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Charles Hodge

Charles Hodge (December 27, 1797 – June 19, 1878) was a Reformed Presbyterian theologian and principal of Princeton Theological Seminary between 1851 and 1878.

Charles Hodge
Hodge, circa 1850–60
2nd Principal of Princeton Theological Seminary
In office
1851–1878
Preceded byArchibald Alexander
Succeeded byArchibald Alexander Hodge
Personal details
Born(1797-12-27)December 27, 1797
DiedJune 19, 1878(1878-06-19) (aged 80)
Spouse(s)Sarah Bache (married 1822; died 1849)
Mary Hunter Stockman (married 1852)
ChildrenArchibald Alexander Hodge, Caspar Wistar Hodge Sr.
Parent(s)Hugh Hodge
Mary Blanchard
Alma materPrinceton College
Princeton Theological Seminary
Signature

He was a leading exponent of the Princeton Theology, an orthodox Calvinist theological tradition in America during the 19th century. He argued strongly for the authority of the Bible as the Word of God. Many of his ideas were adopted in the 20th century by Fundamentalists and Evangelicals.[1]

Biography

Charles Hodge's father, Hugh, was the son of a Scotsman who emigrated from Northern Ireland early in the eighteenth century.

Hugh graduated from Princeton College in 1773 and served as a military surgeon in the Revolutionary War, after which he practiced medicine in Philadelphia.

He married well-born Bostonian orphan Mary Blanchard in 1790. The Hodge's first three sons died in the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793 and another yellow fever epidemic in 1795. Their first son to survive childhood, Hugh Lenox, was born in 1796. Hugh Lenox would become an authority in obstetrics, and he would remain especially close with Charles, often assisting him financially. Charles was born on December 27, 1797. His father died seven months later of complications from the yellow fever he had contracted in the epidemic of 1795. They were brought up by relatives, many of whom were wealthy and influential. Mary Hodge made sacrifices and took in boarders in order to put the boys through school. She, with the help of the family's minister Ashbel Green, also provided the customary Presbyterian religious education using the Westminster Shorter Catechism. They moved to Somerville, New Jersey in 1810 in order to attend a classical academy, and again to Princeton in 1812 in order to enter Princeton College, a school originally organized to train Presbyterian ministers. As Charles prepared to enter the college, Princeton Theological Seminary was being established by the Presbyterian Church as a separate institution for training ministers in response to a perceived inadequacy in the training ministers were receiving at the university as well as the perception that the college was drifting from orthodoxy. Also in 1812, Ashbel Green, the Hodge's old minister, became president of the college.[2]

At Princeton, the first president of the new seminary, Archibald Alexander, took a special interest in Hodge, assisting him in Greek and taking him with him on itinerant preaching trips. Hodge would name his first son after Alexander. Hodge became close friends with future Episcopalian bishops John Johns and Charles McIlvaine, and future Princeton College president John Mclean. In 1815, during a time of intense religious fervor among the students encouraged by Green and Alexander, Hodge joined the local Presbyterian church and decided to enter the ministry. Shortly after completing his undergraduate studies he entered the seminary in 1816. The course of study was very rigorous, requiring students to recite scripture in the original languages and to use the dogmatics written in Latin in the 17th century by Reformed scholastic Francis Turretin as a theological textbook. Professors Alexander and Samuel Miller also inculcated an intense piety in their students.[3]

Following graduation from Princeton Seminary in 1819, Hodge received additional instruction privately from Hebrew scholar Rev. Joseph Bates in Philadelphia. He was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Philadelphia in 1820, and he preached regularly as a missionary in vacant pulpits in the East Falls neighborhood of Philadelphia, the Frankford Arsenal in Philadelphia, and Woodbury, New Jersey over the subsequent months.[4][citation needed] In 1820 he accepted a one-year appointment as assistant professor at Princeton Seminary to teach biblical languages. In October of that year he traveled throughout New England to speak with professors and ministers including Moses Stuart at Andover Seminary and Nathaniel W. Taylor at Yale Divinity School. In 1821 he was ordained a minister by the Presbytery of New Brunswick, and in 1822 he published his first pamphlet, which allowed Alexander to convince the General Assembly to appoint him full Professor of Oriental and Biblical Literature. Financially stable, Hodge married Sarah Bache, Benjamin Franklin's great-granddaughter in the same year.[5] In 1824, Hodge helped to found the Chi Phi Society along with Robert Baird and Archibald Alexander.[citation needed] He founded the quarterly Biblical Repertory in 1825 to translate the current scholarly literature on the Bible from Europe.[6]

Hodge's study of European scholarship led him to question the adequacy of his training. The seminary agreed to continue to pay him for two years while he traveled in Europe to "round out" his education. He supplied a substitute, John Nevin on his own expense. From 1826 to 1828 he traveled to Paris, where he studied French, Arabic, and Syriac; Halle, where he studied German with George Müller and made the acquaintance of August Tholuck; and Berlin where he attended the lectures of Silvestre de Sacy,[citation needed] Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg, and August Neander. There he also became personally acquainted with Friedrich Schleiermacher, the leading modern theologian. He admired the deep scholarship he witnessed in Germany, but thought that the attention given to idealist philosophy clouded common sense, and led to speculative and subjective theology. Unlike other American theologians who spent time in Europe, Hodge's experience did not cause any change in his commitment to the principles of the faith he had learned from childhood.[7]

