SHIELDS, CHARLES WOODRUFF: Educator and author; b. at New Albany, Ind., Apr. 4, 1825; d. at Newport, R. I., Apr. 26, 1904. He was graduated from the College of New Jersey, 1844; and from Princeton Theological Seminary, 1847; became pastor at Hempstead, Long Island, 1849; of Second Church, Philadelphia, 1850; professor of harmony of science and revealed religion in the College of New Jersey, 1866; and, in addition, professor of modern history, 1871, which professorship he soon resigned. His appointment to the professorship of the harmony of science and religion, the first of its kind, was occasioned by the publication of PhiZosophia Ultima (see below), in which he expounded an academic scheme of irenical studies for the reconciliation of religion and science. In his lectures and writings he stood for the restoration of theology, as a science of religion, to its true philosophical position in a university system of culture, as distinguished from the clerical or sectarian system of education, and the placing of philosophy as an umpire between science and religion as embracing without invading their distinct provinces. This view was set forth in Religion and Science in their Relation to Philosophy (New York, 1875). The final philosophy, or science of sciences to come, is to be reached inductively from the collective intelligence of men working through successive generations, Philosophia Ultima (Philadelphia, 1861; rev. and enlarged ed., Vol. i., Historical and Critical Introduction on the Final Philosophy as Issuing from the Harmony of Science and Religion; Vol. ii., History of the Sciences and the Logic of the Sciences; Vol. iii., Scientific Problems of Religion and the Christian Evidences of the Physical and Psychical Sciences, New York, 1905). As a Presbyterian he was an earnest advocate of the restoration of the Presbyterian prayer book of 1661 for optional use by ministers and congregations, and published The Book of Common Prayer as Amended by the Presbyterian Divines (Philadelphia, 1864), with an appendix entitled Liturgia Expurgate (1864). His irenicism also contemplated a church unity on a liturgical basis, looking toward an ultimate organic reunion of Presbyterianism, Congregationalism, and Episcopalianism in what he termed the American Protestant Catholic Church. His writings on this theme created intense interest: Essays on Christian Unity (1885) ; The Historic Episcopate (New York, 1894); The United Church of the United States (1895); and Church Unity (1896). In 1898 he took orders in the Protestant Episcopal Church.
SHINAR.See BABYLONIA, I.
SHINTO. See JAPAN, II., 1.
SHIPLEY, ORBY: Roman Catholic; b. at Twyford House (9 m. n.e. of Southampton) July 1, 1832. He received his education at Jesus College, Cambridge (B.A., 1854; M.A., 1857); entered the ministry of the Church of England, in
398 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA Sherlock
6hnehan which he remained until 1878, when he was received
into the Roman Catholic Church. He has been a
prolific literary worker, being especially interested in
devotional literature and in religious poetry. Thus
he has edited Luis of Granada's Counsels on Holiness
of Life (London, 1862); J. B. E. Avrillon's Euehar
istie Meditations for a Month (1862) and Avrillon on
the Holy Spirit (1866); D. Bourdaloue's Spiritual
Exercises (1868); A. de Guevara's Mysteries of
Mount Calvary (1868); A. Stafford's Life of the
Blessed Virgin (1869); Ignatius of Loyola's Spiri
tual Exercises (1870); and T. Carre's Sweet Thoughts
of Jesus and Mary (1889). Of liturgical works he
has edited, among others, Eucharistic Litanies, from
Ancient Sources (1860), The Daily Sacrifice (1861),
and The Divine Liturgy (1863), combining these in
one (1868); The Liturgies of 164.9 and 1662 (1868);
and The Ritual of the Altar (1870). In religious poet
ry he has edited Lyra Eucharistica (1863); Lyra
Messianica (1864); Lyra Mystica (1865); Annus
Sanctus (1884); and Carmina Mariana (2 vols.,
1893 1902). In the way of collections of essays he
has put forth The Church and the World (3 vols.,
1866 68); Tracts for the Day (1867); A Glossary of
copal (South); b. in Stokes County, N. C., Jan. 15,
1819; d. at his home in Marlboro County, S. C., near
Cheraw, June 27, 1887. He was graduated from
the University of North Carolina, 1840; entered the
ministry, 1841; became president of Greenborough
Female College, N. C., 1847; professor of history and
French in the University of North Carolina, 1849;
president of W offord College, Spartanburg Court
House, S. C., 1859; professor of exegetical and
Biblical theology in Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tenn., 1874; and dean of the theological faculty, and
vice chancellor of the university, 1882. He origi
nated the policy of Biblical chairs for teaching the
Bible to the whole body of students in all Methodist
institutions of learning, and was one of the first
advocates of Biblical institutes for the education
of preachers for the Methodist Episcopal Church
(South). He wrote The History of Methodism in
South Carolina (Nashville, 1882).
