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- Description:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church was founded on October 28, 1899, and located in Martinsville, Virginia. Several names are used throughout the records books including Primitive Baptist Church at Martinsville, Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church, the Church Street Primitive Baptist Church Martinsville, Virginia, and Chatham Heights Primitive Baptist Church. Reference is made to the church meeting at a new location in Chatham Heights in 1963 which may explain some name variation. The church typically met monthly during which time minutes were recorded in the church record books. The first entry in this record book is September 1958 and the final entry is October 1959. One additional entry from May 1980 is included at the end of the book.
- Subject:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church and Primitive Baptists
- Creator:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church
- Location:
- Martinsville (Va.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- September 6, 1958 to May 24, 1980
- Resource type:
- Text
- Identifier:
- PBHLA-MPBC.004
- Description:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church was founded on October 28, 1899, and located in Martinsville, Virginia. Several names are used throughout the records books including Primitive Baptist Church at Martinsville, Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church, the Church Street Primitive Baptist Church Martinsville, Virginia, and Chatham Heights Primitive Baptist Church. Reference is made to the church meeting at a new location in Chatham Heights in 1963 which may explain some name variation. The church typically met monthly during which time minutes were recorded in the church record books. The first entry in this record book is October 1954 and the final entry is August 1958. One additional entry from September 1989 is included at the end of the book.
- Subject:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church and Primitive Baptists
- Creator:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church
- Location:
- Martinsville (Va.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- October 9, 1954 to September 23, 1989
- Resource type:
- Text
- Identifier:
- PBHLA-MPBC.003
- Description:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church was founded on October 28, 1899, and located in Martinsville, Virginia. Several names are used throughout the records books including Primitive Baptist Church at Martinsville, Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church, the Church Street Primitive Baptist Church Martinsville, Virginia, and Chatham Heights Primitive Baptist Church. Reference is made to the church meeting at a new location in Chatham Heights in 1963 which may explain some name variation. The church typically met monthly during which time minutes were recorded in the church record books. The first entry in this record book is February 1919 and the final entry is January 1973. The church records at the beginning start as early as 1899. A gap in entries exists from February 1945 until November 1959. Record books 2 through 4 (PBHLA-MPBC.002-.004) seem to fill this gap.
- Subject:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church and Primitive Baptists
- Creator:
- Martinsville Primitive Baptist Church
- Location:
- Martinsville (Va.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- February 15, 1919 to January 27, 1973
- Resource type:
- Text
- Identifier:
- PBHLA-MPBC.001
- Description:
- The service begins with the reading of Isaiah 9:2-7 (00:00-01:41) and prayer (01:42-03:34). There was no introduction for the speaker, James Leo Green, but he was Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at SEBTS. He begins his message with a story of a star pointing to Jesus Christ (03:35-06:15). Since the perfect star has five points, and since there are five points made about the Messiah from Isaiah’s prophecy, the two should be linked together, according to Dr. Green (06:16-06:34). First, Jesus’s name would be called Wonderful, and His character matched this perfectly (06:35-14:05). Second, Jesus’s name would be called Counselor, referring to His wisdom (14:06-19:44). Third, Jesus would be mighty God, referring to His power which could only come from God (19:45-27:00). Fourth, Jesus would be called Everlasting Father, referring to His personal relation with His people (27:01-28:36). Fifthly, Jesus’s name would be Prince of Peace, referring to His peace with God He would purchase for humans through His death on the cross (28:37-33:52). He ends his time in prayer (33:53-34:20).
- Subject:
- Prophecy--Christianity and Bible. Isaiah
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Green, J. Leo (James Leo), 1912-1994
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- December 15, 1961
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_James_Leo_Green_1961-12-15_B
- Description:
- The service begins with the reading of 2 Corinthians 9:15 (00:00-00:22), a general announcement (00:23-00:44), an introduction to the sermon on Titus 2:11-14 (00:45-02:05), and prayer (02:06-03:01). There was no introduction for the speaker, James Leo Green, but he was Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament at SEBTS. The topic of grace is entertained historically and textually from the passage in Titus (03:02-15:18). To be saved is to be forgiven and made acceptable in the presence of Holy God (15:19-16:59). The primary purpose is the appearance of God’s grace is the creation and cultivation of Christlike character and conduct in us (17:00-21:03). He ends his time in prayer (21:04-21:42).
- Subject:
- Grace (Theology)
- Creator:
- Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and Green, J. Leo (James Leo), 1912-1994
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- December 15, 1961
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_James_Leo_Green_1961-12-15_A
- Description:
- The service begins with the reading of a poem about God (00:00-00:49) and prayer (00:50-05:10). There was no introduction for the speaker, Thelma Arnote, but she was Professor of Religious Education and Director of the Child Care Center. She begins by speaking about the Battle Hymn of the Republic, then leading the congregation to sing it aloud from Hymn #488. The audio is removed, but the opening tune of the hymn is audible (05:11-06:49). She begins by speaking of the tendency at certain times of the year to be caught up in good works and concern (06:50-08:09). She then transitions to reading an excerpt on the topic of concern from Norman Cousins, the editor of the Saturday Review of Literature (08:10-11:45). With her closing words, she shares that the good works of men act as buffers against all kinds of evils in the world (11:46-13:00). The service ends with music and singing (13:01-18:32).
- Subject:
- Benevolence in literature
- Creator:
- Arnote, Thelma and Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
- Location:
- Wake Forest (N.C.)
- Language:
- English
- Date Created:
- December 13, 1961
- Resource type:
- Audio
- Identifier:
- SEBTS_Chapel_Thelma_Arnote_1961-12-13