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Charles Foster Kent

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Charles Foster Kent

Charles Foster Kent (August 13, 1867 - May 2, 1925[1]) was an American Old Testament scholar.

Biography

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Kent was born at Palmyra, New York, and educated at Yale (A.B., 1889; Ph.D., 1891). He studied at the University of Berlin (1891–92).

He was an instructor at the University of Chicago 1893-95 and then professor of Biblical literature at Brown. After 1901, he was Woolsey Professor of Biblical Literature at Yale. In 1920, Kent toured the University of Michigan and advocated for a nonsectarian Michigan School of Religion.[2]

Kent was the founding president of the American Academy of Religion from 1910 to 1925.[3]

Writings

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National Council on Religion in Higher Education

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In 1922, he helped found the National Council of Schools of Religion, an organization that would two years later become the National Council on Religion in Higher Education, which through conference sponsorship and its Kent Fellows scholarship program played a significant role in church-university activities. In the early 1960s it merged with the Danforth fellows program and became the Society for Religion in Higher Education. In 1975 it was renamed the Society for Values in Higher Education.

Notes

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  1. ^ "Subjects of Biographies". Dictionary of American Biography. Vol. Comprehensive Index. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. 1990.
  2. ^ Laipson, Peter. “And the Walls Came Crumbling down: The Michigan School of Religion, 1920-1930.” Michigan Historical Review, vol. 21, no. 2, 1995, pp. 93–123. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/20173523. Accessed 27 Sept. 2024.
  3. ^ Past presidents of the AAR Archived 2018-08-12 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 5 July 2014).

References

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