Abbot, Ezra
ABBOT, EZRA (1819--1884), American biblical scholar, was born at
Jackson, Waldo county, Maine, on the 28th of April 1819. He
graduated at Bowdoin College in 1840; and in 1847, at the request of
Prof. Andrews Norton, went to Cambridge, where he was principal of a
public school until 1856. He was assistant librarian of Harvard
University from 1856 to 1872, and planned and perfected an alphabetical
card catalogue, combining many of the advantages of the ordinary
dictionary catalogues with the grouping of the minor topics under more
general heads, which is characteristic of a systematic catalogue. From
1872 until his death he was Bussey Professor of New Testament Criticism
and Interpretation in the Harvard Divinity School. His studies were
chiefly in Oriental languages and the textual criticism of the New
Testament, thoygh his work as a bibliographer showed such results as the
exhaustive list of writings (5300 in all) on the doctrine of the future
life, appended to W. R. Alger’s History of the Doctrine of a Future
Life, as it has prevailed in all Nations and Ages (1862), and published
separately in 1864. His publications, though always of the most
thorough and scholarly character, were to a large extent dispersed in
the pages of reviews, dictionaries, concordances, texts edited by
others, Unitarian controversial treatises, &c.; but he took a more
conspicuous and more personal part in the preparation (with the Baptist
scholar, Horatio B. Hackett) of the enlarged American edition of Dr
(afterwards Sir) William Smith’s Dictionary of the Bible (1867-1870), to
which he contributed more than 400 articles besides greatly improving
the bibliographical completeness of the work; was an efficient member of
the American revision committee employed in connexion with the Revised
Version (1881-1885) of the King James Bible; and aided in the
preparation of Caspar Rene Gregory’s Prolegomena to the revised Greek
New Testament of Tischendorf. His principal single production,
representing his scholarly method and conservative conclusions, was The
Authorship af the Fourth Gospel: External Evidences (1880; second
edition, by J. H. Thayer, with other essays, 1889), originally a
lecture, and in spite of the compression due to its form, up to that
time probably the ablest defence, based on external evidence, of the
Johannine authorship, and certainly the completest treatment of the
relation of Justin Martyr to this gospel. Abbot, though a layman,
received the degree of S. T. D. from Harvard in 1872, and that of D.D.
from Edinburgh in 1884. . He died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on the 21st
of March 1884.
See S. J. Barrows, Ezra Abbot (Cambridge, Mass., 1884).
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