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See also: scholar, was See also: born at Belford, See also: Northumberland, the youngest son of Rev
.
See also: Marcus See also: Dods, See also: minister of the Scottish See also: church of that
See also: town
.
He was trained at See also: Edinburgh See also: Academy and Edinburgh University, graduating in 1854
.
Having studied See also: theology for five years he was licensed in 1858, and in 1864 became minister of Renfield See also: Free Church, See also: Glasgow, where he worked for twenty-five years
.
In 1889 he was appointed professor of New Testament Exegesis in the New See also: College, Edinburgh, of which he became See also: principal on the See also: death of Dr See also: Rainy in 1907
.
He died in Edinburgh on the 26th of See also: April 1909
.
Throughout his See also: life, both ministerial and professorial, he devoted much See also: time to the publication of theological books
.
Several of his writings, especially a See also: sermon on Inspiration delivered in 1878, incurred the See also: charge of unorthodoxy, and shortly before his election to the Edinburgh professorship he was summoned before the General See also: Assembly, but the charge was dropped by a large majority, and in 1891 he received the honorary degree of D.D. from Edinburgh University
.
He edited See also: Lange's Life of Christ in See also: English (Edinburgh, 1864, 6 vols.), Augustine's See also: works (1872-1876), and, with Dr See also: Alexander
See also: Whyte, See also: Clark's " Handbooks for See also: Bible Classes " series
.
In the Expositor's Bible series he edited See also: Genesis and 1 See also: Corinthians, and he was also a contributor to the 9th edition of the See also: Encyclopaedia Britannica and Hastings' See also: Dictionary of the Bible
.
Among other important works are: The See also: Epistle to the Seven Churches (1865); Israel's Iron Age (1874); Mohammed, See also: Buddha and Christ (1877); Handbook on See also: Haggai, See also: Zechariah and See also: Malachi (1879); The Gospel according to St See also: John (1897), in the Expositor's
See also: Greek Testament; The Bible, its Origin and Nature (1904), the Bross Lectures, in which he gave an able sketch of the use of Old Testament See also: criticism, and finally set forth his Theory of Inspiration
.
Apart from his See also: great services to Biblical scholarship he takes high See also: rank among those who have sought to bring the results of technical criticism within the reach of the ordinary reader
.
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