17 November 1894 A.D. (Rev. Dr. Prof.) W.G.T. Shedd Passes
Archivist. “November 17: W.G.T. Shedd
[1820-1894].” This Day in Presbyterian History.
17 Nov 2014. http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2014/11/november-17-2/. Accessed 17 Nov 2014.
November 17: W .G. T. Shedd [1820-1894]
A Long Name, With an Influential
Theology System
William
Greenough Thayer Shedd was born in June of 1820 of a distinguished New England
lineage. His father was a minister, though it is not clear whether he was a
Congregationalist or a Presbyterian pastor. (In early years, both groups were
closely aligned in that region.) When William Shedd was eleven years old in
1831, his family moved to Lake Champlain, New York. This enabled William to
later attend the University of Vermont, where a teacher introduced him to
philosophy and literature. Graduating in 1839, he began to teach in New
York City. It was here that William made a public profession of faith and began
to attend a Presbyterian Church.
Sensing
the call to the ministry, he attended Andover Theological Seminary. There he
met and was influenced by Prof. Leonard Woods, who was a solid Old School
Calvinist, albeit a Congregationalist. Graduating from Andover, Shedd became a
pastor in the Congregational denomination in Vermont. Even though he was Old
School Reformed in his thinking, he taught briefly at the New School
Presbyterian institution of Auburn Theological Seminary, from 1852-1854.
When
Unitarianism made such inroads among the Congregationalists, decimating the
integrity of that association, Pastor and Professor Shedd made his switch to
the Presbyterian distinctives of his younger years. Leaving Auburn, he was
professor of church history at Andover from 1853-1862, and then for two years
labored as co-pastor at the Brick Presbyterian Church in New York City. His
life’s primary work occurred while teaching at Union Theological Seminary in
New York City, where he was to teach for eleven years, 1874-1892. Just
before the end of his teaching ministry, he wrote his most famous book on
“Dogmatic Theology.”
And
yes, he took a strong stand against the unbelief of his fellow teacher, Charles
Briggs, and Shedd also argued against the revision of the Westminster
Standards, which was also being suggested in those days. He died on November 17, 1894.
Words to live by: When a
pastor or professor has something truly substantive to say, and can summarize
his thoughts on paper and in published works, that expression of the Gospel
message can continue to serve as an influence for righteousness, well beyond
the pastor’s immediate sphere and life. Some churches and educational
institutions (may their tribe increase) are offering sabbaticals to their
pastors and professors for exactly that reason, that is, that they may examine
themselves pastorally or professionally in their calling, and set down in
writing some lessons for the benefit of the church at large. Support such
efforts, if you are a member of a church, or on a board for higher education.
They are that beneficial to the wider church.
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