|
Frank
Hugh Foster, emeritus professor of Church History at the Oberlin
Graduate School of Theology, was known as a rigorous and exacting
teacher. Awarded a Ph.D. in 1882 by the University of Leipzig (Germany),
he was probably the first Oberlin faculty professor to hold a doctoral
degree. While studying in Europe, he was introduced to the German
Seminar Method, popularized by German historian Leopold von Ranke
(1795-1886). Foster brought this new methodical approach to both
his private and classroom study at Oberlin. Nationally known as
an expert in theology and a student of church history, Foster authored
several widely recognized books in these fields.
A New Englander of Puritan ancestry, Frank Hugh Foster, son of
William and Mary Flagg (Miller) Foster, was born in Springfield,
Massachusetts,
on June 19, 1851. He was educated at the local high school before
enrolling at Harvard College (A.B. 1873). Foster taught mathematics
at the United States Naval Academy (1873-74), from which he entered
Andover Theological Seminary. There he befriended school head Edwards
Amasa Park. In 1877, he graduated from Andover and was ordained
as a Congregational minister at North Reading, Massachusetts. His
service
as a minister was brief. In 1881-82 he received a Parker fellowship
from Harvard University to study in Germany. In addition to his
doctorate from Leipzig, he received the D.D. degree from both Chicago
Theological
Seminary (1894) and Olivet College (1909). In 1932, Harvard University
granted him the honorary degree of Doctor of Sacred Theology.
Professor Foster served on the Oberlin theological faculty during
two intervals: 1884-92 and 1926-32. Thirty-four years of teaching
elsewhere separated his time at Oberlin. He began his career teaching
philosophy at Middlebury College (1882-84), followed by professorships
in Church History at Oberlin (1884-92) and Systematic Theology
at Pacific Seminary in Berkeley, California (1892-1902). Finding
little
intellectual stimulation or satisfaction there, he resigned and
later moved to Olivet, Michigan where he was Professor of History
(1907-16)
as well as pastor both at the college and Village Church (1904-07).
His activities during 1902-04 are unknown.
After retiring from Olivet in 1916, he returned to live in Oberlin
and resumed teaching responsibilities at the Oberlin Graduate School
of Theology: homiletics (1917-18), Greek and Hebrew (1926-28),
and Biblical and oriental languages (1928-32). In 1919, as a non-resident
professor, he taught Biblical Literature at Lake Erie College.
Schooled in classical theology and church history, Professor
Foster became one of the leading theological historians of his
time. His
primary focus was New England theology, which he defined in his
groundbreaking book, A Genetic History of New England Theology,
as America’s
first indigenous theology and the region of its development as an
epicenter of intellectual growth. He attributed its collapse to focusing
on externals and neglecting human nature and the inevitable evolution
of theology. Dismissing a theology that merely encompasses “a
collection of learned lumber,” he repeatedly wrote of the need
for one rooted in experience, one that acknowledged the new sciences,
and their role in shaping doctrine. Addressing the graduating class
of the Oberlin Graduate School of Theology in 1932, he spoke as a
minister, teacher, and scholar when he advised them to “avoid
starched professionalism and to come into direct and easy relations
with people.”
In addition to his teaching and writing, Professor Foster was
keenly interested in American and foreign missions. During his
first years
of teaching at the Oberlin Seminary, he and his first wife, who
was the daughter of a missionary to the Zulus, befriended John
L. Dube
(d. 1946), inviting him into their home and introducing him to
Oberlin’s
Second Congregational Church. Dube attended school in Oberlin in
the late 1880s; after returning to South Africa, he served as founding
president of the organization that became the African National Congress,
established the first Zulu language newspaper, and founded the Ohlange
Institute in Inanda.
Foster's interest in missionary work led him to edit and publish
Sela G. Wright’s important manuscript on the Oberlin Ojibway
Mission in 1891. During his years at Olivet College he continued
to write and speak with vigor about the missions field.
Frank Hugh Foster was a linguist of unusual abilities. Even at
the late age of 76, he learned Arabic. He taught language so successfully
at Oberlin that, subsequently, some of his students pursued Arabic
studies. While examining and teaching the language and its literature,
Foster evolved a theory of the Arabic background for the Book of
Job. In 1929, he offered a series of lectures at the Oberlin Graduate
School of Theology on the relationship between Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam. All of these activities led him in 1932 to publish A
Brief
Doctrinal Commentary on the Arabic Koran.
A devoted Congregationalist, Professor Foster actively participated
in various religious and professional organizations and societies
throughout his career. He served as secretary of the Ohio Church
History Society. In May 1910, he spoke on “The Work of a College
Church” at the fiftieth anniversary celebration of Second Congregational
Church, Oberlin, Ohio. In May 1927, he delivered the keynote address
at the annual meeting of the Ohio Conference of the Congregational
Church: “Congregational Achievement During the Seventy-Five
Years of the Congregational Association of Ohio.” He was a
member of the Lansing, Michigan Association of Congregational Churches
and later the Medina, Ohio Association.
Foster was married twice. On August 30, 1877, he married Eliza
C. Grout, who died in 1912. They had three children: Frederick
M., Harold
P., and Katharine R. Foster. On November 26, 1913, he married Margaret
Tracy Algoe, who died in November 1920. They had no children. His
nephew, Frank Hugh Foster (d.1938), attended Oberlin’s Preparatory
Department in 1887-89.
After retiring from active teaching in 1932, Frank Hugh Foster
continued to live in Oberlin until his death on October 20, 1935.
|