Ballantine, William Gay
BALLANTINE, bal´ɑn-tɑin, WILLIAM GAY:
Congregationalist; b. at Washington, D. C., Dec.
7, 1848. He was graduated at Marietta College,
Marietta, O. (1868), and Union Theological
Seminary (1872). He studied at Leipsic in 1872-73,
and in the following year was a member of the
American Palestine Exploring Expedition. He
was then successively professor of chemistry and
natural science in Ripon College (1874-76), assistant
professor of Greek in the University of Indiana
(1876-78), professor of Greek and Hebrew in the
same institution (1878-81), and professor of Old
Testament language and literature in Oberlin
Theological Seminary (1881-91). From 1891 to
1896 he was president of the latter institution,
but resigned and studied in Greece until in 1897 he
was appointed instructor in Bible at the International
Y. M. C. A. Training School, Springfield,
Mass. He was an editor of the Bibliotheca Sacra
in 1884-91, and has written Philippians, the
Model Letter (New York, 1898); Christ in the
Gospel of Mark (1898); Inductive Bible Studies,
Mark and Acts (1898); Luke and John (1899);
and Matthew (1900).