Dudleian lectures
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (January 2023) |
The Dudleian lectures are a series of prestigious lectures on religion at Harvard University, where they are the oldest endowed lectureship. They were held annually and without interruption from 1755 to 1857 when they were suspended by the board of trustees "in order that the Fund, now in their judgment insufficient to support the charge of the same, may accumulate." They began again in 1888.[1] The lectures were endowed by Paul Dudley in 1750 with a sum of £133 6s 8d. Dudley specified that the topic of the lectures should rotate among four themes, so that students would hear each one before graduation:
- The principles of natural religion.
- The truths of scriptural revelation.
- "The detecting and convicting and exposing the idolatry of the Romish church, their tyranny, usurpations, damnable heresies, fatal errors, abominable superstitions, and other crying wickedness in their high places".
- "The validity of the presbyterial ordination of ministers" (specifically, in the form practiced at the time in Scotland and Geneva, and among Englishmen who opposed the episcopal ordination of the Church of England).
In accordance with these precepts, the Dudleian lecturers of the 18th century did faithfully promote the doctrines of New England's anti-authoritarian Low-Church Protestantism, and — as L.K. Gilbert argues — wedded them to principles of Enlightenment rationality by associating ecclesiastical with civil tyranny.
By the 19th century, however, the virulent anti-Catholicism had been much tempered, and in the middle of the 20th century, Clifford K. Shipton could note that "for many years past it has not been deemed expedient by the college authorities to honor the donor’s wishes in this respect." Contemporary Dudleian lectures tend to be highly academic in nature, and are often delivered by Catholic or non-Christian theologians or priests. In a more ecumenical, less religiously polemical age the third topic has been reinterpreted to intend relations among the Christian denominations: The first Catholic who gave the Dudleian lecture under this rubric was Fr. Henri Nouwen.[citation needed]
Notable Dudleian lecturers have included Jason Haven,[2] William Ellery Channing, Reinhold Niebuhr, Paul Tillich, John LaFarge, Jr., Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Carlo Maria Martini, Maria Pilar Aquino.
References
[edit]- ^ Korsman, Gloria. "Research Guides: Harvard Divinity School: Named Lecture Series: Dudleian Lectures". guides.library.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2023-02-07.
- ^ Worthington, Erastus (1827). The history of Dedham: from the beginning of its settlement, in September 1635, to May 1827. Dutton and Wentworth. Retrieved July 17, 2019.
- Gilbert, Leslee K (2003). "The altar of liberty: Enlightened dissent and the Dudleian lectures, 1755–1765". Historical Journal of Massachusetts (Summer 2003). Retrieved 2006-05-20.
- Kuhn Bryant, Rene (June 1958). "No Son Unsung". American Heritage Magazine. 9 (4). Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2006-05-20.
External links
[edit]- Online video recordings (RealPlayer) of recent Dudleian Lectures:
- 2003: In the Beginning of Creation was Consciousness by Seyyed Hossein Nasr (full text)
- 2006: Jesus and Shylock: Feminist Views of Christianity's Jews by Susannah Heschel
- Andover-Harvard Theological Library website for the Dudleian Lectures