Sketches From Church History

Sketches From Church History

Author: Rebecca Frawley

Publisher: Banner of Truth

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 122

ISBN-13: 9780851519524

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A complete unit study on church history; great for families who homeschool, Christian schools, or someone who just wants to understand tht "big picture." Accompanies Banner's Sketches From Church History; includes syllabus, review sheets, tests, puzzles, timelines, maps.


Sketches from Church History

Sketches from Church History

Author: Sidney Maurice Houghton

Publisher:

Published: 1980

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780851513171

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This popularly-written introduction to church history takes the reader from the early Church Fathers to the days of the modern missionary movement.


Fortress Introduction to Black Church History

Fortress Introduction to Black Church History

Author: Anne H. Pinn

Publisher: Fortress Press

Published:

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13: 9781451403831

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This volume, co-authored by a black minister and a black theologian, provides an overview of the shape and history of major black religious bodies: Methodist, Baptist, and Pentecostal. It introduces the denominations and their demographics before relating their historical development into the groups that are known today.


Trial and Triumph

Trial and Triumph

Author: Richard M. Hannula

Publisher: Canon Press & Book Service

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 304

ISBN-13: 1885767544

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for saxophone quartetA slow movement which explores the beautiful sonorities of saxophones played softly.


Books and Readers in the Early Church

Books and Readers in the Early Church

Author: Harry Y. Gamble

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 1995-01-01

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 9780300069181

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This fascinating and lively book provides the first comprehensive discussion of the production, circulation, and use of books in early Christianity. It explores the extent of literacy in early Christian communities; the relation in the early church between oral tradition and written materials; the physical form of early Christian books; how books were produced, transcribed, published, duplicated, and disseminated; how Christian libraries were formed; who read the books, in what circumstances, and to what purposes. Harry Y. Gamble interweaves practical and technological dimensions of the production and use of early Christian books with the social and institutional history of the period. Drawing on evidence from papyrology, codicology, textual criticism, and early church history, as well as on knowledge about the bibliographical practices that characterized Jewish and Greco-Roman culture, he offers a new perspective on the role of books in the first five centuries of the early church.