Archives


The Confessional Presbyterian Archive is a curated digital library dedicated to preserving and promoting the writings of 17th–20th century Presbyterian pastors, teachers, and leaders. Featuring thousands of searchable texts, biographies, and historical resources, the archive provides direct access to the primary-source materials of American Presbyterianism.

An Address on Parochial Schools

Prospectus of The Presbyterian Treasury (1848) promoting Christian education. Contains Charles Hodge’s address urging early, assiduous religious instruction of children and a discussion of church–state roles.

Fervent in Spirit

Garbled, illegible manuscript page filled with symbols, line breaks, and corrupted text. Appears to be OCR or encoding damage rather than coherent content.

The Education Question

Charles Hodge argues public education must include Christian religious instruction; church, state, and parents share responsibility, and excluding religion endangers society.

Prof. Park’s Remarks on the Princeton Review

Examines two theological systems: one stressing divine sovereignty and imputed original sin, the other emphasizing human free agency and responsibility. Debates creedal interpretation.

Faith in Christ the Source of Life

Charles Hodge argues that spiritual life and salvation come only through faith in Christ (Gal. 2:20), not by law or works. Saving faith rests on Christ as Son and Savior.

The General Assembly 1852 (Princeton Review)

Accounts of the 1852 General Assembly: E.P. Humphrey’s Matt. 7 sermon defending Presbyterian doctrine, debates on seminary funds and the Charleston Presbytery, and foreign missions reports.

Visibility of the Church

Defends the Protestant distinction between the visible and invisible Church: the true Church is the body of regenerate believers, not merely the external institutional organization.

Presbyterian Liturgies

Discussion of Presbyterian liturgies: historical origin, forms of public worship, prayers, confession, the Lord’s Prayer, creed, and sacramental rites (baptism, Lord’s Supper). Emphasizes Reformation roots.

The General Assembly 1855 (Princeton Review)

Proceedings of the 1855 Presbyterian General Assembly: seminary reports, Board of Missions statistics and finances, appropriations, and Assembly resolutions.

The Church — Its Perpetuity

Analyzes the perpetuity of the Church, arguing that institutional continuity or doctrinal infallibility aren’t required. The Church endures in true believers despite apostasy.

The General Assembly of 1856

Report of the 1856 Presbyterian General Assembly: seminary reports, appointments and endowments, plus detailed Board of Domestic Missions statistics on missionaries, churches, finances and schools.

Neglect of Infant Baptism

A Presbyterian appeal warning of a growing neglect of infant baptism; urges defense of covenantal infant inclusion, pastoral instruction, and church discipline to remedy it.

Adoption of the Confession of Faith

Examines debates over adopting the Confession of Faith in the Presbyterian church, focusing on what ‘adopt’ and ‘system of doctrine’ mean for ordination and subscription.

The Church Membership of Infants

Defends infant church membership and baptism, arguing visible vs. invisible church and covenant continuity (circumcision → baptism); infants of believing parents belong to the church.

Demission of the Ministry

Examines whether the Christian ministry is a permanent office or a transferable work, arguing Presbyterian ordination creates an enduring office while permitting demission of its exercise.

The General Assembly 1859 (Princeton Review)

Princeton Review (July 1859) reviews Buddhism and records the Presbyterian General Assembly—church extension, finances, and the growth of foreign missions in India, China, and Japan.

The Late Dr. J.W. Alexander

Stories illustrating Christian forgiveness; report on Rev. C. Chiniquy’s conversions among French Romanists with an appeal for support; cautions about New England education for Presbyterian youth.

The First and Second Adam

A critical review of Dr. Baird’s The First and Second Adam, arguing his overconfident treatment of Adam-Christ analogy, original sin, imputation, and covenant theology. Affirms Lutheran/Reformed consensus.

Catholicity of the Gospel (1853)

Hodge argues the Gospel is catholic—God is Lord of Jews and Gentiles. The New Covenant’s spiritual worship and Christ’s atonement are universal, opening salvation to all.

Showing 17,601–17,620 of 22,006 items

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