Pictured: Oliver Hall at Whitworth University, which was Whitworth College when my father attended.
I continue to find interesting things among my parents’ remaining property, which I have spent part of most weekends sifting through since my father passed away. Finding things of interest makes the process more bearable.
This time, it’s a set of my father’s papers he wrote as an undergraduate and a graduate student, all of them typewritten, mostly on onion skin paper, and each placed into individual three-hole folders. The list of them may not be interesting to most people, but I find it useful to see something of what my father studied in school. Here they are.
Dad’s college and grad school papers, from Whitworth College, Princeton Divinity School, and/or the Princeton Ph.D. program in religious studies:
Dated Papers:
“The Origin and Development of Greek Tragedy,” Dec 14, 1953, English Composition, Mrs. Eacker.
“The Symbolist School of French Poetry, “ May 1956 in the course Twentieth Century Poetry. Professor’s comment: “First-rate analysis which illuminates without oversimplifying!”
“A Psychological Study of Conversion,” April 10, 1957 in the course Psychology of Religion.
“An Exegesis of Ezekiel 33:12-20” with An Introduction to Ezekiel and An Essay on Ezekiel’s Eschatological Views, Dec 2, 1958, in the course Hebrew Prophets with Exegesis, Dr. Armstrong.
“The Doctrine of God’s Incomprehensibility According to Clement of Alexandria, The Cappaducian Fathers, and Chrysostom,” May 26, 1959, in the course Greek Patristics, Dr. Barrios
Undated papers:
“The Epistle of James and Wisdom Literature: Evidence of Relationship” (no date). Instructor’s comment: “Excellent. This is what I mean by a research paper.”
“Milton’s God” (no date).
“John Keats and Religion” (no date)
“The ‘Improvement’ of Baptism and The Meaning of History Lies Always in the Present”.
“Book Reviews” (no date). Reviews of Irrational Man by William Barrett and Kierkegaard’s Philosophy of Religion by Reidar Thomte,
“An Exegesis of Titus 2:11-14” (no date).
“Hebrews 13-8 With Reference to Christological Controversies” (no date).
“Tertullian’s Concept of Apostolic Tradition” (no date).
“The Use of Scripture in Gregory of Nazianus” (no date).
“The Understanding of Christian Salvation in the Post-Reformation Era” in the course Post-Reformation Doctrine taught by Dr. Hope (no date).
“William Jennings Bryan and His Part in Political Liberalism” (no date).
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