SHISHAg. See EGYPT, I. 3, § 3; JEROBOAM;
and REHOBOAM.
SHORE, THOMAS TEIGNMOUTH: Church of
England; b. at Dublin Dec. 28, 1841. He was
educated at Trinity College, Dublin (B.A., 1861),
and was ordered deacon in 1865 and ordained priest
in 1866. He was curate of St. Jude's, Chelsea (1865
1867), St. Paul's, Kensington (1867 69), and St.
Peter's, Vere Street, London (1869 70), and in
cumbent of St. Mildred's, Lee (1870 73), and of
Berkeley Chapel, Mayfair, London (1873 90).
Since 1901 he has been canon of Worcester Cathedral.
He was honorary chaplain to the Queen in 1878 81
and chaplain in ordinary in 1881 1901, and since 1901 he has been chaplain in ordinary to the king. He was religious instructor to the three daughters of King Edward VII. In theology he is a Broad churchman of the type of Maurice (whose curate he was at St. Peter's) and Kingsley. He has written Some Difculties of Belief (London, 1877); The Life of the World to Come (1878); St. George for England (1882); Worcester Cathedral (1899); and Auricular Confession and the Church of England (1899), besides preparing the volume on I Corinthians for Bishop Ellicott's Commentary (1883) and on Prayer for the series of Helps to Belief (1886), of which he is the editor.
SHORTHAND AND CHURCH HISTORY.See STENOGRAPHY.
SHOWBREAD. See TEMPLE.
SHUCKFORD, SAMUEL: Church of England; b. at Norwich about 1694; d. at London July 14, 1754. He was educated at Caius College, Cambridge (B.A., 1716; M.A., 1720); was curate of Shelton, Norfolk, 1722 46; prebendary of Canterbury, from 1738; and rector of Allhallows, Lombard Street, London. He was the author of the famous work, The Sacred and Profane History of the World Connected from the Creation of the World to the Dissolution of the Assyrian Empire at the Death of Sardanapalus, and to the Declension of the Kingdoms of Judah and Israel under the Reigns of Ahaz and Pekah (2 vols., 1727; rev. ed. by J. T. Wheeler, 2 vols., London, 1858). This was intended to supplement Humphrey Prideaux's Connection, but was finished only to the death of Joshua.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:DNB, Iii. 168, where references are given
to scattered notices.
SHUEY, shu'i, WILLIAM JOHN: United Brethren in Christ; b. at Miamisburg, O., Feb. 9, 1827. He was educated at the academy, Springfield, O.; was pastor at Lewisburg, O., 1849 51, Cincinnati, 1851 59; Dayton, O., 1860 62; presiding elder, 1862 64; and a member of the publishing house at Dayton, O., 1864 97, retiring in the last named year. In 1855 he was engaged in the planting of a mission near Freetown, Sierra Leone, on the West Coast of Africa.
