Talk:Charles Spurgeon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[edit] Ecumenical
(Deleted article cut-and-pasted from [1] by Darwin Fish.)
- This is not the proper forum for posting vitriolic essays. Do you have some other point? --Flex 16:56, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Calvinism
I put the Calvinism links here just because I thought that if they fit for Jonathan Edwards - they fit here. Edwards didn't develop Calvinism, either. Brian0324
- You mean Categories rather than links, methinks. I would argue that JE did develop Calvinist doctrine in a way Spurgeon did not. He published the oft-referenced Freedom of the Will expounding the Calvinist doctrine of free will philosophically and theologically, was a very significant figure in the development and spreading of postmillennialism, and was even involved in the development of the governmental view of the atonement, which changed the shape of Calvinism in America. He's a titanic figure in American religious history. Those are some of the reasons he's listed in the influences of the Template:Calvinism, while other significant Calvinists such as Spurgeon, Machen, Lloyd-Jones, Sproul, etc. are not. --Flex 17:55, 1 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think that I misunderstood the purpose of the template. If it is something to offer the reader a window to view the influences on Spurgeon as well as his frame of mind - it might be helpful. I still don't think that it is irrelevant. Thanks for the clarification about it. I know that Methodism has a template that is part of a larger discussion & even William Booth who founded the Salvation Army has a Methodism side bar. That was my thinking, but - agreed- there is enough in the text about Spurgeon without the side bar. Brian0324
[edit] photographs
I own about a dozen Carte de visite photographs and stereoviews of Spurgeon and his wife, from different points in his life. The photos themselves date from 1860 to 1895. I am willing to scan them and place the images into the public domain. Would anyone have the time to upload them to wikisource and place them in the article, (if there was a consensus that that is appropriate)? If so, I could email them, as I am a novice and don't know how to upload to wikisource.
I also have copies of most the the Passmore & Alabastor first editions (London), which could be eventually scanned... --Frank Rabinovitch 07:49, 23 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'm willing to help you, though I'd prefer to teach you how to fish, so to speak, than to do it for you. There are instructions at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:Upload that you can follow. If you have any specific questions, feel free to ask on my talk page. (You'll see there that a bunch of images I uploaded are being deleted since the policies have tightened since I uploaded them, but as a consequence I'm more familiar with the policies now.) Do you know how old they are and if anyone owns a copyright on the original? --Flex (talk|contribs) 16:09, 27 November 2006 (UTC)
- I'll take you up on your offer. They are 1860-1885, a few possibly earlier. A few are fairly rare stereoscopic slides, others more common CDVs, including two with the Mrs. I only the originals outright, and can release them into a suitable copyright category. I'll start some scans in the next few weeks, and then contact you for advice. --Frank Rabinovitch 03:51, 29 November 2006 (UTC)