A Guide to the Papers of Guy Archer Weniger

by Mark L. Ward, Jr.

Biography

Early Life and Schooling

There were no "Fundamentalists," so-called, when Guy Archer Weniger was born in 1915. He was newly five years old when the term was first put in print. Weniger, however, would go on to lead the very group the word was coined to describe. His father was an ordained minister who had five other children at G. Archer's birth (one more came later), and Weniger as a young man sat under the preaching of famed Northern Baptist Convention Fundamentalist W. B. Riley.

W. B. Riley's own Northwestern Bible School in Minneapolis was Weniger's school of choice, though it then granted only three-year degrees. Weniger, however, proceeded to earn degrees at Northwestern Evangelical Seminary, Bethel Seminary, and the University of Minnesota. He met his wife Irene at Northwestern Bible School and married her in 1937. In 1951 Northwestern President Billy Graham conferred an honorary doctorate upon Weniger in recognition of his pastoral work. Bob Jones University granted him the Bob Jones Memorial Award for the Defense of the Scriptures in 1972, followed two years later by an honorary doctor's degree.

Foothill Boulevard Baptist Church

Weniger's first pastoral call came in 1942, shortly after his ordination, from 23rd Avenue Baptist Church in Oakland, California, which later moved to the suburbs and changed its name to Foothill Boulevard Baptist. Weniger's ministry there lasted exactly forty years and one month, until the congregation called Dr. Dennis Walton to replace their ailing pastor. Weniger died from heart failure only a month after Walton's installation. Weniger's died the dean of Fundamentalist preachers in the area, but he lived to make sure he had many challengers. He started twenty-four area churches during his tenure at Foothill, and one report attributes "hundreds of conversions and baptisms" to the early years of Weniger's ministry.

Lucerne Christian Conference Center

When an old hotel became available on Clear Lake 135 miles north of San Francisco, Baptist Fundamentalists in California managed to gain legal control of it in the mid 1960s. The "Lucerne Castle" was constructed as an expensive hotel between 1927 and 1932, and had only a short-lived heyday before the Depression helped destroy its economic viability. Weniger and others turned it into the Lucerne Christian Conference Center, and brought in speakers from Peter Masters to Bob Jones for many types of conferences and camps. Lucerne Christian Camp still operates today at the site.

San Francisco Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary

A group of Baptist pastors, including G. Archer Weniger, met together in 1958 and determined that a theological seminary ought to be established in California. Its name became the San Francisco Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary ("to avoid creating confusion in the minds of the Christian world" the word "Conservative" was dropped a few years later after the school broke from the orbit of the Conservative Baptist Association). The school's purpose was "to train young college graduates in all of the Word of God, with a grasp of Biblical Theology, historic Baptist distinctives, practical phases of the ministry, a personal prayer habit, and spiritual discernment for these times, to man churches which must be established." Further, the seminary graduates were to be "Defenders of the Faith, Champions of the Truth, Preachers of the Word, Exponents of Fundamentalism, Experts in Soul-Winning, Builders of local Churches, and Leaders of great stature." In order to realize these ambitious goals, an elected board was established composed of men of "unquestionable Fundamental commitment," with G. Archer Weniger serving as chairman. The school was "accredited" by local churches and required that those graduating agree fully with the school's statement of faith.

Professors at the school included Eugene Petersen, David Innes, and (adjunct) Charles C. Ryrie, among many other Fundamentalists and conservatives over its thirty-two-year history. Many were graduates of Bob Jones University. SFBTS conferred an honorary degree upon Bob Jones III in 1966 as the Seminary's "way of showing solidarity with Bob Jones University." G. Archer Weniger was elected to replace his brother Arno as president of the school in 1976, and held that post until the year of his death.

The Fundamental Baptist Fellowship

The Fundamental Baptist Fellowship traces its roots to the "Fundamentalist Fellowship," a group of non-conformists who gathered in 1920 to protest modernism in their 13-year-old Northern Baptist Convention. Twenty-six years later and still inside the NBC, the group changed its name to "the Conservative Baptist Fellowship of Northern Baptists," and then finally despaired of the success of non-conformity a year later in 1947 after the NBC rejected their independent mission board. The CBFNB that year responded by forming its own denomination, the Conservative Baptist Association of America, of which the CBFNB was made a part. 1951 brought the inevitable elimination of "Northern Baptists" from the name, and the new label became "the Conservative Baptist Fellowship." The CBF made itself an independent entity in 1955 because of an infusion of New-Evangelicals into the CBA of A.

