1628-1928

1628-1928
Author: William Nelson Potter Dailey
Publisher:
Total Pages: 51
Release: 1928
Genre:
ISBN:

History of the Reformed Church in America

History of the Reformed Church in America
Author: Charles Edward Corwin
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1928
Genre:
ISBN:

Manuscript prepared for the Tercentenary of the Reformed Church in America in 1928. Includes chronologies of the Church in Europe and America.

The Arabian Mission's Story

The Arabian Mission's Story
Author: Lewis R. Scudder
Publisher: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Total Pages: 606
Release: 1998
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9780802846167

Volume 30 recounts the eighty-year-long history of the RCA's mission work in the Middle East, written by a missionary who has spent decades in the Arabian Gulf. Including instructive discussion of missiological themes as well as the narrative of the church's daily work in Arabia, this volume is not only of denominational interest but will also provide important insights for mission students and those actively involved in a mission field.

That Ever Loyal Island

That Ever Loyal Island
Author: Phillip Papas
Publisher: NYU Press
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2009-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 0814767664

Of crucial strategic importance to both the British and the Continental Army, Staten Island was, for a good part of the American Revolution, a bastion of Loyalist support. With its military and political significance, Staten Island provides rich terrain for Phillip Papas's illuminating case study of the local dimensions of the Revolutionary War. Papas traces Staten Island's political sympathies not to strong ties with Britain, but instead to local conditions that favored the status quo instead of revolutionary change. With a thriving agricultural economy, stable political structure, and strong allegiance to the Anglican Church, on the eve of war it was in Staten Island's self-interest to throw its support behind the British, in order to maintain its favorable economic, social, and political climate. Over the course of the conflict, continual occupation and attack by invading armies deeply eroded Staten Island's natural and other resources, and these pressures, combined with general war weariness, created fissures among the residents of “that ever loyal island,” with Loyalist neighbors fighting against Patriot neighbors in a civil war. Papas’s thoughtful study reminds us that the Revolution was both a civil war and a war for independence—a duality that is best viewed from a local perspective.