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[Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary]
Subjects: Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Our Baptist ministers and schools [microform] / by Pegues, A. W.(Albert Witherspoon),1859-1929.(CARDINAL)312627;
Microfiche.
Subjects: African American Baptists; Baptist theological seminaries.; African American Baptists; African American clergy;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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A History of the Kiokee Baptist Church in Georgia. by Mosteller, James Donovan,1915-;
Thesis- Northern Baptist Theological Seminary.
Subjects: Kiokee Baptist Church (Appling, Ga.); Baptists;
© 1952., Edwards Bros.,
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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An early history of Free Will Baptists : the original Free Will Baptists in America, a continuing witness from infancy to identity (1727-1830). by Davidson, William F.(William Franklin)(CARDINAL)183550;
Bibliography: volume 1, pages 225-238.
Subjects: Free Will Baptists (1727-1935); North Caroliniana.;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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The great possibilities of the Sunday school : lecture delivered at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary ; Louisville, Ky., January 31, 1906 / by Broughton, N. B.(Needham Bryant),1848-1914.(CARDINAL)621047;
Subjects: Sunday schools.; North Caroliniana.; Old State Library Collection.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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A great trio: Fuller, Jeter, Yates : three lectures delivered on the Gay Foundation before the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Ky., March, 1896 / by Smith, W. R. L.(William Robert Lee),1846-;
Subjects: Biographies.; Fuller, Richard, 1804-1876.; Jeter, Jeremiah Bell, 1802-1880.; Yates, M. T. (Matthew Tyson), 1819-1888.; North Caroliniana.; Old State Library Collection.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Stained glass ceilings : how evangelicals do gender and practice power / by Weaver Swartz, Lisa,author.;
Includes bibliographical references and index."This book speaks to the intersection of gender and power within American evangelicalism by examining the formation of evangelical leaders in two seminary communities. Southern Baptist Theological Seminary inspires a vision of human flourishing gender differentiation and male headship. Men practice "Godly Manhood," and are taught to act as the "head" of the family, while their wives are socialized into codes of "Godly Womanhood" that prioritized prescribed gender roles. This power structure that prioritizes men yet offers agency to their wives in women-centered spaces and through martial relationships. Meanwhile, Asbury Theological Seminary promises freedom from gendered hierarchies. Appealing to a story of gender-blind equality, Asbury welcomes women into classrooms, administrative offices, and pulpits. But the institution's construction of egalitarianism obscures the fact that women are rewarded for adapting to an existing male-centered status quo rather than for developing their own voices as women. Featuring figures such as high-profile evangelicals such as Al Mohler, Owen Strachan, and Craig Keener along with young seminarians poised to lead the movement in the coming decades, this book illustrates the liabilities of white evangelical toolkits and argues that evangelical culture upholds male-centered structures of power even as it facilitates meaning and identity"--
Subjects: Southern Baptist Theological Seminary.; Asbury Theological Seminary.; Evangelicalism; Christian leadership.; Leadership; Sex role; Gender roles.;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Contentious unions : Black Baptist schools and White money in the Jim Crow South / by Mathews, Mary Beth Swetnam,author.(CARDINAL)350251;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-237) and index."In Contentious Unions: Black Baptist Schools and White Baptist Money in the Jim Crow South, Mary Beth Swetnam Mathews interweaves the stories of the founding and development of Richmond Theological Seminary (Virginia), Central City College (Macon, Georgia), and American Baptist Theological Seminary (Nashville, Tennessee) - colleges that saw challenges, complexities, and hard-won accomplishments in the Post-Reconstruction era. Her study begins just after the Civil War, when one of these institutions provided educational opportunities for newly freed slaves, and follows the fortunes of the schools through the 1960s. Mmathews reveals the financial, curricular, and identity struggles of schools that came into being and survived under difficult circumstances. The institutions relied on funding from White Baptists, but also had to fight against control and exploitation from those who helped them financially. Though each school evolved with a different identity and educational mission, Mathews concludes that 'they could be simultaneously symbols of racial independence as well as victims of white supremacy.' As 'oppositional spaces,' these schools gave their communities access to the ground floor of the civil rights movement, and the author highlights their connections to such well-known activists as John R. Lewis, Jo An Gibson Robinson, and Gordon P. Hancock. Ultimately, Mathews's book is a fascinating and complex account that uses the history of these three institutions to illuminate the origins of the long struggle for civil rights." --
Subjects: Richmond Institute.; Richmond Theological Seminary.; Virginia Union University (Richmond, Va.); Central City College (Macon, Ga.); Georgia Baptist College (Macon, Ga.); American Baptist Theological Seminary.; Baptist theological seminaries; African American Baptists; Benefactors;
Available copies: 1 / Total copies: 1
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Baptists in Sunday school history : a lecture delivered at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, Ky., February, 1907, and at the Southern Baptist Convention, in session at Richmond, Va., May, 1907 / by Spilman, Bernard Washington,1871-1950.(CARDINAL)305935;
Subjects: Sunday schools.; Baptists.; North Caroliniana.; Old State Library Collection.;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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The seminarian : Martin Luther King, Jr. comes of age / by Parr, Patrick,author.(CARDINAL)417999;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-277) and indexForeword / by David J. Garrow -- Prologue: On a bus in Georgia, April 1944 -- Year I: Genesis -- Young and alone : Term 1, September 14-November 24, 1948 -- Breaking free : Term 2, November 30, 1948-February 16, 1949 -- Finding a voice : Term 3, February 22, May 6, 1949 -- Year II: Exodus -- A new devotion : Term September 13-November 23, 1949 -- Mordecai's fire : Term 2, November 29, 1949-February 15, 1950 -- Chosen to lead : Term 3, February 21-May 5, 1950 -- Interlude : the summer of 1950 -- Year III: Revelation -- Forbidden love : Term 1, September 12-November 22, 1950 -- The recommended plagiarist : Term 2, November 28, 1950-February 15, 1951 -- A divine cause : Term 3, February 20-May 4, 1951 -- Epilogue: Beyond Crozer -- Appendixes: A. Crozer incoming class of 1948 ; Events from ML's student body presidency ; C. A brief history of the Crozers and Old Main"Based on dozens of revealing interviews with the men and women who knew him then, The Seminarian is the first definitive, full-length account of King's years as a divinity student at Crozer Theological Seminary. Long passed over by biographers and historians, this period in King's life is vital to understanding the historical figure he soon became"--
Subjects: Biographies.; King, Martin Luther, Jr., 1929-1968.; Crozer Theological Seminary.; African American Baptists; African American Baptists;
Available copies: 4 / Total copies: 4
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