Academic literature on the topic 'Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Korea Conference'

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Journal articles on the topic "Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Korea Conference"

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Volkman, Lucas P. "Church Property Disputes, Religious Freedom, and the Ordeal of African Methodists in Antebellum St. Louis: Farrar v. Finney (1855)." Journal of Law and Religion 27, no. 1 (January 2012): 83–139. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0748081400000539.

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In October 1846, the men and women of the African Methodist Episcopal Church in St. Louis (African Church) met to consider whether they would remain with the Methodist Episcopal Church (MEC) or align with the recently-formed Methodist Episcopal Church, South (MECS). Two years earlier, in 1844, amid growing conflict over the question of slavery within the national Methodist Church, its General Conference had adopted a Plan of Separation that provided for the withdrawal of the southern Methodists and the creation of their own ecclesiastical government. The Plan provided that each Border State congregation would have the right to determine for itself by a vote of the majority with which of the two churches it would affiliate.After the southern conferences had organized the new MECS in May 1845, the trustees of the all-white Fourth Street Methodist Church (Fourth Street Church), whose quarterly conference exercised nominal authority over the African Church, informed the black congregants that they could retain their house of worship only if they voted to join the southern Methodists. Throwing caution to the wind, and putting at risk a decade-and-a-half of patient efforts to achieve formal congregational independence within the Methodist Church, the black congregants voted decisively, by a 110 to 7 margin, to remain affiliated with the Northern Conference.
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문영걸. "The Siberia Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in Korea (1920-1931)." Christianity and History in Korea ll, no. 34 (March 2011): 121–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.18021/chk..34.201103.121.

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HONG MINKEE. "A Study of the Coming of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in Japan to Korea and its Beginning of Wonsan Missions." Christianity and History in Korea ll, no. 51 (September 2019): 307–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.18021/chk..51.201909.307.

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Hackett, David G. "The Prince Hall Masons and the African American Church: The Labors of Grand Master and Bishop James Walker Hood, 1831–1918." Church History 69, no. 4 (December 2000): 770–802. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3169331.

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During the late nineteenth century, James Walker Hood was bishop of the North Carolina Conference of the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church and grand master of the North Carolina Grand Lodge of Prince Hall Masons. In his forty-four years as bishop, half of that time as senior bishop of the denomination, Reverend Hood was instrumental in planting and nurturing his denomination's churches throughout the Carolinas and Virginia. Founder of North Carolina's denominational newspaper and college, author of five books including two histories of the AMEZ Church, appointed assistant superintendent of public instruction and magistrate in his adopted state, Hood's career represented the broad mainstream of black denominational leaders who came to the South from the North during and after the Civil War. Concurrently, Grand Master Hood superintended the southern jurisdiction of the Prince Hall Masonic Grand Lodge of New York and acted as a moving force behind the creation of the region's black Masonic lodges—often founding these secret male societies in the same places as his fledgling churches. At his death in 1918, the Masonic Quarterly Review hailed Hood as “one of the strong pillars of our foundation.” If Bishop Hood's life was indeed, according to his recent biographer, “a prism through which to understand black denominational leadership in the South during the period 1860–1920,” then what does his leadership of both the Prince Hall Lodge and the AMEZ Church tell us about the nexus of fraternal lodges and African American Christianity at the turn of the twentieth century?
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5

Kimbrough, S. T. "The Siberia-Manchuria Mission of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South (MECS) during the Years 1920–1930 — with Particular Interest in the Contributions of Methodism in Korea." Missiology: An International Review 39, no. 4 (October 2011): 429–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009182961103900402.

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Lee, Hyewon. "Chinese Female Christians’ Mission Work in the Early Stage of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South in Korea: Focused on the Work of Sientsung Mo and Dora Yu from 1897 to 1905." Korean Journal of Christian Studies 115 (January 31, 2020): 147–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.18708/kjcs.2020.01.115.1.147.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Korea Conference"

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Im, Mi-Soon. "The role of single women missionaries of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, in Korea, 1897-1940." 24-page ProQuest preview, 2008. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1500064611&sid=3&Fmt=2&clientId=10355&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Books on the topic "Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Korea Conference"

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Smith, Jonathan Kennon. Memoir abstracts, Memphis Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1931-1965. [Jackson, Tenn.]: J.K.T. Smith, 2000.

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Smith, Jonathan Kennon. Memoir abstracts, Memphis Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1866-1930. [Jackson, Tenn.]: J.K.T. Smith, 2000.

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Smith, Jonathan Kennon. An annotated index of conference memoirs of the clergy, Methodist Episcopal church, 1785-1844 and Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1845-1865. [Tennessee?: Smith], 1997.

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The Civil War in southern Appalachian Methodism. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2013.

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Rector, Lorene Hobbs. Minutes quarterly conferences: Melrose circuit, San Augustine district, East Texas conference, Methodist Episcopal Church South, 12 October 1861-16 November 1889. San Augustine, TX?: s.n., 1989.

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Register, Johnsonville Circuit, South Carolina Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. [Hemingway, SC: Three Rivers Historical Society, 1995.

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A history of Pleasant Grove Methodist Church: Holston Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South. [Knoxville, TN: B.H. Peters, 1997.

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Society, Methodist Episcopal Church Sou. Annual Publication of the Historical Society of the North Carolina Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church (South). HardPress, 2020.

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Marvin, Bp Enoch Mather. Life of Rev. William Goff Caples: Of the Missouri Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. HardPress, 2020.

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Marvin, Enoch Mather. Life of Rev. William Goff Caples of the Missouri Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. HardPress, 2020.

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