scholarly journals Footnotes to Disciples History

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rice Haggard

From the mid 1950s through the 1990s, DCHS printed short publications to remind its readers about the importance of the past. The series included reprints as well as new historical studies. Footnotes to Disciples History collects this wide-ranging series into one volume. Rice Haggard's An Address to the Different Religious Societies, on the sacred import of the Christian Name (1804); ⁃ John M. Imbler's Beyond Buffalo: Alexander Campbell on Education for Ministry (1992); ⁃ Report of the Proceedings of a General Meeting of Messengers from Thirteen Congregations (J.T. McVay and Alexander Campbell, 1834); William A. Gerrards's Christian Unity, Our Heritage (1986); Alexander Campbell's Lunenburg Letter (1837); ⁃ Eva Jean Wrather's Alexander Campbell and His Relevance for Today (1959); Perry Gresham's The Broncho That Would Not Be Broken (1986)

1997 ◽  
Vol 36 (4I) ◽  
pp. 321-331
Author(s):  
Sarfraz Khan Qureshi

It is an honour for me as President of the Pakistan Society of Development Economists to welcome you to the 13th Annual General Meeting and Conference of the Society. I consider it a great privilege to do so as this Meeting coincides with the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the state of Pakistan, a state which emerged on the map of the postwar world as a result of the Muslim freedom movement in the Indian Subcontinent. Fifty years to the date, we have been jubilant about it, and both as citizens of Pakistan and professionals in the social sciences we have also been thoughtful about it. We are trying to see what development has meant in Pakistan in the past half century. As there are so many dimensions that the subject has now come to have since its rather simplistic beginnings, we thought the Golden Jubilee of Pakistan to be an appropriate occasion for such stock-taking.


2004 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 303-306
Author(s):  
Francis Robinson

I should like to begin by thanking the Honorary Treasurer for his admirably succinct report for 2003. I would like to assure you that Council takes his main points very seriously, that is the need to eliminate the current deficit of around £35k, and the connected imperative to move to a more suitable building in a more suitable location. Over the past seven years the Honorary Treasurer has been a great servant of the Society. On behalf of Council, and the fellowship, I thank him for his skills and for keeping us focussed on the need to act.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Cherok

Historians have recognized Alexander Campbell as the leading figure in an important American Christian reform movement, an advocate of Christian unity, and an educator, but his role as an apologist has been forgotten. This book focuses on Campbell's career as a defender of the faith, arguing that he was "the most significant Christian apologist of America's antebellum period." He contended with some of the most notable skeptics of his era, most famous among them Robert Owen, founder of New Harmony. Martin E. Marty says regarding Campbell, "No clergyman of his time exerted himself more vigorously in combat of the infidels of the period." This groundbreaking book supports this claim with in-depth treatment of these debates.


2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 98-118
Author(s):  
Irina Paert

Abstract The story of Estonian Orthodoxy, as often told through the narrative of collective trauma, is not homogeneous and uncontested. The co-existence of two Orthodox communities in present-day Estonia, each insisting on exclusive canonical legitimacy and holding different views of the past, the incomplete work of transitional justice, and the untold story of political collaboration appear as irreconcilable differences that challenge the ideals of Christian unity. In order to address these unresolved problems of a traumatic past, the paper will turn to the ascetic theology of twentieth-century Orthodox saints St Silouan (1866–1938) and St Sophrony Sakharov (1896–1993) and to the musical oeuvres of the Estonian composer Arvo Pärt (b. 1935). The approach of these Orthodox ascetics, the article argues, provides an important perspective on Christian mission in a wounded world.


1957 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 7-24
Author(s):  
Henning Høirup

