Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Randolph Sinks Foster

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Henry Sanborn Noyes

Website
  

Spouse(s)
  
Sarah Miley Foster

Name
  
Randolph Foster

Profession
  
Educator

Succeeded by
  
Henry Sanborn Noyes

Religion
  
Methodist


Randolph Sinks Foster Randolph Sinks Foster University Archives Northwestern University

Born
  
February 22, 1820 Williamsburg, Ohio (
1820-02-22
)

Alma mater
  
Augusta College (Kentucky) Ohio Wesleyan University (honorary) Northwestern University (honorary)

Died
  
May 1, 1903, Newton Centre, Massachusetts, United States

Education
  
Northwestern University, Ohio Wesleyan University, Augusta College

Books
  
Objections to Calvinism, The Supernatural Book: Evi, Beyond the Grave: Being Thr, OBJECTIONS TO CALVINI, Objections to Calvinism

Randolph Sinks Foster


Randolph Sinks Foster (February 22, 1820 – May 1, 1903) was an American Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, elected in 1872.

Contents

Randolph Sinks Foster Randolph Sinks Foster University Archives Northwestern University

Born on 22 February 1820 at Williamsburg, Ohio, U.S., the son of Israel Foster and Mary "Polly" Kain, he attended Augusta College in Kentucky, but left to become a Preacher in the Ohio Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church when he was only seventeen. He was ordained to the Traveling Ministry by Bishops Waugh and Hedding. He went on to become the Pastor of the Mulberry Street M.E. Church in New York City, where he met Daniel Drew, the financier who provided the original funding for the Drew Theological Seminary in Madison, New Jersey.

Prior to his election to the Episcopacy, Foster served in pastoral appointments and in educational work. He was President of Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, 1857-1860. He also accepted John McClintock's invitation to become Professor of Systematic Theology at Drew. After the death of Drew's first President in 1870, Foster was elected to that post, remaining there until becoming a Bishop in 1872, when he was assigned to the Cincinnati, Ohio area.

He died at Newton Centre, Massachusetts on 1 May 1903. He was buried in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, New York.

Works

Foster wrote the book Objections to Calvinism as it is : in a series of letters addressed to N.L. Rice in 1849.

References

Randolph Sinks Foster Wikipedia