 Yeah, the recording is started. So Let's begin this class with the word of prayer Dear father we come into your presence We surrender each of us in your hands Lord Father as we prepare to share on each topic on the reformers We pray that you will lead us and guide us and strengthen us. We pray for the good connectivity good health Thank you father. Thank you Lord that you will enable us to understand that has been shared in the class and Help us to carry the revival fire and us. Thank you father in Jesus name we pray amen amen Thank you, so As per last class We have assigned each topic To some of us in the class That is starting with Anita Lubega Jeffina Isaac Roslyn John Paul Zellitholi and those whom I have missed to address Y'all can pick the topics from the second list. So these will be the graded assessment for mid assa for the mid midterm exam or mid assessment So if you can pick your topics, it would be great for those who have not picked the topics last week Can pick the topics from the second list? E-lock if you can pick the topic, it would be good. E-lock and Elisha You can type the person name on the chat so that we can get get that assigned to you Or maybe we can do that later also and we can start with Anita Govekar if you're ready, you can present your assignment Okay, and you can start with your session I'll just stop presenting Ma'am. I didn't made any presentation. I have written it in Word doc ma'am Okay Okay, so you would be sharing on George Fox, right? No, not George Fox. Sorry. You'd be sharing on Zurich reform under. Okay. Go ahead. Go ahead and share Yeah, ma'am. Can I share ma'am? Yes. Yes, please. Ma'am, I'll be talking on Who's wing? Hardwick swing Lee He was born on January 1st, 1484 This place was a well this in the togen book equivalent October 11 13 15 31 He was the most important reformer in the space protestant to formation He founded the space reform church and was an important figure in the border reform tradition and His early His early life and career his father was a village magistrate and His mother was Margaret Milley and Wengie was priest of Wilders and later Dean of Wayson Hardwick went to school at Wayson and then basil 1494 and 1496 Where is master Hendrick Wolfman inspired him to inspired him in him and enthusiasm for music and classics, but his father and uncle want him to Pursue the study in theology in And he went to in university deeply influenced by the lectures of the teacher and reformer Thomas written back he would in written back and sorry one second and Sorry, then Wengie at once began to preach his new conviction apart from topical criticism and of abuses He did not first attack traditional positions Begin he began content to expound the regular gospel passages in 1518 Despite much opposition. He was appointed people priest at a great minister at Zurich The post gave him little income or a visual influence out great scope for pitching. He commands the commands the series of Exposition in the New Testament and and wild a by topical application Serious plague in 1519 found him faithful in his ministry and his own illness and recovery followed by his brother's death in 1520 dependent on the spiritual and theological elements in his thinking and teaching that had been overshadowed to some degree by the Humanistic in 1520 he secured permission from the city governing council to please the true divine scriptures and The resulting summons helped him to steer rewards against fasting in practical celibacy that initiated the Swiss reformation in 1522 In perseverance of his view of the supremacy of scriptures Wengie pleased his now famous sermons at the Otain back Convent and despite local opposition to many of his ideas He secured fresh authorization from his bishop to continue preaching attract on Meets and printed version of the otain back addresses the clarity and Certainly of the word of God appeared in 1522 the year 1523 was a crucial in the Zurich and reformation in preparation for a Disputation with the weaker general of Continents arranged for January in town hall of Zurich Wengie published his challenging 67 article his main contentions were adopted by most peace in the state Wengie was Wengie and his Successive steps taken in during 1524 and 1525 included the removal of images the suppression of organ organs and Disolvation of religious houses the replacement of the mass by simple communion service the reform of the baptismal office and the introduction of Prophecying or Bible readings the recognition Recognization of ministry and the preparation of our need to version of the Bible 1529 Wengie fostered the movement not only by preaching and influence on the council but also by his various writings example on education on baptism on the Lord supper and especially the comprehensive commentary on true and false religions in 1525 and He was publicly married to Anna-Grenhardt on April 2 1524 That's it now. Thank you Thank You Anita. Thank you Who goes next? We see Lou Becker Okay, Lou Becker you have prepared on which topic? Yes, pasta and the class. Yes, we can hear you Okay, I think I was given to To deal with the Anabaptist. Is that right? Anabaptist. Yes Okay So, let me go The Anabaptist the name Anabaptist was not their only name. Just ask Krishna One second one second one second, please Have you created any presentation that you can share it with the class before you could share? No, I just No worries on your word doc you have it. Okay. Yes, okay. Please go ahead. Please go ahead Lou Becker I was saying the the name Anabaptist is not the name they gave themselves just ask Krishna is not our name It was a name They are contemporaries gave them but it actually means it comes from two Greek words Anna and the baptimus Which