SMITH, SAMUEL FRANCIS: American Baptist; b. in Boston, Mass., Oct. 21, 1808; d. there Nov. 16, 1895. He attended the Boston Latin School 1820 25; was graduated from Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., 1829, and from Andover Theological Seminary, Mass., 1832; was pastor of the First Baptist Church, Waterville, Me., 1834 42, and during the tame period professor of modern languages in Waterville College; pastor of the First Baptist Church, Newton, Mass., 1842• 54; and editor of The Christian Review, Boston, 1842 48, and of the publications of the American Baptist Missionary Union, 1854 69. Though his fame rests upon the authorship of the hymn " My country, 'tie of thee " (written at Andover, Mats., in Feb., 1832, while a student in the theological seminary), and the missionary hymn " The morning light is breaking " (written in the same year and place), he wrote many other hymns. Most of the pieces included in Lowell Mason's Juvenile Lyre (Boston, 1832), the first book of children's music, were his translations from the German. He edited Lyric Gems,
being selections of poetry, with several original pieces (Boston, 1843); and in collaboration with Baron Stow The Psalmist (1843) which contained twentyeeven of his own hymns, and is the most creditable and influential of the American Baptist collections of its period; also Rock of Ages, being selections of poetry, with some original pieces (1866); and he was the author of Life of Rev. Joseph Grafton (1848);
Missionary Sketches (1879); History of Neurton, Mass., Toran and City from its Earliest Settlement to the Present Time (1880); and Rambles in Miasionr fields (1884).
B:atsoaasrar: 8. W. Duffield, Erpliah $ymne. P• 380, New York, 1888; Julian, $ymROlopy, pp. 1083 84.
SMITH, SAMUEL STANHOPE: American Presbyterian; b. at Pequea, Lancaster County, Pa., Mar. 16, 1750; d. at Princeton, N. J., Aug. 21, 1819. He was graduated from Princeton College, 1767;
483 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA Smi~
was tutor there, 1770 73; first president of Hampden Sidney College, 1775; became professor of moral philosophy at Princeton College in 1779; and was president, 1794 1812. In 1786 he was a member of the committee which drew up the Form of Government of the Presbyterian Church. He had a high reputation as a pulpit orator and college president. He published Sermons (Newark, N. J., 1799); Lectures on the Evidences of the Christian Religion, (Philadelphia, 1809); Lectures . . . on . . . Moral and Political Philosophy (Trenton, N. J., 1812); Principles of Natural and Revealed Religion (New Brunswick, N. J., 1815); (posthumous) Sermons, with Memoir (2 vols., Philadelphia, 1821).
BmmoaRAPay: W. B. Sprague, Annals of the American Pulpit, iii. 335 345, New York, 1858; 1. W. Riley, American Philosophy; the early Schools, pp. 497 509, ib. 1907.
SMITH, SYDNEY: Church of England; b. at Woodford (7 m. n.e. of Charing Cross), London, June 3, 1771; d. in London Feb. 22, 1845. He was graduated from Oxford, 1792; took holy orders, 1794; was minister of Charlotte Episcopal chapel, Edinburgh, 1797 1802; canon of Bristol, 1828; and canon residentiary of St. Paul's, 1831. He was one of the most famous of English wits; but he was also a forcible, earnest preacher, and a sagacious critic and reviewer. He was the real founder of The Edinburgh Review (1802 sqq.) and wrote for it some eighty articles which are among the best that appeared during the first twenty five years of its publication. Besides his Sermons (2 vols., London, 1809) he published Peter Plumley's Letters, and Selected Essays (1886), which did much to promote Roman Catholic emancipation; Sermons Preached at St. Paul's Cathedral, The Foundling Hospital, and Several Churches in. London, together with Others Addressed to a Country Congregation (1846); Elementary Sketches of Moral Philosophy (1850); and in 1848 appeared the fourth edition of his works in 3 vols.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Lady Holland (his daughter), A Memoir of the Rev. Sydney Smith. With a Selection from his Letters, ed. Mrs. Austin, London, 1855; S. J. Reid, Sketch of the Life and Times of . . . Sydney Smith, ib. 1884; A. Chevrillon, Sydney Smith et la renaissance des Wee lib&ales en Anpleterre au xix. sQcle, Paris, 1894; DNB, liii. 119 123.
