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Definition of Charles Taze Russell
1. Noun. United States religious leader who founded the sect that is now called Jehovah's Witnesses (1852-1916).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Charles Taze Russell
Literary usage of Charles Taze Russell
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1910)
"MILLENNIAL DAWN: The title of a series of religious books written by Charles Taze
Russell of Allegheny, Penn., where he was born Feb. 16, 1852. ..."
2. The Harp of God: Proof Conclusive that Millions Now Living Will Never Die; a by Joseph Franklin Rutherford (1921)
"Charles Taze Russell, who afterwards became better known as Pastor Russell, was
the greatest preacher of modern times. He was elected pastor of upwards of ..."
3. Jehovah Himself Has Become King by Robert King (2005)
"Jehovah's Witnesses'Kingdom Proclaimers- On October 2nd, 1914, the Founder of
the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society, Charles Taze Russell, strode into the ..."
4. World Order in the New Millennium by Gerald S. Sage (2005)
"... were readers of the works of Charles Taze Russell and later became Jehovah's
Witnesses, a movement started by a successor of Russell, JF Rutherford. ..."