really means? Re-baptizers or to do baptism again To them they believed that they were going to follow the the Bible and the preachings of the New Testament It was started by a man. They call un-rich Ziggly in 1484 he was born in 1844 and he died in a war in 1531 But they he didn't start it alone. He started it with his counterparts Felix Marzi and comrade Gibral Ah Much as the but the Protestants and the Catholics disagreed on everything in life They on this time agreed to eliminate the Anabaptists their philosophy was very simple they believed that Infant baptism was not in the Bible. So they wouldn't follow it they believed that they would only have one baptism and that was at When a person is an adult and is of age he can confess with his mouth that Christ is a bd is a he died for him and So they fought against infant baptism number two They had a philosophy of saying that the church and the state wouldn't be bedfellows They believed that the church and the the state would be separate This did not go well because in those days in the 16th century There was what we call the state region anybody in the state was supposed to be Following a given region that was either Catholicism or any other These guys If they were born in the 19th century, they would be the Martin Gandhi. They believed in non-violence They said that they would just as Christ did when he was On earth they wanted to follow that so they were believing in non-baptism. I mean, they were believing in non-violence But um This guy they call Felix Mars was the first matter as far as the the anabaptists were concerned He was drained in limit river in near lake in lake Zurich in stazerland as we know that the this radical Reformers started in the town in Zurich the town which is found in in in stazerland he was murdered there Through drowning as far as king fed king fed and the fourth was concerned. He called this one the third baptism So they said if they need water that much they would Be drawn and they called it third baptism to correct First baptism was the other one which the infant baptism second was The one they called their name which is an abaptism which means Re baptism to them. This was the first they never called it the second as others called it And the third was that one of drowning. So he died on the 20 on the 15th january 1951 In the presence of his mother and brother who told him that he can do anything But he would not refute jesus christ When they were drowning him he had psalms 31 verse 5 to say that in In thy hand i commit my my soul and some say that these were the very Words that were spoken by jesus christ they also believed that the People were supposed to be priests for themselves. They needed no go away between the They never needed a mediator Just as the priests, you know the priests have that way of them coming and they You confess your sins and when they forgive you maybe they tell you to read the rosary or what for them They believed that everybody would go to christ and they would ask for forgiveness from god by themselves I think today i'm not the only one who has got something to say that's what i had to put together. Thank you pastor Thank you. Thank you. Look me up for sharing the inputs. Thank you so much I also see on the chat enok has posted a message Enok, you can share next week But then you can choose a topic from the second list If you can choose a topic for now There you can prepare and share it Next or the next class Next class if you can choose anyone george folk to the first great awakening Jonathan edwards any of them from the list And you can share about them in the next class Okay, thank you Good morning Yep, please i'm very very sorry. I won't be able to meet up today because i'm going out i'm living in the city I'm No problem my topic i'm not getting my topic yet Okay, okay, so um you can take up You can take up george fox and the quakers for next class Is that okay, you know Or you can you can talk about first great awakening or jonathan edwards any of them from the slide that you see on your Scree Okay, there's no problem. I will do that next class I I will do that So, yeah, so can we uh decide is it george fox or first great awakening or george first just first will be okay for me Okay, okay. Okay. Thank you so much I'll be going As soon as i board it i'll be going off Okay. Okay. Thank you Thank you so much. Yeah Okay, the next person is jeffina Okay So jeffina you would be sharing on william tindale. Do you have a power point presentation to share? Yes, bachelors. Okay. Yes. I can stop sharing and you can go ahead Yes, you can present it Can you hear me? So I just want to thank pasadena for giving me this opportunity because I learned a lot from william tindale This bible is very common today. We have different versions different Translations and a lot of things my list very common today. I think we have Lost the value of it because it's very common every christian home has a bible I wonder how many of us take and read it But once during the time of william tindale, actually there was no bible in english So william has this great passion that he wants this bible to be for everyone because he has read the scriptures He knew latin So let me give a little introduction about his childhood He was in west of britain and one of the thing that is very important about william is he learned latin During his school days. So the bible was only in latin So he read all these bible and he was like so passionate about scriptures So what he did was uh, he wanted to study theology because of his passion But the thing is even in theology college, they didn't teach scriptures They thought something else, but they didn't teach each and every single scriptures because there was no translation