SMITH, THOMAS: Free Church of Scotland; b. at Symington (31 m. s.e. of Glasgow), Lanarkshire, July 8, 1817; d. at Edinburgh May 23, 1906. He was educated at the University of Edinburgh, and in 1839 was ordained a missionary to Calcutta. Until 1858 he was engaged chiefly in teaching in the General Assembly's Institution and after 1843, when be joined the Free Church, in the institute of the latter denomination. He was long an associate editor of the Calcutta Christian Observer, and for ten years edited the Calcutta Review. For a short time during the Mutiny he was chaplain of the Black Watch, and it is especially noteworthy that he was the first to organize the system of zenana missions in India. In 1858 he returned to Scotland; was minister of Cowgatehead Free Church, Edinburgh (1859 80); and professor of evangelistic theology in New College, Edinburgh (1880 93). He wrote Medimval Missions (Edinburgh, 1880); Anselm of Canterbury (1882); Alexander Duff (London, 1883); Memoirs of James Begg (2 vols., Edinburgh, 1885 88); and Euclid, his Life and System (1902); translated the
Clementine Recognitions for the Ante Nicene Fathers (Edinburgh, 1867) and G. Warneek'a Modern Missions and Culture (1883); and edited the letters of S. Rutherford (1881).
SMITH, WILLIAM ANDREW: Methodist Episcopal, South; b. at Fredericksburg, Va., Nov. 29, 1802; d. at Richmond, Va., Mar. 1, 1870. He professed religion at seventeen years of age, prepared for the ministry, and was admitted into the Virginia Conference in 1825. In 1833 he was appointed agent for Randolph Macon College, then in its infancy. He then filled many of the most important stations in his conference until 1846, when he was called to the presidency of Randolph Macon College. This position, as well as that of professor of mental and moral philosophy, he filled with great acceptability and efficiency until 1866, when he moved to St. Louis, Mo. After serving here as pastor of Centenary Church for two years, he became president of Central College, located at Fayette in that state. At the eventful general conference of 1844 he took a specially prominent part; and in the celebrated appeal of Rev. Francis A. Harding, and in the extrarjudicial trial of Bishop James Osgood Andrew, he won a national reputation for deliberative and forensic eloquence and for rare powers of argument and debate. He was a hard student and an earnest thinker. The vigor and clearness of his intellect, his candor, independence, energy, and unquestioned ability, caused him to stand in the front rank of the leading minds in the MethodistEpiscopal Church, South. His Philosophy and Practice of Slavery (Nashville, 1857) attracted wide attention as one of the ablest presentations of the southern side of the slavery question ever published. BIBLIOGRAPHY: A biographical sketch by Bishop J. C. Granbery is embodied in the Minutes of the denomination for 1870.
SMITH, WILLIAM ROBERTSON: English crit
ical theologian and Semitic scholar; b. at New Farm,
near Keig (22 m. n.w. of Aberdeen), Aberdeenddre,
Nov. 8, 1846; d. at Cambridge Mar. 31, 1894."Tie
was educated by his father and at Aberdeen
University (1861 65), New College (the
Life. Free Church theological hall), Edin
burgh (1866 70), and the universities of
Bonn and Gbttingen (summers of 1867 and 1869),
while in 1868 70 he was also assistant to the pro
fessor of natural philosophy in Edinburgh Univer
sity. In 1870 he was appointed professor of oriental
languages and Old Testament exegesis in the Free
Church College at Aberdeen, and five years later he
became a member of the Old Testament revision
company. It was during this period that a crisis
occurred in Smith's career when he was invited to
prepare articles on Old Testament criticism for the
ninth edition of the Encyclopwdia Britannica. The
very first articles (" Angel " and " Bible ") aroused
a storm of protest, and on the unfavorable report of
an investigating committee, in 1877, Smith demand
ed formal trial. His activity as a teacher practically
ended in the following year; his entire series of
articles for the encyclopedia were held to impair
belief in the inspiration of the Scriptures; and in
1881 he was suspended from his professorship. He
had meanwhile delivered at Edinburgh and Glasgow
Smith THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 484
6nethen
two series of lectures which were published as The
Old Testament in. the Jewish Church (Edinburgh,
1881) and The Prophets of Israel (1882). In 1881 he
was invited to become editor in chief of the Ency
dopmedia Britannica, to which he had continued to
contribute, and for which, besides his editorial
duties, he now prepared a series of additional ar
ticles. He did not, however, permit his Semitic
studies to languish, but spent the winter of 1879,80
in Egypt (also visiting Syria and Palestine) and the
following year in Egypt and Arabia. In 1883 he was
appointed to the Lord Almoner's professorship of
Arabic at Cambridge, where he was elected a fellow
of Christ's College in 1885, and in 1886,89 he was
chief librarian of the university. In the latter year
he was chosen Adams professor of Arabic, a dignity
which he held until his death: In 1888 91 he had
been Burnett Lecturer in Aberdeen, the three courses
being the religious institutions of the Semites, their
religious beliefs, and the historic significance and in
fluence of their religion. Failing health, however,
forbade him to publish more than the first series,
Lectures on the Religion. of the Semites: Fundamental
Institutions (Edinburgh, 1889).
