13.08.2013 Views

Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial ...

Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial ...

Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

ather than any course marked out for<br />

him. He made a careful study <strong>of</strong> Eng-<br />

lish literature, submitted to a very thorough<br />

training in elocution, took hold <strong>of</strong><br />

phrenology and temperance, and partici-<br />

pated in prayer meetings and religious<br />

labors in neighboring country towns with<br />

fervor. His father, an intense and polemical<br />

evangelistic divine for his time, was<br />

liberal, taking an active part in theological<br />

controversies as against the old school or<br />

extreme Calvinistic party in the orthodox<br />

church, laying stress on human liberty<br />

and responsibility, and also as against the<br />

Unitarian denomination, urging the doc-<br />

trine <strong>of</strong> Jesus Christ, the vicarious atone-<br />

ment, regeneration, and the inspiration<br />

and authority <strong>of</strong> the Scriptures. On these<br />

doctrines, Henry Ward Beecher was<br />

reared, and he never to the day <strong>of</strong> his<br />

death lost the impression they made upon<br />

his character and method <strong>of</strong> thought. But<br />

at a very early period they passed with<br />

him from a dogma to a vital spiritual ex-<br />

perience in which, through a conscious<br />

realization <strong>of</strong> Christ as the manifestation<br />

<strong>of</strong> a God <strong>of</strong> infinite mercy, coming into<br />

the world not to judge, but to redeem and<br />

educate, Mr. Beecher himself entered into<br />

a new spiritual consciousness, in which<br />

love took the place <strong>of</strong> duty in the law <strong>of</strong><br />

life, and the place <strong>of</strong> justice in the inter-<br />

pretation <strong>of</strong> God.<br />

Upon graduating from Amherst Col-<br />

lege, he entered Lane Theological Seminary<br />

(Cincinnati), where his father was<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> systematic theology, and pur-<br />

sued his studies there, receiving proba-<br />

bly quite as much from the spiritual life<br />

and keen dialectic conversation at home<br />

as from the instructions <strong>of</strong> the seminary.<br />

He also served as a Bible class teacher,<br />

and in journalistic work in connection<br />

with a Cincinnati paper, in which he took<br />

an active part as an ardent Abolitionist.<br />

His first parish was the Presbyterian<br />

ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY<br />

8<br />

church at Lawrenceburg, Indiana, a small<br />

settlement on the Ohio river. Twenty<br />

persons, nineteen women and one man,<br />

constituted the entire church. He was<br />

both sexton and preacher, lighted the<br />

lamps, swept the church, rang the bell,<br />

and took general charge <strong>of</strong> the edifice.<br />

After a year or two he was called to a<br />

Presbyterian church in Indianapolis, the<br />

capital <strong>of</strong> the State. His remarkable gifts<br />

as an orator gave him almost from the<br />

first a crowded church. His influence was<br />

felt throughout the State in intellectual<br />

and moral impulses given to members <strong>of</strong><br />

the Legislature and to public men, who,<br />

attracted by his originality, earnestness,<br />

practicality and courage, came in great<br />

numbers to hear him. His pulpit did not,<br />

however, absorb either his thought or his<br />

time. He preached throughout the State<br />

in itinerant revival labors ; lectured fre-<br />

quently, generally without compensation,<br />

for impecunious charities; and edited<br />

weekly the agricultural department <strong>of</strong> the<br />

"Indiana Journal."<br />

After eight years <strong>of</strong> increasingly successful<br />

ministry in Indiana, Mr Beecher<br />

accepted a call to the then newly organized<br />

Plymouth Church <strong>of</strong> Brooklyn, New<br />

York, entering upon the duties <strong>of</strong> his pastorate<br />

October 10, 1847, and remaining<br />

until his death, March 8, 1887. The his-<br />

tory <strong>of</strong> these forty years is the history <strong>of</strong><br />

the theological and polemical progress <strong>of</strong><br />

this country during that time. There was<br />

no theological question in which he did<br />

not take an interest, no problem having<br />

any recognized bearing on the moral well-<br />

being <strong>of</strong> the country which he did not<br />

study, and upon the practical aspects <strong>of</strong><br />

which he did not express himself, and no<br />

moral or political reform in which he did<br />

not take an active part. His fertility <strong>of</strong><br />

thought was amazing. He rarely exchanged<br />

; he preached twice every Sab-<br />

bath, usually to houses crowded to over-

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!