G. Archer Weniger became President of the independent CBF in 1964, and led it through its last organizational change—and its final break with the Conservative Baptist Movement—when in 1967 the CBF received the name it bears today: the Fundamental Baptist Fellowship of America (FBF). Weniger continued as the President of the FBF for ten more years, until September of 1977. His activity as a writer and speaker was influential in the formative years of the new FBF.

The Blu-Print

"The Blu-Print, Published periodically in the interests of the New Building Program of the Foothill Boulevard Baptist Church, G. Archer Weniger, Pastor"—these words adorned the masthead of an 11 x 14 blue sheet mailed out weekly for many years and edited by Weniger himself. Irish Fundamentalist leader Ian Paisley wrote after G. Archer Weniger's death, "It was through the Blu Print… that Dr. Weniger served the whole separatist fundamentalist cause both nationally and internationally. In its columns he made available to his brethren his extensive knowledge, attained by the most diligent and painstaking research, of men and movements and their principles and practices." The religious stacks of the Mack Library periodical room contain most of the issues of the Blu-Print, dating back to the second issue of June 20, 1948. "Weniger’s Words of Warning" was a long-time column in the Sword of the Lord, and contained information similar to that of the Blu-Print.

In a letter to a potential Blu-Print subscriber, Weniger called his paper "strictly a local church paper devoted to the interests and concern of the Foothill Boulevard Baptist Church." He admitted, however, that the paper had "developed a phenomenal list of readers" composed of "hundreds of ministers and Christian workers across the land." He added, "We know of no local church paper so widely quoted," and intimated, "We print items which others would not dare or care to print." Weniger considered reception of the Blu-Print a "privilege, not a right," both because there was no subscription price and because its contents were openly controversial.

Weniger edited the Blu-Print without "a cent for his services" over thirty-four years, and focused on exposing the errors of modernists, liberals, and even other professing Fundamentalists. He also included local church and denominational news in addition to a few items of interest in religion generally. Weniger was a staunch anti-Communist, and a member of the John Birch Society, so news blurbs related to this topic also found their way in to the Blu-Print.

The September 14, 1982, issue of the publication was a description of the death and funeral of Weniger, written by his daughter Sonja. "We had thought about continuing the Blu-Print," she writes, "but the Blu-Print was my Dad. This is the final issue."

Conclusion

Dr. G. Archer Weniger invested his life into Christian ministry, listing no hobbies or interests beyond that of his ministry work and his family. After Weniger's death on September 6, 1982, Carl McIntire praised him in the Christian Beacon, and Ian Paisley received a special visa in order to attend his funeral (Paisley was not allowed in the United States at that time). Other Fundamentalist luminaries journeyed to California for the memorial service, including Dr. James Singleton and Dr. Bob Jones, who brought the message. Dr. Weniger was born before Fundamentalism had its official start, and died with some of its most famous living leaders paying him homage.

Description of the Collection

The Weniger papers consist mainly of the personal files collected over many years by Guy Archer Weniger (1915-1982). Included are many newspaper and magazine clippings filed under topic headings of religious interest (see the list that follows), with many pieces marked by Weniger to point out which portions were especially noteworthy for his purposes. The papers also contain much of Weniger's correspondence (with many leading Fundamentalists such as Carl McIntire, Bob Jones, etc.) and hundreds of documents he gathered for sermon illustrations. Periodical articles, which compose about 75% of the topic folders, were clipped from Christianity Today, Christian Century, Christian Beacon, Sword of the Lord, Eternity, certain California newspapers, and many other religious and secular publications. Many advertisements, school bulletins, transcripts, brochures, flyers, and other pertinent miscellanies fill out the rest of the collection.

