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eSchool Class List

 
 

Worship and Intercession 101

 

Intimacy with God 101

 

Forerunner Ministry 101

 

Worship and Intercession 201

 

Intimacy with God 201

 

Forerunner Ministry 201

 

The Eternal Glory of an Intercessor

Corey Russell

God created mankind out of His desire for a partner. When mankind fell from this glory, God sent His Son to intercede and reconcile God and man. Through Christ we have joined His eternal ministry of intercession. We are now “partakers of the heavenly calling” (Heb. 3:1) in this age and in the age to come, crying out to see justice released, Jesus return, and His government established in the earth.

This course focuses on ushering in revival through prayer, studying the lives of great biblical and historical intercessors and how they changed history through the power of prayer. The Church must understand the urgency of the hour and the great need for a people of prayer to emerge. We are called to equip believers in the privilege of praying for God’s will to be done on earth.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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A Life of Communion with God

Stephen Venable

Our hearts were fashioned to be truly satisfied by God alone, and, thus, throughout the ages men and women have been beset by an ardent desire to experience Him in a way that quenches the thirst of their souls. Yet in our day, the way into this profound relational encounter is both largely unknown and oft neglected. By considering the radical call of the gospel and the treasured teachings of figures from church history, this class will seek to illumine the ancient path that leads us into deep communion with Jesus in the inner man, where we taste of the love that passes all knowledge.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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The Acts of the Apostles

Wes Hall, Daniel Lim

Luke was inspired by the Holy Spirit to record this powerful and detailed narrative account of the life of the post-resurrected Christ and the fulfillment of the coming promise and paraclete (helper/comforter) on the day of Pentecost.

The book of Acts laid a critical foundation for Christology, pneumatology, eschatology, ecclesiology, missiology, and even soteriology for the Church of Jesus Christ. Acts also records the accounts of the powerful works of the Holy Spirit through His people in the Jewish community and various other nations to spread the gospel, to heal, to deliver, and to transform lives and communities.

It is amazing how, in one generation, many cities within the Roman Empire were turned upside down by the preaching and demonstration of the power of the gospel. This course continually challenges churches from every period of history to rediscover biblical and apostolic Christianity and uphold the standard of apostolic doctrine and practices.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Cultivating the Gifts of the Holy Spirit

Wes Hall, Ed Hackett, Stephen Beauchamp

This class describes the work of the Holy Spirit in the life of the believer and investigates the operation of the "sign" gifts of 1 Corinthians 12:8–10. You will gain understanding of the nature and purpose of these gifts and we will look at how they functioned in the life of Jesus, in the early church and throughout church history. The course will be heavily focused on learning how to move in the power of the Spirit with a developed biblical understanding of how to use the Holy Spirit's gifts in a ministry environment. You will receive specific training in how to move confidently in the gifts of the Holy Spirit.

Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio)
 
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Zechariah

Wes Hall

In this course, we offer a verse-by-verse study of the exciting and dramatic promises given to the nation of Israel through the prophet Zechariah. Only the book of Isaiah contains more prophecies than Zechariah about the coming messianic kingdom over which Jesus will rule and reign for one thousand years. A study of this book will not only give us significant understanding about God’s end-time plan for Israel and the Church, but will also provoke and inspire our hearts to cry, “Come, Lord Jesus!”
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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The Excellencies of Christ

Allen Hood

The Father has a strategy to mature the Church, to bring her into fullness, and to sustain her at the end of the age: He will unfold the beauty of His Son in an unprecedented way before the second coming. This course delves into the great mystery of the God-man. The student will explore the wonder of Christ’s pre-existence, incarnation, life, death, resurrection, ascension, and return. We will ponder what causes elders to bow, angels to sing, and humans to weep.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Song of Songs

Mike Bickle

Nothing empowers the human heart like the revelation of God's affection for us. Though this love is seen throughout the Bible, the Song of Songs unveils this divine romance unlike any other book. The Song of Songs is an eight-chapter love song revealing the passionate desire of God for His Bride. Song of Songs is Mike Bickle's most popular teaching series. Mike has devoted twenty years of prayerful study and research covering each line of this divine love song. During the winter of 2007 he taught this completely revised and updated course. Packed with new material and fresh insight, this is Mike's most comprehensive and powerful presentation to date.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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The Existence and Attributes of God

Stuart Greaves

The goal of this class is to assist in expanding our mental view and heart experience of God. A. W. Tozer exhorted, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” Jesus, in His high priestly prayer to the Father, prayed, “And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God.” This class will explore the perfections of God as they are revealed in the Holy Scriptures, that the knowledge of God might escort us to deeper levels of faith, hope, and love.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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The Way of Intimacy

