Everything about Charles Hodge totally explained
Charles Hodge (
1797 –
1878) was the principal of
Princeton Theological Seminary between
1851 and
1878. He was one of the greatest exponents and defenders of historical
Calvinism in
America during the
19th century.
Life
He matriculated at the College of New Jersey (now
Princeton University) in
1812, and after graduation entered in
1816 the theological seminary in Princeton, having among his classmates his two lifelong friends, John Johns, afterward bishop of
Virginia, and Charles P. Mollvaine, afterward bishop of
Ohio. In
1819 Hodge was licensed as a
minister by the Presbytery of
Philadelphia, and he preached regularly at the Falls of Schuylkill, the Philadelphia Arsenal, and Woodbury, New Jersey over the subsequent months. In
1822 he was appointed by the General Assembly professor of
Biblical and
Oriental literature. In 1822 he married Sarah Bache, great-granddaughter of
Benjamin Franklin. Soon after he went abroad (
1826–
1828) to prosecute special studies, and in
Paris,
Halle, and
Berlin attended the lectures of
Silvestre de Sacy,
Friedrich Tholuck,
Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg, and
August Neander.
In 1824, he helped to found the
Chi Phi Society along with
Robert Baird and
Archibald Alexander. In
1825 he founded the
Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review, and during forty years was its editor and the principal contributor to its pages. In
1840 he was transferred to the chair of didactic theology, retaining, however, the department of
New Testament exegesis, the duties of which he continued to discharge until his death. He was
moderator of the
New Jersey General Assembly in
1846.
Fifty years of his professorate were completed in
1872, and the event was most impressively celebrated on
April 23rd of that year. A large concourse, including 400 of his own pupils, assembled to do him honor. Representatives from various theological institutes, at home and abroad, mingled their congratulations with those of his colleagues; and letters expressing deepest sympathy with the occasion came from distinguished men from all quarters of the land and from across the sea.
Hodge enjoyed what President Woolsey, at the jubilee just referred to, hoped he might enjoy, "a sweet old age." He lived in the midst of his children and grandchildren; and, when the last moment came, they gathered round him. "Dearest," he said to a beloved daughter, "don't weep. To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord. To be with the Lord is to see him. To see the Lord is to be like him." Of the 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.
, Washington, D.C., 1865-1878.]]
Literary and teaching activities
Hodge was a voluminous writer, and from the beginning to the end of his theological career his pen was never idle. In
1835 he published his
Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, his greatest exegetical work, and one of the most masterly commentaries on
this epistle that has ever been written. 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'd few equals; and if he didn't display popular gifts in the pulpit, he revealed homiletical 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 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.
Character and significance
Though always honorable in debate, one wouldn't gain a correct idea of Hodge's character through judging him only by the polemic relations in which his writings reveal him. Controversy doesn't emphasize the amiable side of a man's nature.
Hodge was a man of warm affection, of generous impulses, and of
John-like piety. 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 gave his sympathy to all good agencies.
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's 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
Hodge supported
slavery in the
1830s, and while he condemned the mistreatment of slaves he didn't condemn the institution of slavery itself. The background to this attitude, however, wasn't primarily his understanding of the Bible's teaching on the matter, but rather his churchmanship.
The Presbyterian church was divided along the same lines that would later split it during the
American Civil War. Hodge himself was torn between the
abolitionists in the
North and the conservatives in the
South, and he used his considerable influence in an attempt to restore order and find a middle ground between the two factions. In
1846, however, he became convinced that slavery was wrong, reversing his earlier anti-abolitionist stance, and he then publicly denounced slavery and supported both the Abolitionist movement and
President Lincoln (Adams, 2003).
Darwinism
In
1874, Hodge published
What is Darwinism?, claiming that
Darwinism, was, in essence,
atheism. He found it hard to believe that natural laws alone could create complex organisms that fit into their niches almost perfectly and that evolution never explained origins but, rather, the evolution of species which were already formed. While he didn't consider all
evolutionary ideas to be in conflict with
religion, he was concerned with its teaching in
America, especially in colleges.
Bibliography
- 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
- 1 Corinthians (Crossway Classic Commentaries). Crossway Books (1995). ISBN 0-89107-867-3
- 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
- The Way of Life (Sources of American Spirituality). Mark A. Noll, ed. Paulist Press (1987). ISBN 0-8091-0392-3
- What is Darwinism?
(1874)
Further Information
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