1,690 research outputs found

    Annual John M. Perkins Lecture

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    John Perkins returns to the SPU campus for the seventh annual John M. Perkins Lecture. One of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement, Perkins is an internationally known author, speaker, and teacher. He has received honorary doctorates from several U.S. universities, including Seattle Pacific University

    John M. Perkins Center Twelfth Annual Lecture

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    Each year our university has the privilege of hearing Dr. John Perkins speak in chapel as part of the John Perkins Lecture series. Dr. Perkins helped launch the John Perkins Center at SPU, is distinguished visiting professor at SPU, and is the co-founder of the Christian Community Development Association. He is the recipient of numerous honorary doctorates and awards, and the author of several books including his most recent work, Dream With Me

    John Perkins Eighth Annual Lecture

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    John Perkins, one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement, returns to SPU for his annual lecture. An internationally known author, speaker, and teacher, he is the co-founder of SPU\u27s John Perkins Center

    13th Annual John Perkins Lecture

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    Dr. John Perkins returns to campus for the Thirteenth John Perkins Lecture Series. Joining the Tuesday annual lecture and chapel, will be Dr. Michael Emerson, scholar and author on race and religion and provost of North Park University in Chicago. Dr. Perkins and Dr. Emerson will host a discussion on faith, race, and evangelicalism

    14th annual John Perkins Lecture

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    Dr. John Perkins returns to campus Tuesday, April 30, 11 a.m., at First Free Methodist Church, for the 14th annual John Perkins Lecture Series. This year’s morning event features Erna Kim Hackett, executive pastor at The Way Berkeley. Later that day, Hackett and Dr. Perkins will continue the morning’s topic, “Words Have Power,” at 7:30 p.m., also in First Free Methodist Church. John Perkins is one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement and an internationally known author, speaker, and teacher. His is the co-founder of SPU’s John Perkins Center for Reconciliation, Leadership Training, and Community Development and the author of the new book One Blood: Parting Words to the Church on Race and Love. Erna Kim Hackett served with InterVarsity for 18 years in Black Ministries and Urban Programs. She is a preacher, pastor, writer, activist, and singer

    John M. Perkins Center Ninth Annual Lecture

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    John Perkins, one of the leading evangelical voices to come out of the American civil rights movement, returns to SPU for his annual lecture. An internationally known author, speaker, and teacher, he is the co-founder of SPU\u27s John Perkins Center

    Dolen Perkins-Valdez: 47th Annual ODU Literary Festival

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    Dolen Perkins-Valdez is the New York Times bestselling author of Take My Hand (2022) which was awarded a 2023 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work, Silver Gavel Award from the American Bar Association, Fiction Award from Black Caucus of the American Library Association and was longlisted for the Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award. A three-time nominee for a United States Artists Fellowship, Dolen is widely considered a pre-eminent chronicler of American historical life

    The family of John Perkins of Ipswich, Mass. Complete in three parts.

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    Title vignette: coat of arms.Pt. I, Quartermaster John Perkins; pt. II, Deacon Thomas Perkins; pt. III, Sergeant Jacob Perkins.Mode of access: Internet

    The family of John Perkins of Ipswich, Mass. : Complete in three parts /

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    Title vignette: coat of arms.Pt. I, Quartermaster John Perkins; pt. II, Deacon Thomas Perkins; pt. III, Sergeant Jacob Perkins.Mode of access: Internet

    Everard Booths Irenische Perkins-Vertaling

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    AbstractEverard Booth's irenic Perkins translation The French diplomat Jean Hotman included the French translation of William Perkins' A Reformed Catholike in a syllabus of irenical literature published by him in 1607. This is important. In around 1600 Protestant people were not struck by the unfriendly remarks about the Roman Catholic Church in Perkins' book but by the fact that each of its chapters started with a discourse on the issues on which Catholics and Protestants agreed. Therefore it makes little sense to pay special attention to Perkins' dedication to William Bowes, as W J. op 't Hof does. The translator, Booth, moreover, did not know English. He made use of a Latin translation for his version and never saw the dedication to Bowes. The wording of his translation of Perkins' preface differs very much in character from the original, as a result of its origin in the Latin text. Op 't Hof refers to a note written to Booth by his publisher Schilders. Yet this note only contains information about the sale of the translation, and tells us nothing at all about the contents of the book or Booth's intentions for it. In his own preface, Booth does tell us about these intentions. Op 't Hof disregards these remarks and brushes aside the strong possibility that the work of Booth's former professor Franciscus Junius, the author of Eirenicum de Pace Ecclesiae Catholicae, may also have influenced his translation. An earlier work of translation by Booth shows his interest in the dialogue between Protestants and Catholics. On the basis of its title, Op 't Hof ascribes to it a strong anti-Romanist nature, but the book itself does not confirm this. The author states explicitly that he does not want to annoy the other side. My conclusion is that Hotman's opinion of Booth's translation of Perkins has to be taken seriously: this version of A Reformed Catholic has an irenical nature. </jats:sec
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