A Challenging Call to Revive Evangelism in Today's Church.
Unblocking the Wells of Salvation.
By Rev. Albert M. Martin
Has the Church lost its evangelistic fire?
Are the ancient wells of soul-winning choked with comfort, busyness, and compromise?
In this bold and prophetic wake-up call, seasoned evangelist and teacher Rev. Albert M. Martin issues a stirring challenge to the Body of Christ. With passion, biblical insight, and decades of frontline ministry experience, he confronts the growing silence in the Church and calls believers back to the heartbeat of God: the lost must be found.
Rooted in the powerful imagery of Genesis 26, where Isaac reopens the wells once dug by his father Abraham, this book draws a striking parallel between the clogged spiritual wells of today's Church and the urgent need for re-digging, restoring, and reviving our evangelistic mandate.
The wells of salvation have not run dry ? they've simply been buried under layers of distraction, tradition, fear, and spiritual apathy.
Each chapter is a spiritual excavation ? unearthing truths that the modern Church has neglected and challenging readers to:
- Rediscover the vital role of the Evangelist in equipping and mobilising the saints
- Understand the prophetic power behind biblical "wells" as signs of revival, provision, and purpose
- Recognise the Church's drift into spiritual obesity and doctrinal shallowness
- Reclaim a bold, unapologetic commitment to the Great Commission
- Lead by example ? whether you are a pastor, leader, or everyday believer
- Identify and overcome the modern-day Philistines who've filled our wells with clutter and compromise
This is not just a teaching ? it's a trumpet blast - It's not just theology ? it's a commissioning.
Whether you're a seasoned minister, a weary leader, a passionate disciple, or someone longing for more than church as usual ? this book is for you.
- The Church must rise again ? not in reputation, but in power.
- The Gospel must go out again ? not as noise, but as living water.
The world is thirsty. The wells are waiting.
Will you dig again?