 
Princeton Seminary in the 1800s

Starting in the 1830s Hodge suffered from an immobilizing pain in his leg, and was forced to conduct his classes from his study from 1833 to 1836. He continued to write articles for Biblical Repertory, now renamed the Princeton Review. During the 1830s he wrote a major commentary on Romans and a history of the Presbyterian church in America. He supported the Old School in the Old School–New School Controversy, which resulted in a split in 1837. In 1840 he became Professor of Didactic Theology,[8] retaining, however, the department of New Testament exegesis, the duties of which he continued to discharge until his death. He was moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (Old School) in 1846.[citation needed] Hodge's wife died in 1849, shortly followed by Samuel Miller and Archibald Alexander, leaving him the senior professor of the seminary. He was recognized as the leading proponent of the Princeton theology. On his death in 1878 he was recognized by both friends and opponents as one of the greatest polemicists of his time.[9] Of his children who survived him, three were ministers; and two of these succeeded him in the faculty of Princeton Theological Seminary, C. W. Hodge, in the department of exegetical theology, and A. A. Hodge, in that of dogmatics. A grandson, C. W. Hodge, Jr., also taught for many years at Princeton Seminary.

Literary and teaching activities

Hodge wrote many biblical and theological works. He began writing early in his theological career and continued publishing until his death. In 1835 he published his Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans. Although considered to be his greatest exegetical work, Hodge revised this commentary in 1864, in the midst of the American Civil War, and after a debate with James Henley Thornwell about state secession from the Union.

Other works followed at intervals of longer or shorter duration – Constitutional History of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (1840); Way of Life (1841, republished in England, translated into other languages, and circulated to the extent of 35,000 copies in America); Commentary on Ephesians (1856); on First Corinthians (1857); on Second Corinthians (1859). His magnum opus is the Systematic Theology (1871–1873), of 3 volumes and extending to 2,260 pages. His last book, What is Darwinism? appeared in 1874. In addition to all this it must be remembered that he contributed upward of 130 articles to the Princeton Review, many of which, besides exerting a powerful influence at the time of their publication, have since been gathered into volumes, and as Selection of Essays and Reviews from the Princeton Review (1857) and Discussions in Church Polity (ed. W. Durant, 1878) have taken a permanent place in theological literature.

This record of Hodge's literary life is suggestive of the great influence that he exerted. But properly to estimate that influence, it must be remembered that 3,000 ministers of the Gospel passed under his instruction, and that to him was accorded the rare privilege, during the course of a long life, of achieving distinction as a teacher, exegete, preacher, controversialist, ecclesiastic, and systematic theologian. As a teacher he had few equals; and if he did not display popular gifts in the pulpit, he revealed homiletic powers of a high order in the "conferences" on Sabbath afternoons, where he spoke with his accustomed clearness and logical precision, but with great spontaneity and amazing tenderness and unction.

Hodge's literary powers were seen at their best in his contributions to the Princeton Theological Review, many of which are acknowledged masterpieces of controversial writing. They cover a wide range of topics, from apologetic questions that concern common Christianity to questions of ecclesiastical administration, in which only Presbyterians have been supposed to take interest. But the questions in debate among American theologians during the period covered by Hodge's life belonged, for the most part, to the departments of anthropology and soteriology; and it was upon these, accordingly, that his polemic powers were mainly applied.

All of the books that he authored have remained in print over a century after his death.

Character and significance

Devotion to Christ was the salient characteristic of his experience, and it was the test by which he judged the experience of others. Hence, though a Presbyterian and a Calvinist, his sympathies went far beyond the boundaries of sect. He refused to entertain the narrow views of church polity which some of his brethren advocated. He repudiated the unhistorical position of those who denied the validity of Roman Catholic baptism.

He was conservative by nature, and his life was spent in defending the Reformed theology as set forth in the Westminster Confession of Faith and Larger and Westminster Shorter Catechisms. He was fond of saying that Princeton had never originated a new idea; but this meant no more than that Princeton was the advocate of historical Calvinism in opposition to the modified and provincial Calvinism of a later day. And it is true that Hodge must be classed among the great defenders of the faith, rather than among the great constructive minds of the Church. He had no ambition to be epoch-making by marking the era of a new departure. But he earned a higher title to fame in that he was the champion of his Church's faith during a long and active life, her trusted leader in time of trial, and for more than half a century the most conspicuous teacher of her ministry. Hodges' understanding of the Christian faith and of historical Protestantism is given in his Systematic Theology.

Views on controversial topics

Slavery

As an archconservative and a believer in both the inerrancy and the literal interpretation of the Bible, Hodge supported the institution of slavery in its most abstract sense, as having support from certain passages in the Bible. He held slaves himself, but he condemned their mistreatment, and made a distinction between slavery in the abstract and what he saw as the unjust Southern Slave Laws that deprived slaves of their right to educational instruction, to marital and parental rights, and that "subject them to the insults and oppression of the whites." It was his opinion that the humanitarian reform of these laws would become the necessary prelude to the eventual end of slavery in the United States.[10]

The Presbyterian General Assembly of 1818 had affirmed a similar position, that slavery within the United States, while not necessarily sinful, was a regrettable institution that ought to eventually be changed.[10] Like the church, Hodge himself had sympathies with both the abolitionists in the North and the pro-slavery advocates in the South, and he used his considerable influence in an attempt to restore order and find common ground between the two factions, with the eventual hope of abolishing slavery altogether.

Hodge's support of slavery was not an inevitable result of his belief in the inerrancy and the literal interpretation of the Bible. Other 19th century Christian contemporaries of Hodge, who also believed in the inerrancy and infallibility of the Bible, denounced the institution of slavery. John Williamson Nevin, a conservative, evangelical Reformed scholar and seminary professor, denounced slavery as 'a vast moral evil.'[11] Hodge and Nevin also famously clashed over polar-opposite views of the Lord's Supper.

