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| education = [[Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary]]
| education = [[Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary]]
| occupation = Founder/Director, Missions Coordinator, [[Pastor]]
| occupation = Founder/Director, Missions Coordinator, [[Pastor]]
| religion = [[Christian]] ([[Southern Baptist, Reformed]])
| religion = [[Christian]] ([[Southern Baptist]], [[Reformed]])
| spouse = Charo Washer
| spouse = Charo Washer
| nationality = American}}
| nationality = American}}

Revision as of 13:21, 19 March 2014

Paul David Washer
NationalityAmerican
EducationSouthwestern Baptist Theological Seminary
Occupation(s)Founder/Director, Missions Coordinator, Pastor
SpouseCharo Washer

Paul David Washer (born 1961) is the Founder/Director & Missions Coordinator of HeartCry Missionary Society[1] which supports indigenous missionary work.[2] He is also a Southern Baptist itinerant preacher. Washer's sermons tend to have an evangelistic focus on the gospel and the doctrine of the assurance of salvation and predestination, and he frequently speaks against practices such as the sinner's prayer, and a focus on numerical church growth.

Biography

Washer says he had a born again experience while studying to become an oil and gas lawyer at the University of Texas. Upon graduation, he attended Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and achieved a Master of Divinity degree. He moved to Peru where he became a missionary proclaiming the gospel for 10 years, after which time he returned to the United States. Washer resides in Radford, VA,[3] where he lives with his wife and three children.

Viewpoint

He believes that no one can be saved unless repentance from and a turning away from sin is actually apparent as a result of their profession of faith, thereby testifying to the new nature that a Christian receives upon conversion. He defines a Christian as one who continues to grow in repentance in addition to placing their trust in Christ. Although Washer admits that no repentance is perfect, he affirms that a genuinely born-again believer will continue to bear fruit of repentance, holiness, and love for God until they are no longer able to do so. He became convinced that easy-believism permeated the world and that those who had said a prayer or believed in Jesus without walking in step with what the Bible teaches about "Abiding in Christ" (John 15) and being obedient, were genuinely at risk of not having been actually converted. He then decided to take this belief to others.

Influences

Washer cites Thomas Watson, John Flavel, R.C. Sproul, John F. MacArthur, George Muller, John Piper, Jonathan Edwards, George Whitefield, Robert Murray M'Cheyne, Charles Spurgeon, Leonard Ravenhill, John Wesley, AW Tozer and Martyn Lloyd-Jones among others, as influences.[4] There are several videos of him preaching at Tim Conway’s Grace Community Church of San Antonio Texas, and he frequently appears on Christian radio to discuss how people are saved.[5]In his 2002 sermon "Modern American Christianity,[6]" he paraphrases a quote from Richard Baxter: “I’ll preach as a dying man to dying men... and I’ll preach as though I will never preach again.”

Books

  • Washer, Paul (2004). The One True God. HeartCry Missionary Society. ISBN 978-0-9770234-0-0.
  • ——— (2009). Truth About Man. Granted Ministries Press. ISBN 978-0-9817321-1-4.
  • ——— (2012). The Gospel's Power and Message. Recovering the Gospel. Reformation Heritage Books. ISBN 978-1-60178-195-6.[7][8]

References

  1. ^ HeartCry Missionary Society.
  2. ^ "Staff", About us, HeartCry Missionary Society.
  3. ^ Paul Washer (account), Twitter.
  4. ^ Washer, Paul (2008). The True Gospel (TV Broadcast). Waukesha Expo Center: VCY America.
  5. ^ Washer, Paul (2009). The True Gospel (Radio Broadcast). Milwaukee, WI: Crosstalk America.
  6. ^ Washer, Paul (2002), "Modern American Christianity", You tube (video) (sermon), Google
  7. ^ Page before inside title lists two other books in the series; the preface is a "Series Preface"; and the last page in the book is an advertisement for the forthcoming books.
  8. ^ The Gospel's Power and Message, Heritage Books.

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