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MOSES STUART (1780-1852)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 1048 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MOSES STUART (1780-1852)  ,
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American biblical scholar, was born in
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Wilton,
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Connecticut, on the 26th of March 1780 . He was reared on a
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farm; graduated with highest honours at Yale in 1799; in 1802 was admitted to the Connecticut bar, and was appointed a tutor at Yale, where he remained for two years; and in 18o6 became pastor of the Centre (Congregational) Church of New Haven . In x8ro he was appointedprofessor of sacred literature in the
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Andover Theological Seminary, organized in 18o8 . Here he succeeded Eliphalet Pearson (1752-1826), the first
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preceptor of the Phillips (Andover) Academy and in 1786-1806 professor of
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Hebrew and
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Oriental
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languages at Harvard . Stuart himself then knew hardly more than the elements of Hebrew and not very much more Greek than Hebrew; in 1810-1812 he prepared for the use of his students a Hebrew grammar which they copied day by day from his
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manuscript; in 1813 he printed his Grammar, which appeared in an enlarged form, " with a copious syntax and praxis," in 1821, and was republished in England by Dr Pusey in 1831 . He gradually made the acquaintance of German
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works in hermeneutics, first Schleusner, Seiler and Gesenius, and taught himself German, arousing much suspicion and distrust among his colleagues by his unusual studies . But his recognition soon came, partly as a result of his Letter to Dr Charming on the Subject of Religious Liberty (1830), but more largely through the growing favour shown to German
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philology and critical methods . In 1848 he resigned his chair at Andover . He died in Andover on the 4th of
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January 1852 . He has been called the "
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father of exegetical studies in
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America." He contributed largely by his teaching to the renewal of
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foreign missionary zeal—of his 1500 students more than Too became foreign missionaries, among them such skilled translators as Adoniram Judson, Elias Riggs and William G . Schauffler . Among his more important publications were: Winer's Greek Grammar of the New Testament (1825), with
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Edward Robinson; Commentary on the
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Epistle to the Hebrews (1827—1828); Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans (1832) ; Commentary on the Apocalypse (1845); Miscellanies (1846); Gesenius's Hebrew Grammar (1846) a version which involved Stuart in a long controversy with T .

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Conant, the earlier, and possibly more scholarly, translator of Gesenius; Commentary on Ecclesiastes (1851), and Commentary on the
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Book of Proverbs (1852) . See the memorial sermons by Edwards A . Park (Boston, 1852) and William Adams (New York, 1852) .

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