Old School

Hodge was a leader of the Old School faction of Presbyterians during the division of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in 1837. The issues involved conflicts over doctrine, religious practice, and slavery. Although prior to 1861 the Old School refrained from denouncing slavery, the issue was a matter of debate between Northern and Southern components of the denomination.

Civil War

Hodge could tolerate slavery but he could never tolerate treason of the sort he saw trying to break up the United States in 1861. Hodge was a strong nationalist and led the fight among Presbyterians to support the Union. In the January 1861 Princeton Review, Hodge laid out his case against secession, in the end calling it unconstitutional. James Henley Thornwell responded in the January 1861 Southern Presbyterian Review, holding that the election of 1860 had installed a new government, one which the South did not agree with, thus making secession lawful.[12] Despite being a staunch Unionist politically, Hodge voted against the support for the "Spring Resolutions" of the 1861 General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian Church, thinking it was not the business of the church to involve itself in political matters; because of the resolutions, the denomination then split North and South. When the General Assembly convened in Philadelphia in May 1861, one month after the Civil War began, the resolution stipulated pledging support for the federal government over objections based on concerns about the scope of church jurisdiction and disagreements about its interpretation of the Constitution. In December 1861, the Southern Old School Presbyterian churches severed ties with the denomination.[13]

Darwinism

In 1874, Hodge published What is Darwinism?, claiming that Darwinism, was, in essence, atheism. To Hodge, Darwinism was contrary to the notion of design and was therefore clearly atheistic. Both in the Review and in What is Darwinism?, (1874) Hodge attacked Darwinism. His views determined the position of the Seminary until his death in 1878. While he didn't consider all evolutionary ideas to be in conflict with his religion, he was concerned with its teaching in colleges. Meanwhile, at Princeton University, a totally separate institution, President John Maclean also rejected Darwin's theory of evolution. However, in 1868, upon Maclean's retirement, James McCosh, a Scottish philosopher, became president. McCosh believed that much of Darwinism could and would be proved sound, and so he strove to prepare Christians for this event. Instead of conflict between science and religion, McCosh sought reconciliation. Insisting on the principle of design in nature, McCosh interpreted the Darwinian discoveries as more evidence of the prearrangement, skill, and purpose in the universe. He thus argued that Darwinism was not atheistic nor in irreconcilable hostility to the Bible. The Presbyterians in America thus could choose between two schools of thought on evolution, both based in Princeton. The Seminary held to Hodge's position until his supporters were ousted in 1929, and the college (Princeton University) became a world class center of the new science of evolutionary biology.[14]

The debate between Hodge and McCosh exemplified an emerging conflict between science and religion over the question of Darwin's evolution theory. However, the two men showed greater similarities regarding matters of science and religion than popularly appreciated. Both supported the increasing role of scientific inquiry in natural history and resisted its intrusion into philosophy and religion.[15]

Works

Books

  • Hodge, Charles (1837). A commentary on the Epistle to the Romans. London: The Religious tract society. pp. xvi, 438 p. LCCN 38018206. LCC BS2665 .H65 1837.
  • ——— (1839–40). The constitutional history of the Presbyterian church in the United States of America. Philadelphia: W.S. Martien. ISBN 9780790551555. LCCN 42027085. OCLC 390536. LCC BX8936 .H6 1839.
  • ——— (c. 1841). The way of life. Philadelphia: American Sunday-school Union. pp. xi, [13]–384 p. LCCN 33024805. OCLC 6956164. OL 23358725M. LCC BV4531 .H55 1840.
  • ——— (1856). A commentary on the Epistle to the Ephesians. New York: R. Carter and brothers. pp. xx, [21]–398 p. LCCN 40015255. OCLC 2517813. LCC BS2695 .H65. - There is an 1860 reprint available through MOA http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moa/AJH0374.0001.001/1 (not in the public domain)
  • ——— (1857). An exposition of the First epistle to the Corinthians. New York: R. Carter. pp. xxi, 373 p., 20 cm. LCCN 40015256. LCC BS2675 .H6 Dewey: 227.2.
  • ——— (1860). An exposition of the Second epistle to the Corinthians. New York: R. Carter & brothers. pp. 1 p.l., 314 p. 20 cm. LCCN 40015257. LCC BS2675 .H65.
  • ——— (1872–73). Systematic theology. New York, London and Edinburgh: C. Scribner and company, T. Nelson and sons. pp. 3 v. 25 cm. LCCN 45041149. LCC BT75 .H63.
  • ——— (1873). "Introduction". In Ramsey, James Beverlin (ed.). The spiritual kingdom: an exposition of the first eleven chapters of the book of the Revelation. Richmond, Va.: Presbyterian Committee of Publication. pp. i–xxxv. LCCN 40016574. OL 23339154M. LCC BS2825 .R35 Dewey: 228.
  • ——— (n.d.). Lectures (on Theology) (Manuscript). LCCN mm81026179. LCC MMC-2873.
  • ——— (1874). What is Darwinism?. New York: Scribner, Armstrong, and company. pp. iv, 178 p. 20 cm. LCCN 06012878. LCC QH369 .H63A version of this book can be obtained from https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/19192 . LCCN 85-665477 corresponds to an English edition {{cite book}}: External link in |postscript= (help)CS1 maint: postscript (link)

Journals

  • ———; Atwater, Lyman Hotchkiss &; Smith, Henry Boynton; Sherwood, James Manning (J. M.); Libbey, Jonas M. & Forsyth, John, eds. (1825–88). The Princeton review (Journal). New York: G. & C. Carvill [etc., etc.] LCCN 01026485. LCC BR1 .P7.
  • ———, ed. (1825–29). "Biblical repertory" (Journal). 1 – v. 5. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Press. LCCN sf89090823. OCLC 08840509. LCC Microfilm 01104 no.229, 566-567 AP. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

Sermons

  • ——— (1833). A sermon, preached in Philadelphia ... American Sunday-school Union, May 31, 1832. Philadelphia: The Union. LCCN 96229925. LCC YA 30459 YA Pam.

