An Englishman, an Irishman and a Scotsman

Scottish Journal of Theology 38 (1):42-83 (1985)
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Abstract

This essay could have been entitled" ‘A Methodist, A Presbyterian and a Congregationalist'; ‘An Arminian, A Calvinist and a Liberal'; or ‘A Systematiser, An Apologist and a Prophet'. For the men who concern us are William Burt Pope, Robert Watts and Andrew Martin Fairbairn. They were all highly respected by their denominations in their day, and each was entrusted with the task of ministerial training. Watts was Professor of Theology at the Presbyterian College, Belfast from 1866-95; Pope was Theological Tutor at Didsbury Methodist College from 1867-86, when ill-health forced his resignation; and Fairbairn, who left Scotland and the Evangelical Union in 1877 to become Principal of Airedale Independent College was in 1886 installed as the first Principal of Mansfield College, Oxford. All but forgotten by their own, an investigation of their work will nevertheless reward us with a fascinating glimpse of the influences at work upon nineteenth-century theology; it will throw into relief their diverse and temperamentally different reactions which are the more interesting because of their relative closeness as nonconformists; and it may serve to remind us that some of the philosophico-theological issues which beset contemporary theology have their roots, if not their final solutions, in the period represented by our triumvirate.

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