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One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic, Tome 1. John Williamson Nevin
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isbn 9781498244923
Автор произведения John Williamson Nevin
Жанр Религия: прочее
Серия Mercersburg Theology Study Series
Издательство Ingram
In the spring of 1853, “the way was open for Dr. Nevin to retire from public life, and find that rest for his body and mind which, after thirteen years of the most intense mental activity, he needed more than anything else.”78 The “way” referred to by Appel was the move of Marshall College to Lancaster. Nevin had declined the invitation to move with the school and shared the reason for his decision in a private interview with this biographer, Theodore Appel:
Among other things he said that, as was well known, he was not satisfied with the present state of Protestantism and Romanism; that he had published his views freely; that he did not wish to burden the new institution with the odium or opposition which they had called forth; and that the College was most likely to do better under a new president to whom there could be no objection on account of his philosophy or theology, as was the case with himself.79
Interestingly, Emmanuel Gerhart, the systematician of Mercersburg Theology, was chosen as the school’s president.80 Appel couldn’t resist this comment on that decision: “Here, as in other things, the hand of Providence manifested itself in enabling the College to grow in its own likeness and image, without suffering any harm to its historical integrity.”81
While Nevin retired from his role as a professor, he continued to preach and write. In his sermon, “The Christian Ministry,” he offers a systematic portrait of the pastoral office. He delivered this sermon in November 1854 at Zion’s Church of Chambersburg during the installation of Bernard C. Wolff (1794–1870), Nevin’s successor as Professor of Theology. In 1857, he wrote an extensive review of a commentary on Ephesians by Charles Hodge, a book wherein Nevin’s former professor focuses on predestination and election. Nevin challenges Hodge’s presuppositions and, in the process, distinguishes both his understanding of election and the church from that of Hodge. In 1858, Nevin wrote “Thoughts on the Church.” This is the last of his publications focused on the church and its ministry, though he wrote articles in defense of the Provisional Liturgy.82
Through these nine texts Nevin encouraged German Reformed Christians, and all others who would listen, to return to “the historical Reformational faith in the visible Church as the true Body of Christ.”83 For Nevin, “the church is the vehicle by which the theanthropic life of Christ is carried forward through history and imparted to mankind.”84 The life of Christ is then imparted to each individual through union with Christ that takes place by and through the ministry of the church. In other words, the church is the primary source of spiritual grace and a place of life-long nurture and discipleship, and the pastoral office is a necessary medium of God’s salvific grace; the pastors who fill the office are called to serve as priests, clothed with apostolic authority.
1. See as examples, Canon, Lectures on Pastoral Theology; Hoppin, The Office and Work of the Christian Ministry; Murphy, Pastoral Theology.
2. Nevin, “Translator’s Introduction” to Schaff, The Principle of Protestantism, 54. The latest edition of Principle, with full editorial apparatus, has been recently published in the present series: Schaff, The Development of the Church: “The Principle of Protestantism” and other Historical Writings of Philip Schaff, ed. David R. Bains and Theodore Louis Trost, MTSS, vol. 3. This edition of Principle and What is Church History? will be used throughout.
3. For treatments of the “Church Question,” see Welch, Protestant Theology in the Nineteenth Century, 1:190–232; Conser Jr., Church and Confession. Almost certainly Nevin was introduced to the concept by Schaff in the lectures that became Principle of Protestantism (October 1844). It does not appear in Nevin’s writing until the 1846 sermon, “The Church” (below, 156). Schaff discussed the question in What is Church History?, 237–38.
4. Nevin, “Introduction” to Schaff, Principle of Protestantism, MTSS, vol. 3, 54–5.
5. Schaff, The Principle of Protestantism, MTSS, vol. 3, 192, emphasis original.
6. For a brief history of the Reformed Church in the United States, see Gunnemann, The Shaping of the United Church of Christ, 167–182.
7. Richards, History of the Theological Seminary, 27.
8. Ibid.
9. “The Consistory of the German Reformed Churches of Falkner Swamp, Skippack, and Whitemarch to the Classis of Amsterdam, July 1729,” in Hambrick-Stowe, ed., Colonial and National Beginnings, 274–284.
10. Coetus, a word of Latin origin, refers to a group or assembly of neighboring congregations within the denomination which serves as an assembly to adjudicate ecclesiastical matters, such as the formation of new congregations and the ordination of ministers. For more on the first Coetus of the German congregations, see Good, History of the Reformed Church, 331–43.
11. Trans. “The Synod of the Reformed High-German Church in the United States of America.”
12. Richards, History of the Theological Seminary, 78.
13. Ibid., 67.
14. Ibid., 217.
15. “The State of the Church” (1863), in Nordbeck and Zuck, ed., Consolidation and Expansion, 521–25.
16. These 1855 national statistics are from Robert Baird, State and Prospects of Religion in America (London, 1855), cited by Smith, Revivalism and Social Reform,