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His Brother’s Keeper by Charles M. Sheldon

08 Jun

His Brother’s Keeper by Charles M. Sheldon

 

 

 

 

Paperback: 245 pages

    1. Publisher: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 1st edition (September 20, 1999)
    2. Language: English
    3. ISBN-10: 0785269487
    4. ISBN-13: 978-0785269489

My Brother’s Keeper by Charles M. Sheldon and the type of book ranges from, Inspirational Christianity, faith, forgiveness, charity, love, tragedy, and fate.

Charles M. Sheldon was a minister at the Central Congregational Church in Topeka Kansas, from 1889 until he passed on in 1946. This book was written in 1895, one year before he wrote In His Steps; popular for the developed statement in 2011 of “What Would Jesus Do?”

When thirty year old Stuart Duncan , the son of Ross Duncan a wealthy mine owner, returns from his college education and was just now returning home from a year of traveling in Europe. As Stuart stepped off the train of his hometown of Champion Stuart sees the biggest crowd of people he ever had seen gathered in town. The crowd of 5,000 mine workers went on strike because they wanted the wealthy mine owners to raise their wages. The strike leader was Eric Vassall, Stuart’s boyhood playmate and life-long friend. Eric saved Stuarts life when an elevator broke in the mineshaft earlier in Stuart’s life. Eric’s life style was of a hard working labor man while Eric’s life style was of a son of a wealthy family. Stuart’s father dies from a stroke or brain hemorrhage and he inherits the entire wealth of his father leaving him to make all of the decisions of the mine business and the strike dispute. The story unfolds and tells how Stuart solves the labor dispute while enduring some of hardest decisions concerning wealth, family, friends, and those of his community.

Other Books:

Sheldon’s most famous book, by far, was In His Steps (1897).

Among the more popular of his approximately 50 other books were:

The Crucifixion of Philip Strong (1898),

Robert Hardy’s Seven Days (1893),

The Reformer(1901),

and His Brother’s Keeper (1896).

He also published hundreds of magazine articles, most frequently in The Christian Herald.

He published an autobiography, His Life Story (1925).

No major biography of Sheldon has been published, although one is in progress.

A pamphlet of some value is Glenn Clark, The Man Who Walked In His Steps (1946).

Several master’s theses have been written on Sheldon; probably the best is David G. Johnson, A Study of the Ideas of Charles M. Sheldon (University of Kansas, 1965).

Many histories of the social gospel period in American religious history make brief references to Sheldon.

 

About Jackie Paulson (Author)

You love to help others solve problems You are Intuitive; YOU SEE THINGS OTHERS CANNOT SEE. You are great at picking up on peoples moods and predicting the future. You know what others are THINKING before they speak a word. Your Purpose in life is to SHOW LOVE TO OTHERS~Lead Others People turn to you for Direction and Hope and New Ideas YOUR PASSION is learning You bring inspiration into people’s lives. YOUR DESIRE: TO find yourself You are able to remove your EMOTIONS and see the Big Picture. You have a GIFT for reading people “human Lie Detector”

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6 Responses to His Brother’s Keeper by Charles M. Sheldon

  1. Pauline

    June 13, 2011 at 12:52 AM

    This sounds like a great book. I love coming across new books that I can add to my book list. Thanks for sharing!

     
    • Jackie Paulson Author

      June 13, 2011 at 12:55 AM

      Thanks for stopping by Pauline, and Yes it was a wonderful read. I loved it. A One day read.

       
  2. terri0729

    June 9, 2011 at 9:04 AM

    Hi Jackie! Sounds like a great book, I will have to read it some time after the three or four I have waiting, lol. Good review. God bless, Terri

     
  3. Jackie Paulson Author

    June 9, 2011 at 6:42 AM

    Thanks for visiting my blog and your nice comments. I enjoyed reading this book.

     
  4. Dennis

    June 9, 2011 at 6:40 AM

    Thanks for keeping me posted. It’s a nice story line…

     
  5. eof737

    June 9, 2011 at 6:08 AM

    Fascinating background and book. I had to re-read that bit on it being published in 1895.
    Now that is impressive.
    E

     

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