Sam Fife

Sam Fife

Samuel Drew Fife Jr. (1926 – April 26, 1979) was an ex-Baptist preacher who started and became the principal leader of an international non-denominational Charismatic Christian group known as "". Fife's followers regard him as a modern-day apostle and prophet.

Early life

Sam Fife was born about 1926 in Miami, Florida, the son of Samuel Drew Fife, Sr., and Maude Iva Cox. He served in the U.S. Navy in World War II.

Ministry

Sam Fife graduated from a Southern Baptist seminary in New Orleans in March 1957. He received the Baptism in the Holy Spirit experience there while pastoring Bible Baptist Church. His first church in Miami was called "The Miami Revival Center" and was located in an old frame building on 22nd Street. Following a period of self-admitted deception, in 1963 while attending prayer meetings, Fife felt he had received the true divine revelation and began preaching and starting up new groups all over United States. The network of assemblies came to refer to themselves loosely as "the move of God" or more frequently, "" to avoid denominational connotations.

In fall 1971, believing the Tribulation and Second Coming of Christ were near, Fife began to preach a message that the end-time saints must go to the wilderness "to the place God had prepared for the woman". Soon after, thousands of his followers left their homes, jobs and security and moved to Canada, Colombia and Alaska to establish communal farms in isolated areas. These "end time farms" were the beginning of a new direction of Fife's ministry.

Fife and three other Americans died on April 26, 1979, when the private airplane he was piloting through heavy fog crashed into a mountainside in Guatemala1. He is buried in the Guatemalan city of Quetzaltenango. He had preached a doctrine of immortality, and taught that the aging process had stopped for him and when asked his age, he would simply answer “I AM”. He assured people that he would never die but was in the process of being changed into an incorruptible life.2

Teachings

Espousing a similar hermeneutic to those of Latter Rain Movement proponents George Warnock and Bill Britton, much of Sam Fife's teachings were based upon metaphorical meanings of passages in the Old Testament, such as the Tabernacle of Moses, the Feast of Tabernacles, Gideon's 300 as well as various verses in the New Testament such as the Manifestation of the sons of God. Fife believed that the time was drawing close for a group of believers to reach a state of sinless perfection, through a process of God's dealings with them, and manifest who God is to the world. That process, he believed, was through the work of the Fivefold ministry. In his booklet "The Manifestation of the Sons of God", Fife interpreting Ephesians 4:11-13 states:

"The fact that these ministries were given for the perfecting of the saints makes it clear that these ministries will not pass away until the saints have been perfected...It is also clear that God purposes for the last day saints to come to perfection here and become the manifested sons of God of Romans 8 who shall deliver the earth from 'the bondage of corruption'."3

In his book "One Corporate Man," Sam Fife states:

"Therefore let all men know, that in this dispensation of the fullness of times, God is going to fulfill His purpose to bring together into one, all things that are in Christ, both in the earth and in heaven, and make of all the twos, one new many-membered man, who lives after the order of Melchisedec. When He has finished preparing this many-membered man, He is going to purge the earth of every other man by His Judgment Day, and there will come in a new age, and a new earth, with a new man living in a new order, where every member is so dead to self that he lives unto the rest of the Body, and that order shall perpetuate eternal life."4

ee also

*
*Latter Rain Movement
*Fivefold ministry

References

# — This is a report bringing out the "move's" tendencies and referring to it as "The Body of Christ".
# Kingdom Triumphalism: The 3rd WAVE. [http://www.letusreason.org/Latrain12.htm] Latter Rain. Let Us Reason Ministries. Retrieved on 2005-12-22. — "Sam Fife [...] taught that the aging process had stopped for him and when asked his age, he would simply answer 'I AM'. He assured people that he would never die but was in the process of being changed into an incorruptible life."
# Sam Fife, "The Manifestation of the Sons of God", Miami, p.5
# Sam Fife, "One Corporate Man" (Miami: The Body of Christ), p.22

External links

* http://www.ima.cc/messages.php Sam Fife sermons on the IMA website.
* A FACTNet message board discussion among ex-members.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • The Move (Sam Fife) — The Move (also known as The Move of the Spirit or Move of God) is the unofficial name of a non denominational charismatic Christian group that was started by an ex Baptist preacher named Sam Fife in Florida in the 1960s. This movement espouses… …   Wikipedia

  • Sam Anderson — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Sam Anderson Nombre real Sam Anderson Nacimiento 13 de mayo de 1945 (64 años) …   Wikipedia Español

  • HMS Fife (D20) — HMS Fife Career (UK) Name: HMS Fife …   Wikipedia

  • Move — To move a page on Wikipedia, see Help:How to move a page, Wikipedia:Moving a page, or Wikipedia:Requested moves Move may refer to: Contents 1 Science 2 Government, law and politics …   Wikipedia

  • Latter Rain Movement — The Latter Rain was a post World War II movement within Pentecostal Christianity which remains controversial to this day. For clarification in discussion of the Latter Rain a distinction should be made between: *The Latter Rain Revival (1948… …   Wikipedia

  • Latter Rain (post–World War II movement) — The Latter Rain, also known as the New Order or New Order of the Latter Rain, was a post–World War II movement within Pentecostal Christianity which remains controversial to this day. For clarification in discussion of the Latter Rain a… …   Wikipedia

  • Naomi Bennett — Private Practice and Grey s Anatomy character Audra McDonald as Naomi Bennett in the episode In Which Sam Receives an Unexpected Visitor . First appearance …   Wikipedia

  • Members of the 1st Scottish Parliament — 1st Parliament (1999) 2nd Parliament (2003) 3rd Parliament (2007) 4th Parliament (2011) This is a list of Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs) or, in Gaelic, Buill Pàrlamaid na h Alba (BPnA) elected to the first …   Wikipedia

  • golf — golfer, n. /golf, gawlf/; Brit. also /gof/, n. 1. a game in which clubs with wooden or metal heads are used to hit a small, white ball into a number of holes, usually 9 or 18, in succession, situated at various distances over a course having… …   Universalium

  • Mayberry — This article is about the fictional setting for The Andy Griffith Show. For other uses, see Mayberry (disambiguation). Mayberry is a fictional community in North Carolina that was the setting for two American television sitcoms, The Andy Griffith …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”