Charles Hodge (1823-1886),
an American Presbyterian
theologian, was
ordained in 1821 and taught at Princeton for almost his whole life. In
1825 he
founded the Biblical Repository and Princeton Review, and for
forty
years was its editor and the principal contributor to its pages. He
received
the degree of D.D. from Rutgers College in 1834, and that of LL.D. from
Washington College, Pennsylvania, in 1864. In 1840 Dr. Hodge was
transferred to
the chair of didactic theology, retaining still, however, the
department of New
Testament exegesis, the duties of which he continued to discharge until
his
death. His most important works are his commentaries on Romans
(1835), Ephesians
(1856), 1 Corinthians (1857), 2 Corinthians (1859), as
well as Constitutional
History of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (2 vols.,
1839-40),
Systematic Theology (3 vols., 1871-3), and What is Darwinism?
(1874). He was an outstanding defender of Calvinism, and has a claim to
be
considered one of the best theologians and Bible commentators that
America has
produced.
Taken from
Systematic
Theology by Charles Hodge, Wordsearch 7 electronic edition.