Charles Hodge (1797-1878)
Charles Hodge is one of the most significant Reformed theologians of the 19th century. From 1851-1878 he was the principal of Princeton Theological Seminary, which was in those days a bastion of Reformed orthodoxy.
Hodge was the epitome of the conservative Presbyterian. It was said that his boast about Princeton seminary during his tenure was that "nothing new is taught here".
Born in Phildadelpia in 1797, Hodge's father Hugh had been a military surgeon in the Revolutionary War. The family had originally come from Northern Ireland and Hodge's grandfather, Andrew Hodge, was a successful businessman when he emigrated to the still colonial North America.
Hodge himself graduated from the then fairly new Princeton Seminary in 1819 and spent a year or two asa kind of missionary preacher in various parts of Pennsylvania before being ordained in 1821. In the mid 1820s he toured Europe to improve his education. Unlike many who did similar European excursions, Hodge returned to the United States with his orthodox Reformed beliefs entirely intact. He then entered the main period of his career as a seminary lecturer then professor.
Hodge did not shy away from the controversial matters that affected the American church in the 19th century. Despite being a northerner, Hodge believed the Bible allowed for the institution of slavery. On the other hand, he supported the prosecution of the Civil War by the Union forces. On Darwinism and evolution, Hodge believed Darwinism was simply a form of atheism.
Hodge wrote a number of important works still in use today. His Commentary on Romans (1837) and his Commentary on Ephesians (1856) are still useful evangelical commentaries. His magnum opus is his three-volume Systematic Theology (1872-73) which covers the whole field of systematic theology in near exhaustive detail.
Although Hodge was faithful to the Westminster standards in his beliefs and in his Calvinism, he sometimes opposed traditional understandings of some doctrines where he felt the church was not following the Scriptures, but human philosophy. Two examples are Hodge's modified views of divine simplicity (in contrast with the church fathers such as Augustine, Aquinas and Scotus) and of a strict view of divine impassibility (that God does not have any emotions). Hodge, by contrast, believed that when the Scripure speaks of God's love, this is a genuine feeling in God, and not merely an anthropopathism.
At the other end of his writing spectrum, his short book The Way of Life (1841) is a guide to Christian doctrines designed for use in Sunday schools.
No comments:
Post a Comment