author

Joseph Warschauer

b. 1869

An early 20th-century religious writer, he explored big questions about faith, theology, and the life of Jesus in a clear, thoughtful way. His books reflect a serious interest in modern Christian thought and debate.

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About the author

Joseph Warschauer was a theological writer active in the early 1900s. Library and public-domain records identify him as Joseph Warschauer, born in 1869, though some editions and catalogs also list him under the shortened form J. Warschauer or the variant Joseph Warshaw.

His known books include The New Evangel (1907), Problems of Immanence (1909), The Way of Understanding (1913), and The Historical Life of Christ (1927). The surviving records consistently connect his work with Christian theology, especially questions about divine immanence, modern belief, and historical approaches to Jesus.

Reliable biographical detail beyond his authorship is scarce in the sources I could confirm, so it is safest to remember him chiefly through his books: a writer engaged with the religious arguments of his time, and one whose work still survives through library catalogs and public-domain editions.