He served as a missionary in India for three years (1847–1850). He held pastorates at Lower West Nottingham, Maryland (1851–1855), Fredericksburg, Virginia (1855–1861), and Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania (1861–1864). In 1864 he accepted a call to the chair of systematic theology in Western Theological Seminary (later Pittsburgh Theological Seminary) in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. There he remained until in 1877 he was called to Princeton to be the associate of his father, Charles Hodge, in the distinguished chair of systematic theology. He took on the full responsibilities of the chair of systematic theology in 1878.[2]
He died on November 12, 1886, in Princeton, New Jersey, from "a severe cold ... which settled in his kidneys".[1]
Influenceedit
At the time of his death, he was a trustee of the College of New Jersey and a leader in the Presbyterian Church. His interests extended beyond religion. He touched the religious world at many points. During the years immediately preceding his death he did not slacken his work, but continued his work of writing, preaching, lecturing, making addresses, coming into contact with men, influencing them, and by doing so widening the influence of Christianity. Among the most influential was an article titled Inspiration that began a series in the Presbyterian Review which established the discipline of biblical theology as a historical science. This article was coauthored with B. B. Warfield in 1880.[3]
Characteristicsedit
Hodge's distinguishing characteristic as a theologian was his power as a thinker. He had a mind of singular acuteness, and though never a professed student of metaphysics, he was essentially and by nature a metaphysician. His theology was that of the Reformed confessions. He had no peculiar views and no peculiar method of organizing theologicaldogmas; in this he may be identified with his father, who claimed at the end of his life that he had taught and written nothing new. Though he taught the same theology that his father had taught before him, he was independent as well as reverent. His first book and that by which he is best known was his Outlines of Theology (New York City, 1860; enlarged ed., 1878; reprinted 1996, ISBN 0-85151-160-0), which was translated into Welsh, modern Greek, and Hindustani. The Atonement (Philadelphia, 1867; reprinted 1989, ISBN 0-685-26838-1) is still one of the best treatises on the subject. This was followed by his commentary on the Westminster Confession of Faith (1869, ISBN 0-8370-0932-4), a very useful book, full of clear thinking and compact statement. He contributed some important articles to encyclopedias – Johnson's, McClintock and Strong's, and the Schaff-Herzog (the Schaff-Herzog encyclopedia furnished the kernel from which this article developed). He was one of the founders of the Presbyterian Review, to the pages of which he was a frequent contributor.
Sermonsedit
In the pulpit, Hodge had few sermons, and he preached them frequently. They were never written nor deliberately planned. They grew from small beginnings and, as he went through the process of thinking them over as often as he preached them, they gradually became more elaborate.
Publicationsedit
The Rule of Faith and Practice
The Protestant rule of faith
The Rules of Interpreting Scripture
The Holy Scriptures - Canon and Inspiration (Part 1) (Part 2)
The Inspiration of the Bible
Commentary on the Westminster Confession of Faith
God - His Nature And Relation To The Universe
Assurance and Humility
A Short History of Creeds and Confessions
God's Covenants With Man--The Church
Baptism
The Mode of Baptism
Sanctification (revised by B.B. Warfield)
Free Will
Outlines of Theology
Justification (Part 1) (Part 2) (Part 3)
Predestination
Selected Essays by Archibald Alexander Hodge
A commentary on the Confession of Faith : with questions for theological students and Bible classes
(1869) https://archive.org/details/commentaryonconf00hodguoft (Robarts - University of Toronto)
(1869) https://archive.org/details/acommentaryonthe00hodguoft (Knox - University of Toronto)
(1879) (ed. by W.H. Goold) https://archive.org/details/outlinestheolog00hodggoog (Oxford University)
There is also a companion to this book by William Passmore (1873)A compendium of evangelical theology given in the words of holy Scripture https://archive.org/details/acompendiumevan00unkngoog
The life of Charles Hodge ... professor in the Theological seminary, Princeton, N.J. (1880)
Inspiration (1881) (Reprinted from the Presbyterian review, April, 1881) https://archive.org/details/inspiration00hodg (Princeton Theological Seminary Library)
Westminster doctrine anent holy scripture : tractates by professors A. A. Hodge and Warfield (1891)
Manual of forms for baptism, admission to the communion, administration of the Lord's Supper, marriage and funerals : conformed to the doctrine and discipline of the Presbyterian Church (1877)
(1882 copyright, 1883 published) https://archive.org/details/manualofforms00hodguoft (Emmanuel - University of Toronto)
The system of theology contained in the Westminster shorter catechism opened and explained (1888) https://archive.org/details/systemoftheology00hodg
Questions on the text of the Systematic Theology of Dr. Charles Hodge : together with an exhibition of various schemes illustrating the principles of theological construction (by A. A. Hodge)(1885)
Van Dyke, Joseph Smith (1886) Theism and evolution : an examination of modern speculative theories as related to theistic conceptions of the universe. With an introduction by d Alexander Hodge
https://archive.org/details/theismandevolut00vanduoft (Trinity College - University of Toronto)
Hodge, Archibald Alexander (1878). "The Ordo Salutis". The Princeton Review. 1: 304–321. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
Hodge, Archibald Alexander (March 1886). "Open Letters: Christian Union". The Century; A Popular Quarterly. 31 (5): 798–801. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
Hodge, Archibald Alexander (December 1883). "Morality and Religion". The North American Review. 137 (325). Retrieved March 23, 2013.
Referencesedit
^ abcd"Archibald Alexander Hodge" (PDF). The New York Times. November 13, 1886. p. 2. Retrieved April 22, 2022.
^Terry, Milton (April 1912). "Biblical Scholars of the United States in 1882". The Biblical World. 39 (4). Chicago: University of Chicago Press: 225–234 [230]. doi:10.1086/474575. JSTOR 3141861. S2CID 144342855.
^Smith, Henry (April 1912). "Thirty Years of Biblical Study". The Biblical World. 39 (4). Chicago: University of Chicago Press: 235–242 [240]. doi:10.1086/474576. JSTOR 3141862.
External linksedit
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