Ferguson received both his undergraduate bachelor's degree and his first master's degree from Abilene Christian University in the mid-1950s.[2] He immediately proceeded to Harvard University and received his Bachelor of Sacred Theology followed by a doctoral degree "with distinction" in History and Philosophy of Religion.[3]
Awards and honors
During his education, Ferguson received such honors as the Honorary John Harvard Fellowship and Harvard Graduate School Fellowship. He later received awards from the Christian Research Foundation for both his dissertation, "Ordination in the Ancient Church," and for a translation of Gregory of Nyssa'sLife of Moses. He was selected to speak as the John G. Gammie Senior Lecturer of the Southwest Commission for Religious Studies. He was later presented with a festschrift, The Early Church in Its Context: Essays in Honor of Everett Ferguson.[3]
Memberships
Dr. Ferguson was a council member of the Association Internationale D'Etudes Patristiques,[3] which seeks "to promote the study of Christian antiquity, especially the Fathers of the Church, without prejudice to work undertaken in this domain in various countries."[4] He served for a term on the council of the American Society of Church History, and has also previously served as president of the North American Patristics Society (1990–1992), from which he received the Distinguished Service Award for more than thirty years of service.[2]
Encyclopedia of Early Christianity, ed. (New York: Garland Publishing, 1990; 2nd ed.,1997. It later came out as an paperback in 1999 and it has been around ever since.) ISBN978-0815333197
Recent Studies in Early Christianity, ed., 6 vols. (New York: Garland Publishing, 1999.)
Christianity and Society: The Social World of Early Christianity. (New York: Garland Publishing, 1999.)
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