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  • John Bishop
    September 1993
    At noon on October 31, 1517, Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenburg. This simple act started...
  • John Bishop
    July 1993
    Horace Bushnell (1802-1976) was born in Bantam, Connecticut. He was educated to hard work. His daughter, Mrs. Cheney, in her biography,...
  • John Bishop
    January 1993
    John Calvin (1509-1564) was born in Nyon, France. He prepared himself for a law career at the insistence of his father, but when his...
  • R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
    November 1992
    "In the midst of the theologically discredited nineteenth century there was a preacher who had at least six thousand people in his...
  • John Bishop
    September 1992
    John Knox was born at Haddington, Scotland, in 1513. He was sent as a boy to the Grammar School to learn Latin and proceeded from there...
  • John Bishop
    July 1992
    Joseph Fort Newton was born on July 21, 1876 in Decatur, Texas, the son of a former Baptist minister who had become a lawyer. He told...
  • James L. Snyder
    May 1992
    Born April 21, 1897, in a tiny farming community in the hills of western Pennsylvania, Aiden Wilson Tozer influenced the evangelical...
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Horace Bushnell: Relating Theology to Life
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Horace Bushnell: Relating Theology to Life
By John Bishop
No American preacher of the nineteenth century succeeded in introducing more theology into the pulpit and in discussing theological problems in a more interesting way than Bushnell. He did not believe in a theology that could not be preached and translated from the realm of thought to the realm of life. Henry Van Dyke described him as "the most logical of mystics and the most mystical of logicians." He understood thoroughly the laws of thought and he was the better preacher because of this. He presented the truth in an orderly, logical manner. But the mystical and the poetical gradually won the ascendancy in him.

It was fifteen years after Bushnell entered the ministry before the mystical element in his religious nature came to the fore. It was then that he entered into a higher type of religious life. As a result of this experience he tells us that he gained new conceptions of the significance of Christ and this became the basis of new conceptions of the character of God. From this time on his religious life was constantly deepened and enriched. He lived more completely in the abiding presence of God.
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He was not a popular preacher in the usual sense of that word but he made a strong appeal to reflective minds. The common people did not listen to him with the same intensity of emotion as they listened to Beecher. But he was in many ways the superior of Beecher as a preacher, and certainly a much more desirable model for most preachers. Sir George Adam Smith once remarked that Bushnell is the preacher's preacher as Spenser is the poet's poet and that his sermons were on the shelves of many a manse in Scotland. The Christian faith, Bushnell said, could never be based upon any system which demanded intellectual proof. Religion appeals ultimately, he insisted, to the heart and to feeling. He wrote: "When the preacher touches the Trinity and when logic shatters it all to pieces, I am all at the four winds. But I am glad I have a heart as well as a head. My heart wants the Father; my heart wants the Son; my heart wants the Holy Ghost -- and one just as much as the other. My heart says the Bible has a Trinity for me, and I mean to hold by my heart."1

Bushnell was a Christian mystic. On a winter morning in February 1848 his wife awoke to hear that the light they had waited for, more than they that watch for the morning, had arisen. She asked, "What have you seen?" He replied, "The Gospel." Like Paul's revelation on the Damascus road, Augustine in the garden in Milan, Bunyan in Bedford Jail, John Wesley at the meeting house in Aldersgate Street, this was a transforming experience. Bushnell was a practical mystic who saw the stars but kept his feet on the earth. He expressed his discovery in a sermon on "Christ the Form of the Soul," based upon the text, "until Christ be formed in you." John Winthrop Platner, in his Religious History of New England, describes Bushnell as "a seer of mystic visions hidden from the many, who was faithful to the spirit of the past, yet able to interpret to his fellow ministers the theology of the future."

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