Weniger gathered information on religious, political, and ethical issues, on denominations and other religious organizations, and on over three hundred people, again primarily religious figures. Organizations about which Weniger filed the most material are either those with which he was closely associated (Bob Jones University, the Fundamental Baptist Fellowship, the Conservative Baptists) or those which were subject to Blu-Print criticism (Fuller Theological Seminary, the Roman Catholic Church, the National Council of the Churches of Christ). The people whose folders are the largest are also those figures who were most likely to appear in the Blu-Print (Jerry Falwell, Billy Graham). In addition, certain issues of the day warranted a large collection (capital punishment, the ecumenical movement, evolution, homosexuality, church and state, Communism). A personal library and sermon ledger resides in the last of the fourteen file drawers required to house the Weniger collection. It lists books in Weniger's possession and contains a lengthy topical bibliography. The ledger also lists texts upon which Weniger had preached.

Of particular interest for original research are Weniger's papers concerning Baptist Fundamentalist organizations. His extensive documentation on the Conservative Baptist Association of America reflects the heated conflicts that went on within that body (of which Weniger was a part) in the 1950s and 1960s. The papers also contain significant information on the Fundamentalist bodies and organizations that left the CBA as a result of these battles, in particular the Fundamental Baptist Fellowship and the New Testament Association of Independent Baptist Churches.

The papers are divided into folders according to subject and arranged alphabetically.

List of Subjects

Religious Subjects

Abortion

Abortion—Biblical teaching

Abortion—Church acceptance

Abortion—Conferences

Abortion—Demonstrations

Abortion—Evidences, medical

Abortion—Fetuses, disposal of Abortion—Foreign countries

Abortion—Laws and legislation

Abortion—Laws and legislation, state Abortion—Live births

Abortion—Organizations

Abortion—Parental consent

Abortion—Public opinion polls

Accelerated Christian Education

Adultery

Alcohol

American Baptist Association

American Baptist Convention—Communism

American Baptist Convention—Colleges and seminaries

American Baptist Convention—Colleges and seminaries—Andover Newton Theological Seminary

American Baptist Convention—Colleges and seminaries—General information

American Baptist Convention—Conferences

American Baptist Convention—Doctrine

American Baptist Convention—Leaders

American Baptist Foreign Mission Society

American Civil Liberties Union

American Council of Christian Churches

Angels

Anglicanism

Antisemitism

Apostasy

Assembly of God

Association of Baptists for World Evangelism

Association of Fundamental Baptist Churches of Northern California

Atheism

Athletes, Christian

Atomic weapons—Disarmament

Baha'i

Baptism

Baptist Bible Fellowship

Baptist Bible Fellowship—Conferences

Baptist Bible Fellowship—People

Baptist Bible Fellowship—Schools

Baptist Bible Fellowship—Separation

Baptist church

Baptist Congress on Fundamentalism

Baptist General Conference

Baptist International Missions, Inc.

Baptist World Mission

Baptist World Mission—Controversy, CBA of A and CBF

Berkeley Baptist Divinity School

Bethel College (St. Paul, MN)

Bible—Antiquities

Bible—Criticism, interpretation

Bible—Inspiration

Bible—Science

Bible—Study

Bible—Versions

Bible—Versions—Authorized—Controversies

Bible—Versions—New English Bible

Biola

Black churches

Black Manifesto

Blu-Print (Periodical)

Bob Jones University

Boycotts

Buddhism

Bus ministry

Busing school children

California Baptist Theological Seminary

California Graduate School of the Bible

Calvinism

Canadian Sunday school curriculum

Campus Crusade for Christ

Capital punishment

Catholic Church

Catholic Church—Abortion

Catholic Church—Celibacy

Catholic Church—Conferences

Catholic Church—Converts

Catholic Church—Doctrine

Catholic Church—Doctrine (Mariolatry)

Catholic Church—Eastern Orthodox Church

Catholic Church—Finances

Catholic Church—History

Catholic Church—Internal conflict

Catholic Church—John Paul II

Catholic Church—John Paul II tours

Catholic Church—Latin America

Catholic Church—Lutheran dialogue

Catholic Church—Membership

Catholic Church—National Conference of Catholic Bishops

Catholic Church—Neo-Evangelicalism

Catholic Church—Nuns

Catholic Church—Papacy

Catholic Church—Political activity

Catholic Church—Priests

Catholic Church—South America

Catholic Church—Southern Baptist Convention

Catholic Church—Spain

Catholic Church—Women

Catholic Church and Pentecostals

Catholic Church and the Bible

Catholic schools

Celebrities, Christian

Central Baptist Church (Berkeley, CA)

Central Bible College

Chaplain—Military

Charismatic movement

Charismatic movement—Catholic Church

Charismatic movement—Southern Baptist Convention

Child abuse

Child care

Child evangelism

Christian Century (Periodical)

Christian colleges

Christian day schools

Christian education

Christian ethics

Christian Fellowship Inc.

