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See also: American theologian and educationalist, was See also: born on Herron's Branch, near Shippensburg, See also: Franklin county, Pennsylvania, on the 20th of See also: February 1803
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He was a descendant of Hugh See also: Williamson of See also: North Carolina, and was of Scotch See also: blood and Presbyterian training
.
He graduated at Union See also: College in 1821; studied See also: theology at See also: Princeton Theological Seminary in 1823-1828, being in 1826-1828 in See also: charge of the classes of See also: Charles
See also: Hodge; was licensed to preach by the See also: Carlisle See also: Presbytery in 1828; and in 1830-1840 was professor of Biblical literature in the newly founded Western Theological Seminary of See also: Allegheny, Pennsylvania
.
But under the influence of Neander he was gradually breaking away from " Puritanic See also: Presbyterianism," and in 1840, having resigned his chair in Allegheny, he was appointed professor of theology in the (See also: German Reformed) Theological Seminary at Mercersburg, Pa., and thus passed from the Presbyterian See also: Church into the German Reformed
.
He soon became prominent; first by his contributions to its
See also: organ the Messenger; then by The Anxious Bench—A See also: Tract for the Times (1843), attacking the vicious excesses of revivalistic methods; and by his defence of the inauguration address, The Principle of Protestantism, delivered by his colleague See also: Philip
See also: Schaff, which aroused a See also: storm of protest by its See also: suggestion that Pauline Protestantism was not the last word in the development of the church but that a Johannean See also: Christianity was to be its out-growth, and by its recognition of Petrine Romanism as a stage in ecclesiastical development
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To Dr Schaff's 122 theses of The Principle of Protestantism See also: Nevin added his own theory of the mystical union between Christ and believers, and both Schaff and Nevin were accused of a " Romanizing tendency." Nevin characterized his critics as pseudo-Protestants, urged (with Dr Charles Hodge, and against the Presbyterian General See also: Assembly) the validity of See also: Roman Catholic See also: baptism, and defended the See also: doctrine of the " spiritual real presence " of Christ in the See also: Lord's Supper, notably in The Mystical Presence: a Vindication of the Reformed or Calvanistic Doctrine of the See also: Holy Eucharist (1846); to this the reply from the point of view of rationalistic See also: puritanism was made by Charles Hodge in the Princeton Review of 1848
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In 1849 the Mercersburg Review was founded as the organ of Nevin and the " Mercersburg Theology "; and to it he contributed from 1849 to 1883
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In 1851 he resigned from the Mercersburg Seminary in See also: order that its See also: running expenses might be lightened; and from 1841 to 1853 he was president of See also: Marshall College at Mercersburg
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With Dr Schaff and others he was on the committee which prepared the See also: liturgy of the German Re-formed Church, which appeared in provisional See also: form in 1857 and as An Order of Worship in 1866
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In 1861-1866 he was instructor of See also: history at Franklin and Marshall College (in which Marshall College had been merged), of which he was president in 1866-1876
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He died at See also: Lancaster, Penn., on the 6th of See also: June 1886
.
See See also: Theodore Appel, The See also: Life and See also: Work of See also: John Williamson Nevin (
See also: Philadelphia, 1889 containing Nevin's more important articles
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