Friday, April 28 starting at 9am, the second floor of the library will begin installing carpet. FYI – There may be some noise associated with the install. Thank you for your cooperation!
EZ Proxy Server Is Fixed!
Our EZ Proxy server has been fixed and you should be able to access our eResources now. Thank you for your patience and a huge thank you to IT!
Writing Center Offerings to Fuller Students
“I wish I could write better!”
“If only someone would read my paper BEFORE I turn it in.”
“I’m an ESL student and English grammar confuses me. I need to go over the basics!”
Have you ever asked yourself these questions or overheard someone ask the same? You’re in luck!
The Writing Center is located on the third floor of the library and is there to help you to write better.
Click here to go to the Writing Center website. There, you can see all the fun and informative events they have during the quarter – some you can join in remotely, so you have no excuse!
If you have any questions about the Writing Center and their services, please feel free to email them [email protected].
Mango Languages Webinar – May 3rd!
Mango Languages is a new eResource (thank you, Ms. Helmerich!) at the Fuller Library available for students, faculty, staff, and alumni!
We are having a webinar for students and instructors on how to use Mango given by a Mango staff person on:
Wednesday, May 3 at 8am.
Please join us at this link: https://bluejeans.com/385304105.
Since this will be recorded and uploaded to our website, please mute your mics and webcams before the webinar begins.
There will be time after the webinar for questions!
New Books in April, Continued…
Christ is Risen from the dead! All we have to do is follow Christ; for in Christ, all our problems will be solved. Happy reading!
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- Mission and money: Christian mission in the context of global inequalities by Mari-Anna Auvinen-Pöntinen&Jonas Adelin Jørgensen. Amazon page
- The Catholic enlightenment: the forgotten history of a global movement by Ulrich L. Lehner. Amazon page
- Negotiating respect: pentecostalism, masculinity, and the politics of spiritual authority in the Dominican Republic by Brendan Jamal Thornton. Amazon page
- The death of race building a new Christianity in a racial world by Brian Bantum. Amazon page
- Fighting fundamentalist: Carl McIntire and the politicization of American fundamentalism by Markku. Ruotsila. Amazon page
- Bonhoeffer’s reception of Luther by Michael P. DeJonge. Amazon page
- John, Jesus, and History, Volume 3: Glimpses of Jesus through the Johannine Lens by Paul N. Anderson, S. J., Felix. Just, Tom. Thatcher. Amazon page
- Qur’an of the oppressed liberation theology and gender justice in Islam by Shadaab Rahemtulla. Amazon page
- The king and the land: a geography of royal power in the biblical world by Stephen C. Russell. Amazon page
- Heidegger and the problem of evil by Cezary Wodziński. Amazon page
- Love let go: radical generosity for the real world by Laura Sumner Truax. Amazon page
- The message of spiritual warfare: the Lord is a warrior; the Lord is his name by Keith Ferdinando. Amazon page
- Political church: the local assembly as embassy of Christ’s rule by Jonathan Leeman. Amazon page
- Intertextuality in the second century by D. Jeffrey Bingham. Amazon page
- An introduction to practical theology: history, theory, and the communication of the gospel in the present by Christian Grethlein. Amazon page
- Deuteronomy 1-11: a handbook on the Hebrew text by James Robson. Amazon page
- Paul among the Apocalypses? : an evaluation of the “Apocalyptic Paul” in the context of Jewish and Christian Apocalyptic literature by J. P. Davies. Amazon page
- Apostolicity: the ecumenical question in world Christian perspective by John G. Flett. Amazon page
Closed for Easter 2017 – 4/14-4/16
Fuller Library will be closed in observance for Easter from Friday, April 14 to Sunday, April 16. Inquiries made during this time may have a slow turnaround.
We will reopen promptly at 7:30am on Monday, April 17th.
Thank you and have an egg-celent Easter weekend!
New Databases! African American Communities, Race Relations in America, and Mango Languages
Fuller Library is proud to announce a new database addition to our collections – African American Communities and Race Relations in America!