Christian life

Christian life—Fashion

Christian Life magazine

Christian Science

Christian Service Brigade

Christian unity

Christianity Today (Periodical)

Christmas

Christocentric radicalism

Church and state

Church and state—Church court cases

Church attendance

Church discipline

Church finance

Church group work

Church growth—Promotions

Church history

Church music

Church of Christ

Church planting

Church polity

Church work with the handicapped

Clergy—Appointment, call and election

Coffee houses

Communism

Communism—Anticommunism

Communism—Bay Area

Communism and Christianity

Communism and Christianity—Ministry and ministers

Communism and the Catholic Church

Congregational Church

Congress on Evangelism

Conservative Baptist Association

Conservative Baptist Association—Baptist Bible College Denver, CO

Conservative Baptist Association—Central Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Association

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1940s

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1950-1954

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1955

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1956

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1957

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1958

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1959

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1960s

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1960

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1961

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1962

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1963

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1964

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1965

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1966

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1967

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1968

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1969

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Fellowship—1970s

Conservative Baptist Association—Conservative Baptist Theological Seminary—Denver, CO.

Conservative Baptist Association—Controversies

Conservative Baptist Association—Foreign Mission Society

Conservative Baptist Association—Foreign Mission Society—1940s and 1950s

Conservative Baptist Association—Foreign Mission Society—1950s

Conservative Baptist Association—Home Mission Society

Conservative Baptist Association—Judson Baptist Bible College

Conservative Baptist Association—Miscellaneous

Conservative Baptist Association—Miscellaneous schools

Conservative Baptist Association—Missions

Conservative Baptist Association—New churches

Conservative Baptist Association—New Testament Association

Conservative Baptist Association—Northern Baptist American Baptist Convention

Conservative Baptist Association—Northern Baptist Theological Seminary

Conservative Baptist Association—Northern California

Conservative Baptist Association—Northwestern Schools

Conservative Baptist Association—Pillsbury Baptist Bible College

Conservative Baptist Association—San Francisco

Conservative Baptist Association—San Francisco Baptist Seminary

Conservative Baptist Association—Southern California

Conservative Baptist Association—World Conservative Baptist Mission 1961

Consultation on Church Union

Contemporary Christian music

Contemporary theology

Counseling

Courtship

Covenant College

Creation

Cults

Cultural mandate

Dancing

Death

Demonology

Deprogramming

Discipline of children

Dispensationalism

Divorce and remarriage

Doctrine

Doctrine—Depravity of man

Doctrine—Election

Doctrine—Eternal security

Doctrine—Fall of man

Doctrine—Forgiveness—Cleansing from sin

Doctrine—Grace

Doctrine—Immortality of the soul

Doctrine—Judgment

Doctrine—Justification by faith

Doctrine—Reconciliation

Doctrine—Redemption

Doctrine—Regeneration

Doctrine—Repentance

Doctrine—Resurrection

Doctrine—Righteousness

Doctrine—Salvation

Doctrine—Sanctification

Doctrine—Sin

Drama

Drug abuse

Easter

Ecumenical movement

Ecumenical movement—Baptist church

Ecumenical movement—Catholic Church

Ecumenical movement—Communion

Ecumenical movement—Doctrine

Ecumenical movement—Evangelism

Ecumenical movement—Sex, obsession of

Ecumenical movement—Spiritualism

Entertainers, Christian

Episcopalian Church

Episcopalian Church—Leaders

Equal Rights Amendment

Ethics

Euthanasia

Evangelicalism

Evangelism

Evolution and creation

Existentialism

Experience, religious

Explo `72

Family

Fasting

Feminism

First Baptist Church of Adin (Adin, CA)

Food relief

Fraud

Freemasons

Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship International

Fuller Theological Seminary

Fundamental Baptist Fellowship

Fundamentalism

Fundamentalism—1930

Funerals

Furman University

Gambling

General Association of Regular Baptist Churches

Glossolalia

God and God as a female

"Godspell"

Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary

Government, resistance to

Graduate Theological Union

Guilt

Habitat for Humanity, Inc.