SHUSHAN: The Biblical name for the place now known as Sus or Shush in southwest Persia, anciently the capital of Elam, east of Babylonia. The Septuagint form of the name is Sousa, agreeing with the ordinary name Susa, Elamitic Shushun, Assyr. Shushan. The Greeks called the country of which it is the capital Susiana, and in the time of Herodotus (Rawlinson's Herodotus, i. 679, New York, 1875) it was called Kissia. Descendants, apparently of the inhabitants of Shushan, who had been transported to Samaria by the Assyrian king, are spoken of as Susanchites (Ezra iv. 19). The city is said to have been situated either on the river Ulseus (Dan. viii. 2; cf. Pliny vi. 27) or the Choaspes or Kherka (Herodotus, v. 49). Disputes about the location with reference to these rivers would probably be solved were the canal system: of the early period well known. The Choaspes forked twenty miles above Susa, but connecting canals probably
Shushan
Sibel THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 394
ran so as to make reconcilable the variant accounts of its location. The ruins which mark the site are located in 490 48' east longitude and 320 10' north latitude.
Mention of the city possibly appears as early as c. 2400 B.c. under the name Sas, 3isa, or Susun (probably meaning " the old " city, which suggests that it was already a place of considerable antiquity). In 2275 (if the report of Asshurbanipal be accepted) its king Kudur nanhundi invaded Babylon and carried away from Erech a statue of the goddess Nana (Ishtar; see BABYLONIA, VI., 1, 1 1). In the period of their era of conquests the Assyrians repeatedly invaded Elam, and about 640 Asshurbanipal captured the city, recovered the image which (as he says) was carried away 1,635 years earlier, removed an immense treasure, and transplanted some of the people to Samaria. Under the Persian rule it became the winter residence, perhaps the chief capital, of the Achmmenides (cf. Xenophon, Cyropadia, VIII., vi. 22; Herodotus, iii. 30, 65, 70). The plot of the book of Esther is laid there in this period, and the story implies the presence of large numbers of Jews. Alexander took the city in 330, and is said to have found gold and silver amounting in value to sixty million dollars, together with great treasures in art, including the Praxitelean bronze statues of Harmodius and Aristogiton, liberators of Athens. Under the SeleucidEe (q.v.) the city lost importance, which it regained to some extent during the later reigns of the Arsacidae down to 226 A.D. Then it declined, and was taken by the Mohammedans in 640. It practically disappeared from history after this and was heard of only at intervals.
The era of exploration was opened by W. K. Loftus in 1852, when trenches were dug, trilingual inscriptions of Artaxerxes Mnemon found at the base of certain columns bearing the names of three kings named Artaxerxes, and of Darius, as well as the divine names Ahuramazda, Anaitis, and Mithra. Marcel Dieulafoy in 1885 was enabled to reopen excavations there through the aid of a French physician at the Persian court and under the protection of the French government. This series of exploration resulted in the uncovering of part of the palace and other structures, and in settling the topographical details of the city. Other results were the recovery of features of art and architecture of great beauty and uniqueness, including the pillars with capitals of bulls' heads, three great porticoes and the hall of columns, the frieze of lions, and that of archers now in the Louvre. The still later exploration under J. de Morgan resulted (1901 02) in the discovery of the now famous Code of Hammurabi (see HAMMURABI AND HIS CODE).
BIBLTOGRAPHY: w. K. Loftus, Travels and Researches in Chaldea and Susiana, pp. 343 sqq., London and New .York, 1857; F. Delitzsch, Wo lag das ParadiesP Leipsic. 1881; Mme. Jane Dieulafoy, La Perae, la Chald€e, et is Suaiane, Paris, 1887; M. Dieulafoy, L'Art antique de la Perse. Paris, 1889; idem, L'Acropole de la Suse, ib. 1890; J. F. MeCurdy, History, Prophecy and the Monuments, i. 125 128, ii. 371 372. 385, New York, 1898; J. de Morgan, D,Iepation en Perse, vol. ii., Paris, 1901; B. T. Evetts, New Light on the Bible and the Holy Land, chap. ix., New York, n. d.; and Rawlinson's Herodotua (consult the Index).
