The Need for a Presbyterian Seminary
In the early 1800s, a need was discovered for a Presbyterian seminary. This need came from:
1. The increase in population and churches, and the shortage of ministers to meet the need.
2. The decreasing percentage of college graduates going into the ministry from places like Yale College and Princeton College, with ministerial training at colleges becoming marginalized.
3. The apparent inability for training under individual ministers after a college education to keep up with demand.
2. The decreasing percentage of college graduates going into the ministry from places like Yale College and Princeton College, with ministerial training at colleges becoming marginalized.
3. The apparent inability for training under individual ministers after a college education to keep up with demand.
The common practice had been for men to get a college education and then to do further private theological studies under a minister or professor. A seminary would basically continue this model, except that it would be more centralized with approved professors devoted to that work, with greater resources. The professors would continue to both teach and mentor their students. It was an institution devoted to training future ministers. After passing a final exam at the end of three years, students would receive a certificate from the board and professors “with which they shall be remitted to their several presbyteries, to be disposed of as such presbyteries shall direct.”
4. The lack of a institution for ministerial training committed to confessional Presbyterianism.
While Princeton College was heavily dominated by Presbyterians, it was not run by the Presbyterian church, nor did the professors commit to teach in accord with the Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms.
The Congregationalists provided generally like-minded theological education at places like Yale, but were not committed to Presbyterian distinctives and were looser in their commitment to the Westminster standards.
The Congregationalists had recently set an example by establishing Andover Seminary (1807) in reaction to Harvard College appointing a Unitarian as its professor of divinity. Princeton College was not that bad and was still run by Presbyterians, but there were doubts as to whether it could successfully ensure a steady stream of doctrinally orthodox and able ministers (its campus culture was not great in the first decade of the 1800s).
The Founding of Princeton Theological Seminary
These needs and reasons were discussed at the General Assembly and were the theme of some influential sermons at the General Assembly by Ashbel Green and Archibald Alexander. In 1809, an overture for the founding of a seminary was considered. The committee proposed three plans to send to the presbyteries: (1) one seminary centrally located, (2) two seminaries for the north and south, or (3) a seminary for each synod. In 1810, it was decided to establish one centrally located seminary for the denomination. In 1812, the General Assembly voted to locate the theological seminary at Princeton, NJ, elected its Board of Directors (21 ministers and 9 elders), and chose its first professor, Archibald Alexander. The seminary began that year in August, with three students, meeting in the professor's house. In October, Ashbel Green became president of Princeton College, seeking to renew it and work together with the seminary. Alexander and Green had both been pastors in Philadelphia before taking up these roles.
Archibald Alexander was soon joined by a second professor, Samuel Miller, and ten years after the seminary's founding they were joined by a third professor, Charles Hodge. These men would work well together and prove influential in American Presbyterian history. What follows is a brief summary of their lives. A good book on the history of "Old Princeton" is the two volume Princeton Seminary by David Calhoun. You can find the writings of these men online at Log College Press at these links:
Archibald Alexander
1736 - Archibald’s Scots-Irish grandfather arrived from northern Ireland.
1772 - Archibald Alexander was born outside Lexington, Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley.
1774 - William Graham moved to Lexington as a pastor and school teacher.
1788 - Archibald becomes a private tutor near Fredericksburg, VA. Conversations with others there and Puritan books led to a spiritual awakening. While assurance came and went for a time, he later looked back at this time as the time of his conversion.
1789 - Archibald traveled with William Graham to Hampden-Sydney College and the revivals taking place in that region. After going through doubts and struggles about his spiritual state, he made his profession of faith by the end of the year.
1790 - Archibald began studying for the ministry under Graham at Liberty Hall (now called Washington and Lee University).
1791 - Archibald was sent (as a ruling elder) to the General Assembly and then licensed to preach.
1792 - He served as an itinerant preacher in Virginia. “In the next fifteen months, he preached 132 sermons, sometimes two hours or more in length. For three years he was continually traveling, often preaching to little groups of six or eight, and sometimes to large gatherings of hundreds” (Calhoun, Princeton Seminary, vol. 1).
1794 - He was ordained and became the pastor of several churches in southern Virginia.
1797 - In addition to his pastoral duties, he became the president of Hampden-Sydney College (at the age of 24).
1802 - He married Janetta Waddel, daughter of Rev. James Waddel.
1807 - He became the pastor of Pine Street Church (3rd Presbyterian) in Philadelphia.
1812 - He became the first professor of Princeton Theological Seminary in New Jersey.
1815 - He, along with his students, assisted in the revival at Princeton College under Ashbel Green.
1823 - He published his first book, Outlines of the Evidences of Christianity.
1851 - He died at home at age 79, having served as professor to the end. Having struggled with health in middle age, expecting an early death, he had a surprisingly active old age and long life.