Matt and Dana Candler

The Bride of Christ is facing the most dramatic time frame of human history. How is the human heart prepared to remain steadfast in love in the world’s darkest night? As forerunners, we need to prepare both ourselves and others. We want to be voices that  bring the message of eternal beauty and transcendent comfort to fainting hearts. To cultivate such love and such voices, we must dwell continually within the great chambers of prayer and fasting. In this course, we explore the benefits and the perils of the fasted lifestyle with line-upon-line detail. We will consider the many graces He has given us as preparation to be protected in the embrace of our Bridegroom God in the Day of Judgment.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Christology II*

Stephen Venable

Through rigorous exploration of the biblical teaching concerning the person and work of Christ, this course seeks to inform the mind and inflame the heart with love. In view of the coming eschatological delusion, it is imperative that believers be established in the truths regarding the Son of God.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
*While not required, Excellencies of Christ is a recommended precursor to this class.
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The Omega Course

Mike Bickle

A time is coming when life as we know it will be forever changed. The Bible describes it as a time of great trouble and gives us much information on how to survive and even thrive in this time. The question is not one of provision—it is one of preparation. The Omega Course is designed to help churches, small groups, and individuals prepare their hearts for the days to come. In these eight sessions, Mike Bickle gives a broad overview of the end times, describing the people, places, and events that matter most at the end of the age. The Omega Course is more than information; it's about preparing the worldwide Church for what the Bible promises will be her most glorious hour.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Daniel

Allen Hood

Daniel is one of the most prophetically comprehensive and relevant books in the Bible for preparing our hearts for the end of the age. No other Old Testament book equals Daniel in its scope of prophetic insight for understanding the end times. This course will take you through the book of Daniel as you explore both the life and the visions of this prophet and intercessor. You will discover the principles of how the heart is sustained in crisis, as well as understanding the basic framework for eschatology.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Biblical Foundations of Eschatology: Introduction to the End Times

David Sliker

The end times. It's a subject many people don't know how to approach. The questions in our hearts seem endless. Should we be afraid of the future? Will Christians face tribulation in the end times?  Do we have a role as part of the Church in the end times?  How do we know when the end times will come? Are the end times coming soon? How can we understand what the Bible says about the end times?

There are answers, and the Bible is clearer than we often think. Biblical Foundations of Eschatology addresses many of the common questions about the end times and gives easy-to-understand explanations. It also provides guidance on how we can study, prepare for, and come to love God's plan for the end of the age. Best of all, it will stir a desire in you to learn more, to go on your own journey of discovery into what God's heart is for every person in the end times and in the eternal age to come.  If you've ever wanted to understand end-time events and what your role is in the final hours of history, this course will serve as an excellent resource.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Old Testament Survey

David Sliker

This class is an overview of Genesis to Malachi, examining the heart of God for Israel and the nations, forerunner themes of intimacy and judgment, and the journey of a people through the unfolding drama of the first 4,000 years of human history. This course will provide context and historical background for the themes that are emerging at the end of the age.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Biblical Theology of Israel

Wes Hall

This class is designed to equip the student with a biblical understanding of Israel’s place in the plan of God. Beginning at God’s covenant with Abraham, we will develop a theology of Israel that proves God’s continuing faithfulness to this “first-born” nation throughout history. Subjects covered include the election of Israel; God’s covenants with Israel; Israel and the time of Jacob’s trouble; and the future glory of the kingdom. This course is an essential foundation for anyone seeking to understand the unique place of Israel in God's plan throughout history and as we approach the end times.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Minor Prophets

David Sliker

This course explores major Old Testament themes as they relate to the era of the prophetic ministry of Israel’s northern and southern kingdoms and the surrounding nations. The historical context will be examined, along with the eschatological implications of God’s heart for Israel and for the nations of the earth.
 
Credit | Non-credit (Video & Audio) | Group Study
 
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Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not a straw whether they be clergymen or laymen; such alone will shake the gates of hell and set up the kingdom of heaven on earth. God does nothing but in answer to prayer.
 
—John Wesley
It seems that God has indeed designed that the inspired Word of the Bible become uniquely powerful by passing through a Spirit-filled person on the way to make a dead heart live.
 
—John Piper
You know the value of prayer: it is precious beyond all price. Never, never neglect it.
 
—Sir Thomas Buxton
Prayer is the first thing, the second thing, the third thing necessary to a minister. Pray, then, my dear brother: pray, pray, pray.
 
—Edward Payson
The act of praying is the very highest energy of which the human mind is capable; praying, that is, with the total concentration of the faculties. The great mass of worldly men and of learned men are absolutely incapable of prayer.
 
