Oswald Thompson Allis

O. T. Allis
Born (1880-09-09)September 9, 1880[1]
Wallingford, Pennsylvania
Died January 12, 1973(1973-01-12) (aged 92)[2]
Occupation Professor, writer

Oswald Thompson Allis (September 9, 1880 – January 12, 1973) was an American Presbyterian theologian and Bible scholar.

Biography

He was born in 1880 and studied at the University of Pennsylvania and Princeton Theological Seminary. He received a master's degree from Princeton University and a doctorate from the University of Berlin. Later, Allis received an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree from Hampden Sydney College in 1927.

Allis taught in the Department of Semitic Philology at Princeton Theological Seminary (1910–1929). In 1929, Allis, J. Gresham Machen, Robert Dick Wilson and others founded Westminster Theological Seminary. Allis was independently wealthy and it was his property in Philadelphia which initially served as the home of the new seminary. He taught at Westminster for six years, and resigned in 1935 to devote himself to writing and study. Two of his more notable works are Prophecy and the Church (1945) and God Spake By Moses (1951). Allis was a conservative Christian theologian who believed in Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch as well as single authorship of the book of Isaiah. He served as editor of the Princeton Theological Review from 1918 to 1929.[2] In 1946 he lectured at Columbia Theological Seminary.[3]

Legacy

A festschrift in his honor was published in 1974 under the title The Law and the Prophets. Contributors included Cornelius Van Til, John Murray, R. Laird Harris, Walter Kaiser, Allan Harman, John Whitcomb, Meredith Kline and E. J. Young.

Books

References

  1. Skilton, John H (1999). "Oswald T. Allis". Bible Interpreters of the 20th Century. p. 122.
  2. 1 2 Skilton, "Oswald T. Allis," 129.
  3. Todd, Galbraith Hall (1974). "Oswald Thompson Allis". In Skilton, John H. The Law and the Prophets. p. 18.
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