Browsing by Author "Kulaga, Jon S."
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Item The Concept and the Sciences : the Integration of Faith and Learning within the Natural and Social Sciences(Spring Arbor University Press, 2007) Beebe, Gayle D.; Kulaga, Jon S.; Hauger, Garnet (Smith); Johnson, David A.; Newhouse, Chris; Buratovich, Michael; Trexler, Fred D.; Hayward, Craig D.; Darling, Terry; Jindra, Michael; Smiley, Stephen R.; Rawson, David; Yeaman, Jan; Bailey, Patricia; Nemecek, PaulThe Concept series, Volume III Featuring the writings of faculty and administrators of Spring Arbor UniversityItem A Concept to Keep: a Concept for Christian Higher Education in the Wesleyan Tradition(Spring Arbor University Press, 2003) Beebe, Gayle D.; Kulaga, Jon S.The Concept series, Volume I Featuring "Concept for the Christian College" by David L. McKenna. With primary sources for the philosophy of higher education at Spring Arbor University drawn from the writings of John Wesley, Benjamin T. Roberts, Edward P. Hart, and Gayle D. Beebe.Item Edward Payson Hart: The Second Man of Free Methodism(Spring Arbor University Press, 2007) Kulaga, Jon S.In the last half of the 1850s, persecution and proscription m a d e the formation of the Free Methodist Church a necessity for those dedicated to the gospel of holiness and ministry to the poor. Three years after launching the new Methodist denomination, founder and organizer Benjamin Titus Roberts found himself feeling alone, having lost his most loyal and trusted friends to premature deaths: William Kendall (1858), Loren Stiles (1863), and John Wesley Redfield (1863). However, waiting in the wings was a young Free Methodist minister, quietly building his circuit in the prairie lands of northern Illinois, who would soon be called upon to partner with Roberts and share the yoke of leadership for the next 30 years. Born in the Green Mountains of Vermont in 1835, Edward Payson Hart was trained as a lawyer, but turned evangelist and preacher when he was converted through the ministry of John Wesley Redfield. W hen asked by B.T. Roberts if he would go to Michigan to see if a work could be established there, his immediate and faith-filled response was, “If you say so and l can gel there. I will go to the North Pole." Other than B.T. Roberts, Free Methodism owes more to the influence of Edward Payson Hart than any other man: and yet to many, he remains a mystery...until now.Item Keeping the Concept : Christian Higher Education and the Integration of Faith, Living and Learning.(Spring Arbor University Press, 2004) Beebe, Gayle D.; Kulaga, Jon S.; Overton-Adkins, Betty; Hauger, Garnet (Smith); Moore-Jumonville, Kimberly; Metts, Wallis C.; Campbell, Charles R.; Bailey, Robert Q.; Dillman, Charles; Brown, Bruce; Varland, Roger; Johnson, David A.; Trexler, Fred D.; Hamilton, David; Wallace, Richard C.; Hopper, David; Darling, Terry; Nemecek, JohnThe Concept series, Volume II Featuring the writings of faculty and administrators of Spring Arbor University.