H. G. Wood Explained

Herbert George Wood
Birth Date:2 September 1879
Occupation:Theologian, writer

Herbert George Wood (2 September 1879 – 9 March 1963), best known as H. G. Wood, was a British theologian and academic.

Academic career

Wood was educated at City of London School and Jesus College, Cambridge, where he was appointed a fellow in 1904. He was a lecturer in the New Testament from 1910 to 1940 at Woodbrooke College. At the University of Birmingham, he was the first Edward Cadbury Professor of Theology, holding the chair from 1940 to 1946, and was also Dean of the Faculty of Arts from 1943 to 1946.[1] [2]

He gave the 1933 Hulsean Lectures at the University of Cambridge. He was the first layman and the first Quaker to do so. He was President of the Studiorum Novi Testamenti Societas in 1957.

Christ myth theory

Wood argued for the historicity of Jesus and was an opponent of the Christ myth theory.[3] [4] He was the author of Did Christ Really Live? (1938).[5] He debated mythicist J. M. Robertson.[4]

Wood wrote that "All Christ-myth theorists start from a view of the gospels as discredited witnesses — a view which no scientific historian can accept and which rests on rationalist prejudice and sheer ignorance."[6]

H.G. Wood Chair

The H. G. Wood Professor of Theology is a chair at the University of Birmingham established in 1961. Its past post-holders include Ninian Smart, John Hick and Denys Turner.

Publications

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Dr. H. G. Wood. The Times. 55646. 11 March 1963. 12.
  2. Kennedy. Thomas C.. Wood, Herbert George (1879–1963). 22 June 2015. 2004. 10.1093/ref:odnb/65076.
  3. Anonymous. (July 4, 1938). Did Christ Really Live? By H. G. Wood. Aberdeen Press and Journal. p. 3
  4. Franke, Damon. (2008). Modernist Heresies: British Literary History, 1883-1924. Ohio State University Press. p. 64.
  5. Daniell, E. H. (1938). Did Christ Really Live? by H. G. Wood. Baptist Quarterly 9 (4): 252-256.
  6. Wood, H. G. (1938). Did Christ Really Live?. Student Christian Movement Press. p. 144
  7. Pauck, W. (1935). Christianity and the Nature of History By H. G. Wood. Church History 4 (3): 239-240.