John Anderson

Author

1748 – 1830

14

Who was John Anderson?

John Anderson was a Presbyterian theologian.

He was born in the far north of England, by the River Tweed. He was brought up as a member of the Church of Scotland and became a pastor. He sailed to the United States in June 1783, studied for four years, and was ordained in Philadelphia 31 October 1788. He later became the founding professor of the first Presbyterian seminary in the U.S.A., Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, founded in 1794.

He was no more than five-feet tall, with black, piercing eyes and tangled hair, and gained a reputation for absent mindedness through his practice of reading a book while riding to church, not noticing when the horse wandered off the route.

He wrote the book Alexander and Rufus: Dialogues on Church Communion. The first part of that book argues for the historic Presbyterian and Reformed doctrines of confessional membership and close communion. The second part of that book defends the Testimony of the Secession Church of Scotland, and its daughter church in North America variously known as the Associate Synod and Associate Presbyterian church.

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Born
1748
Died
1830

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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