Halloween

Heaven

Hell

Hinduism

Holiness movement

Holy shroud

Homosexuality

Hospice

Hostages, Iranian

Human engineering

Humanism

Hume Lake (Campsite)

Humility

Immortality

Independent Fundamental Churches of America

INFACT (Infant Formula Action Coalition)

Infanticide

Infant mortality

Institute in Basic Youth Conflicts

Interdenominationalism

International Congress on World Evangelization

International Council on Biblical Inerrancy (Council on the Bible)

International Council of Christian Churches

International Fellowship of Fundamentalists

International Year of the Child (1979)

Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship

Israel

Jehovah's Witnesses

Jesus Christ—History and criticism

Jesus Christ Superstar

Jesus Ministries

Jesus movement

Jewish Christians

Jewish theology

Jews

John Birch Society

Judaism—Relations—Christianity

Key `73

Lausanne International Congress on World Evangelization

Leprosy

Liberalism

Liberation theology

Local church

Local church—Renewal and changes

Local church controversy

Lord's supper

Los Angeles Baptist College

Lucerne Christian Conference Center

Lutheran church

Maranatha Baptist Bible College

Marriage

Mass media

Melodyland School of Theology

Mennonites

Methodist church

Methodist church and communism

Methodist Laymen of North Hollywood

Military

Miracles

Missions

Missions—Africa

Missions—Africa—1955-1964

Missions—Africa—1965-1969

Missions—Africa—1970-1980 (and undated items)

Missions—Jews

Missions—Military

Mixed marriages

Modernists

Moody Bible Institute

Moral conditions

Moral Majority

Morehouse College (Atlanta, GA)

Mormons. and Mormonism

Moving pictures

Multnomah School of the Bible

Muslims

Mysticism

National Association of Evangelicals

National Council of the Churches of Christ

National Council of the Churches of Christ—San Francisco—1960

Navigators

Neighborhood Church

Neo-Evangelicalism

Neo-Orthodoxy

New Testament Association of Independent Baptist Churches

New Tribes Mission

Northern Baptist Convention

Northern Baptist Theological Seminary

Northwestern College (Roseville, MN)

Occult sciences

Ordination of women

Pacific School of Religion

Parables

Parent and child

Pentecostalism

Philosophy

Pillsbury Baptist Bible College

Politics and Christianity

Pornography

Pornography—Church acceptance

Pornography—Laws and legislation

POW's

Prayer

Preaching

Presbyterian church

Present Truth

Princeton Theological Seminary (Princeton, NJ)

Prison ministry

Prophecy, Biblical

Prosperity gospel

Psychology/psychiatry

Psychology, religious

Public schools

Publishers and publishing, Christian

Race relations and Christianity

Reincarnation

Religions

Religious liberty

Religious liberty—Soviet Union

Revival

Rock music

San Francisco Baptist Theological Seminary

Satan

Scientology

Secret societies

Secularism

Separation

Separation—Biblical teaching

Sermons

Seventh Day Adventists

Sex instruction

Sexual ethics

Shelton College

Simpson College

Smoking

Social gospel

Socialism

Sonora 1974

Soteriology

Southern Baptist Convention—Broadman Press

Southern Baptist Convention—Christian life Commission

Southern Baptist Convention—Church government, organization, and finances

Southern Baptist Convention—Colleges and seminaries

Southern Baptist Convention—Communism

Southern Baptist Convention—Conferences

Southern Baptist Convention—Criticism

Southern Baptist Convention—Doctrine

Southern Baptist Convention—Ecumenism

Southern Baptist Convention—Ecumenism—Catholic Church

Southern Baptist Convention—Evangelism and church expansion

Southern Baptist Convention—Fundamentalist controversy ,

Southern Baptist Convention—History

Southern Baptist Convention—Miscellaneous

Southern Baptist Convention—Moral standards

Southern Baptist Convention—National Council of Churches (WCC)