Smith maintained that Semitic religious concepts
were common to all primitive peoples, and that these
concepts were to be deduced from the data of known
popular religions, the outworking of this theory be
ing best seen in his Kinship and Marriage in Early
Arabia (Cambridge, 1885) and in his Religion of the
Semites. It was, indeed, in these two books that his
scientific work reached its acme. His study of
primitive Arab life, both as recorded in literature and
as observed at the present day, led him to identify
it, in all essentials, with that of the
Theory early Semites as a whole. As the basis
of Semitic of the most primitive Arab social organ
Religion. ization he assumed matriarchy, with
exogamous polyandry and a totemistic
clan system, and for this he sought parallels among
the Hebrews and Arameans. His underlying
ethnological theories, however, need much investi
gation and revision, and his comparative method,
operating with analogies, often gives his hypotheses
only the support of phenomena first recorded
at a late period. Nevertheless, the Kinship and
Marriage represents an amalgamation of scattered
data into a system of culture history never be
fore attained in Semitic science. In the Religion of
the Semites Smith sought to ascertain the original
significance of the earliest religious institutions,
maintaining that the history of ancient religions
must be based essentially on ritual, sacrifice, and
religious law, and thus seeking to prove that religion
was the common possession of the prehistoric Semitic
race. Here again, however, the precautions already
noted must be observed. He held that the conserver
of religion was the tribe united by the consanguinity
of all its members, personality being merged in com
munism. At this period there is an animism which
makes little distinction between beings and things.
The tribal god is considered the physical source of the
tribe, and thus a member of it. To the earlier matri
archy corresponds a mother goddess, beside whom
arises a father god with the development of patri
wchy. As the tribe expands in power, the tribal god
gains prestige and is regarded as king. With the rise
of kingship comes an exaltation of law, the king often
being the source of law and being in duty bound to
safeguard it. The concept of the tribal god thus
receives an ethical content, that of justice. This
ancient trital religion was crystallized in fixed in
stitutions, particularly in sacrifice, and its cardinal
concept was " sanctuary," which Smith compared
with the Polynesian taboo and regarded as especially
affecting sacred places. Side by side with this re
ligion of the nomadic Semites Smith posited the
Baal cult of the agricultural Semitic peoples, Baal
being, according to him, essentially a fertility deity.
This double system was reflected by the Semitic
sacrifices, those to Baal being a tribute of the prod
ucts of the field, and those to the tribal god being an
animal victim which was eaten (its blood being
devoted to the deity), thus renewing and strength
ening, by eating the same sacrificial victim, the blood
kinship within the tribe as well as between the tribe
and the tribal deity. This kinship, however, could
be secured only if the sacrificial victim was itself
akin to the tribe, so that the victim was the totem
of the tribe, which might be killed only for the sacri
ficial mead. From such a meal Smith deduced his
theory of sacrifice. Gradually the communal meal
and the offering became blended, and the sacrifice
even became (notably in India) a means of actually
controlling the deity. On the other hand, his theory
of the basis of human sacrifice is untenable, nor can
all the phenomena of Semitic religion be derived, as
he fancied, from a single source; while it is also
problematical whether all the concepts of a primitive
religion can be coordinated in a fixed system. ..~
(RUDOLF STfE.)
