Butler, James Glentworth
BUTLER, JAMES GLENTWORTH: Presbyterian;
b. at Brooklyn, N. Y., Aug. 3, 1821. He
was educated at New York University (did not
graduate), Union Theological Seminary (1846–47),
and Yale Divinity School, being graduated from
the latter in 1849. After being a resident licentiate
at the same institution in 1849–50, he was ordained
to the Presbyterian ministry late in 1852 and was
pastor of the Walnut Street Presbyterian Church,
Philadelphia, Pa., until 1868. He was then elected
corresponding secretary of the American and Foreign
Christian Union, a position which he retained
three years, after which he was pastor of the
First Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, for two years
(1871–73). In 1874 he retired from the active
ministry, and has since lived the life of a private
scholar. In addition to a number of briefer contributions,
he prepared The Bible Reader's Commentary,
New Testament (2 vols., New York, 1879),
which was afterward enlarged under the title
Bible Work (11 vols., 1892) and made to include
the Old Testament; and Vital Truths respecting
God and Man (Philadelphia, 1904).