Articles

  • ——— (January 1871). "Preaching the Gospel to the Poor". The Princeton Review. New York: G. & C. Carvill. 43 (1): 83–95. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  • ——— (April 1876). "Christianity without Christ". The Princeton Review. New York: G. & C. Carvill. 5 (18): 352–362. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  • ——— (1855). "What is Presbyterianism?". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)[16]

Modern reprints

  • Systematic Theology. Hendrickson Publishers (1999). ISBN 1-56563-459-4 (also available abridged by Edward N. Gross, ISBN 0-87552-224-6)
  • Romans (The Crossway Classic Commentaries). Crossway Books (1994). ISBN 0-89107-724-3
  • Romans (Geneva Series of Commentaries). Banner of Truth (June 1, 1998). ISBN 0-8515-1213-5
  • Corinthians (Crossway Classic Commentaries). Crossway Books (1995). ISBN 0-89107-867-3
  • 1 & 2 Corinthians (Geneva Series of Commentaries). Banner of Truth (June 1, 1998). ISBN 0-8515-1185-6
  • 2 Corinthians (Crossway Classic Commentaries). Crossway Books (1995). ISBN 0-89107-868-1
  • Ephesians (The Crossway Classic Commentaries). Crossway Books (1994). ISBN 0-89107-784-7
  • Ephesians (Geneva Series of Commentaries). Banner of Truth (June 1, 1998). ISBN 0-8515-1591-6
  • The Way of Life (Sources of American Spirituality). Mark A. Noll, ed. Paulist Press (1987). ISBN 0-8091-0392-3

Notes

  1. ^ George M. Marsden, Fundamentalism and American Culture (2006) pp. 19–20, 111–113
  2. ^ Noll 1987, p. 3–6.
  3. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 6–11, 22.
  4. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 11–12.
  5. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 11–13.
  6. ^ Noll 1987, p. 13.
  7. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 12–16.
  8. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 16–17.
  9. ^ Noll 1987, pp. 17–18.
  10. ^ a b Torbett, David (2006). Theology and Slavery: Charles Hodge and Horace Bushnell. Mercer University Press, Macon, Ga. p. 230. ISBN 978-0-88146-032-2. See Pages 6 and 77.
  11. ^ D. G. Hart, John Williamson Nevin: High Church Calvinist July 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Presbyterian & Reformed Publishing (Phillipsburg, New Jersey: 2005). 55.
  12. ^ James McLean Albritton, "Slavery, Secession, and the Old School Presbyterians: James Henley Thornwell and Charles Hodge on the Relationship between Church and State," Southern Historian, April 2000, Vol. 21, pp 25-39
  13. ^ John Halsley Wood Jr., "The 1861 Spring Resolutions: Charles Hodge, the American Union, and the Dissolution of the Old School Church," Journal of Church and State, Spring 2005, Vol. 47 Issue 2, pp 371-387
  14. ^ Joseph E. Illick, "The Reception of Darwinism at the Theological Seminary and the College at Princeton, New Jersey. Part I: The Theological Seminary," Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society, 1960, Vol. 38 Issue 3, pp 152-165
  15. ^ Bradley J. Gundlach, "McCosh and Hodge on Evolution: A Combined Legacy," Journal of Presbyterian History 1997 75(2): 85-102,
  16. ^ "What is Presbyterianism? - online". Retrieved May 20, 2019.

Sources

This article includes content derived from the public domain Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 1914.

Further reading

  • Adams, John H. (April 21, 2003). The Layman.
  • Anderson, Robert at the Wayback Machine (archived June 8, 2001)
  • Gutjahr Paul C. Charles Hodge: Guardian of American Orthodoxy (Oxford University Press; 2011) 477 pages; a standard scholarly biography
  • Hicks, Peter (1997). The Philosophy of Charles Hodge: A 19th Century Evangelical Approach to Reason, Knowledge and Truth. Edwin Mellen Pr. ISBN 0-7734-8657-7
  • Hodge, A. A. (1880). The life of Charles Hodge: Professor in the Theological seminary, Princeton, N.J. C. Scribner's sons. Reissued 1979 by Ayer Co. Pub. ISBN 0-405-00250-5
  • Hoffecker, W. A. (1981). Piety and the Princeton Theologians: Archibald Alexander, Charles Hodge, and Benjamin Warfield P&R Publishing. ISBN 0-87552-280-7
  • Hoffecker, W. Andrew (2011). Charles Hodge: The Pride of Princeton P&R Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87552-658-4
  • Marsden, George M. Fundamentalism and American Culture (2006)
  • Noll, Mark A., ed. (2001). Princeton Theology, 1812–1921: Scripture, Science, and Theological Method from Archibald Alexander to Benjamin Warfield. Baker Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8010-6737-5
  • Stewart, J. W. and J. H. Moorhead, eds. (2002). Charles Hodge Revisited: A Critical Appraisal of His Life and Work. William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8028-4750-1