obviously So he studied in oxford university One thing that motivated him was while he was in college Erasmus printed the greek bible for the very first time So he was very very passionate about scriptures So he learned the greek and he wanted to know about this whole bible thing and everything So the bible was only in latin because it is one of church trick Because the bishop and the pastors they don't want people to know what's in the bible So that people will start questioning them people will be like what the bible says. There's why are you doing that? So they don't want people to be acute if they start getting acute The whole church will be a controversy because the bishop were not exactly doing what the bible says they had their own rules and own things so William came to know about this like so he wanted people to know the scripture He wanted people to live life just like how jesus said So but so one thing that he started thought of doing was first. Let me go to the bishop Let me do it by authority. Let me ask the permission and let me start translating in english so that Everyone can read the bible. So that was his passion. So he went to the bishop Who was named stanzu? So he went to london and met this bishop and he was like Bishop I want to translate this whole bible. I have I know greek. I want to translate this in english But the bishop was like no, no, you should not Because it was one of church tricks So obviously the bishop don't want him to do that and the punishment for translating bible Was really hard to get and it is actually imprisonment for life Or else they'll get burnt just for translating even if you translate one single sentence You will be burnt forever. So this was the punishment, but william tender had this great passion Uh, it is a really big story like he kept moving from place to place place to place place to place He was in hidden places so that he can start translating and he kept it as a secret in himself But once he decided and let me go to germany Germany, so I'll I'll have the freedom. I'll have the freedom to print. I'll have the freedom to translate So he decided and he went to germany But one thing that really shocked him was while he was on the way to germany. There was one person Uh, who actually translated, uh, I mean in williams own place. It was not in germany Uh, but in williams own place. There was one person Who translated the lord's prayer and he wrote it in a very small paper and he had it in the But he was burnt alive while he was on his way to germany william came to know this but he still don't want to give up No matter what happens. He wants to translate. So he started printing as soon as he went to germany. He went to the print shop He started printing Almost six thousand six thousand bibles he translated and he sent to britain Uh secretly through ships and secretly everything was secret because if someone found out there's a bible in english They are sure gonna get into some punishment But while william was about printing the last copies. There was someone called cohalious He started raiding that print shop So because he was against martin luther even in germany, there are some people who are against this So williams didn't know about him, but somehow he came to knew that he's coming against him So he flew to a city called warms. So almost his life was like Going from place to place place to place and place to place in thousand five and ten to six fifteen twenty six He printed the very first bible. Uh, so he kept Sending things to england he secretly even though he knew that it's against law He kept sending things to england because he was so passionate about this because he wanted people to know about it So once the bishop of london duncel came to know that There are people who are having these bibles that translated in english they are in secret places So what he did was he burnt all of the bible in uh in front of the church And the most funniest thing is while the bibles were burning. He was actually preaching He was preaching to the people like you should not do this and he was preaching about jesus, but he was burning the bibles so That is the most funniest thing for me like how can someone burn the word and preach the word I don't know, but still williams angel didn't give up He kept printing no matter where he went. Um, I think, uh And then he almost completed the new testament. So he thought of uh translating The old testament so he learned hebrew and then uh, he literally really learned hebrew Like he had this great talent in him to learn languages like in proper grammar even so he Translated the first five five books the pens took By staying in belgium sea coast. Uh, it was like a place They call it merchants place like many people live there. He wanted protection So he won't don't want to live alone don't want people to recognize him So like group of people's were living in that place So he wrote he was there writing all these Things and started printing things in 1534 he did and one thing that happened That actually kind of seemed good was king henry Had a second coin called annie bullen and she loved this bible she started reading this bible and She also told king henry like I have this bible and look at these the translations are good The words are so powerful and everything so king henry wanted william on his court in england King henry was not against the bible in that moment. He was like, I want him to be in my court He's so uh talented. So I want an in my court. So he sent steven wake And asked him to find william because william is hiding actually in a place where many people are living So he's actually hiding. So he went Found william and he was like uh king henry wants you in his court But william said