152:, a wealthy local merchant, on July 9, 1832. At times the family wealth would be a point of conflict between Smyth and some members of his congregation, who voiced their opposition to Smyth receiving a raise in salary. Some members of the congregation also thought he preached too long. Barry Waugh argues that Smyth nevertheless had a fruitful ministry, as evidenced by the fact that at least thirty-six men from his congregation entered the ministry.
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The Name, Nature, and
Functions, of Ruling Elders: Wherein it is Shown from the Testimony of Scripture, the Fathers, and the Reformers, that Ruling Elders are not Presbyters or Bishops, and that as Representatives of the People, their Office Ought to be
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243:, while in Britain, he was seen as a supporter of slavery." Smyth was instrumental in the establishment of Zion Presbyterian Church for black people, and for this he was vilified by some Southerners. When the
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The Unity of the Human Races Proved to be the
Doctrine of Scripture, Reason, and Science. With a Review of the Present Position and Theory of Professor Agassiz
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Presbyterian. He wrote numerous books, and after his death his complete works were published in ten volumes. Smyth was especially interested in
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that elder and minister constituted the same office. Along these lines, Smyth argued that a ruling elder was not a
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suggests that he was the "most influential defender of monogenesis in the nineteenth-century United States".
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103:(June 14, 1808 – August 20, 1873) was an American Presbyterian minister. He served as minister of
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Smyth commenced pulpit supply at Second
Presbyterian Church in Charleston in 1832, and was
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The
Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600–2000
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Order in the
Offices: Essays Defining the Roles of Church Officers
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Cyclopædia of
Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
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held separate offices in the church, as opposed to the view of
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Presbyterian Church in the United States of
America ministers
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People educated at the Royal
Belfast Academical Institution
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in 1834. He married
Margaret Milligan Adger, daughter of
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A Guide to the
Complete Works of Rev. Thomas Smyth, D.D.
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Thomas and Margaret Smyth had nine children. Their son,
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Brown, Mark R. (1993). "The Forgotten Thomas Smyth".
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The Southern Presbyterian Review Digitization Project
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of Charleston from 1896 to 1903, while another son,
111:for more than 40 years, from 1832 until his death.
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235:Smyth tried to take a moderate approach to
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19:For other people named Thomas Smyth, see
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130:degree from Princeton also.
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440:Cambridge University Press
412:"A Window into the Breach"
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249:Confederate
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150:James Adger
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226:monogenism
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432:(2006).
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