McGuffy, a Presbyterian Licensee, advocated learnedness to/for his readers using McGuffy's Reader. Presbyterians have always been advocates of a learned ministry. Anglicans have also advocated similarly. It is unfortunate that PCA History misses this. Together, The Book of Common Prayer and the Westminster Standards were symbols and instructors in reading, learning, faith, hope, strength and the values of industry and success. Emphases in the American Anabaptist or revivalist streams did not have these emphases upon a learned, quiet, and thoughtful faith. In fact, many Hillbillies and revivalists impugned a learned ministry, guffawing and ratifying a populist envy; in fact, they often were "proud of their anti-intellectualism, non-Confessionalism, and non-liturgies." This appealed to illiterates rather than ameliorating it; many, if not most, still advocated such. McGuffy, although a Presbyterian rather than Anglican, did have these emphases, to his credit...alongside his literate Anglican cousins.
http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2012/09/september-23-william-holmes-mcguffey/September 23: William Holmes McGuffey |
This Day in Presbyterian History:
Words to live by: The proverbs of old told us to “train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old, he will not depart from it.” (KJV – Proverbs 22:6) That is as true today as it was when it was first written down in holy Scripture. The Hebrew word for “train up” speaks of “across the roof of.” It referred to the practice of birthing when the midwife would spread the olive juice across the roof of the mouth of the just born infant, teaching that infant how to draw milk from the mother’s breast. It therefore came to mean“create a desire for.” Christian dads and moms, you are to be the instrument of the Holy Spirit to create a desire for spiritual things in the hearts and minds of your children. By being faithful to do this, you can then claim the general promise of this favorite text.
Home School Education in the Nineteenth Century
They are still being used today! McGuffey Readers, that is. But what an important force they have had from the early days of our land up to the present. In a day when modern textbooks are known to tear down what is right about America and Christian values, the McGuffey Readers would instead reflect the values of hard work, industry, honesty, loyalty, Sabbatarianism, and temperance, or in other words, exactly what is needed today in our modern society.
Their name comes from William Holmes McGuffey, who was born on September 23, 1800. From an early age, he demonstrated a prodigious command of both languages and literature. Educated by his mother in their home and schooled in Latin, as was the practice then, by a Presbyterian minister, William committed large passages of the Bible to memory. Eventually he studied at Washington College in Lexington, Virginia (now Washington and Lee University) which was an early Presbyterian college. He graduated with honors from the college in 1826.
William McGuffey was licensed to preach by the Presbyterian Church, and although we cannot find his name associated with any local church, he preached regularly, delivering some 3000 messages by his own account. His ministry was in education, serving as president and professor at five different colleges and universities.
He would be remembered primarily for his Eclectic Readers, though afterwards those readers were more commonly called by his name, and they had a profound influence on American public education for over two centuries. He died in 1873, but like the prophets of old, being dead, he yet speaks through these remarkable readers for young ages.
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