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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Helen City Motto: “Georgia Alpine village” Location in White County and the state of Georgia Coordinates: 34°42′9″N 83°43′39″WCoordinates: 34°42′9″N 83°43′39″W Country United States State Georgia County White Area  • Total 2.1 sq mi (5.5 km2)  • Land 2.1 sq mi (5.5 km2)  • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2) Elevation 1,447 ft (441 m) Population (2010)  • Total 510…
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thunderlane109 · 7 years ago
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ward McKendree Bounds (August 15, 1835 – August 24, 1913) prominently known as E.M. Bounds, was an American author, attorney, and member of the Methodist Episcopal Church South clergy. He is known for writing 11 books, nine of which focused on the subject of prayer. Only two of Bounds’ books were published before he died. After his death, Rev. Claudius (Claude) Lysias Chilton, Jr., grandson of William Parish Chilton and admirer of Bounds, worked on preserving and preparing Bounds’ collection of manuscripts for publication. By 1921, more editorial work was being done by Rev. Homer W. Hodge.
Contents
1 Early life
2 Writing background
3 Published works
4 Notes
5 References
6 Further reading
7 External links
Early life
Edward McKendree Bounds was born on August 15, 1835, in Shelbyville, Missouri. He is the son of Thomas Jefferson and Hester A. (née Purnell) Bounds.[1] In the preface to E.M. Bounds on Prayer, published by Hendrickson Christian Classics Series over 90 years after Bounds’ death, it is surmised that young Edward was named after the evangelist, William McKendree, who planted churches in western Missouri and served as the fourth bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.[1] He was the fifth child, in a family of three sons and three daughters.[1]
Thomas Jefferson Bounds was one of the original settlers of Shelby County. Prior to organizing the County, Thomas Bounds served as the first Justice of the Peace.[2] In April 1835, he was named County Clerk, followed by an appointment to serve as the County Commissioner in December 1835.[2] In 1836, he began holding circuit court in his home, during the third term each year.[2] In his capacity as County Commissioner, he platted the town into blocks and lots for new settlers.[2] In 1840, he advanced the building of the First Methodist Church. In 1849, Thomas contracted tuberculosis and died.[3][4]
After his father’s death, 14-year-old Bounds joined several other relatives in a trek to Mesquite Canyon in California, following the discovery of gold in the area. After four unsuccessful years, they returned to Missouri. Bounds studied law in Hannibal, Missouri, after which, at age 19, he became the youngest practicing lawyer in the state of Missouri.[4] Although apprenticed as an attorney, Bounds felt called to Christian ministry in his early twenties during the Third Great Awakening. Following a brush arbor revival meeting led by Evangelist Smith Thomas, he closed his law office and moved to Palmyra, Missouri to enroll in the Centenary Seminary. Two years later, in 1859 at the age of 24, he was ordained by his denomination and was named pastor of the nearby Monticello, Missouri Methodist Church.[4]
Marriage and children
Bounds’ first marriage was to Emma (Emmie) Elizabeth Barnett from Washington, Georgia on September 19, 1876. They had two daughters, Celeste and Corneille, and a son, Edward. Emmie died on February 18, 1886.
Twenty months later, Edward married Emmie’s cousin, Harriet (Hattie) Elizabeth Barnett in 1887. To them were born three sons (Samuel, Charles, and Osborne) and three daughters (Elizabeth, Mary, and Emmie). His son Edward, by his first wife, died at the age of six, and his son Charles, by his second wife, died eight days after his first birthday.[3]
Military service
E.M. Bounds did not support slavery. But, because he was a pastor at a congregation in the recently formed Methodist Episcopal Church South, his name was included in a list of 250 names who were to take an oath of allegiance and post a $500 bond. Edward saw no reason for a U.S. Citizen to take such an oath, he was morally opposed to the Union raising funds in this way, and he didn’t have the $500.[4] Bounds and the others on the list were arrested in 1861 by Union troops, and Bounds was charged as a Confederate sympathizer. He was held with other non-combatants in a Federal prison in St. Louis for a year and a half. He was then transferred to Memphis and released in a prisoner exchange between the Union and the Confederacy.[3]
He became a chaplain in the Confederate States Army (3rd Missouri Infantry CSA).[5] During the Second Battle of Franklin, Bounds suffered a severe forehead injury from a Union saber, and he was taken prisoner. On June 28, 1865, Bounds was among Confederate prisoners who were released upon the taking of an oath of loyalty to the United States.
Pastoral service
Upon his release as a prisoner of the Union Army, he felt compelled to return to war-torn Franklin and help rebuild it spiritually, and he became the pastor of the Franklin Methodist Episcopal Church, South. His primary method was to establish weekly prayer sessions that sometimes lasted several hours. Bounds was regionally celebrated for leading spiritual revival in Franklin and eventually began an itinerant preaching ministry throughout the country.
