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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
HENRY H. JESSUP Taken when Moderator of the General Assembly.
Contents SECOND VOLUME XIX. NOTABLE VISITORS AND CONVERTS . . 405
XX. A CHOLERA YEAR ...... 430 XXL HELPS AND HINDRANCES . ., . .467
XXII. MISSION SCHOOLS ...... 508 XXIII. SKETCHES 1887 ...... 526
XXIV. THREE YEARS OF PROGRESS 1888 . . . 533 XXV. MARKING TIME . .
. . . .572 XXVI. A NEW CENTURY DAWNS 1899-1900 . . 664 XXVII. THE
WHITENING FIELDS 1901-1902 . . 695 XXVIII. MY LATEST FURLOUGH YEARS
1903-1904 . 719 XXIX. JUBILEE TIMES 1905-1907 .... 753 XXX. WHAT
SHALL THE HARVEST BE JANUARY I9O8-MAY 1909 781 APPENDICES I.
Missionaries in Syria Mission from 1819 to i9 8 797 II. The History
Bibliography . . .801 III. American Medical Missionaries and
Agencies in Syria Mission . 802 IV. List of Mission Schools of the
Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions in Beirut and D am as c as,
and in the Mutserfiyet of Lebanon . . . . . 805 V Outline of the
History of the Syria Mission of the American Presbyterian Church
and Contemporary Events, 18201900 . . 809 VI. Figures, 1908-1909
Statistics of the Syria Mission . . . . .814 VII, Statistics of the
Syrian Protestant College from 1866 to 1906 .... 819 INDEX . . . .
. .821 Illustrations SECOND VOLUME Facing page Dr. Jessup ........
College Hall, Syrian Protestant College . . . . 412 Mission Group
......... 429 A View of Lebanon ......... 440 A View in the Lebanon
........ 456 Hasroun, A Lebanon Village ....... 465 Geo. E. Post
Science Hall, Syrian Protestant College . . . 480 Assembly Hall,
Syrian Protestant College ..... 490 Sarcophagus of Alexander the
Great. Sarcophagus of Weeping Women 507 Front View of Gerard
Institute, Sidon . ., . . 5 1 3 Dar es Salaam Orphanage. Gerard
InstitutePupils . . .516 Asfuriyeh Hospital. General View . . . . .
.521 Pietros Hotel, 1875 ......... 530 Jedaan the Bedawy .........
541 Kamil Aietany .......... 559 Syrian Mission in 1893 with Drs.
Bliss and Post, .... 570 Gorge of Nahr Barada ........ 585 American
Press .......... 590 The Damascus to Mecca Railway . . . . . .601
Beirut Memorial Column . . . . . . .618 Daniel Bliss Hall .........
630 Mission Stations . . . . . . . . .680 The Seventieth Birthday
Picnic. Ancient Mule Bridge . . . 690 Yusef Ahtiyeh, Kasim Beg Amin
....... 700 Dr. Daniel Bliss in 1905 . . . . . . . .711 Syrian
Churches and Houses . . . . . . .720 Group of Syrian Teachers and
Preachers . . . . .730 Interior of the Chapel of the Protestant
College, Beirut . . 737 Group of Syrian Churches ........ 749 Plan
of the American Mission Property . . . . . .781 XIX Notable
Visitors and Converts The one-eyed kadi Mr. Roosevelt Two great
sheikhs The new bell Wm. E. Dodge Abu Selim and Moosa Ata The
monthly con cert at home, AT the close of 1873 the stations were
manned as follows Beirut, Drs. Thomson, Van Dyck, Dennis, and H. H.
Jessup. Abeih, Messrs. Calhoun and Bird. Sidon, Messrs. W. W. Eddy
and Pond. Tripoli, Messrs. S. Jessup and Hardin, and Dr. Danforth.
Zahleh, Messrs. Dale, Wood, and March. The theological seminary was
opened in Beirut in premises adjoining Dr. Denniss house, the
teachers being Dr. Dennis, Dr. C. V. A. Van Dyck, Dr. Wm. M.
Thomson, and my self. The Syrian Protestant College at this time
had eighty-four students in all its departments and all its friends
were much en couraged. They little thought that in 1907 the number
would be 878. In September the notable meeting of the International
Evan gelicalAlliance, postponed from 1870 on account of the
Franco-Prussian War, was held in New York. My paper on Missions to
the Oriental Churches was read in my absence by my dear friend,
Rev. D. Stuart Dodge. It was subsequently the basis of a booklet on
The Greek Church and Protestant Missions written at the request of
the Christian Literature Society of New York 405 406 Notable
Visitors and Converts and a special edition of which was published
in England by my friends, Canon H. B. Tristram and Rev. H. E. Fox,
and sent to hundreds of clergymen of the Church of England...
HENRY H. JESSUP Taken when Moderator of the General Assembly.
Contents SECOND VOLUME XIX. NOTABLE VISITORS AND CONVERTS . . 405
XX. A CHOLERA YEAR ...... 430 XXL HELPS AND HINDRANCES . ., . .467
XXII. MISSION SCHOOLS ...... 508 XXIII. SKETCHES 1887 ...... 526
XXIV. THREE YEARS OF PROGRESS 1888 . . . 533 XXV. MARKING TIME . .
. . . .572 XXVI. A NEW CENTURY DAWNS 1899-1900 . . 664 XXVII. THE
WHITENING FIELDS 1901-1902 . . 695 XXVIII. MY LATEST FURLOUGH YEARS
1903-1904 . 719 XXIX. JUBILEE TIMES 1905-1907 .... 753 XXX. WHAT
SHALL THE HARVEST BE JANUARY I9O8-MAY 1909 781 APPENDICES I.
