Fotografía de autor

Frank Spencer Mead (1898–1982)

Autor de Handbook of Denominations in the United States

59+ Obras 2,436 Miembros 10 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Obras de Frank Spencer Mead

Who's Who in the Bible (1878) 170 copias
12,000 Religious Quotations (1904) 134 copias
Los Bautistas (1936) 27 copias
Rebels with a cause (1964) 18 copias
The Pulpit In the South (1950) 5 copias
Communion Messages (1961) 4 copias
Book of Praise and Prayer (1977) 3 copias
Tarbell's Teacher's Guide (1974) 2 copias
On our own doorstep. (1948) 1 copia
Right here at home, (1939) 1 copia
The Baptists 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Let freedom ring! (1975)algunas ediciones54 copias
My favorite Christmas story (1960) 38 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1898
Fecha de fallecimiento
1982
Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

 
Denunciada
Rostie | 6 reseñas más. | Feb 9, 2023 |
Great reference book to learn about all of the diferent denominations in the United States and some of the key differences in beliefs and history of each. I love the charts in the back showing how all of the denominations relate to each other.
 
Denunciada
kjslaughter | 6 reseñas más. | Jan 1, 2013 |
Short biographies of figures named in the Christian Bible.

Citing only the Scripture itself, without archeology, exegetes, or socio-historians. The little biographies are delights, and are drawn accurately from literature. {Reminds me of the description: "The Bible is all true; and some of it may have happened.} Here are four notes on synoptic "authors", Mead does not mention could not have been alive at the time of Christ. Then again, my notes do not do his charming "biographies" the justice they deserve!

MARK. Describes Mark as a youngster hiding in the street, and then as the soldiers grab him, "loosing his sheet" and escaping naked. That figure is not named in Scripture, and may even be a Markan expression for one who lost his life during a street brawl. He appears with Barnabas and Paul on their first missionary journey and then deserts them. Paul never forgives him. The author says "His is the oldest, most vivid and authentic Life of Christ. Matthew, Luke and John copied from him liberally." [219]

MATTHEW. "He sold himself twice, once to Mammon and once to God." He began as a publican tax-collector. "Rome despised him; Jewry hated him. Matthew was rich and wretched." [201 It is Matthew who says "Ye cannot serve God and mammon." That thing about the camels and the eye of a needle, comes from Matthew.

LUKE. "Luke was a doctor and a gentile. He may once have been a slave; slaves were often physicians." [227] Mead notes that science and theology were joined in Luke, even globe-trotting with Paul as a missionary and personal physician. At the end of a long trail, Paul says "Only Luke is with me!" Only Luke.

JOHN. "He moved about in a charmed circle of love." The only disciple at the foot of the Cross, heard Jesus commend Mother Mary to his care. "Wrote the loveliest and most popular Life of Jesus Christ."

Foreword: "The Bible is a portrait-gallery. Down through its pages from Adam walking the mists of the cooling earth to the last dreaming seer of Revelation, moves a deathless procession of the most interesting men and women in the history of the world."
… (más)
 
Denunciada
keylawk | Aug 26, 2012 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
59
También por
2
Miembros
2,436
Popularidad
#10,539
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
10
ISBNs
44

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