The analogy of religion, natural and revealed: Sixth Edition
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The Extent and Efficacy of the Atonement. Fifth Edition
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Travels in South-Eastern Asia, Embracing Hindustan, Malaya, Siam, and China: With a Full Account of the Burman Empire
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Malcom's new dictionary a dictionary of the most important names
(Malcom's new dictionary a dictionary of the most importan...)
Malcom's new dictionary a dictionary of the most important names, objects, and terms found in the Holy Scriptures This book, "Malcom's new dictionary a dictionary of the most important names", by Howard Malcom, is a replication of a book originally published before 1874. It has been restored by human beings, page by page, so that you may enjoy it in a form as close to the original as possible.
(Signs of the times favorable to peace: an address before ...)
Signs of the times favorable to peace: an address before the American Peace Society at its anniversary in Boston May 26 1862 Gale Archival Editions: On Demand are digital copies of rare and out-of-print historical content. Delivered where and when you need them, Gale Archival Editions arrive complete with original fonts, marks, notations, punctuation and spelling, giving you the feeling of owning the original work. These images of original works?from the world's leading libraries?include everything from books to pamphlets, many with original illustrations, indexes, maps and other annotations. Sourced from Joseph Sabin's Bibliotheca Americana: A Dictionary of Books Relating to America from its Discovery to the Present Time (1868-1936), the Sabin American Civil War Collection includes thousands of titles on all topics related to the Civil War experience.
A Brief Memoir of Mrs. Lydia M. Malcom: Late of Boston, Mass., Wife of REV. Howard Malcom
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Howard Malcom was an American clergyman, author, and educator.
Background
Malcom was born on January 19, 1799, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was the son of John J. and Deborah (Howard) Malcom.
His father had emigrated from Scotland; on his mother's side he was of Welsh ancestry. After the death of his father, his home was with his grandfather, John Howard, a wealthy merchant.
Education
Malcom attended Dickinson College and Princeton Theological Seminary.
Career
Malcom left Dickinson College in his junior year to take a position in a large commission house in Philadelphia. During the following seventeen months of business experience, he passed through a religious experience which resulted in his joining the Sansom Street Baptist Church, where in 1818, he was licensed to preach. There, also, having spent the intervening time at Princeton Theological Seminary, he was ordained a Baptist clergyman on April 23, 1820.
From 1820 to 1826, he was pastor of a Baptist church at Hudson, New York, where his capacity for leadership became so well and favorably known that the American Sunday School Union invited him to give all of his time to the field work of that organization. In this service, he visited nearly all the principal towns and cities in the United States.
In November 1827, he accepted the pastorate of the Federal Street Baptist Church, Boston, which he had to relinquish in 1835 because of a throat disease which made it difficult for him to speak to large audiences. That same year the American Baptist Foreign Missionary Union sent him abroad to visit missionary stations in India, Burma, and China.
As a fruitage of three years of travel, he published in 1839, Travels in South-Eastern Asia, a work which added to his growing reputation as an author, his first venture in authorship, A Dictionary of Important Names, Objects, and Terms Found in the Holy Scriptures (1830), having already become the most popular book of its kind.
In 1840, he became president of Georgetown College, Kentucky, where he remained nine years. When he voted for an anti-slavery amendment to the state constitution, the trustees of the college asked for his resignation. He had been warned that he would have to leave the state if he so voted.
Returning to Philadelphia, he soon became pastor of his old home church, but the large auditorium overtaxed his voice and in 1851, he resigned to become president of Lewisburg University, now Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. For six years, he made a valuable contribution to the growth of that institution.
His literary interests came to absorb so much of his time and strength, however, that in 1857, he resigned his presidency to give them first place. To facilitate his work as a writer, he moved to Philadelphia where he became identified with a wide variety of public interests. From 1874 till his death, he was a president of Hahnemann Medical College.
As his Dictionary passed through successive editions, he continued to revise and enlarge it for thirty years. From his royalties, he built a home in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.
On May 1, 1820, Malcom was married to Lydia Morris Shields, who died in 1833. She was the mother of his eldest son. On June 26, 1838, he was married to Ruth A. Dyer, by whom he had two sons and two daughters.