Edgar Ellyson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edgar P. Ellyson (1869 - 1954) was a minister, theologian, and general superintendent in the Church of the Nazarene. E. P. Ellyson was born in Damascus, Ohio, August 4, 1869, of Quaker parentage. He became a Quaker minister and the headmaster of the Friends' Bible School in Marshalltown, Iowa. In 1907, he succeeded Aaron Merritt Hills as the president of Peniel College in Greenville, Texas.

Due to his sympathies with the Holiness Movement and his living in nearby Greenville, Ellyson was at the conference in Pilot Point, Texas, where the Church of the Nazarene was created. He was elected general superintendent in 1908, remaining in that position through 1911. During that time, he traveled between the various congregations of the new church, at the same time evangelizing and organizing the new church, while still remaining president of Peniel College. In later years, he would become president of Pasadena College, Olivet Nazarene College, Trevecca Nazarene University, and Bresee College.

He also served as a vital force in the Church's educational works in general. He was responsible for establishing the Nazarene Board of Education, and also was the chief editor of the church's Sunday school publications through 1923. In 1924, he was the chairman of the committee that revised the Nazarene Manual of discipline.

His major published work, Theological Compound, published in 1908, waqs the first systematic theology arising out of the American Holiness Movement. It placed emphasis on the basic themes of Holiness theology, and was later used by theologians like A. M. Hills and H. Orton Wiley as one of the foundations of their own thinking.

[edit] References

  • Reid, Daniel G., et. al. Dictionary of Christianity in America. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1990. ISBN 0-8308-1776-X.