Author:Charles Monroe Sheldon

From Wikisource

Jump to: navigation, search
←Author Index: Sh Charles Monroe Sheldon
(1857–1946)
See biography, Indexes. Author and leader of the Social gospel movement
Charles Monroe Sheldon

[edit] Works

  • The Crucifixion of Philip Strong[1]
  • The High Calling[2]
  • Robert Hardy's Seven Days[3]
  • His Brother's Keeper
  • The Twentieth Door, 1893[4]
  • In His Steps, 1897
  • Malcom Kirk: A Tale of Moral Heroism in Overcoming the World, 1898[5]
  • For Christ and the Church, 1899[6]
  • Howard Chase, Red Hill, Kansas, 1918[7]
  • Charles M Sheldon, His Life Story, 1925 autobiography (unrenewed)

[edit] Sermons

  • The Christian Life: the Best Life
  • The Christian Life: a Practical Life
  • The Christian Life: an Active Life
  • The Christian Life: an Unselfish Life
  • The Christian Life: a Hopeful Life
  • The Christian Life: the Nearest Approach to a Perfect Life
  • The Christian Life: the Life That Mankind Needs
  • The Christian Life: the Life That God Commands
  • Summing Up of Series
  • What Is Your Life?
  • Who Killed Joe's Baby?, 1901
  • The Reformer, 1902
  • The Narrow Gate, 1903
  • The Show That Would Have Stunned New York
  • Miracle at Markham, 1899
  • Intellectual Christianity
Retrieved from "http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Author:Charles_Monroe_Sheldon"
Categories: Authors-Sh | 1857 births | 1946 deaths | Early modern authors | Modern authors
Views
  • Author
  • Discussion
  • Edit
  • History
Personal tools
  • Try Beta
  • Log in / create account
 
Navigation
  • Main Page
  • Community portal
  • Central discussion
  • Recent changes
  • Random page
  • Random author
  • Help
  • Donate
Toolbox
  • What links here
  • Related changes
  • Special pages
  • Permanent link
Print/export
  • Create a book
  • Download as PDF
  • Printable version
Powered by MediaWiki
Wikimedia Foundation
  • This page was last modified on 15 October 2009, at 02:41.
  • Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License; additional terms may apply. See Terms of Use for details.
  • Privacy policy
  • About Wikisource
  • Disclaimers