Little Talks with E.H. Ijams at 93: Exploring Important Questions
By (Author) E.H. Ijams
Edited by Servants of Christ
BookBaby
BookBaby
4th March 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
Religious ministry and clergy
Paperback
42
Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 5mm
81g
At ninety-three years of age, only three years before his death, E. H. Ijams began to meet with a small house fellowship of young adults in Memphis, TN. The location varied, but the logistics were the same. Different members of the group picked him up each evening at his home. He would be dressed perfectly in suit and tie immaculate as always. His talks were transcribed from journal notes taken during those evening sessions. The purpose was as always: to transmit eternal ideas and raise important questions for young adults.
Questions about what is most important, timing, the rhythm of life, relationships, invisible power, wisdom, psychic phenomena, adaptability, war against powers of darkness, the knowledge of God, growing old, failure in life, dissipation, and true worship are explored. Ijams uses stories of real life characters to illustrate many of his point.
Born on May 30, 1886 in Florence, Alabama, E.H. Ijams received his Masters from Harding University and his Legum Doctorate in 1934. He went on to become president of Lipscomb University in Nashville, TN. as well as minister to four churches spread between Nashville, Los Angeles and Memphis. Author of Power to Survive and Surpass and Friendly Talks to Elders and The Reality of God, E.H. Ijams never failed to stir the imagination of his students with the wonder, majesty and beauty of the Creator of the universe. He was married for 67 years to Una Hartley Ijams. They had three children.Servants of Christ is a forty-plus year old non-denominational community that hosted multiple conversations with E.H. Ijams in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Multiple journals were kept during those meetings, and the book, Little Talks with E.H. Ijams at 93, is the result of piecing together what Brother Ijams shared. Though not word for word, the resulting manuscript is faithful to his intent.