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InterVarsity Press began just before World War II as a small service branch of the InterVarsity Christian Fellowship campus ministry, which had its beginnings in the 1939–1940 academic year. [3] At its inception, InterVarsity Press solely imported books from the Great Britain InterVarsity Christian Fellowship movement for use by college ...
Inchley remained in his post, apart from an interlude for war service, until 1976. [3] He died on 13 April 2005 (aged 93). Following the IVF's wartime closure, the press re-emerged and a steady growth ensued. Ruth Bolton was appointed as Editorial Assistant in 1948 and in 1949, the press appointed its first Sales Manager, Eddie Bradley-Feary.
InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-3369-6. Lowman, Pete (1988), The Day of His Power, Leicester: Inter-Varsity, ISBN 0-85110-794-X. Poynor, Alice (1986), From the Campus to the World: Stories from the First Fifty Years of Student Foreign Missions Fellowship, InterVarsity Press, ISBN 0-87784-947-1. Woods, C. Stacey (1978), The Growth of a Work ...
Urbana 2000, InterVarsity's 19th triennial student missions convention (themed "Because God First Loved Us"), was an unusual Urbana in that it was scheduled four years (vesrus the traditional three) after the previous conference, to avoid possible Y2K complications. Over 20,000 participated.
By 1950 there were 35 staff serving students in 499 InterVarsity chapters across the country. InterVarsity Press had been started to supply quality literature suitable for the campus. And the Urbana Student Missions Convention had begun the tradition of calling every student generation to consider global missions.
InterVarsity was officially organized in late 1929. In 1934 Stacey Woods became the new general secretary of InterVarsity in Canada and in 1938 he helped establish the first InterVarsity chapters in the United States. [1] Typically, InterVarsity meetings are composed of small groups of Christians meeting for weekly prayer and study.
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