Bxsraoan"a:: DNB, liii. 160 162. in the British Museum Catalogue, ax., are entries of pamphlets concerning the trial and the views of Smith, but they are controversial and add little to knowledge of his life. Consult on the trial H. W. Moncrieff, Hist. of the Case of Professor W. Robertson Bmith, Edinburgh, 1881; H. F. Henderson, The Religious Comroroeraies of Scotland, chap. xi., Edinburgh, 1905.
SMYRNA. See ASIA MINOR, IV.
SMYTH smaith (SMITH), JOHN: English Sepa
ratist, generally considered the founder of the General Baptists; d. in Amsterdam Aug., 1612 (buried Sept. 1). He studied at Christ's College (he is identified by the principal authorities with a John Smith
who was graduated B.A., 1576; M.A., 1579). He was cited before the university authorities for preaching on Ash Wednesday, 1586, in favor of a strict observance of the Sabbath; was preacher or lecturer at Lincoln, 1603 05; after nine months of consideration and perplexity he left the Church of
England, and became pastor of a Separatist congregation in Gainsborough,1606. For further notice of his work see BAmsTS, I., 1.
Smyth's publications were A True Description out of the Word of God of the Visible Church (1589; several
times reprinted); The Bright Morning Star, or the Resolution and Exposition of the twenty second Psalm, Preached publicly ire Four Sermons at Lincoln (Cambridge, 1603; the only known copy is in the library of Emmanuel College, Cambridge); A Pattern of True Prayer, a Learned and Comfmrtahle Exposition
466 RELIGIOUS ENCYCLOPEDIA Emit'
$nethen
or Commentary upon the Lord's Prayer (London, 1605
and 1624; apparently the first edition has disap
peared); The Differences of the Churches of the
Separation (n.p., n.d., probably 1608 or 1609; it
called forth a reply from Ainsworth, 1609); Par
allels, Censures, Observations (1609; a reply to
Richard Bernard and Ainsworth); The Character
of the Beast (1609; in controversy with Richard
Clifton on infant baptism); A Reply to Mr. R. Clif
ton's 'Christian Plea' (1610). The library of York
Minster possesses a unique tract which contains
(1) An Epistle to the Reader by T. P. [Thomas Pig
gott]; (2) The Last Book of John Smith, Called the
Retraction of his Errors and the Confirmation of the
Truth; (3) Propositions and Conclusions concerning
True Christian Religion, Containing a Confession of
Faith of Certain English People, Luring at Amster
dam, in 100 Propositions; (4) The Life and Death
of John Smith (reprinted in Robert Barclay's Inner
Life of the Religious Societies of the Commonwealth,
pp. i. xvi., following p. 117, London, 1876).
BtnLxoaaAPHY: Edward Arber, The Story o) the Pilgrim
Fathers, pp. 131 140, London, 1897; T. Crosby, Mist. of
the English Baptists, i. 91 99, 265 271, ib.1738; J. Ivimey,
Hist. of the English Baptiste, i. 113 122, ii. 503 505, ib.
181130; J. Clifford, The English Baptists, app. x., xm.,
London, 1881; H. M. Dexter, The True Story of John
Smyth, the Se baptist, Boston, 1881; A. H. Newman,
Hist. of Antipedobaptism, pp. 378 393, Philadelphia, 1897;
DNB, liii. 88 70.
SMYTH, JOHN PATERSON: Church of Ireland;
b. at Killarney (44 m. w.n.w. of Cork), County Kerry,
Feb. 2, 1852. He was educated at Trinity College,
Dublin (B.A., 1880), and was ordered deacon in 1880
and advanced to the priesthood in the following
year. He was curate of Lisburn Cathedral (1881
1883), and of Harold's Cross, Dublin (1883 88); and
incumbent of Christ Church, Kingstown, until 1902.
Since 1902 he has been vicar of St. Ann's, Dublin.
He has also been chaplain to the Lord Lieutenant
of Ireland since 1889 and professor of pastoral the
ology in Trinity College since 1902. He has written
How we got our Bible (London, 1886; 18th ed., 1906) ;
The Old Documents and the New Bible (1890); How
God Inspired the Bible (1892); The Divine Library:
Suggestions how to Read the Bible (1896); The Bible
for the Young (3 vols., comprising Genesis, Exodus,
Joshua, Judges, Prophets and Kings, and Matthew;
1901 08); The Preacher and his Sermon (1907); and
Gospel of the Hereafter (1910).