The Origin of the Grundtvig Society and its Activities during its First Decade. By Henning Høirup. The Grundtvig Society was founded on September 8th, 1947, in the Bishop’s Palace at Ribe. Three theological research-workers — Bishop C. I. Scharling, Dr. Villiam Grønbæk and the Reverend Henning Høirup — together with three young historians of literature — William Michelsen, Sten Johansen and Helge Toldberg — had at several private meetings discussed a series of problems of importance for Grundtvigian research. From this sprang the idea of a more comprehensive Society, which could pre-eminently become a forum for the extensive and many-sided activity which was beeing devoted to the study of Grundvig’s life and work. Invitations were therefore sent to all known research-students of Grundtvig to join the new Society, which was constituted at a meeting on January 13th, 1948. It was resolved that the Society should be open to all who were interested, and that a year-book — “Grundtvig- Studier” — should be published. The first President of the Society was Bishop Scharling, D. D.; Helge Toldberg became the Secretary and Henning Høirup the Editor of “Grundtvig-Studier”. The number of members soon rose to about 500. The Society was granted the free use of the Grundtvig Library at Vartov, a centre for study much prized by research workers. Soon the Society was already avtive in investigating the possibilities of a great Collected Edition of Grundtvig’s writings, an edition which should also include the enormous mass of unprinted material which is to be found in the Royal Library and elsewhere in Denmark. The plan was originally put forward by Helge Toldberg and William Michelsen. Preliminary negotiations were carried on with the Ministry of Education, The Carlsberg Fund, and the Danish Language and Literature Society, and as a sort of preparatory task, a partial cataloguing of Grundtvig’s writings was carried out, an experimental piece of work which proved particulary beneficial in creating the possibility of laying down uniform principles for cataloguing. This work was financed by grants from the memorial bequest of L. Zeuthen. One link in the work of making the priceless collections of the Grundtvig Archives available for research consisted of making microfilms of them, a task which was undertaken by the Royal Library and financed by the Library and the Ministry of Education. In addition to “Grundtvig-Studier”, which is published in September each year, the Society began publishing a series of writings, the first of which was Henning Høirup thesis: “Grundtvigs Syn paa Tro og Erkendelse” (“Grundtvig’s Views on Faith and Understanding”) and which in the past ten years has come to include ten separate books. In 1951 the first President of the Society, Bishop Scharling, died, and Dean Henning Høirup, D. D., became his successor, while Dr. Gustav Albeck, Ph. D., took over the post of Editor of “Grundtvig-Studier” . In the same year a very fruitful meeting between Danish and Norwegian workers in the field of Grundtvigian research took place at “Lysebu” near Oslo — a little Grundtvig Congress with a series of lectures which mainly sought to shed light on the central problem: Grundtvig and Norway. Here, too, there was an opportunity to make valuable personal contacts, and to discuss common tasks to be undertaken in the future, e. g., a proposal put forward by Dr. Albeck for a special edition of Grundtvig’s correspondence with prominent Norwegians, covering the whole period from Nordahl Brun in 1809 to Grundtvig’s death in 1872. Every year the Society has arranged a big annual meeting in Copenhagen, Aarhus or Odense, with a general meeting and election of the Executive Committee, and with at least two lectures, which have often been subsequently published in “Grundtvig-Studier“, or in other ways have made their mark in the literature about Grundtvig. The Society has also arranged a number of local meetings (in Aarhus and especially in Copenhagen). Thanks to the establishment of “The General State Fund for the Advancement of Knowledge”, the Society succeeded in 1954 (in close co-operation with the “Danish Language and Literature Society, whose administrator is Dr. Albert Fabritius, Ph. D.) in obtaining the necessary financial support and an adequate organisation for a complete cataloguing of the Grundtvig Archives, with Gustav Albeck, Uffe Hansen, Steen Johansen, William Michelsen, Kai Thaning, Helge Toldberg, K. E. Bugge, and Niels Kofoed as cataloguers, under the professional supervision of Dr. Høirup and Professor Peter Skautrup, Ph. D. Up to the present more than half the Archives have been catalogued. In the course of five years the catalogue will be available in about twenty-five volumes, which will be sold principally to libraries catering for scholars and to other central libraries. Up to now the first three volumes have been published. At the beginning of its second decade the Society can look back on the great contribution which it has already made, and forward to a host of tasks which are still undone, both in the sphere of research and in relation to the Society’s other important task — to spread the knowledge of Grundtvig’s life and ideas both at home and abroad.


2021 ◽  
pp. 097468622110457
Author(s):  
Preetha S

The need for strengthening engagement between companies and its shareholders is being increasingly recognised over the past few years. Various authors have discussed about the role of shareholder engagement in enhancing corporate governance standards. The literatures discussing these aspects are focusing on developed countries. This study seeks to make a contribution to the debate by discussing the scope and challenges for shareholder engagement in India. Many reforms were introduced to enhance shareholder participation and engagement in India. The study explains the significance of shareholder engagement and the strategies adopted by shareholders to influence corporate policy. The study gives a brief overview of scheme of division of power between board of directors and the company in general meeting in India. It examines the statutory reforms introduced in India for promoting shareholder engagement in corporate governance processes. It also discusses some incidents in Indian corporate sector to examine the growth of shareholder engagement in India.


