The Works of John England V4: First Bishop of Charleston (1849)

The Works of John England V4: First Bishop of Charleston (1849)
Author: John England
Publisher:
Total Pages: 496
Release: 2009-05
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9781104509736

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This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.

Bishop England Papers

Bishop England Papers
Author: John England
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1829
Genre: Bishops
ISBN:

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Twentieth-century items that mention England include a biographical sketch, and an essay, published May 1946, that quotes a toast offered by Bishop England, on 4 July 1827, during a banquet in Charleston honoring Mary Caton as part of an essay on the Caton family and how sisters Mary, Elizabeth, and Louisa Caton married into British noble familes. The sisters were granddaughters of Charles Carroll of Maryland, who outlived all other signers of the Declaration of Indpendence.

John Bachman

John Bachman
Author: John Bachman
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 400
Release: 2011
Genre: History
ISBN: 0820338184

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John Bachman (1790-1874) was an internationally renowned naturalist and a prominent Lutheran minister. This is the first collection of his writings, containing selections from his three major books, his letters, and his articles on plants and animals, education, religion, agriculture, and the human species. Bachman was the leading authority on North American mammals. He was responsible for the descriptions of the 147 mammal species included in Viviparous Quadrupeds of North America, a massive work produced in collaboration with John James Audubon. Bachman relied entirely on scientific evidence in his work and was exceptional among his fellow naturalists for studying the whole of natural history. Bachman also relied on scientific evidence in his Doctrine of the Unity of the Human Race. He showed that human beings constitute a single species that developed as varieties equivalent to the varieties of domesticated animals. In this work, perhaps his most significant accomplishment, Bachman stood nearly alone in challenging the polygenetic views of Louis Agassiz and others that white and black people descended from different progenitors. Bachman was also an important figure in the establishment of Lutheranism in the Southeast. He wrote the first American monograph on the doctrines of Martin Luther and the history of the Reformation. Bachman served for fifty-six years as minister of St. John's Lutheran Church in Charleston, South Carolina, and was one of the founders of Newberry College.

Dictionary of American Religious Biography

Dictionary of American Religious Biography
Author: Henry W. Bowden
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 702
Release: 1993-04-13
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0313369607

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The first edition of this award-winning reference, published in 1977, contained 425 biographical profiles of the most significant American religious figures. This new edition includes profiles for 125 additional people, and the earlier biographical sketches have been revised and updated. The volume includes religious leaders who died before July 1, 1992. Among its pages are entries for reformers, philosophers, social activists, doers and dreamers. While many of the people are mainstream, white ordained clergymen, many more stand outside traditional denominations and reflect the cultural and religious diversity of modern America. The result is a systematic overview of 400 years of American religion from the colonial period to the present day. Each profile begins with a capsule summary of the chief events in that person's life. The biographical essay that follows places the basic facts of the figure's life within the larger context of American religious history. A bibliography of the most significant works by and about the figure concludes each entry. Appendices at the end of the work categorize each individual by religious denomination and by place of birth.

Heaven Can Wait

Heaven Can Wait
Author: Diana Walsh Pasulka
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2015
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0195382021

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After purgatory was proclaimed an official doctrine of the Catholic Church in the thirteenth century, its location became a topic of heated debate and philosophical speculation. Over the centuries, the debate surrounding purgatory has never ended: even today members of post-millennial ''purgatory apostolates'' maintain that purgatory is an actual, physical place. Heaven Can Wait provides crucial insight into the theological problem of purgatory's materiality (or lack thereof) over the past seven hundred years.

Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson, S.J. (1786–1864) and the Reform of the American Jesuits

Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson, S.J. (1786–1864) and the Reform of the American Jesuits
Author: Cornelius Michael Buckley
Publisher: University Press of America
Total Pages: 326
Release: 2013-10-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 0761862323

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Cornelius Michael Buckley, S.J. delves into Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson’s life, using him as the point of departure to describe the tensions among Jesuits in Maryland after the restoration of the order in 1814. A refugee of the violent slave rebellions in Haiti, where he was born, and the Terror in France, Dubuisson became a clerk in Napoleon’s personal treasury and a resident in the Tuileries. He was a member of Marie Louise’s flight in 1814 and later differed with Napoleon’s account of the fate of the lost treasury during this momentous event. The following year, giving up a promising career in the Restoration government, he entered the slave-owning Jesuits in Maryland. Ten years later, he was the priest involved in the Mattingly Miracle. After a brief tenure as Georgetown’s fourteenth president, Dubuisson spent three years in Europe advising the Jesuit general how to keep his American troops in step along the Ignatian “long black line.” During this time, he began his career as a fundraiser and propagandist for the American Church and as an unofficial, and sometimes vexing, diplomat of the general in the courts of Europe. After his return, Dubuisson served as a parish priest in Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. Elected a second time to represent the Maryland Jesuits at a meeting in Rome, he never returned to the United States and eventually became chaplain to the dashing Duke and Duchess de Montmorency Laval. Recognized as “the chief pillar of the Jesuit mission in the United States,” he died in Pau, France, during the height of the American Civil War.