Ungersma, Aaron J. Ray F. Kibler III.. 1993. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm15837.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15837coll1/id/326.
APA citation style
(1993). Ungersma, Aaron J. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm15837.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15837coll1/id/326.
Chicago citation style
Ungersma, Aaron J. 1993. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm15837.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p15837coll1/id/326.
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Aaron John Ungersma (1905 - 2000) was professor of pastoral psychology at San Francisco Theological Seminary. He received his bachelor's degree from Hope College; BD, Western Theological Seminary; ThM, Princeton Theological Seminary; and Ph.D. in psychology from Marburg University in Marburg, Germany. He was ordained a minister in the Presbyterian Church in 1929. He became Stuart Professor of Systematic Theology at SFTS in 1938 and later specialized in pastoral psychology until his retirement in 1976. He was one of the founders of the Pacific Coast Theological Group (now Society) in 1938. Ungersma spent a sabbatic year working with Viktor Frankl in Vienna and was the first academic to introduce Frankl's work to the American public. His books include The Search for Meaning (1961), a study of Victor Frankl's existential analysis or logotherapy; Handbook for Christian Believers (1964); and Escape from Phoniness (1969).
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