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Erroll Hulse

Erroll Hulse (March 3, 1931 – August 3, 2017) was a South African-born British preacher and pastor whose ministry advanced Reformed Baptist theology and revival across six decades. Born in Fort Beaufort, South Africa, to an architect father and a successful businesswoman mother, he was an only child in a nominally Christian home. Converted in 1953 under Welsh evangelist Ivor Powell while studying architecture at Pretoria University, he moved to the UK in 1955 to attend London Bible College, embracing Calvinism through Robert Haldane’s Romans commentary and Martyn Lloyd-Jones’s preaching. Hulse’s preaching career began as the first manager of Banner of Truth Trust (1957–1967), followed by a 23-year pastorate at Cuckfield Baptist Church in West Sussex (1962–1985), then brief stints in Liverpool (1985–1988) and as associate pastor at Leeds Reformed Baptist Church (1988–2007). His sermons, marked by a passion for biblical truth and revival, reached global audiences through Reformation Today magazine, which he edited from 1970 to 2013, and the African Pastors’ Conferences he founded. Author of over 60 works, including Who Saves, God or Me? and Introduction to the Puritans, he preached extensively in Asia, Europe, and Africa. Married to Lynette in 1955, with whom he had four children—Sharon, Michelle, Neil, and Joanne—he died at age 86 in Wetherby, England, after a stroke in 2013.
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Erroll Hulse emphasizes the importance of God sending equipped and anointed leaders throughout history to guide His people through various challenges and seasons. He highlights the need for outstanding leadership in the church today, urging believers to pray for men who are deeply devoted to God, knowledgeable in Scripture, grounded in doctrinal truths, well-versed in church history, humble yet visionary, evangelistic, uncompromising in truth, and focused on the power of preaching the gospel.
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Men That We Need
“But now we are all little men; there is scarce a man alive now upon this earth.” --C. H. Spurgeon From earliest times, God has blessed His people and sustained His church by giving them leaders. While the children of Israel were groaning in bondage in Egypt, Jehovah was preparing Moses to be a savior. When the hordes of Midian filled the land of Israel, driving God’s people into dens and caves in the mountains, Gideon was commissioned, and by three hundred men a great victory was wrought. When Europe was enslaved in the chains of popery and superstition, Luther emerged as God’s sent servant. When England relapsed into darkness, the voice of Whitefield came like a trumpet blast to waken the dead. All God’s men have been equipped by Him for their peculiar tasks--Peter for Pentecost, Paul for the Gentiles. The scene is always changing, but the Lord has always had His men. In our day, rank confusion prevails on every hand. We are all acquainted to some degree with the weaknesses that depress the church of God as a whole. The question is, Are we aware of the need for outstanding leadership? And if so, are we praying that God will send us men for the times--men who are equipped, called, and thrust forth? It is not for us to dictate to our heavenly Father the kind of men He must send, but we can envision some of the gifts that we might find in such leaders. Let us intercede earnestly for: 1. Men who have burning hearts of love for God and men, who fear God and nothing else but sin, who have an inexhaustible zeal for God’s glory, and who are ready to die, if need be, for Christ. 2. Men who possess a thorough knowledge of Scripture and who are able to expound any text in a systematic and convincing manner. 3. Men who are gifted in doctrinal comprehension and who love the tried and tested doctrines of the faith. 4. Men who love and study church history, who specialize in the history of evangelical reformations and revivals, who know what the martyrs believed and died for, and who can competently apply an extensive knowledge of church history to the present day. 5. Men who are humble enough to apply themselves to small spheres of labor but who, at the same time, have a world vision, following missionary movements everywhere, doing everything in their power to help fulfill the Great Commission. 6. Men who know how to meet the evils of the age, who have a plan from God for our day, who are competent and aggressive in evangelism, and who are sons of thunder rather than showmen. 7. Men who do not follow infidels but concentrate like the apostles on power in preaching the gospel. 8. Men who will not compromise the truth for the sake of expediency, who have the courage to discard that which is merely traditional, oppose that which is unscriptural, and yet be respectful of those who do not measure up to the spiritual dimensions here described. May God send us such men.
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Erroll Hulse (March 3, 1931 – August 3, 2017) was a South African-born British preacher and pastor whose ministry advanced Reformed Baptist theology and revival across six decades. Born in Fort Beaufort, South Africa, to an architect father and a successful businesswoman mother, he was an only child in a nominally Christian home. Converted in 1953 under Welsh evangelist Ivor Powell while studying architecture at Pretoria University, he moved to the UK in 1955 to attend London Bible College, embracing Calvinism through Robert Haldane’s Romans commentary and Martyn Lloyd-Jones’s preaching. Hulse’s preaching career began as the first manager of Banner of Truth Trust (1957–1967), followed by a 23-year pastorate at Cuckfield Baptist Church in West Sussex (1962–1985), then brief stints in Liverpool (1985–1988) and as associate pastor at Leeds Reformed Baptist Church (1988–2007). His sermons, marked by a passion for biblical truth and revival, reached global audiences through Reformation Today magazine, which he edited from 1970 to 2013, and the African Pastors’ Conferences he founded. Author of over 60 works, including Who Saves, God or Me? and Introduction to the Puritans, he preached extensively in Asia, Europe, and Africa. Married to Lynette in 1955, with whom he had four children—Sharon, Michelle, Neil, and Joanne—he died at age 86 in Wetherby, England, after a stroke in 2013.