—Samuel Taylor Coleridge
I urge upon you . . .  a nearer communion with Christ, and a growing communion. There are curtains to be drawn aside in Christ that we never saw, and new foldings of love in Him. I despair that ever I shall win to the far end of that love, there are so many plies in it. Therefore, dig deep; and sweat, and labor, and take pains for Him; and set by as much time in the day for Him as you can. He will be won with labor.
 
—Samuel Rutherford
What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.
 
—A. W. Tozer
The man who comes to a right belief about God is relieved of ten thousand temporal problems…
 
—A. W. Tozer
He is looking for voluntary lovers: people who long to know Him more than anything else; people who will live lifestyles of prayer, fasting and meditation on the Word of God because they hunger to know a holy God; people who will seek the knowledge of God because they want to be transformed and invited into the deep things of God’s heart.
 
—Corey Russell
If the anointing which we bear comes not from the Lord of hosts, we are deceivers, since only in prayer can we obtain it.
 
—Rev. Charles H. Spurgeon
Speak for eternity. Above all things, cultivate your own spirit. A word spoken by you when your conscience is clear and your heart full of God’s Spirit is worth ten thousand words spoken in unbelief and sin. Remember that God, and not man, must have the glory.
 
—Robert Murray McCheyne
All the minister’s efforts will be vanity or worse than vanity if he have not unction. Unction must come down from heaven and spread a savor and feeling and relish over his ministry; and among the other means of qualifying himself for his office, the Bible must hold the first place, and the last also must be given to the Word of God and prayer.
 
—Richard Cecil
God wants men on the field who can pray. There are too many preachers now and too few pray-ers.
 
—J. Hudson Taylor
Satan dreads nothing but prayer. . . . The Church that lost its Christ was full of good works. Activities are multiplied that meditation may be ousted, and organizations are increased that prayer may have no chance. Souls may be lost in good works, as surely as in evil ways. The one concern of the devil is to keep the saints from praying. He fears nothing from prayerless studies, prayerless work, and prayerless religion. He laughs at our toil, mocks at our wisdom, but trembles when we pray.
 
—Samuel Chadwick
The Holy Spirit will give to the praying saint the brightness of an immortal hope, the music of a deathless song, in His baptism and communion with the heart, He will give sweeter and more enlarged visions of heaven until the taste for other things will pall, and other visions will grow dim and distant. He will put notes of other worlds in human hearts until all earth’s music is discord and songless.
 
—Rev. E. M. Bounds
A certain preacher whose sermons converted many souls received a revelation from God that it was not his sermons or works by all means but the prayers of an illiterate lay brother who sat on the pulpit steps pleading for the success of the sermon. It may be in the all-revealing day so with us. We may believe after laboring long and wearily that all honor belongs to another builder whose prayers were gold, silver, and precious stones, while our sermonizings being apart from prayer are but hay and stubble.
 
—Rev. Charles H. Spurgeon
Fletcher of Madeley, a great teacher of a century and a half ago, used to lecture to the young theological students. He was one of the fellow-workers with Wesley and a man of most saintly character. When he had lectured on one of the great topics of the Word of God, such as the Fullness of God’s Holy Spirit or on the power and blessing that He meant His people to have, he would close the lecture and say, “That is the theory; now will those who want the practice come along up to my room!” And again and again they closed their books and went away to his room, where the hour’s theory would be followed by one or two hours of prayer.
 
—Rev. Hubert Brooke
The prayer of faith is the only power in the universe to which the great Jehovah yields. Prayer is the sovereign remedy.
 
—Robert Hall
During the great Welsh Revival a minister was said to be very successful in winning souls by one sermon that he preached—hundreds were converted. Far away in a valley news reached a brother minister of the marvelous success of this sermon. He desired to find out the secret of the man’s great success.—He walked the long way, and came to the minister’s poor cottage, and the first thing he said was: “Brother, where did you get that sermon?” He was taken into a poorly furnished room and pointed to a spot where the carpet was worn threadbare, near a window that looked out upon the everlasting hills and solemn mountains and said, “Brother, there is where I got that sermon. My heart was heavy for men. One night I knelt there—and cried for power as I never preached before. The hours passed until midnight struck, and the stars looked down on a sleeping world, but the answer came not. I prayed on until I saw a faint streak of grey shoot up, then it was silver—silver became purple and gold. Then the sermon came and the power came and men fell under the influence of the Holy Spirit.”
 
—G. H. Morgan
Study universal holiness of life. Your whole usefulness depends on this, for your sermons last but an hour or two; your life preaches all the week. If Satan can only make a covetous minister a lover of praise, of pleasure, of good eating, he has ruined your ministry. Give yourself to prayer, and get your texts, your thoughts, your words from God. Luther spent his best three hours in prayer.
 
—Robert Murray McCheyne