After serving several important churches in St. Louis and other places, south, he became Editor of the St. Louis Christian Advocate for eight years and, later, Associate Editor of The Nashville Christian Advocate for four years. The trial of his faith came to him while in Nashville, and he quietly retired to his home without asking even a pension. His principal work in Washington, Georgia (his home) was rising at 4 am and praying until 7 am. He filled a few engagements as an evangelist during the eighteen years of his lifework. “While on speaking engagements, he would not neglect his early morning time in prayer, and cared nothing for the protests of the other occupants of his room at being awakened so early. No man could have made more melting appeals for lost souls and backslidden ministers than did Bounds. Tears ran down his face as he pleaded for us all in that room.”[6]
According to people who were constantly with him, in prayer and preaching, for eight years “Not a foolish word did we ever hear him utter. He was one of the most intense eagles of God that ever penetrated the spiritual ether. He could not brook delay in rising, or being late for dinner. He would go with me to street meetings often in Brooklyn and listen to the preaching and sing with us those beautiful songs of Wesley and Watts. He often reprimanded me for asking the unconverted to sing of Heaven. Said he: ‘They have no heart to sing, they do not know God, and God does not hear them. Quit asking sinners to sing the songs of Zion and the Lamb.'”
Writing background
Only two of Bounds’ books were published before he died. After his death, Rev. Claudius (Claude) Lysias Chilton, Jr., grandson of William Parish Chilton and admirer of Bounds, worked on preserving and preparing Bounds’ collection of manuscripts for publication. By 1921, more editorial work was being done by Rev. Homer W. Hodge.
Chilton said of Bounds’ books, “These books are unfailing wells for a lifetime of spiritual water-drawing. They are hidden treasures, wrought in the darkness of dawn and the heat of the noon, on the anvil of experience,and beaten into wondrous form by the mighty stroke of the divine. They are living voices whereby he, being dead, yet speaketh!”[7]
Published works
Power Through Prayer (e-text)
Prayer and Praying Men (e-text) (online book)
Purpose in Prayer (e-text)
The Essentials of Prayer (e-text) (online book)
The Necessity of Prayer (e-text) (online book)
The Possibilities of Prayer (e-text)
The Reality of Prayer (e-text)
The Weapon of Prayer (e-text)
Preacher and Prayer (Internet Archive) (online book)
Satan: His Personality, Power and Overthrow (online book)
Heaven: A Place – A City – A Home (online book)
The Ineffable Glory: Thoughts on the Resurrection (online book)
The Collected Works of E. M. Bounds
Notes
  Bounds on Prayer 2006, pages viii–xiv
“The General History of Shelby County, Missouri” (PDF). Shelby.mogenweb.org. 1911. Retrieved 2013-06-08.
Complete Works 2000, page 9–10
Failed Ambition 2004, pages 85–87
“3rd Missouri Infantry CSA”. Missouridivision-scv.org. Retrieved 2013-06-08.
Heaven 1921, pages 5–6
  Necessity 2009, foreword
References
Bounds, E.M. (2106). Prayer Warrior Bootcamp, Targeted Communications, 318 pages. ISBN 978-0991312634
Bounds, E.M. (2006). E.M. Bounds on Prayer, Hendrickson Christian Classics Series, 267 pages. ISBN 978-1598560527
Bounds, E.M. (2000). The Complete Works of E.M. Bounds on Prayer, Prince Press, 568 pages. ISBN 978-1565635838
Jewett, Tom (2004). Failed Ambition: The Civil War Journals & Letters of Cavalryman Homer Harris, 300 pages. ISBN 978-1438240879
Bounds, E.M.; and Homer W. Hodges (1921). Heaven, a Place, A City, A Home, Baker Books, 151 pages. ISBN 978-0801006487
Bounds, E.M., (foreword by Claude Chilton). The Necessity of Prayer, 84 pages. ISBN 978-0585035987
Further reading
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Edward McKendree Bounds
King, Darrel D. “E.M. Bounds (Men of Faith)”, Bethany House, 1998. (ISBN 0-764-22009-8)
Dorsett, Lyle W. “E. M. Bounds: Man of Prayer”, Zondervan (September 1991) (ISBN 0310539315)
External links
Works by or about Edward McKendree Bounds at Internet Archive
Works by Edward McKendree Bounds at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Authority control
WorldCat Identities
VIAF: 57140210
LCCN: n85093288
ISNI: 0000 0001 1214 0412
NDL: 00433991
IATH: w6z91zdz
Categories:
American Methodist clergy
Christian writers
1835 births
1913 deaths
Confederate States Army chaplains
American Civil War prisoners of war
Methodist writers
American religious writers
Editors of Christian publications
Methodist evangelists
American evangelists
American print editors
Methodist chaplains
American military chaplains
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This page was last edited on 17 August 2017, at 18:46.
