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List of Moody Bible Institute people

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This is a list of people affiliated with Moody Bible Institute as officers, faculty, alumni, or liaisons.

Presidents

Dwight L. Moody

Alumni and faculty

Others associated with MBI

  • William Whiting Borden - trustee; although he died at age 25, Borden graduated from Yale, started the Yale Hope Mission while an undergraduate there and then graduated from Princeton Theological Seminary; he pledged almost all of his approximately $1,000,000 fortune to missions and was training to become a missionary to China when he died of cerebral meningitis (According to this author, Borden was not related to the milk family. His father was a lawyer, and his grandfather was in Chicago real estate.)[60][61]
  • Nathaniel S. Bouton - original trustee; organized and incorporated the Union Foundry Works, which was "one of most prominent" manufacturers of industrial steel "in the west"; former superintendent of public works in Chicago, who was the first superintendent to pave the city's streets[62]
  • Henry Parsons Crowell - trustee president; an industrialist who was the president and CEO of the Quaker Oats Company and a philanthropist (Crowell Trust); he guided MBI for 40 years, starting in 1904[63]
  • Sir William Dobbie - British lieutenant general; associated with the Second Boer War, World War I and World War II; in 1945, for three months Dobbie and his wife testified of their Christian faith across the United States and to the First Lady, Eleanor Roosevelt, under the auspices of MBI[64]
  • John V. Farwell - original trustee; dry goods salesman, vice-president of the Chicago Board of Trade and presidential elector on the Lincoln ticket, in 1860[62]
  • T.W. Harvey - original trustee and first vice-president; lumber dealer and banker; founded Harvey, Illinois[65]
  • Harry A. Ironside - one of the many evangelists who participated somewhere around the U.S. (48 states at the time), or in the British Isles, in MBI's 1936-'37 50th anniversary celebration of the Institute and the 100th-year birthday celebration for D.L. Moody[66]
  • Elbridge G. Keith - original trustee and treasurer; banker and former president of Chicago Title and Trust Company[65]
  • Howard Atwood Kelly - trustee; noted gynecologist and surgeon and one of the four founding staff members/-professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital, in Baltimore, Maryland[63]
  • Cyrus H. McCormick, Jr. - original trustee; perfected and patented his father's reaper invention which harvested field crops;[65] this revolutionized farming worldwide; however, almost 20 years later, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office legally ruled that the McCormicks' invention was not the first crop-harvesting reaper invented in the U.S.; McCormick Harvesting Machine Company was founded, which eventually became International Harvester through a merger with Deering Harvester Company and three smaller companies; then, McCormick's company became part of Case IH (JI Case), their former parent corporation, together, being Tenneco; but, as of 2013, the assets of International Harvester and Case Corporation are currently owned by the agricultural division of CNH Industrial, an American-Italian company based in the UK
  • Robert S. Scott - original trustee; dry goods salesman who eventually became the senior partner of Carson Pirie Scott,[65] now billing itself as, "Carson's."
  • Mel Trotter - one of the many evangelists who participated somewhere around the U.S. (48 states at the time), or in the British Isles, in MBI's 1936-'37 50th anniversary celebration of the Institute and 100th-year birthday celebration for D.L. Moody[67]

References

  1. ^ Broadway, Bill (2005-02-02). "In Brief - Pastor Moving On". Washington Post. p. B09. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
  2. ^ Michael J. Easley
  3. ^ J. Paul Nyquist
  4. ^ History of Moody Bible Institute
  5. ^ Paul Benware bio
  6. ^ Paul Benware
  7. ^ "Mary McLeod Bethune". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  8. ^ Mary McLeod Bethune bio
  9. ^ McLeod Bethune bio
  10. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History, Moody Press (1960), p.62
  11. ^ "David Brickner". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  12. ^ Jews for Jesus official site
  13. ^ Mark Bubeck, short bio
  14. ^ "Marie Chapian". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  15. ^ Gary Chapman bio
  16. ^ "The Ministry of Dr. Robert A. Cook". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  17. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.120,121
  18. ^ Robert A. Cook
  19. ^ "Davis College History". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  20. ^ Peter Deyneka, Sr., obit
  21. ^ C. Fred Dickason bio
  22. ^ "Christianity Today:The Lapsed Evangelical Christian". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  23. ^ Ehrman, Bart D., Jesus, Interrupted, HarperCollins, 2009. ISBN 0-06-117393-2
  24. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.32,34
  25. ^ William Evans bio
  26. ^ Memorize the Bible
  27. ^ "Daniel Everett". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  28. ^ "Local Newspapers Highlight Lives of Two Moody Alumni". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  29. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.91,92
  30. ^ Four Chaplains Memorial
  31. ^ George L. Fox
  32. ^ Louis Goldberg bio
  33. ^ Goldberg scholarship
  34. ^ Michael Guido obit
  35. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.91
  36. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History, Moody Press (1960), p.125.
  37. ^ a b "Moody Facts: Education". Retrieved 29 December 2012.
  38. ^ Jerry B. Jenkins
  39. ^ HCJB beginnings
  40. ^ Crandal, Faye E., Into the Copper River Valley, Taylors, SC: Faith Printing, 1994.
  41. ^ "Ephemera of Isobel Miller Kuhn". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  42. ^ Espinosa, Gaston (2014). Latino Pentecostals in America: faith and politics in action. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  43. ^ Espinosa, Gaston (2009). "Olazabal, Francisco". Hispanic American Religious Cultures. Retrieved May 1, 2015.
  44. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.74
  45. ^ Irwin A. Moon bio
  46. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.123,124
  47. ^ "Mayor Ed Pawlowski". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  48. ^ "Arthur W. Pink". Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  49. ^ "Wes Stafford". Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  50. ^ John and Betty Stam, a CIM/OMF bio
  51. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.92,93
  52. ^ Maynard Tollberg
  53. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History, Moody Press (1960), p. 39.
  54. ^ Daniel B. Towner, short bio
  55. ^ Tim Walberg bio
  56. ^ "John Walton". Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  57. ^ Lula Wardlow bio
  58. ^ Gary Wilde bio
  59. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History, Moody Press (1960), pp. 100, 102.
  60. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.37,38
  61. ^ William Borden bio
  62. ^ a b De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.18
  63. ^ a b De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.37
  64. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.93
  65. ^ a b c d De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.20
  66. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), p.76
  67. ^ De Remer, Bernard R., "Moody Bible Institute: A Pictorial History," Moody Press (1960), pp.76,80