ABBOTT, LYMAN


Meaning of ABBOTT, LYMAN in English

born Dec. 18, 1835, Roxbury, Mass., U.S. died Oct. 22, 1922, New York, N.Y. American Congregationalist minister and a leading exponent of the Social Gospel movement. Abbott left law practice to study theology and was ordained in 1860. After serving in two pastorates he became associate editor of Harper's Magazine and in 1870 editor of the Illustrated Christian Weekly. In 1876 he joined Henry Ward Beecher's Christian Union, a nondenominational religious weekly, and in 1881 Abbott became its editor in chief. He succeeded in 1888 to Beecher's pulpit in the Plymouth Congregational Church, Brooklyn, where he served until 1899. Abbott early became interested in industrial problems. Under his editorship the Christian Union (renamed Outlook in 1893) promulgated the Social Gospel, which sought to apply Christianity to social and industrial problems. His Christianity and Social Problems (1897), The Rights of Man (1901), The Spirit of Democracy (1910), and America in the Making (1911) present his moderate sociological views, which rejected both socialism and laissez-faire economics. On other problems Abbott presented the viewpoint of liberal evangelical Protestantism. He sought to interpret, rather than condemn, the effect of the theory of evolution on religion.

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