Author, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind Christ the Healer
Copyright (c) 2018
On March 9, 1907, John Alexander Dowie, an important figure in the life history of F.F. Bosworth, died at his home, the Shiloh House, a few months before his 60th birthday. Dowie was a controversial Scottish preacher who found fame as a healing evangelist and pastor. He founded Zion City, Ill., and the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church. He suffered a debilitating stroke in 1906, and according to some reports, he never fully recovered.
It was around 1902 when
Bosworth and his family left Fitzgerald, Ga., and moved to Zion City, where he
sat under the ministry of Dowie. Soon after their arrival, Dowie hired him as a
band leader. In 1903, the band became so popular it reportedly drew capacity
crowds at 10 successive concerts in Madison Square Garden, New York.
Because of Dowie’s
emphasis on divine healing and his ministry of praying for the sick, the Zion
City community provided Bosworth with an environment that was apparently
charged with spiritual gifts and enthusiasm for miraculous healing. Bosworth,
of course, would go on to write the classic, Christ the Healer. Inspired by
Dowie -- and other healing ministries -- he would also grow into a famous
healing evangelist.
#FFBosworth #OnThisDay #ChristTheHealer
To learn more about F.F. Bosworth, visit here.
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