.F. Bosworth History" is now on Twitter. Follow @bosworth_fred

Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can be purchased here with a 25% discount. Use the discount code (ALL CAPS): BOSWORTH25.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Want to know more
about F.F. Bosworth?

Follow the Bosworth Matters blog!

Visit here:

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and @Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters

84th commemoration of Rhythm Night Club fire slated for Saturday, April 27

Monroe Sago is pictured with the historical  marker that tells the story of the Rhythm  Night Club Fire. Monroe and his wife, Betty Monroe, ...