I have one thing one thing Ask him to authorize english translation If he says bible can be translated in english Like everyone can get it then I will for sure come to the court But this actually Tensed william henry like he was like why? I sent someone I asked someone to search for him. I am the king. How can he say no to me? So this actually made him tense. So he sent uh henry phillips Uh henry phillips to actually get caught up william So during this time william didn't give up the thing is william didn't give up no matter what happened He started writing joshua to chronicles hand written during those times while waiting for king henry's reply And then henry phillips he came Searching for william. He was very tricky. He entered as william's friend. He started searching and he was like I'm william's friend. I want to have a lunch with you. That's how he Invited william. William should not come out of that place because if he comes out people will know And just arrest him but unfortunately he believed in this friendship So he came out as soon as he came out the woman citizen is the woman soldiers they caught him up uh, and Yeah, and then they caught him up. They caught him to king henry And william was died on october 6th with the 36. They burnt him alive Uh, even at the last moment he was praying for england like god. I pray that these People's eyes will be open like they can see that your word is important And what happened after william's death was also so inspiring his friend known as john rogers He translated the whole bible the reminding passage is also he translated and he made it as a whole book And 10 months after uh, his death The same king king henry he authorized the bibles in english It's so inspiring like, uh It is one thing that I love this He printed it so small like it was like a pocket bible like 8,000 20,000 copies he made everything was so small as pocket Bibles so that no one no one will know that we have a bible And then it was finally authorized today. We have many translations In bible today. We are so blessed Uh, I think I have like seven to eight translations in my home And we have different bible study bibles journaling bibles bible for kids bible for teens And I think We have a million reasons to be thankful to god to not to worry and to just praise him and we must be thankful for Cards sending people like william changer Because he gave his whole life just to translate bible just to pick it in english So we must be thankful and just like william changel. We should be passionate about the words these words or not just words Really, they are not just words. They are more valuable. Many people have sacrificed their life for this word So it's our responsibility and we should really decide and desire To go read this word get deeper into this and keep trusting on this because these are not just words These are powerful words of god. So just like william changel Let us also Give our whole life to Jesus and be passionate about it no matter what happens around because when god is for us Who can be against you? So thank you Thank you. Jeff. You know that was wonderful. Thank you also for the Presentation it was wonderfully shared and presented Yeah Thank you. God bless. Okay. The next person we have is Mastar Isaac. If you're ready on john calpin We can go with that Yes, good morning Good morning brother. Okay. I'm sorry. I prepared my excerpt on Gogu notes I don't know how to share it, but I have it and I I will do the presentation orally And later on I will forward it to you Sure. Sure. No problem. You can go ahead with the presentation. Please I mean with your with your session. Yeah Okay, um Presentation is about john calvin John calvin was a french lawyer Theologian pastor and an ecclesiastical statesman He was the most important figure in the second generation of the protestant reformation He worked in juneva during the protestant reformation He was born on july 10 1509 in nor yong A town in peccadilly a province of france The second of three children who survived childhood His parents were jane and gerald calvin He was married to idyllete calvin from 1540 to 1549 The widow of a man he had converted John calvin was raised in the stoned roman catholic family His father was employed by the local bishop As an administrator in the town's cathedra His father wanted him to become a priest because of his close ties with the bishop and his noble family At the age of 14 calvin went to paris to study at the college of mashay In preparation for his university studies Towards the end of 1523 he transferred to the most famous college of montego Although the teachings of individuals like luta marty luta and jackals the staples Were spreading in paris calvin remained closely tied to roman catholic However john calvin in 1525 developed friendship with individuals who were reform minded This is eventually the stage for calvin's eventual shift to the reformed fate While studying in orleans in the university of orleans his father died in 1531 And he buried his father While attending to his studies in the universities of france He read a lot from erasmus and marty luta It was through their writings He became converted to become a true follower of christ By 1532 john calvin finished his civil law studies and also published his first book A commentary on the clemencia An essay on clemency by a roman philosopher sinaka The following year Calvin fled paris because his because of his contacts Their lectures and their writing seems opposed to roman catholic He spent the next years in various places under various names outside france He studied a lot on his own Preach and began work on his first edition of the institute At the age of 26 calvin published the institute Which became