George Arthur Buttrick

{{short description|American preacher}}

{{Infobox person

| name =George Arthur Buttrick

| image =Dr. George Arthur Buttrick about 1922.jpg

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| birth_date =March 23, 1892

| birth_place =Seaham Harbour, England

| death_date =January 23, 1980{{cite news|title=George Arthur Buttrick, 87, Dies; Presbyterian Pastor and Scholar|url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1980/01/24/113022238.html?pageNumber=87|accessdate=April 29, 2017|work=The New York Times|date=January 24, 1980}}

| death_place =Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.

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| education =Victoria University of Manchester

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| occupation =Christian pastor
Christian author
Academic lecturer

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George Arthur Buttrick (March 23, 1892 – January 23, 1980) was an English-born, American-based Christian preacher, author and lecturer.Theodore Alexander Gill, To God be the glory: sermons in honor of George Arthur Buttrick, Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 1973, p. 11 [https://books.google.com/books?id=kQtqt9mTdZwC&q=%22george+buttrick%22]Charles F. Kemp, Life-situation preaching, Bloomington, Minnesota: Bethany Press, 1956, p. 184 [https://books.google.com/books?id=nJY9AAAAYAAJ&q=%22george+buttrick%22]T. A. Prickett, The Story of Preaching, Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse, 2011, pp. 80-81 [https://books.google.com/books?id=axcv4-7RnS4C&dq=%22george+buttrick%22&pg=PA80]

Early life

Buttrick was born in Seaham Harbour, England on March 23, 1892. He attended the Victoria University of Manchester and later emigrated to the United States.

Career

Buttrick served as a pastor in Quincy, Illinois, Rutland, Vermont, Buffalo, New York, and in 1927 he succeeded Henry Sloane Coffin as minister of the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church in New York City.

In 1936, Buttrick officiated the wedding of Fred and Mary Anne MacLeod Trump, the parents of Donald Trump.{{Cite news|last=Hannan|first=Martin|date=May 20, 2016|title=An inconvenient truth? Donald Trump's Scottish mother was a low-earning migrant|work=The National|publisher=Newsquest|location=Glasgow, Scotland|url=https://www.thenational.scot/news/14903147.an-inconvenient-truth-donald-trumps-scottish-mother-was-a-low-earning-migrant/|access-date=July 27, 2020}}{{cite book |last1=Trump |first1=Fred |title=All in the Family: The Trumps and How We Got This Way |date=2024 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |location=London |isbn=9781398541016 |oclc=1453469554 |page=29|quote=They married the following January at Manhattan's Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church with a British-born minister named George Arthur Buttrick officiating.}}

Buttrick gave a lecture series at Yale University. From 1955 to 1960 he was Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Preacher to the university at Harvard University. He was then a guest professor at the Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York and went on to teach at Garrett–Evangelical Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois. He later taught at Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina, Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and the Southern Baptist Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. He also taught classes on preaching at Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}

While at Harvard, Buttrick served as advisor to Phillips Brooks House, the student-run social service organization, and was greatly admired for his dedication to the cause of social justice. This admiration was put to the test when he denied the use of Harvard's Memorial Church to a Jewish couple who wished to be married there by a rabbi. His reasoning, strongly supported by Harvard president Nathan Pusey, was that the church was a Christian institution, and that permitting it to be used for non-Christian activities would be to secularize it. An intense controversy erupted involving both faculty, students, and donors to the university, ending in 1958 when Buttrick reversed his position on the ground that "The Harvard community is today a mixed society. It contains numerous groups with religious loyalties other than those which gave shape to Harvard’s ceremonies of public worship."{{cite magazine|title="Religion: God and Man at Harvard,"|magazine= Time |date=May 5, 1958| url=https://time.com/archive/6800797/religion-god-man-at-harvard-2/}}

Buttrick was also Commentary Editor for The Interpreter's Bible, a twelve volume set of the Holy Scriptures, in the King James and Revised Standard Versions with general articles and introduction, exegesis and exposition, first published by Abingdon-Cokesbury Press in 1952.

Death and legacy

Buttrick died in 1980. His son, David G. Buttrick (1927–2017), was a Presbyterian minister who later joined the United Church of Christ and became the Drucilla Moore Buffington Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics at the Vanderbilt University Divinity School.{{cite news|title=David G. Buttrick|url=http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/tennessean/obituary.aspx?n=david-g-buttrick&pid=185203382&fhid=14384|accessdate=April 26, 2017|work=The Tennessean|date=April 26, 2017}}

Frederick Buechner has often cited Buttrick as a central influence on his career, including his decision to become himself a Presbyterian minister. Buttrick's influence was also cited by Eugene Peterson, who was raised Pentecostal but became an intern at Madison Avenue during Buttrick's ministry and was inspired by his preaching.A Burning in My Bones: The Authorized Biography of Eugene H. Peterson, Translator of The Message by Winn Collier, p. 72-75 In fact, according to Peterson's biographer Winn Collier, both Buechner and Peterson were sitting in the pews of Madison Avenue Presbyterian that same year, having their shared epiphanies under Buttrick's preaching.

Bibliography

  • Parables of Jesus (1928)
  • Jesus Came Preaching: Christian Preaching in the New Age (1931)
  • Christian Fact and Modern Doubt (1934)
  • Prayer (1942)
  • Christ and Man's Dilemma (1946)
  • So We Believe, So We Pray (1951)
  • Faith and Education (1952)
  • Sermons Preached in a University Church (1959)
  • Biblical Thought and the Secular University (1960)
  • Editor, Interpreter's Dictionary of the Bible, 4 vols (1962)
  • Christ and History (1963)
  • God, Pain, and Evil (1966)
  • The Beatitudes, A Contemporary Meditation (1968)
  • The Power of Prayer Today (1970)
  • The Interpreter's One Volume Commentary on the Bible (1971)

References