| 1914 - 750 páginas
...hundred years ago, prescribed "that every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial and unbiassed investigation of Christian Truth, and that no assent...of any denomination of Christians shall be required of either instructors or students." This ideal was reaffirmed in a very practical fashion many years... | |
| Harvard Divinity School - 1910 - 620 páginas
...100 years, prescribed that " every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiassed investigation of Christian truth, and that no assent...of any denomination of Christians shall be required of either the instructors or students." The administration of the School conforms carefully to this... | |
| Union Theological Seminary (New York, N.Y.) - 1910 - 180 páginas
...that the men who drew up the articles constituting that school in 1817 used these remarkable words: "No assent to the peculiarities of any denomination...be required either of the instructors or students." They were thus 150 the precursors by nearly ninety years of those who, in 1905, proclaimed Union Seminary... | |
| Albert Hauck, Samuel Macauley Jackson, Charles Colebrook Sherman, George William Gilmore - 1911 - 265 páginas
...(qv). The initial constitution of the school, as made in 1816, provided " that every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiased investigation...no assent to the peculiarities of any denomination be required either of the students, or professors, or instructors." The distinct organization of the... | |
| 1917 - 116 páginas
...words " it being understood, that every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiassed investigation of Christian truth; and that no assent to the peculiarities of any denomination be required either of the Students, or Professors, or Instructors." These words have been often quoted... | |
| Charles Harold Lyttle - 1920 - 64 páginas
...impartial and unbiased investigation of Christian truth" with the now classic but ever glorious proviso that "no assent to the peculiarities of any denomination of Christians shall be required of the students or instructors." Such therefore was the sequence of events and the volume of justification... | |
| Joseph Estlin Carpenter - 1922 - 82 páginas
...said the constitution, " that every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiassed investigation of Christian truth; and that no assent to the peculiarities of any denomination be required either of the Students, or Professors, or Instructors." The movement of which Channing... | |
| Charles William Eliot - 1923 - 164 páginas
...Church of Massachusetts set about building up in Harvard (45) University a theological school in which "no assent to the peculiarities of any denomination...Christians shall be required either of the instructors or of the students." That was the third of the professions to obtain what may be called official connection... | |
| Edwin P. Conklin - 1927 - 426 páginas
...Faculty was organized in 1819. The constitution of the School prescribed that "every encouragement be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiased investigation...of any denomination of Christians shall be required of either the instructors or students." Andover Theological Seminary, founded in 1808 at Andover, Massachusetts,... | |
| Francis Greenwood Peabody - 1927 - 364 páginas
...among the constitutions of theological seminaries. It announced that ' Every encouragement shall be given to the serious, impartial, and unbiased investigation...the peculiarities of any denomination of Christians be required either of the instructors or students.' This fundamental clause had, in fact, deterred... | |
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