an instant bestseller The institute of the christian religion is calvin's seminal work of systematic theology It is regarded as one of the most influential works of the protestant theology Published in latin in 1536 And in his native french in 1541 It's a core reference for the system of System of doctrine adopted by the reform churches, usually called calvinism By 1536 calvin has disengaged Or was disengaged from the roman catholic church and made plans to permanently leave france But because of the war between Francis the first and charge the fifth Charge the fifth or the tenth I don't get that player anyway He he made his top in jenever His fame has spread so far ahead of him in jenever that the local bishop Guglielmo Ferral persuaded him to stay Ferral was struggling to plant protestant musin in the city This started a long difficult yet fruitful relationship with that city Calvin began as a lecturer and a preacher By 1538 he and ferral were asked to leave the city by the council Because of escalating theological conflicts And their uncompromising religious stand He went to strassburg Until 1541 He stayed there as a pastor To french refugees Was peaceful and happy In strassburg he learned a lot about the administration of obang church From martin boucher His senior pastor In 1541 the council of jenever Requested him to return He was emotionally not happy to return He wanted to stay in strassburg However, he felt it a responsibility to return to jenever Calvin published many volumes of commentaries On most of the books Both the old and the new testament except few Which he omitted Calvin was instrumental in the establishment of the college The jenever which later on became college calvin One of the oldest public schools in jenever, switzerland Calvin believed in Calvin's belief was centered around the sovereignty of god Calvin thought that god had power An absolute supremacy over all things that he created Calvin thought that god is so holy and so worthy That he should be praised and loved So man was created So that all god's tribute might be displayed Known and praised They let the last days in the last days of calvin In the late 1558 calvin became ill with fever Afraid of dying before completing the final edition of the institute He forced himself to walk He improved it from 21 chapters to 80 Shortly after he recovered He stringed his voice while preaching Which brought a violent feat of cough That burst a vessel in his lungs He said deteriorated considerably And on the 25th of april 1564 He made his will in which he left a small amount of money to his family Few days later ministers came to visit him And he said or he paid his last goodbye Calvin passed away On the 27th of may 1564 at the age of 54 That's all i got for now And like i said please show me so that i can forward it to you God bless us all thank you Thank you thank you mr. Isaac god bless you shared well yes you can share uh You can share on the google drive i will create an assignment as usual how we create on google classwork So that's where you can upload your ppt presentation along with the research word doc Okay Yeah So the next person Optimist isaac would be rosalind rosalind if you're ready with john orcs can we start And before we could start rosalind one second enox there would be a change of topic for you because george fox has already been taken by zealot only request you to please you know Take up on jonathan edwards. Would that be okay? enox if you have heard me you can You can reply on chat Okay, he's left and rejoined Okay, okay, we will go ahead with rosalind for others you can look up to your chat to get the topics aradhana Elisha Okay, okay, please go ahead rosalind so i can stop sharing. Do you have a presentation to share rosalind? Um, sorry, ma'am. I don't know how to present Okay I just return it in my book So I Will read it out. Okay. So maybe later for those Uh, for those who have not prepared the presentation that is the ppt slide Request you all to please prepare and upload uploaded directly on the google classwork. Is that okay? I will learn Okay. Okay. Great. Uh, yeah, rosalind. Uh, you can get in touch with us if you wanted any help. Okay, we will find you so right now Sit sit can move for any help whenever I need Okay, we have jeffina also here available. He can assist you. Okay Yeah, ma'am. I'll text her also jeffina. Is that okay with you? Would you help rosalind? I Text uh, I texted jeffina also the other day for some information. So I'll do that. I learned from this. Yes. Sure. Sure. Sure. Thanks So I've written it as well. So I'll just read it out Yes, go ahead Yeah, uh, thank you ma'am for this opportunity Um, I'm presenting john north, uh, scotland's greatest performer Ma'am, excuse me for the noise A john knocks was a 16th century spotish minister He was uh born in jiffer gate in haddington east loatium in united kingdom He was a reformed theologian and writer He was also a leader of the country's information Uh, he was the founder He was the founder of the presbyterian church of scotland Uh, his father william knocks was a merchant Um, mother's name is in glare who died when john knocks was a child His elder brother william knocks took over his father's business John knocks studied at the university of st. Andrews Uh, under john major One of the greatest scholars of the bible of the time John knocks was ordained a catholic priest in edinburgh in the year 1536 by william pashom bishop of dun glane However, john knocks was converted from catholic priest to the protestant faith um John knocks joined the reformers patrick hamilton and george wisher All the both died as martyrs for jesus christ For the for their faith John knocks was in the year 1549. He was also present for 19 