SIAM AND LAOS:The kingdom of Siam includes an irregular stretch of territory in southeastern Asia, bounded by British Burma on the west, the French colonies of Cambodia, Anam, and Tonking on the northeast, and extending through more than half of the Malay peninsula to the south. The area is estimated at about 195,000 square miles, and the general physical features of the country include a rough upland in the north and two river valleys between high mountain ranges extending toward the south. The rainfall is abundant, and in their lower portions the rivers traverse immense alluvial plains which are to a considerable degree overflowed during a portion of the year, resulting in great fertility of the soil. The streams are only measurably navigable inasmuch as they are frequently broken by rapids. The climate is tropical, though less torrid than that of South India, and the year is divided into two seasons of about equal length, the rainy season extending from May to October, and the dry season covering the rest of the year.
The population is estimated at about 4,686,846, and belongs chiefly to the Shan race, about 1,000,000 being Chinese, Burmese, and others. The Shan population again is divided between the Siamese, occupying the southern portion of the kingdom, and the Laos, who are found in the north or hill country. The Siamese are the more polished and agreeable in manners, the Laos the more uncultured, but more sturdy and virile. The government is an absolute monarchy, although under the late king, Chulalongkorn, it became noted for its liberality and sympathy with aggressive modern improvements. Like other Asiatic countries, Siam has suffered from the aggression of European powers. The western coast was surrendered to the Burmese and subsequently to England. The French colonies on the east encroached gradually upon the territory of the Mekong river until it became a question whether the kingdom would continue intact. At present the entire kingdom is practically divided up between England and France, in so called spheres of influence, England holding the general control of the northern Malay peninsula of the territory bordering on Burma, while France claims a corresponding influence along the whole valley of the Mekong.
There are few cities of importance, Bankok, the capital, being practically the only one widely known. The dominant religion, especially in the southern section, is Buddhism, and it is claimed to be the purest form of that faith except perhaps that in Ceylon. In no other country is it so completely identified with the life of the people. There is scarcely a family but is represented by at least one member in the priesthood, and not only its ceremonies but the social life and pleasures are under the control or auspices of the temples, while monasteries and pagodas with their vast number of priests are in evidence on every hand. In a measurable degree throughout Siam proper, and especially in the hill country to the north, demon worship is prevalent, a form of the Shamanism which is found throughout Asia and Africa. While brutal, especially in its terrifying power and in its relation to disease, it is not as fatal to vigor of life and thought as the Buddhism of the southern portion, and a more easily overcome
395
RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA by Christian influences, particularly as they approach it through the medium of medical aid.
The first missionary effort in Siam was in 1828,
when Dr. Karl Friedrich August Gutzlaff (d.1851) of
the Netherlands Missionary Society visited Bankok
with the special purpose of seeking an entrance to
China. Through his representations, David Abeel of
the American Board came to that city in 1830, but
the first effective work was done by Dr. Daniel
Beach Bradley, Rev. Jesse Caswell of the American
Board, and Rev. William Dean of the American
Baptist Missionary Union. Dean's work, chiefly
among the Chinese, Dr. Bradley's medical work, and
paaticularly t4 e influence of Mr. Caswell, who was
appointed by the king as tutor of his son, the late
king of Siam, laid the foundation of the successful
labors of succeeding years when the Presbyterian
Board in 1848 entered the country and the American
Board withdrew, preferring to put its strength into
other fields. The early work was not productive of
specific results, and it was not until 1859 that the
first convert was baptized. Three years later a new
station was opened to the south at Petchaburee,
and shortly after a tour of exploration into the Laos
states resulted in the establishment, in 1867, of
mission work at Chieng Mai on the river MePing,
about 500 miles north of Bankok. From the be
ginning this work gave promise of great success, and
numerous stations have been established. Medical.
work was begun in 1875, and three years later a
boarding school for girls was opened, and one for
boys in 1888. As the work among the distinctively
Siamese Laos tribes has progressed, there has come
to be a feeling that through them the Shan tribes to
the east and north might probably be reached.