Southern Baptist Convention—Political activity

Southern Baptist Convention—Presidents

Southern Baptist Convention—Racial issues

Southern Baptist Convention—Social action

Southern Baptist Convention—State subsidies

Southern Baptist Convention—Sunday School Board

Southern Baptist Convention—Theologians

Southern Baptist Convention—Withdrawals

Southwestern College

Soviet churchmen

Spiritualism

Stewardship, Christian

Stiles Hall

Suffering

Suicide

Sunday school

Sunday School Convention

Sweden—Christian or heathen

Syncretism

Taxation

Taxation, exemption from

TEAM (The Evangelical Alliance Mission)

Television

Television in religion

Tennessee Temple Schools

Textbook controversy

Thanksgiving

Theologians, German

Theological seminaries

Theonomy

Theothanatology

Tradition

Transcendental meditation

Trans World Radio

Unidentified flying objects

Unification Church

Unitarianism

United Church of Christ

United Methodist Church

United Nations

United States—Religion—Public opinion polls

Universalism

University of the Pacific

Visions

War and religion

Watchman Examiner

Way, The

Western Baptist Bible College

Western Conservative Theological Seminary

Westmont College

Wheaton College

Wills

Women

Women—Biblical teaching

Women as ministers

Women in religion

Work

World Congress of Fundamentalists

World Congress on Evangelism

World Conservative Baptist Mission

World Council of Churches

World Council of Churches—Conferences

World Council of Churches—Nairobi—1975

World government and Christianity

World Literature Crusade

World Relief

World Vision

Worship, religious

Writing

Wycliffe Bible Translators

Year of the Child

Young Life

Youth

Youth—Suicidal behavior

Youth for Christ

Zionism

Nonreligious Subjects

Anthropology

Bay Area—C.P.M.

Body—Health—Medical

Castro Valley, CA

Center For Democratic Studies—Santa Barbara, CA

Chile and Portugal

China

Civil rights demonstrations

Congo

Crime

Cuba

El Salvador

Energy

Environmentalists

Europe

Forced housing (Proposition 14, etc.)

Freedom of speech—Press

Freedom Riders

Hippie movement

India

Latin America

Life

Light

Mental health

Middle East

Moon, space and atomic weapons

New year

Northern Ireland

Operation Abolition

Patriotism

Philippines

Police brutality and ministers

Racial issues

Riots

Russia

San Francisco Chronicle

San Francisco riots

Sensitivity training

South Africa and Rhodesia

Southeast Asia United Nations

United States appeasement

University of California Violence

Watergate

W. E. B. Du Bois Clubs of America

Biographical Subjects

Abernathy, Ralph David

Adams, Jay E.

Alinsky, Saul

Allen, Charles

Anderson, John

Appelman, Hyman J.

Armstrong, Herbert W.

Armstrong, James

Ashbrook, John M.

Barclay, William

Barnhouse, Donald Grey

Barth, Karl

Bass, C.

Bell, Ralph

Bennett, John C.

Berrigan, Philip and Daniel

Blackstone, William E.

Blair, Charles

Blake, Eugene Carson

Bloesch, Donald G.

Bodo, John R.

Bonhoeffer, Dietrich

Boone, Pat

Booth, William

Boyd, Malcolm

Braaten, Carl E.

Bradbury, John W.

Braden, Anne

Braden, Carl

Bright, Bill

Brown, Edmund (Governor)

Brown, Edmund—Wilkinson controversy

Brown, Jerry

Brown, Robert MacAfee

Bruce, F. F.

Buck, Pearl

Buckingham, Jamie

Bultmann, Rudolf

Burhoe, Ralph Wendell

Buttrick, George A

Byfield, Canon Richard

Carey, F. Sterling

Carnell, Edward John

Carter, James Earl

Cash, Johnny

Castro, Emilio

Clark, Glenn

Clearwaters, Richard Volley

Cleaver, Eldridge

Coffin, William Sloan

Coggan, Donald

Collins, Gary R.

Colson, Charles

Cone, James H.

Conlan, John B.

Cox, Harvey

Criswell, Wallie Amos

Cromey, Robert Warren

Cronin, John F.

Cullmann, Oscar

Dahlberg, E. T.

