2000 YEARS OF CHRIST'S POWER
Part Two: The Middle Ages
By N. R. Needham
This book was born out of the author's deep conviction that today's Christians can benefit enormously from learning what God has done in the past. The mighty Acts. In every century since the first, the Almighty has been at work and believers can trace his footsteps by studying the way that Christians of a previous generation faced the challenges that confronted them.
It is
intended that this will be the second in a series of four volumes, which will cover the History of the
Church from the earliest days up till modern times. Pastors and preachers will undoubtedly gain much from
this series, and those who already have an interest in Church History will find the four books useful
additions to their library. Nevertheless, the series is written in a style that will appeal to their
library. Nevertheless, the series is written in a style that will appeal to the non-specialist and any
modern Christian will find it challenging and stimulating to be introduced to men and women who loved and
served the same Savior that he loves and serves. This volume deals with the Middle Ages, and includes the
stories of great missionaries such as Boniface and the brothers Cyril and Methodius, outstanding
theologians like Anselm of Canterbury and Gregory Palamas, spiritual giants like Simeon the New
Theologian and Bernard of Clairvaux, and 'reformers before the Reformation' like John Wyclif and John
Huss.
Nick Needham is a Londoner by birth and upbringing. He studied theology at
New College, Edinburgh University, where he specialized in Church History. He
also taught a course at New College on the life and work of the Swiss Reformer
Ulrich Zwingli, at the same time completing his PhD thesis on the
nineteenth-century Scottish theologian, Thomas Erskine of Linlathen. He then
taught Systematic Theology at the Scottish Baptist College in Glasgow for
several years before spending a semester in Nigeria at the Samuel Bill
Theological College, where he taught Church History. After a period as assistant
pastor in a church in North London, he moved to the Highland Theological
College, Dingwall, Scotland, where he teaches Church History.