External links

  • Works by Charles Hodge at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Charles Hodge at Internet Archive
  • Works by Charles Hodge at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, 1830–82, at the University of Michigan's "Humanities Text Initiative".

charles, hodge, december, 1797, june, 1878, reformed, presbyterian, theologian, principal, princeton, theological, seminary, between, 1851, 1878, hodge, circa, 1850, 602nd, principal, princeton, theological, seminaryin, office, 1851, 1878preceded, byarchibald,. Charles Hodge December 27 1797 June 19 1878 was a Reformed Presbyterian theologian and principal of Princeton Theological Seminary between 1851 and 1878 Charles HodgeHodge circa 1850 602nd Principal of Princeton Theological SeminaryIn office 1851 1878Preceded byArchibald AlexanderSucceeded byArchibald Alexander HodgePersonal detailsBorn 1797 12 27 December 27 1797DiedJune 19 1878 1878 06 19 aged 80 Spouse s Sarah Bache married 1822 died 1849 Mary Hunter Stockman married 1852 ChildrenArchibald Alexander Hodge Caspar Wistar Hodge Sr Parent s Hugh HodgeMary BlanchardAlma materPrinceton CollegePrinceton Theological SeminarySignatureHe was a leading exponent of the Princeton Theology an orthodox Calvinist theological tradition in America during the 19th century He argued strongly for the authority of the Bible as the Word of God Many of his ideas were adopted in the 20th century by Fundamentalists and Evangelicals 1 Contents 1 Biography 2 Literary and teaching activities 3 Character and significance 4 Views on controversial topics 4 1 Slavery 4 2 Old School 4 3 Civil War 4 4 Darwinism 5 Works 5 1 Books 5 2 Journals 5 3 Sermons 5 4 Articles 5 5 Modern reprints 6 Notes 7 Sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksBiography EditCharles Hodge s father Hugh was the son of a Scotsman who emigrated from Northern Ireland early in the eighteenth century Hugh graduated from Princeton College in 1773 and served as a military surgeon in the Revolutionary War after which he practiced medicine in Philadelphia He married well born Bostonian orphan Mary Blanchard in 1790 The Hodge s first three sons died in the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793 and another yellow fever epidemic in 1795 Their first son to survive childhood Hugh Lenox was born in 1796 Hugh Lenox would become an authority in obstetrics and he would remain especially close with Charles often assisting him financially Charles was born on December 27 1797 His father died seven months later of complications from the yellow fever he had contracted in the epidemic of 1795 They were brought up by relatives many of whom were wealthy and influential Mary Hodge made sacrifices and took in boarders in order to put the boys through school She with the help of the family s minister Ashbel Green also provided the customary Presbyterian religious education using the Westminster Shorter Catechism They moved to Somerville New Jersey in 1810 in order to attend a classical academy and again to Princeton in 1812 in order to enter Princeton College a school originally organized to train Presbyterian ministers As Charles prepared to enter the college Princeton Theological Seminary was being established by the Presbyterian Church as a separate institution for training ministers in response to a perceived inadequacy in the training ministers were receiving at the university as well as the perception that the college was drifting from orthodoxy Also in 1812 Ashbel Green the Hodge s old minister became president of the college 2 At Princeton the first president of the new seminary Archibald Alexander took a special interest in Hodge assisting him in Greek and taking him with him on itinerant preaching trips Hodge would name his first son after Alexander Hodge became close friends with future Episcopalian bishops John Johns and Charles McIlvaine and future Princeton College president John Mclean In 1815 during a time of intense religious fervor among the students encouraged by Green and Alexander Hodge joined the local Presbyterian church and decided to enter the ministry Shortly after completing his undergraduate studies he entered the seminary in 1816 The course of study was very rigorous requiring students to recite scripture in the original languages and to use the dogmatics written in Latin in the 17th century by Reformed scholastic Francis Turretin as a theological textbook Professors Alexander and Samuel Miller also inculcated an intense piety in their students 3 Following graduation from Princeton Seminary in 1819 Hodge received additional instruction privately from Hebrew scholar Rev Joseph Bates in Philadelphia He was licensed to preach by the Presbytery of Philadelphia in 1820 and he preached regularly as a missionary in vacant pulpits in the East Falls neighborhood of Philadelphia the Frankford Arsenal in Philadelphia and Woodbury New Jersey over the subsequent months 4 citation needed In 1820 he accepted a one year appointment as assistant professor at Princeton Seminary to teach biblical languages In October of that year he traveled throughout New England to speak with professors and ministers including Moses Stuart at Andover Seminary and Nathaniel W Taylor at Yale Divinity School In 1821 he was ordained a minister by the Presbytery of New Brunswick and in 1822 he published his first pamphlet which allowed Alexander to convince the General Assembly to appoint him full Professor of Oriental and Biblical Literature Financially stable Hodge married Sarah Bache Benjamin Franklin s great granddaughter in the same year 5 In 1824 Hodge helped to found the Chi Phi Society along with Robert Baird and Archibald Alexander citation needed He founded the quarterly Biblical Repertory in 1825 to translate the current scholarly literature on the Bible from Europe 6 Hodge s study of European scholarship led him to question the adequacy of his training The seminary agreed to continue to pay him for two years while he traveled in Europe to round out his education He supplied a substitute John Nevin on his own expense From 1826 to 1828 he traveled to Paris where he studied French Arabic and Syriac Halle where he studied German with George Muller and made the acquaintance of August Tholuck and Berlin where he attended the