The Jack Miller Archive

Vision, Strategy & Direction of WHM

Jack Miller collection, St. Louis, Missouri.
See also Paul Miller interview:

P: And that by the way gave dad to a lifelong love hate relationship with renewal work of of World Harvest that continued.

P: Well he was always nervous because it wasn't on evangelism. #1:28:38.4#

P: Yes. The Sonship course was kind of became bigger than dad and it kind of made dad famous. Without that dad would have been.. #1:30:40.2#

P: Here here the the thing that the one thing I react to when and mom and dad said this wasn't true... #1:31:30.7#

P: Is that he wrote the course to help missionaries. I mean in their mind that was true and that's what we did. But from the very beginning I designed it as a gospel renewal course for the church because I thought if the church really got this I don't know if that makes any.. (inaudible). #1:31:45.2#

P: So I designed the thing from the very beginning to be a broadly renewal. Everyone now of course it works best with educated somewhat moralistic reformed people, or baptists. But I designed it from that study when I heard Luther's preface, which are part of it I disagree with now. #1:32:18.1#

P: Yeah I knew what justification was by that point. You know I'd been well schooled in reformed doctrine. But I sit just there was ways that Luther articulated it that and when I read it that it really I came home I still remember laying it on the kitchen table saying Jill if the church gets this it could really change things. So justification was a very it was more a course on justification than Sonship.

P: Well here what's inaccurate was why the Sonship course written to train missionaries; that's inaccurate. I wrote the course. I didn't write it for that reason. #1:33:46.1#

P: Some gave their individual lectures, they're not mutually exclusive ideas, it's just that moms spin on it is just not true. Dad didn't even know barely know I'd written the Sonship course until he thanked me for doing it in 1992.

Location: Presented By Paul Miller