F. B. Meyer

F. B. Meyer

Emotions are fickle. Feelings are like waves; they come and go. Frederick Brotherton (F. B.) Meyer (1847-1929) made popular the slogan, “Fact! Faith! Feeling!” in his preaching and writing. The point of the motto is the order. First, the facts about Christ. Second,...
F. B. Meyer

Anne Hawks

Her pastor saw real talent in her poetry. Robert Lowry, pastor of Hanson Place Baptist Church in Brooklyn, New York urged Anne Hawks (1836-1918) to try her hand at writing hymns. When Anne sent Robert a copy of her simple five-stanza hymn, he recognized its potential....
F. B. Meyer

Robert Aitken

The Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC has more than six hundred Bibles in its collection. One Bible on display is a rare 1872 Aitken’s Bible, sometimes called the Congress Bible. Less than thirty copies are still in existence. Although Robert Aitken’s...
F. B. Meyer

William Aitken

“Chronological snobbery” was a term coined by Owen Barfield in the 1920s and made popular in the writings of C.S. Lewis in the 1950s. The phrase communicates our modern prediction to regard the past as intrinsically inferior to the present. New is better...
F. B. Meyer

Jeremiah Rankin

It’s hard to say goodbye. You may recall the immortal words Juliet spoke to Romeo, “Parting is such sweet sorrow.” Or consider the endearing line from Winnie the Pooh, “How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.” Jeremiah Rankin (1828-1904)...