lectures of Silvestre de Sacy citation needed Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg and August Neander There he also became personally acquainted with Friedrich Schleiermacher the leading modern theologian He admired the deep scholarship he witnessed in Germany but thought that the attention given to idealist philosophy clouded common sense and led to speculative and subjective theology Unlike other American theologians who spent time in Europe Hodge s experience did not cause any change in his commitment to the principles of the faith he had learned from childhood 7 Princeton Seminary in the 1800s Starting in the 1830s Hodge suffered from an immobilizing pain in his leg and was forced to conduct his classes from his study from 1833 to 1836 He continued to write articles for Biblical Repertory now renamed the Princeton Review During the 1830s he wrote a major commentary on Romans and a history of the Presbyterian church in America He supported the Old School in the Old School New School Controversy which resulted in a split in 1837 In 1840 he became Professor of Didactic Theology 8 retaining however the department of New Testament exegesis the duties of which he continued to discharge until his death He was moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America Old School in 1846 citation needed Hodge s wife died in 1849 shortly followed by Samuel Miller and Archibald Alexander leaving him the senior professor of the seminary He was recognized as the leading proponent of the Princeton theology On his death in 1878 he was recognized by both friends and opponents as one of the greatest polemicists of his time 9 Of his children who survived him three were ministers and two of these succeeded him in the faculty of Princeton Theological Seminary C W Hodge in the department of exegetical theology and A A Hodge in that of dogmatics A grandson C W Hodge Jr also taught for many years at Princeton Seminary Literary and teaching activities EditHodge wrote many biblical and theological works He began writing early in his theological career and continued publishing until his death In 1835 he published his Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans Although considered to be his greatest exegetical work Hodge revised this commentary in 1864 in the midst of the American Civil War and after a debate with James Henley Thornwell about state secession from the Union Other works followed at intervals of longer or shorter duration Constitutional History of the Presbyterian Church in the United States 1840 Way of Life 1841 republished in England translated into other languages and circulated to the extent of 35 000 copies in America Commentary on Ephesians 1856 on First Corinthians 1857 on Second Corinthians 1859 His magnum opus is the Systematic Theology 1871 1873 of 3 volumes and extending to 2 260 pages His last book What is Darwinism appeared in 1874 In addition to all this it must be remembered that he contributed upward of 130 articles to the Princeton Review many of which besides exerting a powerful influence at the time of their publication have since been gathered into volumes and as Selection of Essays and Reviews from the Princeton Review 1857 and Discussions in Church Polity ed W Durant 1878 have taken a permanent place in theological literature This record of Hodge s literary life is suggestive of the great influence that he exerted But properly to estimate that influence it must be remembered that 3 000 ministers of the Gospel passed under his instruction and that to him was accorded the rare privilege during the course of a long life of achieving distinction as a teacher exegete preacher controversialist ecclesiastic and systematic theologian As a teacher he had few equals and if he did not display popular gifts in the pulpit he revealed homiletic powers of a high order in the conferences on Sabbath afternoons where he spoke with his accustomed clearness and logical precision but with great spontaneity and amazing tenderness and unction Hodge s literary powers were seen at their best in his contributions to the Princeton Theological Review many of which are acknowledged masterpieces of controversial writing They cover a wide range of topics from apologetic questions that concern common Christianity to questions of ecclesiastical administration in which only Presbyterians have been supposed to take interest But the questions in debate among American theologians during the period covered by Hodge s life belonged for the most part to the departments of anthropology and soteriology and it was upon these accordingly that his polemic powers were mainly applied All of the books that he authored have remained in print over a century after his death Character and significance EditDevotion to Christ was the salient characteristic of his experience and it was the test by which he judged the experience of others Hence though a Presbyterian and a Calvinist his sympathies went far beyond the boundaries of sect He refused to entertain the narrow views of church polity which some of his brethren advocated He repudiated the unhistorical position of those who denied the validity of Roman Catholic baptism He was conservative by nature and his life was spent in defending the Reformed theology as set forth in the Westminster Confession of Faith and Larger and Westminster Shorter Catechisms He was fond of saying that Princeton had never originated a new idea but this meant no more than that Princeton was the advocate of historical Calvinism in opposition to the modified and provincial Calvinism of a later day And it is true that Hodge must be classed among the great defenders of the faith rather than among the great constructive minds of the Church He had no ambition to be epoch making by marking the era of a new departure But he earned a higher title to fame in that he was the champion of his Church s faith during a long and active life her trusted leader in time of trial and for more than half a century the most conspicuous teacher of her ministry Hodges understanding of the Christian faith and of historical Protestantism is given in his Systematic Theology Views on controversial topics EditSlavery Edit As an archconservative and a believer in both the inerrancy and the literal interpretation of the Bible