- African American Communities – this collection presents multiple aspects of the African American community through personal diaries and scrapbooks, pamphlets, newspapers and periodicals, correspondence, official records and in-depth oral histories.
- Race Relations in America – this contains excellent survey material, including interviews, questionnaires, statistics, raw data and analyses, as well as advice for other organisations and towns wishing to conduct their own investigations. In addition to this, audio recordings and transcripts of speeches, photographs recording the participants of each institute, as well as two publicity film slideshows are featured.
- Mango Languages – offers instruction and learning for 77 languages and counting. Languages include, Biblical Hebrew, Ancient Greek, and Latin. The program also includes Specialty Courses, which feature culture and themes relating to the language you are learning as well as using movie clips! For more info on Mango Languages, go to our Resources page!
To access these databases, go to our Databases page or click the hyperlinks above.
We were able to purchase these through the very gracious grant of Ms. Peggy Helmerich – thank you very much!
New books in April!
Easter is approaching! It’s the time to repent for all our sins and thank God for all his blessings over us. It is also the time to spread the joy and happiness that Christ has brought about into our lives, to everyone we meet. Have a blessed and learned Easter!
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- Debates over the resurrection of the dead: constructing early Christian identity by Outi Lehtipuu. Amazon page
- Instead of atonement: the Bible’s salvation story and our hope for wholeness by Ted Grimsrud. Amazon page
- The historical Jesus: a guide for the perplexed by Helen K. Bond. Amazon page
- God’s Being in Reconciliation: the Theological Basis of the Unity and Diversity of the Atonement in the Theology of Karl Barth by Adam J. Johnson Amazon page
- The incarnate Lord: a Thomistic study in Christology by Thomas Joseph White. Amazon page
- John by Karoline M. Lewis. Amazon page
- ‘I lifted my eyes and saw’ : reading dream and vision reports in the Hebrew Bible by Elizabeth R. Hayes, Lena-Sofia Tiemeyer. Amazon page
- The ordering of the Christian mind: Karl Barth and theological rationality by Martin Westerholm. Amazon page
- Patterns of sin in the Hebrew Bible : metaphor, culture, and the making of a religious concept by by Joseph Lam. Amazon page
- Apostle of the crucified Lord: a theological introduction to Paul & his letters by Michael J. Gorman. Amazon page
- Representations of the afterlife in Luke-Acts by Alexey Somov. Amazon page
- Jesus and the Holocaust: reflections on suffering and hope by Joel Marcus. Amazon page
- Reading Acts in the discourses of masculinity and politics by Eric D. Barreto, Matthew L. Skinner, Steve Walton. Amazon page
- Basic introduction to the New Testament by John R. W. Stott, Stephen Motyer. Amazon page
- 1 & 2 Kings: an introduction and study guide history and story in ancient Israel by Lester L. Grabbe. Amazon page
- The last Adam: a theology of the obedient life of Jesus in the Gospels by Brandon D. Crowe. Amazon page
- Evolution and the fall by William T. Cavanaugh, James K. A. Smith. Amazon page
- Jesus according to Scripture: restoring the portrait from the Gospels by Darrell L. Bock, Benjamin I. Simpson. Amazon page
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April 1st – Remodeling in the Library, Second Floor
Please note and this is not an April Fools Joke!
This Saturday, April 1st the second floor will be noisy because we are removing shelving from the area.
Quiet areas are still located on floors 1 and 3.
Sorry for the inconvenience!
David Allan Hubbard Library – Department Restructure
Hello Everyone!
Dr. Waldrop has recently restructured the library staff into five distinct departments. Moving forward, if you have questions that fall under any of these departments, you will get a quicker response by contacting the department heads with the emails listed on the image below. Clicking on the image enlarges it and clicking here leads you to the Library Staff page; this page lists everyone, their departments, and contact information. If you’d like more information about the departments, please feel free to email [email protected]. Thank you!





