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    ward McKendree Bounds (August 15, 1835 – August 24, 1913) prominently known as E.M. Bounds, was an…
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thunderlane109 · 7 years ago
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Prayer Foundation Prayer God’s Word FYI Monks Features Books Movies     “Edward McKendree Bounds (1835-1913), Methodist minister and devotional writer, born in Shelby County, Missouri. Studied law and was admitted to the bar at twenty-one years. After practicing law for three years, began preaching for the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. At the time of his pastorate at Brunswick, Misouri, war…
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thunderlane109 · 7 years ago
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Prayer Foundation Prayer God’s Word FYI Monks Features Books Movies     Worship Service of The Prayer Foundation ™ Knights of Prayer Monks ™: The Liturgy of Monk Preston “In ainm an Athar, agus a Mhic, agus an Spioraid Naomh.”  (“In the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.” -in Gaelic).   Interdenominational, Evangelical Historical, Liturgical     About this Service:  …
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St Paricks Breastplate
Prayer Foundation Prayer God’s Word FYI Monks Features Books Movies Saint Patrick‘s “Breastplate” Prayer “…and having on the breastplate of righteousness;”     -Ephesians 6:14 Not our righteousness; Christ’s.  Prayer Upon Arising.  Psalm 5 may added. I bind unto myself today The strong Name of the Trinity, By invocation of the same, The Three in One and One in Three. I bind this day to me for…
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E M Bounds Theology portal of wikipedia.org
E M Bounds Theology portal of wikipedia.org
http://staticxx.facebook.com/connect/xd_arbiter/r/Z2duorNoYeF.js?version=42#channel=f24eacd31e67cfe&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thywordistrue.comhttps://staticxx.facebook.com/connect/xd_arbiter/r/Z2duorNoYeF.js?version=42#channel=f24eacd31e67cfe&origin=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.thywordistrue.com Strengthen your faith in God’s word Bible Articles Store Apps | Help About Apparent Contradictions Login | Register…
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PORTFOLIO RJL
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Art and Busness Magazine
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Home/ Bio/ Blog/ Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries/ FBI K-9s/ Galleries/ Events/ Contact Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries by Jen J. Danna with Ann Vanderlaan Massachusetts State Police Trooper Leigh Abbott is a homicide detective who goes to the wall to find justice for her victims. But when confronted with single bone as the only evidence of a victim’s…
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thunderlane109 · 7 years ago
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Home/ Bio/ Blog/ Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries/ FBI K-9s/ Galleries/ Events/ Contact Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries Abbott and Lowell Forensic Mysteries by Jen J. Danna with Ann Vanderlaan Massachusetts State Police Trooper Leigh Abbott is a homicide detective who goes to the wall to find justice for her victims. But when confronted with single bone as the only evidence of a victim’s…
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Simple Sketches For Beginners 10 Star Wars Bloopers All Of Us Missed Again 10 Biggest Babes Of The 90s 25 Unbelievable Real-Life Cartoon Lookalikes How To Draw Mickey Mouse Dog Sketches How to Draw Eyes in 7 Easy Steps : Free Art Tutorial + Infographic Dog Sketches Rose Sketch Tutorial: Botanical drawing with pencil and watercolor Weekly: Doodles (and tuts): August 2012 95% Of Americans Won’t See…
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Help get your blog off to a good start
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https://s1.wp.com/_static/??- eJImagine your ship has just come incan you ask for moreyes my dear much more Then you have whatever you want.  just ask God for moreHE LOVES YOU CHILD IT SAYS THIS IN HIS WORD!                     yVyzEOgCAMAMAPiRXjAIPxLYINKWptoOj33dy9/eAREy9WZIWzGTlaIq6gD6liMeFY4x6obEYIgfHGgrwRpz7XDv5c+d5yznYanPfOjja/fEYvZQ==
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Keyboard Shortcuts Keyboard shortcuts are available for common actions and site navigation. View Keyboard Shortcuts Dismiss this message Skip to content Twitter Home Home Home, current page. New Tweets available. Moments Moments Moments, current page. Notifications Notifications Notifications, current page. 0 Messages Search query Search Twitter Recent searches Clear All Remove Saved searches…
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Keyboard Shortcuts Keyboard shortcuts are available for common actions and site navigation. View Keyboard Shortcuts Dismiss this message Skip to content Twitter Home Home Home, current page. New Tweets available. Moments Moments Moments, current page. Notifications Notifications Notifications, current page. 0 Messages Search query Search Twitter Recent searches Clear All Remove Saved searches…
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