The Reformed Church Center of New Brunswick Theological Seminary, New
Brunswick, N.J. will co-host an event titled The Colonial Clergy Conference:
Dutch Traditions and American Realities with the Collegiate Church of New
York, the Van Raalte Institute in Holland, Michigan, the Roosevelt Study
Center in Middelburg, Netherlands, and the Reformed Church in America Archives.
Planned as part of a larger celebration this year of Henry Hudson’s voyage
for the Dutch to the Hudson River and New York, it is an international
event on twosites.
The conference will be held September 27-28th at the Haworth Center at
Hope College in Holland, Michigan and October 24th at First Reformed Church,
9 Bayard St., New Brunswick, N.J. Additional information about
registration, etc. can be found on the website: _http://www.nbts.edu/clergyconference/_
(http://www.nbts.edu/clergyconference/)
In Holland, Michigan, the speakers will be Dr. Leon van den Broeke,
Assistant Professor in Religion, Law and Society and Director of the Center for
Religion and Law at Free University in Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Dr.
Willem Frijhof, Emeritus Professor of Early Modern History at Free University;
Dr. Hans Krabbendam, Assistant Director of the Roosevelt Study Center in
Middelburg, The Netherlands; Dr. Earl Wm. Kennedy, Senior Research Fellow and
Professor of Religion Emeritus at Northwestern College in Orange City,
Iowa; Dr. Firth Haring Fabend, Fellow of the New Netherland Project and
Historian for The Holland Society of New York,; and Dr. John Coakley, L. Russell
Feakes Memorial Chair and Professor of Church History at New Brunswick
Theological Seminary.
Speakers in New Brunswick, New Jersey will include Dr. Leon van den
Broeke; Dr. Joyce Goodfriend, Professor of History at the University of Denver;
Dr. John Coakley; Dr. Dirk Mouw, past Albert A. Smith Fellow at New
Brunswick Theological Seminary; Dr. Firth Haring Fabend, and Dr. Robert Naborn,
Director of the Dutch Studies Program at the University of Pennsylvania. Also
included in the day is a tour of the church’s historic cemetery and bell
tower, lunch, and an opportunity to order a book which will be based on the
papers presented. First Reformed Church was founded in 1717 and the current
building dates to 1765.
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