6
November 1870 A.D. A Fist-Fight:
Rev. Dr. B.B. Warfield—Yes, BB was in a fist-fight as a student at
Princeton & was dubbed the “Pugilist”
November 6: The Pugilist
We are honored today to draw our text from the opening chapter to Dr. Kim
Riddlebarger’s 1997 doctoral dissertation, B.B. Warfield: The Lion of Princeton. Our thanks to Dr. Riddlebarger for granting permission to post this
excerpt.
“The Pugilist”
Princeton
College alumni who remembered Benjamin Breckinridge Warfield’s student days at
Princeton recall that on November 6, 1870, the young Warfield and a certain
James Steen, “distinguished themselves by indulging in a little Sunday fight in
front of the chapel after Dr. McCosh’s afternoon lecture.” Warfield, it seems,
“in lieu of taking notes” during Dr. McCosh’s lecture, took great delight in
sketching an “exceedingly uncomplimentary picture of Steen,” which was
subsequently circulated among the students.[1] The resulting fist-fight
between the two young men ultimately didn’t amount to much, but it earned
Warfield the nickname—”the pugilist.”[2]
B. B.
Warfield’s earliest days at Princeton, as well as his last, were characterized
by a passionate defense of his personal honor. Princeton Seminary colleague,
Oswald T. Allis, tells the story about Dr. Warfield’s encounter with Mrs.
Stevenson, the wife of the Seminary President, shortly before Warfield’s death
and during the height of the controversy at Princeton over an “inclusive”
Presbyterian church. When Mrs. Stevenson and Dr. Warfield passed each other on
the walk outside the Seminary, some pleasantries were exchanged, and then Mrs.
Stevenson reportedly said to the good doctor, “Oh, Dr. Warfield, I am praying
that everything will go harmoniously at the [General] Assembly!” To which
Warfield responded,
“Why,
Mrs. Stevenson, I am praying that there may be a fight.”[3] As the late Hugh
Kerr, formerly Warfield Professor of Theology at Princeton Theological Seminary
reflects, “from the very beginning to end, Warfield was a fighter.”[4] B.
B. Warfield was not only a fighter, he was also a theological giant, exerting
significant influence upon American Presbyterianism for nearly forty-years.
John DeWitt, professor of Church History at Princeton during the Warfield
years, told Warfield biographer Samuel Craig, that . . . he had known
intimately the three great Reformed theologians of America of the preceding
generation—Charles Hodge, W. G. T. Shedd and Henry B. Smith—and that he was not
only certain that Warfield knew a great deal more than any one of them but that
he was disposed to think that he knew more than all three of them put
together.[5]
Unlike
many of today’s “specialists,” B. B. Warfield was fully qualified to teach any
of the major seminary subjects—New Testament, Church History, Systematic or
Biblical Theology, and Apologetics.[6] One of Warfield’s students, and an
influential thinker in his own right, J. Gresham Machen, remembers Warfield as
follows: “with all his glaring faults, he was the greatest man I have
known.”[7] Hugh Kerr, though critical of Warfield’s “theory of the
inerrancy of the original autographs,” still told his own students a generation
later that, “Dr. Warfield had the finest mind ever to teach at Princeton
Seminary.”[8]
[1.]
Hugh Thomson Kerr, “Warfield: The Person Behind the Theology,” Annie
Kinkead Warfield Lecture
for 1982, at Princeton Theological Seminary, ed. William O. Harris (1995), p.
21.
[2.] Ibid., pp. 21-22.
[3.] O. T. Allis, “Personal Impressions of Dr Warfield,” in The Banner of
Truth 89 (Fall 1971) pp. 10-14.
[4.] Kerr, “Warfield: The Person Behind the Theology,” p. 22.
[5.] Samuel G. Craig, “Benjamin B. Warfield,” in B. B. Warfield, Biblical
and Theological Studies. (Philadelphia: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing
Company, 1986), p. xvii.
[6] Ibid., p. xix.
[7] Ned B. Stonehouse, J. Gresham Machen: A Biographical Memoir
(Philadelphia: Westminster Theological Seminary, 1977), p. 310.
[8] Recounted in personal correspondence of February 25, 1995, from
William O. Harris, Librarian for Archives and Special Collections at Princeton
Theological Seminary.
Words to Live By:
Beloved, when I gave all
diligence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to
write unto you, and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for
the faith which was once delivered unto the saints.—Jude,
verse 3 (KJV)
Fight the good fight of the faith. Take
hold of the eternal life to which you were called when you made your good
confession in the presence of many witnesses.—1 Timothy 6:12
(KJV)
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