Archibald and his wife had six sons and a daughter, including James Waddel Alexander (1804–1859), a professor and Presbyterian pastor in New York City; William Cowper Alexander (1806–1874), a lawyer and state senator; Joseph Addison Alexander (1809–1860), professor at Princeton Seminary and Bible commentator; and Samuel Davies Alexander (1819-1894), a Presbyterian pastor in New York City.
J.W. Alexander wrote a biography of his father and wrote this about his father's ways at home:
4. The lack of a institution for ministerial training committed to confessional Presbyterianism.
While Princeton College was heavily dominated by Presbyterians, it was not run by the Presbyterian church, nor did the professors commit to teach in accord with the Westminster Confession of Faith and Catechisms.
The Congregationalists provided generally like-minded theological education at places like Yale, but were not committed to Presbyterian distinctives and were looser in their commitment to the Westminster standards.
The Congregationalists had recently set an example by establishing Andover Seminary (1807) in reaction to Harvard College appointing a Unitarian as its professor of divinity. Princeton College was not that bad and was still run by Presbyterians, but there were doubts as to whether it could successfully ensure a steady stream of doctrinally orthodox and able ministers (its campus culture was not great in the first decade of the 1800s).
The Founding of Princeton Theological Seminary
These needs and reasons were discussed at the General Assembly and were the theme of some influential sermons at the General Assembly by Ashbel Green and Archibald Alexander. In 1809, an overture for the founding of a seminary was considered. The committee proposed three plans to send to the presbyteries: (1) one seminary centrally located, (2) two seminaries for the north and south, or (3) a seminary for each synod. In 1810, it was decided to establish one centrally located seminary for the denomination. In 1812, the General Assembly voted to locate the theological seminary at Princeton, NJ, elected its Board of Directors (21 ministers and 9 elders), and chose its first professor, Archibald Alexander. The seminary began that year in August, with three students, meeting in the professor's house. In October, Ashbel Green became president of Princeton College, seeking to renew it and work together with the seminary. Alexander and Green had both been pastors in Philadelphia before taking up these roles.
Archibald Alexander was soon joined by a second professor, Samuel Miller, and ten years after the seminary's founding they were joined by a third professor, Charles Hodge. These men would work well together and prove influential in American Presbyterian history. What follows is a brief summary of their lives. A good book on the history of "Old Princeton" is the two volume Princeton Seminary by David Calhoun. You can find the writings of these men online at Log College Press at these links:
1736 - Archibald’s Scots-Irish grandfather arrived from northern Ireland.
1772 - Archibald Alexander was born outside Lexington, Virginia, in the Shenandoah Valley.
1774 - William Graham moved to Lexington as a pastor and school teacher.
1788 - Archibald becomes a private tutor near Fredericksburg, VA. Conversations with others there and Puritan books led to a spiritual awakening. While assurance came and went for a time, he later looked back at this time as the time of his conversion.
1789 - Archibald traveled with William Graham to Hampden-Sydney College and the revivals taking place in that region. After going through doubts and struggles about his spiritual state, he made his profession of faith by the end of the year.
1790 - Archibald began studying for the ministry under Graham at Liberty Hall (now called Washington and Lee University).
1791 - Archibald was sent (as a ruling elder) to the General Assembly and then licensed to preach.
1792 - He served as an itinerant preacher in Virginia. “In the next fifteen months, he preached 132 sermons, sometimes two hours or more in length. For three years he was continually traveling, often preaching to little groups of six or eight, and sometimes to large gatherings of hundreds” (Calhoun, Princeton Seminary, vol. 1).
1794 - He was ordained and became the pastor of several churches in southern Virginia.
1797 - In addition to his pastoral duties, he became the president of Hampden-Sydney College (at the age of 24).
1802 - He married Janetta Waddel, daughter of Rev. James Waddel.
1807 - He became the pastor of Pine Street Church (3rd Presbyterian) in Philadelphia.
1812 - He became the first professor of Princeton Theological Seminary in New Jersey.
1815 - He, along with his students, assisted in the revival at Princeton College under Ashbel Green.
1823 - He published his first book, Outlines of the Evidences of Christianity.
1851 - He died at home at age 79, having served as professor to the end. Having struggled with health in middle age, expecting an early death, he had a surprisingly active old age and long life.
Archibald and his wife had six sons and a daughter, including James Waddel Alexander (1804–1859), a professor and Presbyterian pastor in New York City; William Cowper Alexander (1806–1874), a lawyer and state senator; Joseph Addison Alexander (1809–1860), professor at Princeton Seminary and Bible commentator; and Samuel Davies Alexander (1819-1894), a Presbyterian pastor in New York City.