1881 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
G. G. Zerffi ◽  
WM. Herbage

In presenting their Report on the past year to the General Meeting of the Fellows, the Council of the Royal Historical Society gladly give the first place to their expression of thanks to the Committee of Inquiry (appointed 18th November, 1880), for their valuable assistance, for although nearly every suggestion of theirs for the future management of the Society has been anticipated in resolutions already passed by the Council, still they feel that had not such a Committee been instituted they would probably not have had it in their power to have obtained the information on which the resolutions have been based. The Council have further to report that on the 5 th January, 1881, the Rev. Charles Rogers asked the Council to be permitted to resign the appointments of Historiographer and Secretary of the Society then and there, and under the circumstances he was permitted to do so, and the resignation was accepted. His connection with the Society in any capacity therefore ceased.


1988 ◽  
Vol 27 (4I) ◽  
pp. 347-353
Author(s):  
Ghulam Ishaq Khan

Syed Nawab Haider Naqvi, Dr Ghaffar Chaudhry, Distinguished Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is my privilege to inaugurate the Fifth Annual General Meeting of the Pakistan Society of Development Economists. During the past six years of its existence the Society, which I founded in 1982, has become an institution devoted to the pursuit of scientific virtuosity and academic rectitude. It has provided a powerful medium through which a serious discussion of economic and demographic issues related to Pakistan's economy has become possible. I am happy to know that by this time over one hundred papers, written by scholars from all over the world, have been presented in this forum. In addition, the Inaugural Address, the Presidential Address, the Quaid-i-Azam Lectures, and the Guest Lectures, presented in this forum each year, provide a synoptic review of the fields of development economics and demography, and of issues relating to the economics of education, health and the role of women in the development process. This massive intellectual output should strengthen the process of knowledge creation by matching the theories of economic development with the 'reality' in the developing countries. The resulting literature, with a focus on Pakistan, also provides rich source material and guidelines for policy formulation in the field of socio-economic development. I must add, however, that while due to the contributions of the Society we know much more about the nature of the development problem, our knowledge of how to solve it has probably not expanded as much.


Oryx ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 149-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin W. Holdgate

The world is being altered by human action more rapidly now than natural forces changed it during any short period in the past. There are predictions of massive ecological changes and extinctions of species on a unprecedented scale. The author examines what is actually happening, what the consequences are likely to be, and what corrective action can be taken. He emphasizes that, as with all exercises in crystal gazing, this cannot be an error-free analysis. Despite the vast scale of current scientific activity, our knowledge of the processes affecting the world environment and our monitoring of changes are far from adequate. Too many statements—including widely quoted estimates of extinctions—are based on extrapolation from limited data. This is a speculative paper intended as a spur to further analysis rather than as a definitive review. It is based on an address to the Annual General Meeting of the Fauna and Flora Preservation Society on 10 September 1986.*


2009 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 264-295
Author(s):  
Michael Kaler

AbstractIn this article I discuss the Letter of Peter to Philip, one of the gnostic documents found in the Nag Hammadi collection, as well as in the recently published Codex Tchacos. In prior work on the Letter, questions have been raised with regard to its overall coherence, the precise nature of its relationship to the canonical book of Acts, and the reasons for including it in Nag Hammadi Codex VIII in late antiquity. In my response to these questions, I demonstrate that it is a coherent work; that it is solidly grounded in a specific (albeit somewhat fictional) historical context, namely that of Acts 7-8; and that its presence in codex VIII makes good sense given the codex's underlying logic. The Letter has also been treated in the past as a Petrine document; I demonstrate that in fact it is extremely indebted to a Pauline view of revelation and enlightenment, drawing specifically on the account of Paul's revelation in Acts 9. Thus in contrast to older views that saw the Letter as an incoherent, Petrine work making scattershot use of Lukan references and placed in codex VIII as “filler,” I demonstrate that it is a quite coherent, Pauline work that operates within a precise context in the Actsian historical plan, and that its presence in Codex VIII illuminates the logic underlying that codex's arrangement. In all of this, my emphasis is firmly on the narrative aspects of the frame story part of the Letter, rather than privileging the content of the esoteric revelation delivered by Jesus, as has been done in the past.


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