We build up disciples, found churches and further the Kingdom.
Josh Provow, together with his five kids, have lived in Bulgaria since July 1, 2015. For almost three years the Provow family lived in the city of Svishtov and served in Bulgarian Protestant Church New Life in Svishtov alongside pastor Tim Awtrey. In 2018 they moved to the city of Shumen
The pastor’s favorite verse:
“Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation.” -Habakkuk 3:17-18
What do I like?
My dream
Connect with Josh on Facebook.
God is not just a power or energy. He is a triune personal God. If this is true it should change completely the way we think and live. In Bulgarian Protestant Church “New Life” we believe that God exists and that He has revealed Himself to us through creation, the Biblical revelation and the incarnation of God’s Son Jesus Christ.
We love Bulgaria and want to know more about its history, care for its present and work for its better future. That’s why at our gatherings we learn to better obey God, love our neighbor and serve our motherland.
We believe that only faith in God’s Son Jesus Christ can give hope to our compatriots for overcoming the hard political, economic and spiritual crisis. Only the spiritual revival can take our nation to a new awakening so that she could come regain its noble position in the family of European nations.
We invite you to an exciting adventure with us – come and get to know more of this incredible God and take part in the work of renewal of Bulgaria.
We build up disciples, found churches and further the Kingdom.
We believe…
The name “Free Will Baptists” is used for the first time even the 60s of the 17th century in England to denote baptists who called themselves ‘freewillers’. The name was a term of derision referring to our conviction that every person has free will to accept or reject God.
Colonial Roots
Free Will Baptists sprang up on two fronts in Colonial America. The southern line, or Palmer movement, traces its beginnings to the year 1727 when Paul Palmer organized a church at Chowan, North Carolina.
The northern line, or Randall movement, had its beginnings with a congregation organized by Benjamin Randall June 30, 1780, in New Durham, New Hampshire. Both lines of Free Will Baptists taught the doctrines of free grace, free salvation, and free will, although from the first there was no organizational connection between them.
The northern line expanded more rapidly in the beginning and extended its outreach into the West and Southwest. In 1910-1911 this body of Free Will Baptists merged with the Northern Baptist denomination, taking along the great majority of its 1,100 churches and all denominational property, including several major colleges. In 1916, a broad Cooperative General Association was formed at Pattonsburg, Missouri. The new association included delegates from the Randallite churches that had resisted the merger, while others owed their origins to the Palmer movement.
Free Will Baptists in the southeastern United States, having descended from the Palmer foundation, often manifested fraternal relationships with Free Will Baptists of the Randall movement in the north and west, but the slavery question and the Civil War prevented formal union between them. The churches in the southern line were organized into various associations and conferences from the beginning and finally organized into a General Conference by 1921. These congregations were unaffected by the merger of the northern movement with the Northern Baptists.
A New Movement
It was inevitable that a fusion between the Cooperative General Association and the General Conference of Free Will Baptists would finally come. In Nashville, Tennessee, on November 5, 1935, representatives from the two bodies met and organized the National Association of Free Will Baptists.
The new body adopted a Treatise, which set forth basic doctrines and described the faith and practice that had characterized Free Will Baptists through the years. After being revised on several occasions, this document continues to serve as a guideline for a denominational fellowship comprising more than 2,400 churches in 42 states and 14 foreign countries.
“New Life” in Bulgaria
The first New Life Church in Bulgaria, as part of the Free Will Baptist Movement, was founded in the town of Svishtov in 2011 by pastor Timothy & Lydia Awtrey, missionaries of the denomination. In 2013 there came the family of Jonathan and Amy Postlewaite who began their ministry in Svishtov and are now planting a church in Pleven. The same year Trif and Vanya Trifonovs founded a New Life Church in Varna.
The new denomination was registered on September 10th 2014. In 2015 the Josh Provow family arrived in Svishtov. The Provows have planted a church in Shumen and dream of the day when the church will have a Bulgarian pastor.
Used with permission from Free Will Baptist History.
BPC New Life Shumen
5 Petyr Karjiev Str.
pastor Josh Provow
tel. 0879638556
email: newlifeshumen@gmail.com