Difference between revisions of "James Smith"

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James Smith <ref name="term_61195" />
James Smith <ref name="term_61245" />
<p> Smith, James (5), </p> <p> a Presbyterian minister, was, born in Scotch Valley, Blair Co., Pa., Sept. 5, 1819. His father was an elder in the Church at Hollidaysburg, of which the son afterwards became a member. He was graduated at Jefferson College in 1843, and entered [[Princeton]] Theological Seminary in the autumn. of the same year. After completing the course he graduated, and was licensed by the [[Presbytery]] of [[Huntingdon]] at Clearfield, Pa., Oct. 8, 1846. The following April he was dismissed to the Presbytery of Clarion, and was ordained as an evangelist by that presbytery Sept. 1, 1847. After preaching one year as an evangelist, he was again received into the Presbytery of Huntingdon in 1848, and in April, 1849, he was called to the pastorate of the Little Valley Church. He did not choose to be installed as pastor, but supplied the pulpit until 1855. [[Joining]] the Allegheny Presbytery, he was, soon after leaving his former charge, installed by the last-named presbytery over the Church at Bridgewater. In 1857 he again changed his relation, and was installed pastor of the Church at Mount Joy by the [[Donegal]] Presbytery. Here he continued to labor with great acceptability and usefulness among a people strongly attached to him, and he to them, for a period of ten years, when, owing to the failure of his health, he was obliged to submit to the dissolution of the pastoral relation. For the last eight years of his lite feeble health prevented him from performing ministerial duties, and he gradually declined until his death, Oct. 4, 1875. (W.P.S.) </p>
<p> a Presbyterian minister, was born in Glasgow, Scotland. He became a deist from reading the works of [[Volney]] and Paine, came to America, settled in Tennessee, and edited a paper in Nashville. Soon, however, he was converted, and began to preach. In the winter of 1839, while upon a visit to Columbus, Mississippi, the home of Olmstead, author of the work, The Bible its Own Refutation, he was challenged to a public debate on the evidences of Christianity, and achieved a great victory. He afterwards compiled his argument, and published it in a book entitled Christian. Evidences. Dr. Smith was connected with the [[Cumberland]] Presbyterian Church in Kentucky, but was thoroughly Calvinistic in his theology. The [[Springfield]] Church, in Illinois, of which he became pastor, April 11, 1849, prospered under his ministry. He was dismissed December 17, 1856; acted for two or three years as agent for Peoria University, and, on Mr. Lincoln's accession to the presidency, was appointed consul to Glasgow. There he spent the closing years of his life, and died at Dundee, but the date does not appear. See Hist. of the Presbyterian Church in Illinois, page 398. </p>


== References ==
== References ==
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<ref name="term_61195"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/smith,+james+(5) James Smith from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_61245"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/smith,+james,+d.d. James Smith from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
</references>
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Latest revision as of 16:10, 15 October 2021

James Smith [1]

a Presbyterian minister, was born in Glasgow, Scotland. He became a deist from reading the works of Volney and Paine, came to America, settled in Tennessee, and edited a paper in Nashville. Soon, however, he was converted, and began to preach. In the winter of 1839, while upon a visit to Columbus, Mississippi, the home of Olmstead, author of the work, The Bible its Own Refutation, he was challenged to a public debate on the evidences of Christianity, and achieved a great victory. He afterwards compiled his argument, and published it in a book entitled Christian. Evidences. Dr. Smith was connected with the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Kentucky, but was thoroughly Calvinistic in his theology. The Springfield Church, in Illinois, of which he became pastor, April 11, 1849, prospered under his ministry. He was dismissed December 17, 1856; acted for two or three years as agent for Peoria University, and, on Mr. Lincoln's accession to the presidency, was appointed consul to Glasgow. There he spent the closing years of his life, and died at Dundee, but the date does not appear. See Hist. of the Presbyterian Church in Illinois, page 398.

References