What Peace Means by Henry Van Dyke | Project Gutenberg

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‘This little book contains three plain sermons which were preached in New York in the Easter season of 1919, in the Park Avenue Presbyterian Church’, by Henry Van Dyke, American author and clergyman. Van Dyke was appointed by President Wilson as Ambassador to the Netherlands and Luxembourg in 1913, and as such, received thousands of American refugees (many tourists) displaced by the conflict.

Theological discussions on the nature of peace prompted by the recent armistice.

CONTENTS
I. PEACE IN THE SOUL
II. PEACE ON EARTH THROUGH RIGHTEOUSNESS
III. THE POWER OF AN ENDLESS LIFE

New York and Chicago: Fleming H. Revell Co., 1919

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Licence Project Gutenberg License (author d. 1933)

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About Richard Marshall

Richard Marshall is studying for a doctorate in the literature of ancient Rome at Wadham College, Oxford, and is a tutor for Ancient History at St Benet’s Hall. In addition to Classics, he has a long-standing interest in the tactics and material culture of the British Army, especially of the period spanned by the Cardwell Reforms and First World War. He has a large collection of original uniform and equipment items used for teaching and research purposes, and is currently exploring the evolution of British military clothing and accoutrements in response to changes in fashion and warfare for eventual publication. He previously worked as a cataloguer for the Oxford University Great War Archive.
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