Alexander Duff and the theological and philosophical background to the General Assembly's Mission in Calcutta to 1840
dc.contributor.author
Maxwell, Ian Douglas
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T12:44:46Z
dc.date.available
2018-05-22T12:44:46Z
dc.date.issued
1995
dc.description.abstract
This thesis sets out to explore the theological and philosophical background to the
General Assembly's Institution in Calcutta. This is done by means of a study of the
education and early career of Alexander Duff, the Mission's first superintendent, and an
examination of the institutions with which Duff was involved.
en
dc.description.abstract
Earlier historical study by Duffs Victorian biographers suggested that the
Evangelical Revival was a significant influence on Duffs early religious formation. Duffs
involvement in the Theological and Student Missionary Societies at the university has
already been identified by several historians as important for his later mission interests. The
powerful influence of Thomas Chalmers, Professor of Moral Philosophy at the United
Colleges has also been noted. This thesis argues, however, that the most important elements
of Duffs later approach to mission in Calcutta have their origins in the educational
traditions of St.Andrews University. From the Humanities course there Duff imbibed a
Baconian theory of modernity. And the rhetorical skills to which he was introduced in
Professor James Hunter's class were to be a characteristic of his later career.
en
dc.description.abstract
Alexander Duffs main theological training was at St.Mary's, the divinity college
of St.Andrews University. This training, the thesis argues, was in the then dominant tradition
of rational Calvinism. The emphasis of this tradition was essentially on the importance of
rationality for Christian belief, chiefly expressed in an assured confidence in the
potentialities of reason and the rational progress of history.
en
dc.description.abstract
The argument of the thesis continues by tracing the contours of the wide ranging
debate within Scottish presbyterianism on the progress of civil society and the key role of
rationality in advancing that progress. Many of the assumptions and expectations underlying
the establishment of the Institution in Calcutta first emerged in this debate.
en
dc.description.abstract
Much valuable research has already been completed into the early history of the
Institution in Calcutta. This enquiry builds on that earlier research in order to explore further
Alexander Duffs use of apologetic theology in the renowned lectures to the students of
Hindu College. The argument of this study is that Duffs use of this theology typifies the
emphases of the rational Calvinist tradition. The enquiry goes on to record the mounting
financial pressures on the Institution which led Duff to seek public funding from Scotland.
en
dc.description.abstract
al pressures on the Institution which led Duff to seek public funding from Scotland.
The necessary financial support for the Mission, however, was contingent on public
perceptions of the work of the Institution. Within Scottish presbyterianism the dominant
paradigm of missions was traditionally evangelical and biblicist. Alexander Duff, however,
iv
was supremely successful in displacing this model by a series of Assembly addresses,
speeches, pamphlets and books, India and Indian Missions in particular. He was,
furthermore, able to consolidate these gains by further speeches on a tour of the presbyteries
of Scotland. He did this to such effect that what was essentially the rational Calvinist
approach to missions became part of the normal discourse of Scottish presbyterianism until
at least the second half of the nineteenth century.
en
dc.description.abstract
These themes are drawn together in a conclusion which enables a more precise
assessment of the contribution of the Scottish Enlightenment to presbyterian missions. The
conclusions of recent historical study are corroborated. Alexander Duff was not the pioneer
of missionary education that previous generations understood him to be. His achievement
lies in other areas. In Missions - the Chief End of the Church, for example, he made a
highly original contribution towards an understanding of the missionary nature of the
Church. Within the period in question, however, his main achievement was to have shifted
the public perception of missions in Scotland towards a modern theory of rationally
motivated change. Indeed, as a general conclusion this study argues that Duffs
promulgation of a Baconian emphasis on modernity based on an older Enlightenment theory
of the emergence of civil society was prototypical. As such, it was the ancestor of those
later nineteenth century mission theories of development which aimed at the displacement
of traditional, pre-industrial culture by rational Westernized society.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/30455
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 19
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
en
dc.title
Alexander Duff and the theological and philosophical background to the General Assembly's Mission in Calcutta to 1840
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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