J.W. Alexander wrote a biography of his father and wrote this about his father's ways at home:
He was addicted to sacred music, and as both he and Mrs. Alexander were gifted with clear and pleasing voices, the hours of family intercourse were enlivened by many a psalm and sacred song … Nothing more characterized him than his fondness for communicating instruction, on every subject, even the most elementary, within his reach. It might be the alphabet, or Hebrew and Syriac grammar, or geometry and surveying, in which he was fully versed, or metaphysics; he was unwearied and delighted, if only he had willing learners; and he had the art of making every learner willing … Except in hours of devotion, his study was always free to his children, even the youngest; noise made no difference; their books and toys were on his floor; and two or three would be clambering upon him, while he was handling a folio or had the pen in his hand … Before dismissing the matter of family training, we ought to mention his constant and animated conversations with his children. It was his solace, at home and by the way. Without the slightest appearance of plan, but with an easy and spontaneous flow, he was, during some hours of every day, pouring forth a stream of useful information, on all subjects, but chiefly on religion. The whole wealth of his extended reading and observation seemed at one time or another to be distilled in these familiar interviews.Samuel Miller
1710 - Samuel’s grandfather arrived from Scotland in Boston; he married a descendant of the Pilgrims.
1769 - Samuel Miller was born in Dover, DE, the eighth child of Rev. John and Margaret Miller.
1788 - He made his profession of faith and began studies at the University of Philadelphia, having been homeschooled until then. He graduated the following year with “first honor.”
1789 - With encouragement from his parents and Rev. Ashbel Green, he began studying theology under his father.
1791 - Samuel was licensed to preach and studied under Charles Nisbet in Carlisle, PA.
1793 - Samuel was ordained and installed as an associate pastor for the unified Presbyterian congregations in New York City.
1801 - Samuel married Sarah Sargeant; they would be married 49 years and have ten children. (His grandson, Samuel Miller Breckinridge, was a ruling elder who died on the floor of the 1891 General Assembly arguing for the veto of the appointment of a liberal professor at Union Seminary.)
1803 - He published A Brief Retrospect of the Eighteen Century, a two volume overview of the previous century expanded from a sermon he gave on January 1, 1800.
1807 - In response to aggressive polemics from northern Episcopalians, he wrote in defense of Presbyterian church government, Letters concerning the Constitution and Order of the Christian Ministry, as deduced from Scripture and Primitive Usage. A sequel followed in 1809 and he also began preaching and writing on the divine appointment, duties, and qualifications of ruling elders.
1813 - He was chosen by the General Assembly as the second professor for Princeton Seminary, the professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church Government. He and Archibald Alexander were quite different in many ways, but they worked together as friends until they died.
1827 - His book, Letters on Clerical Manners and Habits.
1831 - His book, The Warrant, Nature, and Duties of the Office of the Ruling Elder.
1835 - His book, Presbyterianism the Truly Primitive and Apostolical Constitution of the Church of Christ.
1837 - His book, Infant Baptism Scriptural and Reasonable: and Baptism by Sprinkling or Affusion, the Most Suitable or Edifying Mode.
1849 - His book, Thoughts on Public Prayer.
1850 - Samuel Miller died at home at the age of 80.
Charles Hodge
1730s - Charles’ Scots-Irish grandfather arrived from northern Ireland in Philadelphia.
1797 (Dec. 27) - Charles Hodge was born in Philadelphia to Hugh and Mary Hodge (Mary had moved there from Boston).
1798 - Charles’ father died from yellow fever, having fought against that disease as a doctor.
1812 - Mary moved with her two sons to Princeton, NJ for their education. Their pastor, Ashbel Green, moved at the same to from Philadelphia to become president of Princeton College.
1815 - While Charles had been believing and pious from a very early age, the outbreak of a revival at the college caused him to reevaluate his faith. Charles concluded that his faith was genuine and he publicly professed his faith on January 15, 1815, the beginning of a year of revival that would see one-third of the 105 students make professions of faith by April.
1816 - He entered Princeton Seminary. He graduated and and was licensed to preach in 1819 and was ordained in 1821.
1822 - He was elected Professor of Oriental and Biblical Literature at the seminary and married Sarah Bache, a godly, beautiful, and learned great-granddaughter of Benjamin Franklin. The two of them had been companions since they were around 14. They would have eight children.
1825 - He founded a journal, Biblical Repertory (renamed in 1837 as The Biblical Repertory and Princeton Review).
1827-1828 - Charles studied abroad in Germany to better engage the threat of Higher Criticism.
1835 - His book, Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans.
1840 - His book, The Constitutional History of the Presbyterian Church in the United States. His title changed to Professor of Exegetical and Didactic Theology.
1841 - His book, The Way of Life.
1849 - His dear wife Sarah died.
1852 - He married Mary Hunter Stockman, a widow and a friend of Sarah’s and the family.
1873 - His three volume, Systematic Theology was completed.
1874 - His book, What Is Darwinism?, in which he critiqued Darwinism.
1878 - He died at the age of 80, serving as professor until his death like his predecessors. He was succeeded by his son, Archibald Alexander Hodge. Another son, Caspar Wistar Hodge Sr., and a grandson, Caspar Wistar Hodge Jr., would also be professors at the seminary. His grandson Thomas L. Hodge was a founding member of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in 1936.