Paternoster Press
Parent company | Koorong |
---|---|
Founded | 1936 |
Founder | Howard Mudditt |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Headquarters location | Milton Keynes |
Publication types | Books |
Official website | www |
Paternoster Press is a British Christian publishing house which was founded by (1906–1992) in 1936. Mudditt was a Bank of England clerk who decided to move into publishing after seeing the many publishers based on London's Paternoster Row during his lunch hours;[citation needed] the firm was named after the street, and also alluded to the Lord's Prayer.[1] The Irish Times described Paternoster as "a synonym for scholarly, evangelical Christian publications."[2]
Mudditt led a Plymouth Brethren assembly in Walthamstow, a north-east suburb of London. Through this and other connections, Mudditt formed relationships with many religious scholars who then published in Paternoster, including F. F. Bruce, H.L. Ellison, George H. Lang,[3] and I. H. Marshall.[1] In its early decades, Paternoster collaborated with other publishers, including Inter-Varsity Fellowship (later Inter-Varsity Press) and the American firm Eerdmans.[4]
Paternoster began with the publication of a children's magazine, Horizon and followed with another magazine, The Harvester,[3] and a regular evangelical booklet, The Emergency Post.[1] Also among Paternosters early works were a periodical, Science and Religion.[5] In 1956, Inter-Varsity Fellowship sold the periodical, Evangelical Quarterly to Paternoster.[6] Another significant publication was the New International Greek Text Commentary of the Bible, coedited by I. Howard Marshall, , and Donald Hagner and published with Eerdmans.[7] Later authors publishing in Paternoster include and . In the 1990s and 2000s, the publisher also presented a series of noted academic monograms: Paternoster Biblical Monographs, Paternoster Theological Monographs, Studies in Christian History and Thought, Studies in Evangelical History and Thought, and Studies in Baptist History and Thought.[1] Paternoster Biblical Monographs, a series in the Evangelical tradition, broadly defined, won praise for the high caliber of its scholarship.[8]
Paternoster relocated to Exeter in 1962.[3] In 1975, Mudditt's son, , became managing director and in 1976 was joined by . In 1992 it was purchased by the Christian book distributor Send the Light as part of their Authentic Media division based in Milton Keynes,[3] and moved to Carlisle, England.[1]
Paternoster's imprints include Regnum (an academic list) and Rutherford House (a popular historical list); it also publishes books with specific imprints for organisations such as WEF (), YWAM (Youth with a Mission) and Spring Harvest.[citation needed]
In December 2009, as part of the failure of STL (Send the Light), Paternoster was sold[1] to Australian-based company Koorong, which, prior to this, was primarily a retailer of Christian books, music and gifts.[citation needed]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Summerton 2010
- ^ "A guiding light to the Bible". The Irish Times. July 8, 1981. p. 13 – via ProQuest.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Paternoster Press Papers
- ^ Grass 2012, p69-72
- ^ Grass 2012, p74
- ^ Grass 2012, p89
- ^ Harmsel et al 2011, p94
- ^ Squires, John T., "Spirit and Kingdom in the Writings of Luke and Paul: An Attempt to Reconcile These Concepts", (book review) Review of Biblical Literature. 2007, Vol. 9, p480-483.
Sources[]
- Grass, Tim. FF Bruce: A Life. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2012.
- Neil Summerton, Jeremy Mudditt. Brethren Historical Review. (2010) Vol 6: P 122-125
- Ten Harmsel, Larry, and Reinder Van Til. An Eerdmans Century. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2011.
- Paternoster Press Papers, Administrative History. ELGAR: Electronic Gateway to Archives at Rylands. The University of Manchester Library Collections, Manchester, UK.
- Christian mass media companies
- Christian publishing companies
- Book publishing companies of the United Kingdom
- Publishing companies established in 1936