months in the galley prison He was released in a very uncertain manner Uh, his release On his release knocks took refuge in england Uh, in this same year on 7th april 1549 knocks was I was licensed to work in the church of england Knox uh, the liturgy required worshipers to kneel during the communion knocks considered this as idolatry He was protesting the Catholic mass and worship His preaching and work of reformation was carried on in scotland The bishops of scotland View veered him as a threat to their authority and summoned him To appear in edinburgh on may 1556 He was accompanied by so many Uh, uh, he was accompanied by so many influential persons That the bishop decided to call the hearing off And uh, john knocks was set free to preach openly in edinburgh on august 1st Scottish parliament met to settle religious issues Knox and five other ministers were called to draw up a new confession of faith The parliament passed three acts in one day Abolish the jurisdiction of the pope in scotland It condemned all doctrine and practice contrary to the reformed faith It forbade the celebration of mass in scotland um to conclude like um More than anything else, uh, john knocks was uh Known for his prayers Give me scotland or i die Knox's prayer Was not an arrogant demand but passionately of a man Willing to die for the sake of pure preaching of the gospel in the salvation of his countrymen This uh prayer has really blessed me as I was doing this Study on john knocks Knox's greatness Lay his humble dependence on his god To revive his nation and reform his church Knox's belief was not in the power of his prayer or power of his preaching But in the power of the gospel and power of god Preaching and prayer is always a second was always a secondary means in the salvation of his people Um John knocks continued his work as a reformer He was called as the trumpeter of scotland Because of his preaching with conviction He was called to menace menace he was called to um minister in his early forties Was called to ministry in his early forties. Uh, he was a brilliant scholar Uh came a little late in the ministry yet his preachings gets immediate recognition Uh king edward the sixth appointed him to be as one of his royal chaplain Who went throughout england? Preaching reformed truths John knocks was a god fearing man a man of prayer And his prayers threatened the queen of scotland He feared not the face of any man He was known for his boldness as he stood in the pulpit Because he feared only his god John knocks said quote Whatever influenced me to utter whatever the lord put in my mouth So boldly and without respect of persons Was a reverential fear of my god unquote Because he feared god so much he feared man so little This holy fear trust him forward in his preachings He said I knew I rendered an account before the judgment throne as we read in Paul a Paul's epistle to second Corinthians chapter five verse 10 I will read that For we must all appear before the judgment seat of christ That each one may receive the things done in the body According to what he has done whether good or bad We christians shall all stand before the judgment seat to give an account of what we did and how we did verse 11 says therefore knowing The terror of the lord we persuade men Praise god It is the fear of the last day and are giving an account to believers As believers to jesus christ The deeds done in our bodies whether good or bad that drove john knocks to preach with great boldness He was so bold in his preachings to call out things as they truly are in a time It was desperately needed to be heard He took the word of god so seriously. He took his ministry so seriously He took the last day That we shall stand before the lord so seriously that it gripped his heart and made him sober minded As bible also tells us to be sober minded to be level headed in our ministry To not to be intoxicated with the spirit of this age, but to remain very level headed In our ministry, so as we preach the word of god So That's it ma'am. He died on 24th november 1572 in edinberg We really praise god for such anointed man of god that he That we had Thank you ma'am. Thank you rosalind wonderfully shared. Thank you each one for taking this time And sharing on the assigned topic Okay. Um, so there are some changes on george fox. We already have assigned to zealot only So jonathan edwards would be Texas enock and george whitefail will be super shish and then We have Was the other person Linden right Linden Yes ma'am Okay, george whitefield was assigned to you, but Who did super shish talk on george whitefield? Okay. Okay. So linden. I'll just give you a different person um Can you talk about Okay, let's skip. Okay jonathan westley linden okay Okay, so linden will you talk about jonathan westley um, i'm just going to the list Elisha would you like to choose? To choose a person from the notes abubakar elisha aradhana I'm ready to pick on his question Yeah, mr abubakar on whom you would be talking on Let me talk on David David brad, okay Okay Okay, elisha Elisha would be it would you take up the second great awakening or any individual person? I'll give it to you. Just give me a minute I'll assign a person George whitefield This revival David brad William carry Elisha is that topic okay with you aradhana Aradhana would you pick henry martin? I think most of us have covered in the class right? Okay, so we have covered most of them Okay, okay, then thank you so much in the next class kindly prepare a presentation and Research doc and you can present it in the class. Okay Thank you so much. Nice talking to you and the each one I put in the effort to share on the topics That was assigned. Thank you. See you all in the next class. God bless Thank you