H. Wheeler Robinson Explained

Henry Wheeler Robinson
Honorific Prefix:Doctor
Office:Principal of Regent's Park College, Oxford
Term Start:1920
Term End:1942
Predecessor:George Pearce Gould
Successor:E. A. Payne

Henry Wheeler Robinson (7 February 1872 in Northampton, England – 12 May 1945 in Oxford, England) was a British theologian.

Career

H. Wheeler Robinson was educated at Regent's Park Baptist College, then still in London, the University of Edinburgh, Mansfield College, Oxford, and the Universities of Marburg and Strasbourg. He began his ministry at Pitlochry and then at St Michael's, Coventry. In 1926, he received the degree of Doctor of Divinity honoris causa from the University of Edinburgh.[1]

He was Principal of Regent's Park Baptist College from 1920 to 1942, and was responsible for moving the college from London to its present location in Oxford.[1] When he came to Oxford as Principal of Regent's Park College, he was the most outstanding British Old Testament scholar of the day. The Faculty of Theology immediately appointed him as an examiner, and he became a Reader in Biblical Criticism in 1934 and the Old Testament tutor for Mansfield College. [2]

He was President of the Society for Old Testament Study in 1929 and Acting President 1941–45.

Publications

Humorous reference

There exists in the McPherson Library, University of Victoria, an undated letter from Freddy Hood, a member of the Chapter, and later Principal, of Pusey House, to John Betjeman, in which he wrote,

If you can possibly come to a meeting of the NICENE at Mansfield SCR tonight...at 8.15. Wheeler Robinson on "The Marriage of Cana and its Significance in Theology". It will be frightfully funny - I want you to come and take part in the discussion "speaking as an Irvingite I should like to suggest..." Do try ever so hard.[3]

(John Betjeman was not, of course, an Irvingite).

Legacy

Rex Mason devoted his Presidential Address to the Society for Old Testament Study to the topic, H. Wheeler Robinson Revisited. He argued that Wheeler Robinson's work was rooted in his interest in Hebrew Psychology, while he was also influenced by developments in sociology and anthropology. Mason argued that the most significant aspect of Wheeler Robinson's work was not in the concept of Corporate Personality, but rather in the concept of the invasion of the human psyche by the divine Spirit. Wheeler Robinson had found that this concept in fact originated in animism, though it was subsequently developed to much greater religious depth in Hebrew thought.

The sociological and anthropological material on which Wheeler Robinson drew was later discredited. However, Mason believed that Wheeler Robinson's main concepts were drawn from his study of the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures themselves, and that his use of comparative material from the ancient Near East served mainly as an illustration, rather than a source, for his ideas. In conclusion, Mason found that Wheeler Robinson anticipated subsequent developments in Old Testament scholarship, and especially those developments that were critical of "Biblical Theology" - a movement that Mason claims Wheeler Robinson himself would have rejected.[4]

Wheeler Robinson left an enduring legacy and is still considered a major scholar whose influence on Old Testament studies is felt long after his own time.A building at Regent's Park College, Oxford, Wheeler Robinson House, is named in his honour.

Family

His son Bernard Robinson (6 June 1904 - 7 July 1997) was a physicist on Ernest Rutherford's team at the Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge and an influential amateur musician. Robinson founded the annual Bothampstead Music Camp in 1935, which continued at the farmland site in Berkshire most years until 1966, when it moved to Speen in Buckinghamshire.[5] Many professional (or future professional) musicians participated in Music Camp over the years, including Dennis Brain, Colin Davis, John Gardner, Peter Pears and more.[6] Robinson was the author of An Amateur in Music (1985).[7] He married the pianist Alice Dodds (nee Bradley-Moore) in 1933, and after her death married Elizabeth Orloff-Davidoff, daughter of Thomas Evelyn Scott-Ellis, 8th Baron Howard de Walden and Margherita van Raalt, on 31 October 1959.[8]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Henry-Wheeler-Robinson 'Henry Wheeler Robinson', Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. F.M. Turner, The History of the University of Oxford. Vol. VIII: The Twentieth Century. Oxford University Press (1994), p. 297
  3. Quoted in Bevis Hillier, Young Betjeman [London: [[John Murray (publishing house)|John Murray]], 1988], p. 164)
  4. Web site: 6–8 January 1997. Winter Meeting, 1997. The Society for Old Testament Study. Trinity College, Bristol. 2006-08-30. https://web.archive.org/web/20061009193420/http://www.trinity-bris.ac.uk/sots/conferences1997.html . 2006-10-09.
  5. Humphrey Burton. In My Own Time: An Autobiography (2021), p. 80
  6. 'BWR: An Adequate Life?', reviewed by Christopher Boyce in The Speen and North Dean News, Issue 67, Autumn 2016, p. 25
  7. Robinson, Bernard. An Amateur in Music, Countryside Books (1985), reviewed by The Musical Times, Vol. 128, No. 1734 (August 1987), p. 441
  8. David Mather. 'Obituary: Bernard Wheeler Robinson', in The Independent, 18 August 1997