Poetry--Religious aspects
Found in 20 Collections and/or Records:
Messages in Metre, 1973
Phil Kerr's Favorite Poems, second edition, 1958
Poems with a Message, 1975
Rays of California Sunshine, third edition, 1945
This accruing collection contains books that meet the general acquisitions policy of the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center, but are not catalogued in the library system. They are shelved alphabetically according to first author's last name in aisle four of the Church of God Publications Building site. It will require at least 48 hours notice or wait time to use these materials.
Rays of Hope, 1987
This accruing collection contains books that meet the general acquisitions policy of the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center, but are not catalogued in the library system. They are shelved alphabetically according to first author's last name in aisle four of the Church of God Publications Building site. It will require at least 48 hours notice or wait time to use these materials.
Religious Poetry
Contains one (1) folder of unitemized materials on the named topic.
Shafts of Sunlight and Songs of Shadow, 1940
This accruing collection contains books that meet the general acquisitions policy of the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center, but are not catalogued in the library system. They are shelved alphabetically according to first author's last name in aisle four of the Church of God Publications Building site. It will require at least 48 hours notice or wait time to use these materials.
The World's Best Loved Christian Poems, 1973
Treasures from Above, 2004
This accruing collection contains books that meet the general acquisitions policy of the Dixon Pentecostal Research Center, but are not catalogued in the library system. They are shelved alphabetically according to first author's last name in aisle four of the Church of God Publications Building site. It will require at least 48 hours notice or wait time to use these materials.
Unpublished poetry, 1988–1991
While many unpublished manuscripts naturally find their home in individual, family, or institutional collections, there are other manuscripts in our holdings which do not have such a home. This accruing collection brings intellectual cohesion to those manuscripts that broadly fit our holdings but are not included in other collections because each one might be the only item we have related to a person or a variety of other reasons.