21 February 1830 A.D. Prof. Caspar Wistar Hodge Born—Son of Prof. Charles Hodge
21
February 1830 A.D. Prof.
Caspar Wistar Hodge Born—Son of Prof. Charles Hodge
Archivist. “Febuary 21: Caspar Wistar Hodge.” This
Day in Presbyterian History. 21 Feb 2014.
http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/tag/caspar-wistar-hodge/.
Accessed 10 May 2014.
February 21, 1830 marks the birth of Caspar Wistar Hodge, youngest
son of Dr. Charles Hodge, named after the eminent physician Caspar Wistar
[1761-1818]. Another of Dr. Hodge’s sons, Archibald Alexander Hodge, also
taught at Princeton Theological Seminary. The Rev. Dr. Caspar Wistar
Hodge died on 27 September 1891.
The
following is excerpted from Francis Landey Patton’s memorial tribute to his
close friend and colleague. And not surprisingly, given self-effacing portrait
that Patton paints of his friend, we were unable to locate a photograph of C.W.
Hodge. If you know of a good portrait photography in the public domain, we
would like to know of it.
“He
was my most intimate friend. I have come to-day to place a wreath of affection
upon his grave. My text ["He opened to us the Scriptures."--Luke
24:32
] is taken from the floral
tribute which you who were his pupils placed upon his bier. This is your answer
to the question, What did he do? It is a sufficient answer. He wrote no books,
his voice was seldom heard beyond his native town, he took no active part in
public affairs, and he shrank from the public gaze; but he opened to us the
Scriptures. To more than thirty classes he unfolded the truths of the New
Testament. He led them reverently over the ground that had been hallowed by the
Saviour’s feet, and traced the history of the Apostolic Church from Peter on
the day of Pentecost to John in Patmos. Year by year he sent his pupils forth
into the world laden with material for use in the service of the gospel, filled
with quickening thoughts, and ready to testify that the reverent spirit can
handle the subtle questions of criticism without suggesting doubt or lessening
zeal.
“Dr.
Caspar Wistar Hodge was born in Princeton, 21
February 1830. He grew up in Princeton; and, with the exception of the
short period covered by his two pastorates, he spent his life there. We can
see, then, why he loved Princeton. Others love it; even those who have spent
only three or four years of academic residence here speak of it in enthusiastic
terms. We who have come here to live, and who expect to die here, love it with
an affection that grows deeper even if it grows sadder every year. But we are
only adopted children after all. We love sometimes with a divided heart. It was
not so with Dr. Hodge. He loved it as one loves the home of his childhood. He
loved it with an unfaltering and an unwandering affection. Its rough streets
and crooked lanes and weather-beaten houses had tender associations for him.
The bridge we crossed and the brook we would sometimes pensively look into in
our summer rambles would often suggest an anecdote that showed how the
neighborhood was haunted by the ghosts of memory.
“Besides,
the theology of this seminary was to him a precious heritage. He was in
intellectual sympathy with it to be sure; but his hereditary relations to
Princeton theology gave an emotional warmth to his convictions. He believed
that Princeton had performed a mission in the past, and he believed that in the
maintenance of the same truth she had a mission just as great to perform
to-day.
“He
had no love for novelties; and he regarded all schemes that fettered the
individual conscience by man-made regulations as new modes of returning unto
the weak and beggarly elements, where unto so many still love to be in bondage.
. .
“. .
. The worst heresy is a half-truth, because it is so hard to deal with it.
There are so many reasons that can be given for this bad influence in the
class-room. Men are ambitious and seek notoriety. They love to be thought
original, and they step out of the beaten path. Men raise the cry of progress,
and think what is new is an improvement. Men find themselves in unstable
equilibrium between the old and the new modes of thinking, and they adopt a
paradoxical and inconsistent style of utterance. They try to pour the new wine
into the old bottles. They teach orthodoxy with the voice, and suggest heresy
with a shrug of the shoulders. But there was nothing of all this in Dr. Hodge.
He was a reverent believer in the Bible as the Word of God, and in the
doctrines of the Bible as they are formulated in the creed of his church. He
was honest, fair-minded, and firm. When he saw difficulties and it was
necessary, he held his judgment in suspense. He knew the resources of the
enemy, and did not underrate them. But he also knew the argumentative resources
of Christianity. The consequence was that his lectures strengthened faith and
deepened conviction; and men who had no great critical sagacity themselves felt
that they had been reinforced immensely by the fact that they had a man of Dr.
Hodge’s scholarship and judgment on the side of the theology of the catechism.”
Words to Live By: It is often true that some of the greatest and most
abiding work in God’s kingdom is accomplished by dear saints whose names you
may never know, those men and women who work faithfully in the work that God
gives them, yet without drawing attention to themselves. Do your work
faithfully, as unto the Lord, for this is His calling and purpose for your
life. And if God should later bring you into wider fields of service and
usefulness in His kingdom, then praise Him for that as well.
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