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Keith Malcomson

Keith Malcomson (1972–present). Born in 1972 in Banbridge, Northern Ireland, Keith Malcomson is the youngest son of Will and Leila Malcomson, raised in a Pentecostal family. Saved at age four and a half in Hadley, Shropshire, England, where his father pastored an Elim Pentecostal Church, he experienced deep communion with Christ throughout childhood, despite struggling with dyslexia in school. At 13, he was baptized in the Holy Spirit under evangelist Sandy Thompson’s ministry in Belfast, and at 15, witnessed his father’s miraculous healing from terminal cancer. Malcomson began open-air preaching in Belfast at 19 and has since ministered globally, focusing on revival, biblical purity, and leadership training. In 2006, he and his wife, Candace, founded Limerick City Church in Ireland, pastoring a congregation of mostly young believers until her death in 2022. He runs a three-week European Bible School annually in Limerick, drawing students from over 20 countries, and has worked with School of Christ International since 2001, calling Europe the “Prodigal Continent.” A scholar of church history and revival, he authored Pentecostal Pioneers Remembered (2008), Sober Saints (2012), The Scarlet Woman (2015), and Christian Foundations (2018). Malcomson said, “The Word of God must be our sole authority, for it alone reveals Christ in truth.”
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Keith Malcomson preaches about Arthur Clibborn's journey from growing up in a Quaker family with deep convictions against military service to his encounter with the true gospel and sanctification experience through the Salvation Army. Despite being expected to take over the family's mill business, Arthur felt the call of God burning within him, leading him to pursue holiness and a deeper relationship with God through the Salvation Army's militant evangelism and fiery baptism of the Holy Ghost.
Arthur Booth-Clibborn (1855-1939)
Arthur Clibborn was born in 1855 into a well to do home in Moate, Co. Westmeath, Ireland. His godly family were Quakers. While Arthur was yet young the family moved to Bessbrook in County Armagh. The Bessbrook community was a Quaker stronghold with a mill built by a Quaker family. Some of Arthur’s other ancestors were the leading writers in defence of Quaker doctrines such as pacifism. In his young days Arthur read these writings which marked him ever after with very deep convictions about Christians not being involved in military service or in wars. Sadly by the time Arthur came along the fire had gone out of Quakerism, erroneous beliefs had come in and the clear direct gospel proclamation had been replaced by morality. At the age of 13, Arthur’s parents sent him to boarding school in France and to Switzerland where he graduated from Lausanne University and gained initial experience in foreign languages. When he returned to Bessbrook he worked in the family’s linen mill but as yet without any clear understanding of the gospel. As a result of revival ferver stirred up by the Moody and Sankey meetings in Belfast and Dublin in 1874 Arthur came under the sound of the true gospel in meetings in Portadown. It was at these meetings that he was convicted of sin and saved by faith in the Blood of Jesus. As the years passed it was expected that he would take over the mill after his father, but the call of God began to burn. At the age of 26 he was appointed as a Quaker minister. He walked in the light he had at the time but much more was to come. He began to hear of the work of the Salvation Army which carried forth the work of militant evangelism with a fiery baptism of the Holy Ghost. He then read Catherine Booth’s books which created a deep hunger within him for holiness. Captain Edmunds of the Salvation Army came to Bessbrook to hold meetings. Arthur saw that this man had something which he desperately needed. After this in an all night of prayer with three other friends he entered into an experience of sanctification or of holiness of heart by faith. A week later he attended a Salvationist convention in where godly officers had gathered to hear from God and to meet with Him. In these meetings Arthur saw a movement with which he could identify; it was primitive Christianity of the Bible kind.
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Keith Malcomson (1972–present). Born in 1972 in Banbridge, Northern Ireland, Keith Malcomson is the youngest son of Will and Leila Malcomson, raised in a Pentecostal family. Saved at age four and a half in Hadley, Shropshire, England, where his father pastored an Elim Pentecostal Church, he experienced deep communion with Christ throughout childhood, despite struggling with dyslexia in school. At 13, he was baptized in the Holy Spirit under evangelist Sandy Thompson’s ministry in Belfast, and at 15, witnessed his father’s miraculous healing from terminal cancer. Malcomson began open-air preaching in Belfast at 19 and has since ministered globally, focusing on revival, biblical purity, and leadership training. In 2006, he and his wife, Candace, founded Limerick City Church in Ireland, pastoring a congregation of mostly young believers until her death in 2022. He runs a three-week European Bible School annually in Limerick, drawing students from over 20 countries, and has worked with School of Christ International since 2001, calling Europe the “Prodigal Continent.” A scholar of church history and revival, he authored Pentecostal Pioneers Remembered (2008), Sober Saints (2012), The Scarlet Woman (2015), and Christian Foundations (2018). Malcomson said, “The Word of God must be our sole authority, for it alone reveals Christ in truth.”