Under French law no missionary effort can be car
ried on in the province of Tonking, but the members
of the Laos churches, as they cross the border for
business, are constantly coming into relations with
the people and are carrying the Gospel in much
the same way as the Christians did in the first cen
tury. Of late years the work in Siam proper has
taken a new start and has met with greater success.
A considerable amount of shore work is done by
means of a vessel that touches at the different ports
on the extended coast line, and from these points
into the interior the influences are rapidly spreading.
One peculiarity of the mission work in this kingdom is that it is entirely under the care of one organization, the Board of Foreign Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. There is thus not only a unity which is lacking in other fields, but a freedom from intervention and disintegrating influences. The statistics of the work for the year 1908 09 are as follows: Siam: Stations, 7; missionaries, 37 (10 ordained, 6 medical, 1 lay, 14 married women, 6 single women); native helpers, 41 (1 ordained preacher); churches, 9; communicants, 580; schools, 8; pupils, 660; in Sundayschools, 805; contributions, $24,225. Laos: stations, 5; missionaries, 47 (I6 ordained, 7 medical, 20 married women, 4 single women); native helpers, 92 (5 ordained preachers); churches, 18; communicants, 3,494 ; schools, 27; pupils, 781; in Sundayschools, 2,843; contributions (incomplete), $11,369. Total: stations, 12; missionaries, 84; native helpers,
Modern exploration shows that the Shan race has spread in China in the province of Yunnan northward as far as 25a north latitude, westward as far as the Selwin River, and as far eastward as the province of Kwantung. So that over an area of 400,000 square miles the predominant element of the population is Laos. This involves the fact that on a most conservative estimate five millions of Laos are living in southern China, and raises the total of the race to about twelve millions using the Laos language. This fact is of importance for the diffusion of Christian literature in that tongue.
BIBmooRAPHY: E. Young, The Kingdom of the Yellow Robe: Sketches of the domestic and religious Rites of the Siamese, London, 1898; P. A. Thompson, Lotus Land; Account of the Country and the People of Southern Siam, ib. 1908; C. Gutzlaff, Ausfahrlicher Bericht von winem dreiiahripen Aufenthalt in Siam, Elberfeld, 1838; J. B. Pallegoix, Description du royaume Thai ou Siam, 2 vols., Paris, 1854,; Sir John Bowring, Kingdom and People of Siam, 2 vols., London, 1857; Mrs. F. R. Feudge, Eastern Side; or, missionary Life in Siam, Philadelphia, 1871; B. Taylor, Siam, New York, 1881; Siam and Laos as Seen by our American Missionaries, Philadelphia, 1884; A. R. Colquhoun,Among the Shane, London, 1885; Miss M. L. Cort, Siam, New York, 1886; H. W. Smith, Five Years in Siam, 1891 98, 2 vole., ib. 1898; J. G. D. Campbell, Siam in the 80th Century, London, 1902; Lillian J. Curtis, Laos of North Siam, Philadelphia, 1903; A. Wright and O. T. Breakspear, Twentieth Century Impressions of Siam. Its History, People, Commerce, Industries and Resources, London, 1909; J. H. Freeman, An Oriental Land of the Free; or Life and Mission Work among the Laos of Siam, Burma, China, and Indo China, Philadelphia, 1910; P. A. Thompson, Siam; an Account of the Country and the Pea pie, Boston, 1911.
SIBBES, sibz (SIBBS, SIBS), RICHARD:Puritan; b. at Tostock (33 m. e. of Cambridge), Suffolk, 1577; d. at Gray's Inn, London, July 5, 1635. He was successively student and fellow of St. John's College, and lecturer of Trinity Church, Cambridge (B.A., 1599; M.A., 1602; B.D., 1610); preacher of Gray's Inn, London, 1617 26; master of Catharine Hall, Cambridge, from 1626; and perpetual curate of Holy Trinity, Cambridge, from 1633. His bestknown works are, The Bruised Reede and Smoaking Flax (London, 1630), to which Richard Baxter owed his conversion; The Soul's ConLdict (1635); The Returning Backslider (1639); and A Learned Commentary upon. the First Chapter of the Second Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians, ed. Thomas Manton (1655). His literary activity was, however, much more extensive than this, thirty three titles of books and sermons being known. His Complete Works were published with memoir by A. B. Grosart (6 vole., 1862 63).
