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CHARLES HODGE: Guardian of American Orthodoxy

Oxford University Press, 2011

 


2012 CHRISTIANITY TODAY

Outstanding Book of the Year in History/Biography


   PROLOGUE – THE POPE OF PRESBYTERIANISM

            On a brisk April morning in 1872, over five hundred former students, family, friends, and colleagues congregated to honor Charles Hodge on his fiftieth teaching anniversary at Princeton Theological Seminary. Some had traveled from as far away as California, Texas and Ireland to attend the event. As the throngs packed into the pews and crowded to obtain standing room in Princeton’s First Presbyterian Church, speaker after speaker praised the seventy-five year-old Hodge, paying tribute to a man already widely acknowledged as the Pope of Presbyterianism and the “Nestor” of American theology. With one voice they anointed him the greatest Reformed theologian their country had ever produced.

            Hodge’s semi-centennial celebration offers but a glimpse of the immense influence he exercised over nineteenth-century American Protestantism. During his fifty-six year career at Princeton, he taught over three thousand seminarians. No American professor had taught more graduate students. He extended his influence through his aggressive and savvy use of the country’s growing print culture by founding the Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review in 1825, a quarterly theological journal he directed for nearly five decades. By editing over one hundred and twenty issues, and contributing more than two hundred articles to its pages, Hodge established himself as a major voice in the most important religious controversies of his day. By the time he left the journal to others in 1872, it stood as the second oldest quarterly publication in the United States and enjoyed so great an international reputation that the British Quarterly Review called it “beyond all question the greatest purely theological Review that has ever been published in the English tongue.”

            In addition to his articles for the Repertory, Hodge completed several longer book-length works: commentaries on four New Testament books including a world-renowned volume on Romans, the first extended critical analysis of Transcendentalism, a major history of the American Presbyterian Church, a landmark critique of Darwinism, the immensely popular devotional The Way of Life, and his magnum opus, a three-volume Systematic Theology. Almost all these works are still in print today, and his Systematic Theology remains a foundational text in the study of American systematic theology. 
 
            While Hodge towered in the theological circles of his day, his fame has dimmed as the years have passed. When the great men of nineteenth-century American Christianity are named, figures such as Charles Finney, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Horace Bushnell, Joseph Smith Jr., Henry Ward Beecher and D.L. Moody come quickly to mind. Charles Hodge does not. Biographies are but one indicator of who perseveres in the American religious imagination. In the past fifty years, three biographies of Bushnell have appeared, five of Emerson, six of Finney, and a staggering seven of Joseph Smith Jr. Only a single biography exists on Hodge, completed just two years after his death in 1878 by his son Archibald Alexander Hodge. No one has deemed Hodge worthy of his own biography for more than one hundred and thirty years.

            Within this biographical lacuna, opinions have varied as to Hodge’s importance. Some have claimed him as America’s greatest theologian, while others see him as little more than a derivative thinker who simply taught and disseminated the ideas of others. Still others have sounded darker notes, believing him to be a pro-slavery racist whose every trace should be erased. Whatever judgements exist, the truth remains that in the life of Charles Hodge one finds a stunning panoramic view of nineteenth-century Protestantism. His story touches many, if not all, of the most critical developments in American Christianity of his era, and whether one admires or despises Hodge, there is no denying that he exercised a profound influence in his day with lasting consequences after his death. As one historian has noted, without Hodge “American Presbyterianism and American Calvinism would have received an entirely different shape.”

            Through his heartfelt personal piety, encyclopedic intellect and position of influence at the country’s most important Presbyterian seminary, Hodge spent his nearly sixty-year career crafting a uniquely American strain of Reformed theology. Mainly through his writings in the Repertory, but in numerous other venues as well, he brought his Confessional beliefs to bear on issues as diverse as slavery, temperance, Presidential politics, war, international diplomacy, advances in science, educational reform, and domestic and foreign missions. He firmly believed in the rational faculties and that no realm of creation stood beyond the reach and essential insights offered by the Bible and theology. His tender heart offered a sympathetic and optimistic, yet thoroughly conservative, type of Calvinism, which encouraged the cultivation of personal piety and eschewed such harsh doctrines as infant damnation. He believed the world was improving and that God wanted to save more people than He condemned. Convinced that there was only a single human species, Hodge’s sympathy extended across cultural and racial divides, making every person equally capable of enjoying Christ’s promise of salvation.

            While many today may be unaware of Hodge and the enduring influence of his theological legacy, his ghost lingers throughout contemporary American Christianity. This biography is based on the simple premise that few Americans can match the depth, breadth, and longevity of Hodge’s theological influence, and perhaps no single figure is better able to help one appreciate the immensely powerful and hugely complex nature of conservative American Protestantism in the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries than the deeply pious, keenly intelligent, and yet largely forgotten Charles Hodge.

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Illustrations

Key Events in Hodge’s Life

Key Figures in Hodge’s Life

Prologue - The Pope of Presbyterianism

Part I   1797-1810 - The Hodges of Philadelphia
            1. Andrew Hodge, Family Patriarch
            2. Presbyterian Heritage
            3. Hodge’s Parents

Part II   The 1810s - Student Years
            4. The Beginnings of Self
            5. Prince’s Town
            6. Witherspoon’s Common Sense
            7. “Classick Learning”
            8. Enlisting under the Banner of King Jesus
            9. Happy Jaunts and the “Man of Men”
            10. “Give us ministers!”
            11. Student Years at the Seminary
            12. “Where am I to go?”

Part III    The 1820s - Young Professor
            13. “The Most Eligible Situation for Improvement”
            14. New England’s Theological Landscape
            15. Democratic Christianity
            16. The Birth of the Biblical Repertory
            17. The Trip to Europe
            18. Halle
            19. Berlin and the Return Home
            20. A Sense of Mission
            21. The Repertory Reborn

Part IV   The 1830s - Crusader
            22. The Imputation Controversy
            23. Romans
            24. Crippled in Body, But not in Mind
            25. Hodge’s Home: “Sunny, Genial, Kindly and Tolerant”
            26. The Coming Storm
            27. The Slavery Question
            28. The Schism
            29. The New School Fights Back
            30. Writing History

Part V   The 1840s - Professor of Theology
            31. The Way of Life
            32. Didactic Theology
            33. Teaching and Preaching
            34. The Public Face of the Seminary
            35. Moderator of the General Assembly
            36. “The Nonsensical Dialect of Transcendentalism”
            37. Roman Catholic Baptism
            38. Infection of German Idealism
            39. “When the will of the wife is the other way”
            40. “Covered in Gloom”

Part VI   The 1850s - Inspired Churchman
            41. College Trustee
            42. Language and Feeling
            43. The Inspiration of Scripture
            44. “Graces of the Spirit”
            45. The Battle against “Churchianity”
            46. Thornwell and “Thus Saith the Lord”
            47. The Pauline Commentaries
            48. Politics and Conscience

Part VII   The 1860s - Conflicted Unionist
            49. The State of the Country and the Church
            50. Hodge’s Family at War
            51. The Unities of Mankind
            52. The Disunities of Mankind
            53. Reuniting the Old and New Schools

Part VIII   1870s - Systematic Theologian and Scientist
            54. The Systematic Theology
            55. “The apex of my life”
            56. Science and Darwinism
            57. “O Death, Where is Thy Sting?”

Epilogue - Hodge’s Legacy


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