Excerpt from The Glory in the Grey: Forty-Two Talks on Every-Day Life and Religion
IT sometimes happens, when we are dispirited, that God's gracious gift of reviving comes to us along a very ordinary channel - in the form, perhaps, of some tonic, heartening passage found in reading, or the morning face and cheerful greeting of a friend. That is often all that we need - when our hurt is not serious - to send us back with. A new zest and courage to our tasks and that is the sort of usefulness which is desired for this book.
It does not pretend to deal with the great themes or the great hours of the religious life, but only with some of its simple encouragements and ideals for every day. There is a wide differ ence between the far-off flash of guidance which the sailor steers by in the darkness, and the humbler lights on board by which he sees to do his work. Yet he needs them both.
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Born near Lexington, Virginia, he was the son of a merchant and farmer. At the age of 10, he attended the academy of Rev. William Graham at Timber Ridge meetinghouse, which later became Washington and Lee University. At 17 years of age, he became the tutor to the family of General John Posey.
He then returned to Timber Ridge. He was influenced by the "Great Revival" and began the study of divinity, being licensed to preach October 1, 1791. and ordained as a Presbyterian on June 9, 1794. He was an itinerant pastor for seven years. He was president of Hampton Sydney College (1797-1806). In 1807 he became pastor of Pine Street Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia.
He received the Doctor of Divinity in 1810 from the College of New Jersey and also assumed the presidency of the Union college in Georgia. He was the first president of Princeton Theological Seminary (1812-1851).
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