Jonathan Allbaugh

(USA)

Dean of Missional Effectiveness,
Vanguard University

JonAllbaugh ColorfulBG

About The Speaker

Jonathan Allbaugh is the dean of missional effectiveness at Vanguard University, overseeing church engagement, ministry development, and missional alignment. He holds a PhD in organisational leadership from Regent University, an MA in leadership studies, and BAs in religion and psychology from Vanguard University.

He is an ordained Assemblies of God minister and has pastored churches in Southern California and Utah for 27 years. He has served as trustee, dean of spiritual formation, university pastor, and director of the Lewis Wilson Institute for Pentecostal Studies, as well as chaplain with the San Diego Sheriff’s Department for 17 years. He is certified in critical incident stress management and executive coaching.

Dr Jon is a seasoned preacher and conference speaker. His experience spans both ministry and academia, reflecting his commitment to leadership development and missional effectiveness.

Paper Synopsis

From the Atonement to Pentecost: An Exegetical and Theological Reflection

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

Paper 2

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

From the Atonement to Pentecost: An Exegetical and Theological Reflection

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

Many separate the atonement from Pentecost to the degree that the link between them is lost. I wish to explore that link. The link is based on the insight that the cross of Christ is not limited to Israel. Rather, Christ seeks at the cross to open his life to all peoples, redeeming persons “from every tribe, and language, and people, and nation” (Rev. 5:9) and breaking down the wall of hostility between them (Eph. 2:14-16). The Spirit is poured out on all peoples at Pentecost in loyalty to the cross and for the sake of the crucified and risen Christ.

Video

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