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Tullian Tchividjian to headline Reformation500 lecture
Best-selling author, pastor puts spotlight on Luther鈥檚 legacy
Acclaimed author, pastor, and lecturer Tullian Tchividjian will be the featured speaker at SA国际传媒鈥檚 fourth annual speaker series. The event will be held at 7 P.M. CST, March 19, in Werner Auditorium on the Seminary campus.
Serving at present as senior pastor at Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Tchividjian (pronounced cha-vi-jin) will offer his perspective on the significance of the Reformation for the current religious landscape of Christianity in the United States.
As Tchividjian examines the legacy of the theology of the Reformation, he brings his own legacy of American Christianity and ministry. He is the grandson of famed evangelist Billy Graham, a contributing editor to Leadership Journal, and founder of , a resource ministry that seeks to 鈥渃onnect God鈥檚 inexhaustible grace to an exhausted world.鈥
Tchividjian is the author of several books and his accolades include Christianity Today鈥檚 book of the year in 2011 for . That book and , were finalists for the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) Books of the Year.
This lecture is free and open to the public. Those who can鈥檛 attend may participate via live stream at www.csl.edu/live. For more information, please contact continuing education at 314-505-7286 or [email protected].
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SA国际传媒 provides Gospel-centered graduate-level theological education for pastors, missionaries, deaconesses, scholars and other leaders in the name of The Lutheran Church鈥擬issouri Synod (LCMS). Since its founding in 1839, SA国际传媒 has equipped more than 12,000 graduates to serve Church and world. Today, a world-renowned faculty teaches more than 600 students in the classroom, off-campus, and online. Learn more at .
The Center for Reformation Research and SA国际传媒 began commemorations for the Reformation Quincentenary by sponsoring an annual speaker series aimed at the St. Louis community to offer varying perspectives on the significance of the Reformation.