- James Henley Thornwell
James Henley Thornwell (
December 9 ,1812 –August 1 ,1862 ) was an AmericanPresbyterian preacher and religious writer.Born in Marlboro District,
South Carolina on December 9, 1812; Thornwell graduated from South Carolina College at nineteen, studied briefly atHarvard , then entered the Presbyterian ministry. He became prominent in the Old School Presbyterian denomination in the south, preaching and writing ontheological and social issues. He taught at South Carolina College, eventually served as its president, and went on to teach atColumbia Theological Seminary . He was a contemporary ofCharles Hodge and represented the southern branch of the Presbyterian church in debates onecclesiology with Hodge.Thornwell founded the "Southern Presbyterian Review", edited the "Southern Quarterly Review," and had a prominent role in establishing the
Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America . Thornwell preached the first sermon and wrote the first address for the new denomination. He died on August 1, 1862 after a long struggle withtuberculosis .Thornwell, in the words of Professor
Eugene Genovese , attempted "to envision a Christian society that could reconcile-so far as possible in a world haunted by evil-the conflicting claims of a social order with social justice and both with the freedom and dignity of the individual."Children of the covenant
Thornwell viewed mankind in three divisions:
As a result the church was to treat children of the covenant "precisely as she treats all other impenitent and unbelieving men -- she is to exercise the power of the keys, and shut them out from the communion of the saints" (p. 341). As a result while children were still baptized as heirs apparent, in his view they were "to be dealt with as the Church deals with all the enemies of God. She turns the key upon them and leaves them without" (p. 348).
This conclusion regarding children is described by L. B. Schenck (1940, "Children in the Covenant") as inconsistent with Presbyterian and Calvinistic thought to that point. The presumed regeneration of infants in the covenant, so characteristic of Calvinists since Dort,Fact|date=May 2008 is not represented in this concept, but Thornwell's view may also be affected by the need to confront and reject the abuses of the
Halfway Covenant .lavery
Thornwell was also an advocate of slavery and in 1850 said: "The parties in this conflict [referring to the conflict over slavery] are not merely Abolitionists and slaveholders - they are atheists, socialists, communists, red republicans, Jacobins on one side, and the friends of order and regulated freedom on the other. In one word, the world is the battleground -Christianity and atheism the combatants; and the progress of humanity at stake." (Quoted in "Labor's Untold Story", Richard O. Boyer and Herbert M. Morais, Cameron Associates, New York, 1955)
ee also
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Robert Lewis Dabney References
* Thornwell, James Henley. "The Collected Writings of James Henley Thornwell", 4 vols. Edited by John B. Adger and John L. Girardeau, 1871-1873.
* Palmer, B.M. "The Life and Letters of James Henley Thornwell", 1875.
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