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Harry Emerson Fosdick (May 24, 1878 – October 5, 1969) was an American pastor. Fosdick became a central figure in the fundamentalist–modernist controversy within American Protestantism in the 1920s and 1930s and was one of the most prominent liberal ministers of the early 20th century.
She was the daughter of Harry Emerson Fosdick, who was the first pastor of the Riverside Church in New York City.She graduated from Smith College in 1934 and received a Ph.D. from Columbia University in 1939, subsequently returning to Smith College to teach for four years.
Harry Emerson Fosdick (1900), pastor/author; John Tecumseh Jones, (attended 1829), Native American leader, Ottawa translator, Baptist minister, anti-slavery advocate in Kansas, founder of Ottawa University; Joseph Endom Jones (1876), Baptist minister, professor at Virginia Union University
Harry Emerson Fosdick: Preacher, Pastor, Prophet by Robert Moats Miller (1985) Harry Emerson Fosdick: Persuasive Preacher by Halford R. Ryan (1989) The Presbyterian Controversy: Fundamentalists, Modernists, and Moderates by Bradley J. Longfield (1991) Understanding Fundamentalism and Evangelicalism by George M. Marsden (1991)
Books by Eleanor Gertrude Brown include Milton's Blindness (1934), a work of literary scholarship based on her doctoral dissertation about John Milton; Into the Light (1946), a book of poetry; and Corridors of Light (1958), a memoir of her own education, with an introduction by Harry Emerson Fosdick. [8] "To my interpretation of Milton's life ...
Harry Emerson Fosdick, American Pastor 5. ... "The worst thing that can happen in a democracy–as well as in an individual's life–is to become cynical about the future and lose hope: that is ...
Harry Emerson Fosdick – First minister of Riverside Church and professor of homiletics; Beverly Wildung Harrison - a Christian feminist ethicist, she taught for 34 years at Union and was the Caroline Williams Beaird Professor of Ethics. She was the first woman president of the North American Society of Christian Ethics.
1923: George Edwin Horr — The Christian Faith and Eternal Life; 1924: Philip Cabot — The Sense of Immortality; 1925: Edgar S. Brightman — Immortality in Post-Kantian Idealism; 1926: Gustav Kruger — The Immortality of Man According to the Views of the Men of the Enlightenment; 1927: Harry Emerson Fosdick — Spiritual Values and Eternal Life