The King’s Business was a monthly publication of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles from 1910 to 1970. In the first decades of its publication, it was the leading journal for conservative Christianity and the early fundamentalist movement. The King’s Business was one part house organ (reporting the activities of its students in Los Angeles), one part celebrity editorializing (with R. A. Torrey and T. C. Horton reacting to America’s role in the first world war, the depression, prohibition, etc), and one part content provider for the church life of conservative Protestants (publishing vast quantities of Sunday School literature).

Its subscribers looked to it for a reasoned defense against the encroachments of biblical criticism, for a balanced view of various theological topics, for guidance about “the Best Books” to read, and for inspiration in their spiritual lives.

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Browse the 1940-1949 Collections:

King’s Business 1940

King's Business 1941

King's Business 1942

King's Business 1943

King's Business 1944

King's Business 1945

King's Business 1946

King's Business 1947

King's Business 1948

King's Business 1949