
Part of Series
A jam-packed edition of WhatCulture Wrestling magazine featuring a look back at the 50 Best Moments Of The WWE Attitude Era. - Why John Cena Is Hollywood’s Next The Rock - Disjointed WWE Raw Increases Reliance On Part-Timers - How WWE Should Have Booked… A StarrCade Card - Crimes Against Wrestling - Vince Russo, Part 2 - Essential Viewing - Kenta Kobashi Vs. Mitsuharu Misawa - Wrestling Trashing Titles - Strange Case Of... Herb Abrams - Wrestling Games Revisited - SmackDown 2: Know Your Role - The Brawl For All - Real Fighting In The Fake World Of Pro Wrestling - Working Stiff - Wrestling Network Quirks - The Death Of SmackDown - Stone Cold Steve Austin - Bio - December To 10 Matches That Defy The Christmas Curse - Hulkster In Heaven - 10 ‘Next Big Things’ In Wrestling That Totally Flopped
Authors

Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name. . Murray was Born in Cape Town, South Africa, Murray became a noted missionary leader. His father was a Scottish Presbyterian serving the Dutch Reformed Church of South Africa, and his mother had connections with both French Huguenots and German Lutherans. This background to some extent explains his ecumenical spirit. He was educated at Aberdeen University, Scotland, and at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. After ordination in 1848 he served pastorates at Bloemfontein, Worcester, Cape Town, and Wellington. He helped to found what are now the University College of the Orange Free State and the Stellenbosch Seminary He served as Moderator of the Cape Synod of the Dutch Reformed Church and was president of both the YMCA (1865) and the South Africa General Mission (1888-1917), now the Africa Evangelical Fellowship. He was one of the chief promoters of the call to missions in South Africa. This led to the Dutch Reformed Church missions to blacks in the Transvaal and Malawi. Apart from his evangelistic tours in South Africa, he spoke at the Keswick and Northfield Conventions in 1895, making a great impression. upon his British and American audiences. For his contribution to world missions he was given an honorary doctorate by the universities of Aberdeen (1898) and Cape of Good Hope(1907). Murray is best known today for his devotional writings, which place great emphasis on the need for a rich, personal devotional life. Many of his 240 publications explain in how he saw this devotion and its outworking in the life of the Christian. Several of his books have become devotional classics. Among these are Abide in Christ, Absolute Surrender, With Christ in the School of Prayer, The Spirit of Christ and Waiting on God.