- Charles Reynolds Brown
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Charles Reynolds Brown (October 1, 1862 – November 28, 1950) was an American Congregational clergyman and educator, born in Bethany, W. Va. He graduated at the University of Iowa in 1883 and studied theology in Boston University. He lectured at various times at Leland Stanford, Yale, Cornell, and Columbia universities, and was pastor of the First Congregational Church at Oakland, Cal., from 1896 to 1911. In the latter year he became dean of the Yale Divinity School. He wrote:
- Two Parables (1898)
- The Main Points (1899)
- The Social Message of the Modern Pulpit (1906)
- The Strange Ways of God, a Study of the Book of Job (1908)
- The Gospel of Good Health (1908)
- Faith and Health (1910)
- The Cap and Gown (1910)
- The Modern Man's Religion (1911)
- The Quest of Life and Other Addresses (1913)
- Living Again (Ingersoll Lecture, 1920)
- Lincoln The Greatest Man of the Nineteenth Century (1922)
- My Own Yesterdays
Bibliography
- Scott Langston, "Exodus in Early Twentieth Century America: Charles Reynolds Brown and Lawrence Langner," in Michael Lieb, Emma Mason and Jonathan Roberts (еds), The Oxford Handbook of the Reception History of the Bible (Oxford, OUP, 2011), 433-446.
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.
Categories: Yale University faculty | American religious writers | People from Oakland, California | People from Brooke County, West Virginia | University of Iowa alumni | American Congregationalist clergy | Congregationalist writers | American writers | 1862 births | American religious biography stubs
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