Excerpt from The Gift of Influence
The sermons generally were not chosen for their academic character, but were expressly designed to avoid scholastic issues. It is my experience that the last thing an academic audience at public worship wants is an academic discourse, partly because students have a surfeit Of that in their ordinary studies, and partly because a College congregation after all consists very largely Of young men who are not much more than beginning their education and whose problems are the practical problems Of all youth. More than guidance in speculation do they need simply inspiration for life. At many Colleges where opportunity Offered, in addition to the regular Chapel Service I met the men later in a less formal way, and we discussed the intellectual and specula tive bearings of religion, often in the form of questions supplied by the students.
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Hugh Black was a Scottish-American theologian and author.
Black was born on March 26, 1868 in Rothesay, Scotland. He received a Master of Arts degree from Glasgow University in 1887, and studied divinity at Free Church College in Glasgow from 1887 until 1891. Black was ordained in 1891 and became associate pastor at St. George's Free Presbyterian Church in Edinburgh in 1896, where he worked with Alexander Whyte.
Black emigrated to the United States in 1906 to accept the position of chair of Practical Theology at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. He received honorary Doctor of Divinity degrees from Yale University in 1908 and from Princeton University and Glasgow University in 1911, and later accepted a position of pastor of the First Congregational Church in Montclair, New Jersey. Black retired from Union Theological Seminary in 1938.
Black also authored numerous books and sermons.
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