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CHARLES AUGUSTUS BRIGGS (1841– )

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 566 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARLES AUGUSTUS BRIGGS (1841– )  ,
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American
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Hebrew scholar and theologian, was born in New York City on the 15th of
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January 1841 . He was educated at the university of Virginia (1857–186o), graduated at the Union Theological Seminary in 1863, and studied further at the university of Berlin . He was pastor of the Presbyterian church of Roselle, New Jersey, 1869–1874, and professor of Hebrew and cognate
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languages in Union Theological Seminary 1874–1891, and of Biblical
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theology there from 1891 to 1904, when he became professor of theological
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encyclopaedia and symbolics . From 188o to 1890 he was an editor of the Presbyterian Review . In 1892 he was tried for
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heresy by the
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presbytery of New York and acquitted . The charges were based upon his inaugural address of the preceding
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year . In brief they were as follows: that he had taught that reason and the Church are each a " fountain of divine authority which apart from
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Holy Scripture may and does savingly enlighten men "; that " errors may have existed in the
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original text of the Holy Scripture "; that " many of the Old Testament predictions have been reversed by
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history and that " the
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great
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body of Messianic prediction has not and can-not be fulfilled "; that " Moses is not the author of the
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Pentateuch," and that " Isaiah is not the author of
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half of the
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book which bears his name "; that " the processes of redemption extend to the
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world to come "—he had considered it a fault of
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Protestant theology that it limits redemption to this world—and that" sanctification is not
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complete at
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death." The general assembly, to which the case was appealed, suspended Dr Briggs in 1893, being influenced, it would seem, in
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part, by the manner and tone of his expressions—by what his own colleagues in the Union Theological Seminary called the " dogmatic and irritating " nature of his inaugural address . He was ordained a priest of the Protestant Episcopal Church in 1899 . His scholarship procured for him the honorary degree of D.D. from
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Edinburgh (1884) and from
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Glasgow (19o1), and that of Litt: D, from Oxford (19ot) . With S . R . Driver and Francis Brown he prepared. a revised Hebrew and
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English
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Lexicon (1891–1905), and with Driver edited the " International Commentary Series." His publications include Biblical Study: Its Principles, Methods and History (1883) ; Hebrew Poems of the Creation 0884); American Presbyterianism: Its Origin and Early History (1885) ; Messianic Prophecy (1886); Whither ?

A Theological Question for the Times (1889); The Authority of the Holy Scripture (1891); The

Bible, the Church and the Reason (1892) ; The Higher Criticism of the
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Hexateuch (1893); The Messiah of the Gospels (1894); The Messiah of the Apostles (1894); New
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Light on the
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Life of Jesus (1904); The Ethical Teaching of Jesus (1904); A Critical and Exegetical Commentary on the Book of Psalms (2 vols., 1906–1907), in which he was assisted by his daughter; and The Virgin Birth of Our Lord (1909) .

End of Article: CHARLES AUGUSTUS BRIGGS (1841– )
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