Missionaries in Syria Mission from 1819 to i9 8 797 II. The History
Bibliography . . .801 III. American Medical Missionaries and
Agencies in Syria Mission . 802 IV. List of Mission Schools of the
Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions in Beirut and D am as c as,
and in the Mutserfiyet of Lebanon . . . . . 805 V Outline of the
History of the Syria Mission of the American Presbyterian Church
and Contemporary Events, 18201900 . . 809 VI. Figures, 1908-1909
Statistics of the Syria Mission . . . . .814 VII, Statistics of the
Syrian Protestant College from 1866 to 1906 .... 819 INDEX . . . .
. .821 Illustrations SECOND VOLUME Facing page Dr. Jessup ........
College Hall, Syrian Protestant College . . . . 412 Mission Group
......... 429 A View of Lebanon ......... 440 A View in the Lebanon
........ 456 Hasroun, A Lebanon Village ....... 465 Geo. E. Post
Science Hall, Syrian Protestant College . . . 480 Assembly Hall,
Syrian Protestant College ..... 490 Sarcophagus of Alexander the
Great. Sarcophagus of Weeping Women 507 Front View of Gerard
Institute, Sidon . ., . . 5 1 3 Dar es Salaam Orphanage. Gerard
InstitutePupils . . .516 Asfuriyeh Hospital. General View . . . . .
.521 Pietros Hotel, 1875 ......... 530 Jedaan the Bedawy .........
541 Kamil Aietany .......... 559 Syrian Mission in 1893 with Drs.
Bliss and Post, .... 570 Gorge of Nahr Barada ........ 585 American
Press .......... 590 The Damascus to Mecca Railway . . . . . .601
Beirut Memorial Column . . . . . . .618 Daniel Bliss Hall .........
630 Mission Stations . . . . . . . . .680 The Seventieth Birthday
Picnic. Ancient Mule Bridge . . . 690 Yusef Ahtiyeh, Kasim Beg Amin
....... 700 Dr. Daniel Bliss in 1905 . . . . . . . .711 Syrian
Churches and Houses . . . . . . .720 Group of Syrian Teachers and
Preachers . . . . .730 Interior of the Chapel of the Protestant
College, Beirut . . 737 Group of Syrian Churches ........ 749 Plan
of the American Mission Property . . . . . .781 XIX Notable
Visitors and Converts The one-eyed kadi Mr. Roosevelt Two great
sheikhs The new bell Wm. E. Dodge Abu Selim and Moosa Ata The
monthly con cert at home, AT the close of 1873 the stations were
manned as follows Beirut, Drs. Thomson, Van Dyck, Dennis, and H. H.
Jessup. Abeih, Messrs. Calhoun and Bird. Sidon, Messrs. W. W. Eddy
and Pond. Tripoli, Messrs. S. Jessup and Hardin, and Dr. Danforth.
Zahleh, Messrs. Dale, Wood, and March. The theological seminary was
opened in Beirut in premises adjoining Dr. Denniss house, the
teachers being Dr. Dennis, Dr. C. V. A. Van Dyck, Dr. Wm. M.
Thomson, and my self. The Syrian Protestant College at this time
had eighty-four students in all its departments and all its friends
were much en couraged. They little thought that in 1907 the number
would be 878. In September the notable meeting of the International
Evan gelicalAlliance, postponed from 1870 on account of the
Franco-Prussian War, was held in New York. My paper on Missions to
the Oriental Churches was read in my absence by my dear friend,
Rev. D. Stuart Dodge. It was subsequently the basis of a booklet on
The Greek Church and Protestant Missions written at the request of
the Christian Literature Society of New York 405 406 Notable
Visitors and Converts and a special edition of which was published
in England by my friends, Canon H. B. Tristram and Rev. H. E. Fox,
and sent to hundreds of clergymen of the Church of England...
This book focuses on pastoral and lay leadership in the African
American church. It deals with the internal and external issues
such as the tendency toward a bifurcated mentality and practice
such as the 'this is business' syndrome as well as the social issue
of race and affirmative action. Ministers and laity in the black
church must actively engage themselves in overcoming the inequities
that are still endemic to life in urban America. Harris affirms
that affirmative action policies are more important than ever in
obtaining a degree of social justice.
Identity contains essays by six internationally famous
contributors, focusing on different facets of identity from the
viewpoints of their various disciplines. Two philosophers, Bernard
Williams and Derek Parfit, discuss, respectively, numerical
identity (when can we say that two phenomena observed at different
times are one and the same thing?) and personal identity (how far
can the concept of 'I' be stretched, and does it always matter
whether we can say if that would still be me?). Henry Harris looks
at philosophical discussions of identity from the perspective of an
experimentalist, and discusses whether philosophical
thought-experiments have any basis in scientific reality. The
essays that follow offer perspectives from outside philosophy:
Michael Ruse considers homosexual identity and to what extent it is
reasonable to claim that homosexuality is a social construct.
Terence Cave looks at personal identity through the eye of
literature and fiction, and portrays identity as generated through
the narratives that one weaves about oneself or about other people.
Finally, Anthony D. Smith looks at national identities and how they
are formed, analysing how this process is shaped by the interplay
of cultural inheritance, political expediency, and myth.
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