Dalton, Ken

Davis, Angela

DeChardin, P. Teilhard

DeHaan, Richard W.

Dixon, Greg

Dobson, James C.

Dollar, George

Dollar, Truman

Drinan, Robert F.

Drummond, Fred

Du Plessis, David

Eareckson, Joni

Elliott, Willis

Ellul, Jaques

England, Harold

Epp, Theodore

Falwell, Jerry

Falwell, Jerry—Charismatic movement

Falwell, Jerry—Finances

Falwell, Jerry—Separation

Ferre, Nels

Fickett, Harold

Fletcher, Joseph F.

Flynt, Larry

Fonda, Jane

Ford, Gerald

Ford, Leighton

Fosdick, Harry E.

Fry, John R.

Fuller, Charles E.

Fuller, Daniel P.

Gallagher, Buel

Garfield, James A

Geering, L G.

Gerig, Ezra S.

Gill, Theodore A

Glasser, Arthur

Goldwater, Barry

Gothard, William

Graham, William

Graham, William 1957

Graham, William 1958-1961

Graham, William 1962-1964

Graham, William 1965-1968

Graham, William 1969-1973

Graham, William 1974-1979

Graham, William—Before ecumenism

Graham, William—Beliefs

Graham, William—Catholic Church

Graham, William—Correspondence

Graham, William—Crusades

Graham, William—Crusades—Africa

Graham, William—Crusades—Atlanta

Graham, William—Crusades—Australia

Graham, William—Crusades—Chicago

Graham, William—Crusades—England

Graham, William—Crusades—Greenville

Graham, William—Crusades—Hungary

Graham, William—Crusades—Los Angeles

Graham, William—Crusades—New York

Graham, William—Crusades—Oakland, CA

Graham, William—Crusades—Oregon

Graham, William—Crusades—Poland

Graham, William—Crusades—Results

Graham, William—Crusades—San Francisco

Graham, William—Crusades—Wheaton College

Graham, William—Finances

Graham, William—National Council of the Churches of Christ

Graham, William—Political activity

Graham, William—Separation 1959-1960

Graham, William—Separation 1960-1964

Graham, William—Separation 1965-1968

Graham, William—Separation 1969-1972

Graham, William—Separation 1973-1976

Graham, William—Separation 1977-1980

Graham, William—Separation 1981-1983

Graham, William—World Council of Churches

Graham, William—Youth for Christ

Greeley, Andrew

Grounds, Vemon

Grubb, Norman

Gurr, Eric T.

Halvonik, Paul

Hargis, Billy James

Harkness, Georgia

Harnish, J. Lester

Harrington, Bob

Hatfield, Mark

Hays, Brooks

Hearst, Patricia

Hedley, George

Henry, Carl F. H.

Hensley, K. J.

Hidy, Ross F.

Hill, E. V.

Hiss, Alger

Hoover, J. Edgar

Howie, Carl Gordon

Hromadka, Joseph L

Hubbard, David Allan

Hughes, Langston

Humbard, Rex

Hunt, Nelson Bunker

Hutson, Curtis

Hyles, Jack

Ironside, H. A

Jackson, Jesse

Johnson, John

Johnson, Lyndon

Jones, E. Stanley

Jones, Jim

Jones, Rufus

Jonsen, Albert

Judd, Walter

Kagawa, Toyohiko

Kantzer, Kenneth

Kempton, Wendall

Kennedy, Edward (Ted)

Kennedy, Gerald

Kennedy, John F.

Ketcham, Robert T.

Kierkegaard, Soren A

King, Martin Luther

Kinsolving, Lester

Kissinger, Henry

Kivengere, Festo

Kueng, Hans

Kuhlman, Kathryn

Ladd, George

LaHaye, Tim

Larson, Bruce

LaSor, William Sanford

Lewis, C. S.

Lincoln, Abraham

Lindsell, Harold

Lindsey, Hal

Littell, F. H.

Lockridge, S. M.

London, Holland

Lovett, C. S.

Lundquist, Carl

Luther, Martin

Lyles, Bud

McAlister, Jack

McBirnie, W. S.

McCall, Duke K

McGee, J. Vernon

McGovern, George

Mcllvenna, Ted

McIntire, Carl

McIntire, Carl—American Council of Christian Churches struggle

McLain, R. M.