Hodge supported the institution of slavery in its most abstract sense as having support from certain passages in the Bible He held slaves himself but he condemned their mistreatment and made a distinction between slavery in the abstract and what he saw as the unjust Southern Slave Laws that deprived slaves of their right to educational instruction to marital and parental rights and that subject them to the insults and oppression of the whites It was his opinion that the humanitarian reform of these laws would become the necessary prelude to the eventual end of slavery in the United States 10 The Presbyterian General Assembly of 1818 had affirmed a similar position that slavery within the United States while not necessarily sinful was a regrettable institution that ought to eventually be changed 10 Like the church Hodge himself had sympathies with both the abolitionists in the North and the pro slavery advocates in the South and he used his considerable influence in an attempt to restore order and find common ground between the two factions with the eventual hope of abolishing slavery altogether Hodge s support of slavery was not an inevitable result of his belief in the inerrancy and the literal interpretation of the Bible Other 19th century Christian contemporaries of Hodge who also believed in the inerrancy and infallibility of the Bible denounced the institution of slavery John Williamson Nevin a conservative evangelical Reformed scholar and seminary professor denounced slavery as a vast moral evil 11 Hodge and Nevin also famously clashed over polar opposite views of the Lord s Supper Old School Edit Main article Old School New School Controversy Hodge was a leader of the Old School faction of Presbyterians during the division of the Presbyterian Church USA in 1837 The issues involved conflicts over doctrine religious practice and slavery Although prior to 1861 the Old School refrained from denouncing slavery the issue was a matter of debate between Northern and Southern components of the denomination Civil War Edit Hodge could tolerate slavery but he could never tolerate treason of the sort he saw trying to break up the United States in 1861 Hodge was a strong nationalist and led the fight among Presbyterians to support the Union In the January 1861 Princeton Review Hodge laid out his case against secession in the end calling it unconstitutional James Henley Thornwell responded in the January 1861 Southern Presbyterian Review holding that the election of 1860 had installed a new government one which the South did not agree with thus making secession lawful 12 Despite being a staunch Unionist politically Hodge voted against the support for the Spring Resolutions of the 1861 General Assembly of the Old School Presbyterian Church thinking it was not the business of the church to involve itself in political matters because of the resolutions the denomination then split North and South When the General Assembly convened in Philadelphia in May 1861 one month after the Civil War began the resolution stipulated pledging support for the federal government over objections based on concerns about the scope of church jurisdiction and disagreements about its interpretation of the Constitution In December 1861 the Southern Old School Presbyterian churches severed ties with the denomination 13 Darwinism Edit In 1874 Hodge published What is Darwinism claiming that Darwinism was in essence atheism To Hodge Darwinism was contrary to the notion of design and was therefore clearly atheistic Both in the Review and in What is Darwinism 1874 Hodge attacked Darwinism His views determined the position of the Seminary until his death in 1878 While he didn t consider all evolutionary ideas to be in conflict with his religion he was concerned with its teaching in colleges Meanwhile at Princeton University a totally separate institution President John Maclean also rejected Darwin s theory of evolution However in 1868 upon Maclean s retirement James McCosh a Scottish philosopher became president McCosh believed that much of Darwinism could and would be proved sound and so he strove to prepare Christians for this event Instead of conflict between science and religion McCosh sought reconciliation Insisting on the principle of design in nature McCosh interpreted the Darwinian discoveries as more evidence of the prearrangement skill and purpose in the universe He thus argued that Darwinism was not atheistic nor in irreconcilable hostility to the Bible The Presbyterians in America thus could choose between two schools of thought on evolution both based in Princeton The Seminary held to Hodge s position until his supporters were ousted in 1929 and the college Princeton University became a world class center of the new science of evolutionary biology 14 The debate between Hodge and McCosh exemplified an emerging conflict between science and religion over the question of Darwin s evolution theory However the two men showed greater similarities regarding matters of science and religion than popularly appreciated Both supported the increasing role of scientific inquiry in natural history and resisted its intrusion into philosophy and religion 15 Works EditBooks Edit Hodge Charles 1837 A commentary on the Epistle to the Romans London The Religious tract society pp xvi 438 p LCCN 38018206 LCC BS2665 H65 1837 1839 40 The constitutional history of the Presbyterian church in the United States of America Philadelphia W S Martien ISBN 9780790551555 LCCN 42027085 OCLC 390536 LCC BX8936 H6 1839 c 1841 The way of life Philadelphia American Sunday school Union pp xi 13 384 p LCCN 33024805 OCLC 6956164 OL 23358725M LCC BV4531 H55 1840 1856 A commentary on the Epistle to the Ephesians New York R Carter and brothers pp xx 21 398 p LCCN 40015255 OCLC 2517813 LCC BS2695 H65 There is an 1860 reprint available through MOA http quod lib umich edu m moa AJH0374 0001 001 1 not in the public domain 1857 An exposition of the First epistle to the Corinthians New York R Carter pp xxi 373 p 20 cm LCCN 40015256 LCC BS2675 H6 Dewey 227 2 1860 An exposition of the Second epistle to the Corinthians New York R Carter amp brothers pp 1 p l 314 p 20 cm LCCN 40015257 LCC BS2675 H65 1872 73 Systematic theology New York London and Edinburgh C Scribner and company T Nelson and