I Achieve the Impossible": A Sermon Delivered in the First Presbyterian Church of Lansdowne, Pennsylvania, on Sunday morning [Oct. 27, 1935] by the pastor, Rev. G. Malcolm Van Dyke
by Van Dyke, G. Malcolm
- Used
- Paperback
- Condition
- Very Good -
- Seller
-
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania, United States
Payment Methods Accepted
About This Item
Lansdowne, Pa: s.n., 1935. Paperback. Very Good -. [8] p.; 22 cm. Beige wrapper with black wrapper title; stapled. The sermon was printed "by one of the members of this church, who himself found help therein." -- inside back wrapper. The Rev. G. Malcolm Van Dyke took over the 1st Presbyterian Church of Lansdowne in 1935, facing a congregation that was struggling through the Great Depression and a church that had a large debt, making his first decade a difficult one. This sermon described the challenges of the church around the world as it faced totalitarianism and nationalism. In Very Good- Condition: back wrapper scraped; clean and tight.
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Details
- Bookseller
- Classic Books and Ephemera (US)
- Bookseller's Inventory #
- 006914
- Title
- I Achieve the Impossible": A Sermon Delivered in the First Presbyterian Church of Lansdowne, Pennsylvania, on Sunday morning [Oct. 27, 1935] by the pastor, Rev. G. Malcolm Van Dyke
- Author
- Van Dyke, G. Malcolm
- Format/Binding
- Paperback
- Book Condition
- Used - Very Good -
- Quantity Available
- 1
- Publisher
- s.n.
- Place of Publication
- Lansdowne, Pa
- Date Published
- 1935
Terms of Sale
Classic Books and Ephemera
If the item is not as described, the buyer must contact us within 72 hours of their receipt of it. We will refund the full amount with the costs of return shipping within 24 hours of receipt of the item.
About the Seller
Classic Books and Ephemera
Biblio member since 2006
Lansdowne, Pennsylvania
About Classic Books and Ephemera
We have a large stock, focusing primarily, but by no means exclusively, on 16th- to mid-19th-century books in English, French, and German in the fields of history, travel, and the arts, and children's books; late 19th- and early 20th-century military prints and postcards; and manuscripts, deeds, maps, and printed ephemera of all periods and disciplines.