McMichael, Jack Richard

MacArthur, John, Jr.

Machen, J. Gresham

Mackay, John A

Malone, Tom

Mandell, William Marx

Marshall, Robert J.

Martin, Walter

Marty, Martin E.

Mayer, Milton

Mead, Margaret

Meisenbach, Robert J.

Milik, Charles

Miller, Keith

Millheim, John E.

Mills, B. Fay

Moellering, Ralph

Mollenkott, Virginia

Moltmann, Jurgen

Montefiore, Hugh

Montgomery, John

Moody, Jess C.

Moon, Robert W.

Moon, Sun Myung

Mooneyham, Stanley

Morkiawa, Jitsuo

Morris, Henry M.

Morris, Leon

Mouritzen, Wayne

Muggeridge, Malcolm

Munger, Robert B.

Muste, A J.

Myers, C. Kilmer

Narramore, Clyde M.

Neill, S. C.

Nelson, Ed

Neuhaus, Richard J.

Newbigin, Leslie

Newman, John (Bishop)

Newton, Louie

Niebuhr, Reinhold

Niemoller, Martin

Niles, Daniel T.

Nixon, Richard

Norris, J. Frank

Ockenga, H. J.

O'Hair, Madalyn Murray

Oldham, Doug

Oswald, Lee Harvey

Oxnam, G. B.

Packer, J. I.

Paisley, Ian

Palau, Luis

Pannenberg, Wolfhart

Parker, Monroe

Paulling, Linus

Peale, Norman Vincent

Peet, E. L.

Peterson, Lemuel

Phelps, Dryden L.

Phillips, J. B.

Pietsch, Tim

Pike, James

Pike, James—Beliefs

Pike, James—Communism

Pike, James—Personallife/death

Pike, James—Political activity

Pinnock, Clark

Poling, Charles S.

Potter, Phillip

Powell, Adam C.

Prince, Robert

Radmacher, Earl

Raines, Robert

Ramm, Bernard

Ramsey, Michael

Reagan, Ronald

Redpath, Alan

Rees, Paul S.

Rice, John R.

Riley, W. B.

Roberts, Oral

Robinson, Haddon W.

Robinson, James

Robinson, John A T.

Rockefeller, Nelson A

Rogers, Adrian

Roosevelt, James

Rosell, Merv

Ruether, Rosemary

Runcie, Robert A K.

Rustin, Bayard

Saffen, Wayne

Schaeffer, Francis

Schleiermacher, Ernst

Schuller, Robert

Schweitzer, Albert

Setton, Elizabeth Ann Bayley

Shaull, Richard

Sheen, Fulton J.

Shields, T. T.

Shuler, Phil

Sider, Ron

Sightler, Harold

Skinner, Tom

Smith, Bailey

Smith, Paul

Sockman, Ralph

Solzhenitsyn, Alexander

Spike, Robert W.

Spurgeon, Charles H.

Stapleton, Ruth Carter

Stedman, Ray

Stendahl, Krister

Stott, John R.

Stringfellow, William

Suenens, Leo-Josef

Swaggart, Jimmy

Sweeting, George

Swindoll, Charles R.

Ten Boom, Corrie

Tharpe, J. G.

Thielicke, Helmut

Thieme, R. B.

Thompson, William

Thurmond, Strom

Tietjen, John

Tillich, Paul

Ting, K. H.

Tippett, Donald

Todd, Johnny

Towns, Elmer

Tozer, A W.

Trueblood, David Elton

Truehaft, Robert

Truman, Harry S.

Uphaus, Willard

Van Dusen, Henry P.

Van Impe, Jack

Vins, Georgi

Walker, Alan

Walvoord, John F.

Washington, George

Weatherhead, Leslie

Wendel, Cynthia

Wiersbe, Warren

Wildmon, Donald

Wilkerson, Ralph

Wilkinson, Frank

Williams, Bill

Williams, Colin W.

Williams, J. Rodman

Wirt, Sherwood

Woelfel, James W.

Wycliffe, John

Wyrtzen, Jack

Young, Andrew

Personal Papers

Weniger, Archer

Weniger, Archer—Correspondence

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