sons pp 3 v 25 cm LCCN 45041149 LCC BT75 H63 1873 Introduction In Ramsey James Beverlin ed The spiritual kingdom an exposition of the first eleven chapters of the book of the Revelation Richmond Va Presbyterian Committee of Publication pp i xxxv LCCN 40016574 OL 23339154M LCC BS2825 R35 Dewey 228 n d Lectures on Theology Manuscript LCCN mm81026179 LCC MMC 2873 1874 What is Darwinism New York Scribner Armstrong and company pp iv 178 p 20 cm LCCN 06012878 LCC QH369 H63A version of this book can be obtained from https www gutenberg org ebooks 19192 LCCN 85 665477 corresponds to an English edition a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a External link in code class cs1 code postscript code help CS1 maint postscript link Journals Edit Atwater Lyman Hotchkiss amp Smith Henry Boynton Sherwood James Manning J M Libbey Jonas M amp Forsyth John eds 1825 88 The Princeton review Journal New York G amp C Carvill etc etc LCCN 01026485 LCC BR1 P7 ed 1825 29 Biblical repertory Journal 1 v 5 Princeton N J Princeton Press LCCN sf89090823 OCLC 08840509 LCC Microfilm 01104 no 229 566 567 AP a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sermons Edit 1833 A sermon preached in Philadelphia American Sunday school Union May 31 1832 Philadelphia The Union LCCN 96229925 LCC YA 30459 YA Pam Articles Edit January 1871 Preaching the Gospel to the Poor The Princeton Review New York G amp C Carvill 43 1 83 95 Retrieved March 23 2013 April 1876 Christianity without Christ The Princeton Review New York G amp C Carvill 5 18 352 362 Retrieved March 23 2013 1855 What is Presbyterianism a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 16 Modern reprints Edit Systematic Theology Hendrickson Publishers 1999 ISBN 1 56563 459 4 also available abridged by Edward N Gross ISBN 0 87552 224 6 Romans The Crossway Classic Commentaries Crossway Books 1994 ISBN 0 89107 724 3 Romans Geneva Series of Commentaries Banner of Truth June 1 1998 ISBN 0 8515 1213 5 Corinthians Crossway Classic Commentaries Crossway Books 1995 ISBN 0 89107 867 3 1 amp 2 Corinthians Geneva Series of Commentaries Banner of Truth June 1 1998 ISBN 0 8515 1185 6 2 Corinthians Crossway Classic Commentaries Crossway Books 1995 ISBN 0 89107 868 1 Ephesians The Crossway Classic Commentaries Crossway Books 1994 ISBN 0 89107 784 7 Ephesians Geneva Series of Commentaries Banner of Truth June 1 1998 ISBN 0 8515 1591 6 The Way of Life Sources of American Spirituality Mark A Noll ed Paulist Press 1987 ISBN 0 8091 0392 3Notes Edit George M Marsden Fundamentalism and American Culture 2006 pp 19 20 111 113 Noll 1987 p 3 6 Noll 1987 pp 6 11 22 Noll 1987 pp 11 12 Noll 1987 pp 11 13 Noll 1987 p 13 Noll 1987 pp 12 16 Noll 1987 pp 16 17 Noll 1987 pp 17 18 a b Torbett David 2006 Theology and Slavery Charles Hodge and Horace Bushnell Mercer University Press Macon Ga p 230 ISBN 978 0 88146 032 2 See Pages 6 and 77 D G Hart John Williamson Nevin High Church Calvinist Archived July 14 2014 at the Wayback Machine Presbyterian amp Reformed Publishing Phillipsburg New Jersey 2005 55 James McLean Albritton Slavery Secession and the Old School Presbyterians James Henley Thornwell and Charles Hodge on the Relationship between Church and State Southern Historian April 2000 Vol 21 pp 25 39 John Halsley Wood Jr The 1861 Spring Resolutions Charles Hodge the American Union and the Dissolution of the Old School Church Journal of Church and State Spring 2005 Vol 47 Issue 2 pp 371 387 Joseph E Illick The Reception of Darwinism at the Theological Seminary and the College at Princeton New Jersey Part I The Theological Seminary Journal of the Presbyterian Historical Society 1960 Vol 38 Issue 3 pp 152 165 Bradley J Gundlach McCosh and Hodge on Evolution A Combined Legacy Journal of Presbyterian History 1997 75 2 85 102 What is Presbyterianism online Retrieved May 20 2019 Sources EditNoll Mark A 1987 Introduction In Noll Mark A ed Charles Hodge The Way of Life Sources of American Spirituality New York Paulist Press dead link This article includes content derived from the public domain Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge 1914 Further reading EditAdams John H April 21 2003 Charles Hodge A voice for today s PCUSA The Layman Anderson Robert A Short Biography at the Wayback Machine archived June 8 2001 Gutjahr Paul C Charles Hodge Guardian of American Orthodoxy Oxford University Press 2011 477 pages a standard scholarly biography Hicks Peter 1997 The Philosophy of Charles Hodge A 19th Century Evangelical Approach to Reason Knowledge and Truth Edwin Mellen Pr ISBN 0 7734 8657 7 Hodge A A 1880 The life of Charles Hodge Professor in the Theological seminary Princeton N J C Scribner s sons Reissued 1979 by Ayer Co Pub ISBN 0 405 00250 5 Hoffecker W A 1981 Piety and the Princeton Theologians Archibald Alexander Charles Hodge and Benjamin Warfield P amp R Publishing ISBN 0 87552 280 7 Hoffecker W Andrew 2011 Charles Hodge The Pride of Princeton P amp R Publishing ISBN 978 0 87552 658 4 Marsden George M Fundamentalism and American Culture 2006 Noll Mark A ed 2001 Princeton Theology 1812 1921 Scripture Science and Theological Method from Archibald Alexander to Benjamin Warfield Baker Publishing Group ISBN 0 8010 6737 5 Stewart J W and J H Moorhead eds 2002 Charles Hodge Revisited A Critical Appraisal of His Life and Work William B Eerdmans Publishing Company ISBN 0 8028 4750 1External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Hodge Wikiquote has quotations related to Charles Hodge Works by Charles Hodge at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Charles Hodge at Internet Archive Works by Charles Hodge at LibriVox public domain audiobooks The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review 1830 82 at the University of Michigan s Humanities Text Initiative Academic officesPreceded byArchibald Alexander Principal of Princeton Theological Seminary1851 1878 Succeeded byArchibald Alexander HodgeReligious titlesPreceded byThe Rev John Michael Krebs Moderator of the 58th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America Old School 1846 1847 Succeeded byThe Rev James Henley Thornwell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Hodge amp oldid 1093145885, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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