BiBrroaRAPHY: Besides the principal memoir by Grosart, the reader may consult the Life by E. Middleton, in 9th ed. of The Bruised Reeds, London, 1808; that in a new ed. of Sibbes's Divine Meditations, Newport, 1799 (ed. G. Burder); and one by S. Clarke in The Soules Conflict, Glasgow, 1768. Also: T. Fuller, Hist. of the Worthies of England, ed. J. Fuller, 4 parts, London, 1662; Samuel Clark, Lives of Thirty two English Divines, 3d ed., ib. 1670; B. Brooke, Lives of the Puritans, ii. 416 sqq., ib. 1813: DNB, Iii. 182 184.
SIBEL, sai'bel, gASPAR: Dutch Reformed; b. at Unterbarmen (a part of Barmen, 26 m. n. of
Sibyl
Sibyl THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 896
Cologne) June 9, 1590; d. at Deventer, Holland, Jan. 1, 1658. He was educated at Herborn, Siegen, and Leyden, and, after preaching to various congregations, was called, in 1609, to be minister of the churches of Randerath and Geilenkirchen in the principality of Jiilich, the oversight of the church at Linnich soon being added to his duties. Sibel met with extraordinary success at Randerath, where he labored exposed to considerable personal peril from the attempts of Roman Catholics to regain their position. He was a delegate to the Reformed convention at Diiren (Aug. 17, 1610) to organize the first general synod of the lower Rhine (see REFORMED [DUTCH] CHURCH); and later was deputized to attend the other synods. He accepted in 1611 a call to Jillich, where, in addition to his regular duties, he had to minister to the Protestants in the surrounding district, while during an outbreak of the plague he proved himself a true pastor in the face of death. In 1617, on his return from a journey to Holland, he accepted a call to Deventer, especially as he realized that the strife then raging in J(ilichCleve Berg was but the prelude to the long civil war which was to devastate Germany. At Deventer he found himself in his element, and his influence quickly spread beyond the limits of the city. He took part in the preparations for the Synod of Dort, to which he was a deputy; and at his instance the estates of Overyssel approved the canons of Dort and rejected the five Arminian articles. Still more important was his activity as a member of the committee for the new Dutch translation of the Bible proposed by the Synod of Dort. As one of the revisers, he was chosen vice secretary of the board of revision, which sat for eleven months in Leyden, and for three years he essentially furthered the work. He was active also in providing capable teachers for the school in Deventer, but at the same time maintained close relations with his native country, inducing the states general to threaten reprisals against any interference with Protestant services in Jiilich Berg, and otherwise aiding his coreligionists.
In 1647 a stroke of apoplexy forced Sibel to retire from active life. As a preacher he enjoyed high reputation, being known as the Chrysostom of his locality, and his sermons up to 1644 were collected under the title of Caspari Sibelii opera theologica (5 parts, Amsterdam, 1644). In homiletics, while he paid due regard to form and arrangement, he was especially concerned with the subject matter. He was also much given to exposition of a passage in a sermon series. Among his other works, special mention may be made of his BTeditationes catechetico; (4 parts, Amsterdam, 1646 50) and of his autobiographical Historica narratio de curriculo totius vitro et peregrinationis mere, of which two manuscript volumes are preserved in the Deventer library (the part before 1609 ed. L. Scheibe, in Festschrift zur Feier des dreihundertjdhrigen Bestehens der . . . lateinischen Sehule zu Elberfeld, Elberfeld, 1893). (EDUARD SIMONS.)
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Besides the autobiographical Hiatorica narratio, ut sup., consult ADB, vol. xxxiv.: ZeUschrift des Berg. Geschichtsvereins, vol. xxviii (by W. Harless. on Elberfelder Kirchen) and also vol. iv (by Bouterwek, on Dye 'Reformation in Wupperthal).