SMYTH, SAMUEL PHILLIPS NEWMAN: Con
gregationalist; b. at Brunswick, Me., June 25,
1843. He was educated at Bowdoin College (A.B.,
1863) and at Andover Theological Seminary
(graduated, 1867). In 1863 he was an assistant
teacher in the Naval Academy at Newport, R. I.,
and in 1864 65 was lieutenant in the Sixteenth Maine
Volunteers. From 1867 to 1870 he was acting
pastor of the Harrison Street Chapel (now Pilgrim
Church), Providence, R. I., after which he was
pastor of the First Congregational Church, Bangor,
Me. (1870 75), and of the First Presbyterian
Church, Quincy, Ill. (1876,82). In 1882 he be
came pastor of the First Congregational Church,
New Haven, Conn., becoming pastor emeritus
in 1908. He has written The Religious Feeling:
A Study for Faith (New York, 1877); Old Faiths
X. 30
in Net, Lights (1879); The Orthodox Theology of To day (1881); The Reality of Faith (sermons; 1884); Christian Facts and Forces (1887); Personal Creeds (1890); Christian Ethics (1892); The Place of Death in Evolution (1897); Through Science to Faith (1902); Light in Dark Places (1903); Passing Protestantism and Coming Catholicism (1908); and Modern Belief in Immortality (1910).
SHAPE, ANDREW: Participant in the Bangorian controversy (see HoADLY, BENJAMIN); b. at Hampton Court (13 m. s.w. of London) in 1675; d. at Windsor Castle Dec. 30, 1742. He was educated at Eton and at King's College, Cambridge (B.A., 1693; M.A., 1697; D.D., 1705); became lecturer at St. Martin's, London, and chaplain to the sixth duke of Somerset, by whom he was made rector of St. Mary at Hill and St. Andrew Hubbard in 1706; he became chaplain to Queen Anne and afterward to King George I.; then headmaster of Eton in 1711, in this period attacking Benjamin Hoadly, one of his Letters to the Bishop of Bangor (1717) passing through many editions; his part in the controversy caused the loss of the king's favor and the position of chaplain; he was made provost of King's College, Cambridge, 1719, and was vice chancellor of the university, 1723 24; became rector of Knebworth, Hertfordshire, 1737, and the same year changed to West Ildesley, Berkshire, holding this position till his death. His sermons were collected, Forty five Sermons on Several Subjects (3 vols., London, 1745); he also edited the Sermons of Dean Robert Moss (1732).
B:BLtoaasray: DNB, liii. 203, where references to scattering notices are found.
SNETHEN, NICHOLAS: Methodist Protestant; b. at Fresh Pond (now Glen Cove), Long Island, Nov. 15, 1769; d. on a journey from Cincinnati May 30, 1845. In 1794 he entered the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and served for four years in Connecticut, Vermont, and Maine; preached in Charleston, S. C., 1798 99; and during 1800 was traveling companion of Bishop Asbury (q.v.); he was secretary of the general conference of 1800, and a member of the conferences of 1804 and 1812, taking a prominent part in the measures for the limitation of the prerogatives of bishops; he retired to his farm at Longanore, Md., 1806, but in 1809 reentered the ministry, serving in Baltimore, Georgetown, and Alexandria, and acting also part of the time as chaplain of the house of representatives; in 1829 he removed to Indiana, and, when the Methodist Protestant Church (see METHODISTS, IV., 3) was organized, united with it, preaching and traveling in behalf of it till his death; he became one of the editorial staff of The Methodist Protestant in 1834; in 1836 took charge of the college of the denomination which was founded in New York City, which enterprise, however, was a failure; in 1837 he returned to the west to take charge of the Manual Labor Ministerial College started at Lawrenceburg, Ind., which also failed, and he then took up his residence in Cincinnati, where he continued to live. His principal publications were A Reply to O'Kelly's Apology (1800), and Answer to O'Kelly's Rejoinder (1801); Lectures on Preaching (1822); Essays on
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