Daniel Sharp (clergyman) explained

Daniel Sharp
Honorific Suffix:D.D.
Birth Date:December 25, 1783
Birth Place:Huddersfield, England
Death Place:Baltimore, Maryland
Module:
Embed:yes
Office:2nd President of the Conference of Baptist Ministers in Massachsuetts
Termstart:1830
Termend:1852
Predecessor:Joseph Grafton
Successor:Rev. Baron Alanson Stow
Office2:2nd Pastor of the Charles Street Baptist Church in Boston
Termstart2:1812
Termend2:1853
Predecessor2:Rev. Caleb Blood
Successor2:Rev. J. C. Stockbridge
Ordination:May 1809
Church:Baptist Church
Buried:Mount Auburn Cemetery
Religion:Baptist
Education:Brown University, A.M. (1811)
Honorific Prefix:The Reverend

Daniel Sharp (December 25, 1783 – June 25, 1853) was pastor of the Charles Street Baptist Church in Boston, Massachusetts, for more than forty years, from 1812 to about 1853. He was also one of the founders of the Newton Theological Institution.[1]

Biography

Sharp was born December 25, 1783, in Huddersfield in West Riding of Yorkshire, England. His father was a Baptist pastor. Daniel was a member of the Congregational Church when, after some success in business, he emigrated to the United States in 1806 and soon joined the Baptists. He studied theology with Dr. William Staughton in Philadelphia beginning in March 1807 and was ordained pastor of the First Baptist Church in Newark, New Jersey, in 1809. Sharp received a Master of Arts from Brown University in 1811.[2]

Sharp became pastor of Charles Street Baptist Church in Boston in 1812, having previously been invited to preach there in 1809 and 1811. He was secretary of the Baptist Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in India and Foreign Parts when it was formed in February 1813 and he prayers for the missions a regular practice for his congregation. Throughout his career he held administrative positions in the Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Society.[3] He was a fellow of the corporation of Brown University and a member of the Board of Overseers of Harvard University.

As the head of a congregation and a leader of Baptist organizations, Sharp faced the dilemma of maintaining unity while providing moral guidance on the most contentious issues of his era, war and slavery. Preaching on April 2, 1846, on the subject of war and peace, he described the pastor's duty and used slavery to make his point:[4]

Sharp was a member and at times a vice president of the American Peace Society,[5] which sought non-violent resolution to international conflicts. Though many Baptist pastors thought differently, he opposed the Mexican–American War and in June 1846, shortly after the U.S. declared war, he published a "Discourse on Peace" that called it "a war for southern territory, waged against justice, against humanity, and against the voice of God."[6]

His health declined in 1852 and his service as pastor in Boston ended about 1853 when he traveled south seeking warmer weather. He died on June 23, 1853, at the home of Robert P. Brown in the village of Stoneleigh, in Baltimore, Maryland. The Boston Journal wrote in an obituary that "his views upon public affairs, and upon the great movements of the day ... were sound, practical and conservative, and fraught with benevolence."[7]

Sharp received a Doctor of Divinity degree (D.D.) from Brown University in 1828 and from Harvard University in 1843. He was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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Notes and References

  1. https://books.google.com/books?id=zpQsAAAAYAAJ Services at the fortieth anniversary of the installation of the Rev. Daniel Sharp
  2. Book: Armitage, Thomas . A history of the Baptists: traced by their vital principles and practices from the time of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ to the year 1886 . 1 . New York . Bryan, Taylor . 1890. 857–58 .
  3. Arthur Warren . Smith . Early Baptist Missionary Leaders: Daniel Sharp . Baptist Missionary Magazine . LXXXIX . September 1909 . 336–38 .
  4. Publications on Peace . Advocate of Peace . 7 . 5/6. 1847 . 59–68 . 27891040 .
  5. Proceedings at the Anniversary of the American Peace Society . Advocate of Peace . 11 . 6. June 1854 . 81–89, esp. 87 . 27891319 .
  6. Ellsworth . Clayton Sumner . The American Churches and the Mexican War . American Historical Review . 45 . 2 . 1940 . 301–26, esp. 312 . 10.2307/1906279 . 1906279 .
  7. News: Death of Rev. Dr. Sharp . June 27, 1853 . New York Times . October 2, 2022 . . this obituary appeared originally in the Boston Journal on June 23, 1853.