Miller also wrote: ‘Repentance’ (2009), ‘Evangelism & Your Church’ (1980), ‘Come Back, Barbara’ (Co-Authored with his daughter Barbara Juliani, 1988), ‘Power Evangelism for the Powerless (1997), and ‘A Faith Worth Sharing: A Lifetime of Conversations about Christ’ (1999) Miller’s wife Rose Marie has also authored several books including ‘From Fear to Freedom: Living as Sons and Daughters of God’ (1994), and ‘Nothing is Impossible with God: Reflections on Weakness, Faith, and Power’ (2015).
The full extent of Jack Miller’s impact on a generation of pastors, church leaders, missionaries, and scholars throughout the United States and around the world in the late Twentieth and early Twenty-first century is difficult to fully measure.
To name a few: Timothy Keller, Senior Pastor of Redeemer Church (New York, NY), said about Jack Miller: “Kathy and I went to Gordon-Conwell Seminary together in the early ’70s and there studied under Richard Lovelace, whose teaching on revival and renewal had profoundly moved us and changed us personally.
Lovelace taught the theory, but Jack showed us the practice, and this ignited a desire in me to start a church and ministry where I could do what I learned at New Life.
Van Dixhoorn suggested that Miller's Sonship program stemmed from three and a half months spent in Spain overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.
Miller "studied the promises of Scripture for three and a half months culminating in a mountaintop experience, or its seaside equivalent.
"[8] Along with Van Dixhoorn, other critics of Miller's Sonship theology included his one-time colleague at Westminster Seminary, Jay Adams.