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P.T. Forsyth

Peter Taylor Forsyth (1848–1921). Born on May 12, 1848, in Aberdeen, Scotland, to Alexander Forsyth and Helen Taylor, P.T. Forsyth was a Scottish Congregationalist theologian and preacher, often called the “theologian of the cross.” Raised in a devout Presbyterian family, he excelled at Aberdeen Grammar School and graduated from Aberdeen University (MA, 1868), studying under philosopher Alexander Bain. After a semester at Göttingen University under Albrecht Ritschl, he trained at New College, London, and was ordained in the Congregational Union in 1876. Forsyth pastored churches in Shipley, Yorkshire (1876–1880), St. Thomas’ Square, Hackney (1880–1885), Manchester (1885–1888), Leicester (1888–1894), and Emmanuel Church, Cambridge (1894–1901), where his sermons blended intellectual rigor with evangelical passion, addressing modern doubts while emphasizing Christ’s atonement. Initially a liberal, he shifted to evangelical orthodoxy by 1890, focusing on God’s holiness and grace. His 25 books, including The Cruciality of the Cross (1909), The Person and Place of Jesus Christ (1909), and The Work of Christ (1910), profoundly influenced 20th-century theology, notably Karl Barth. Married to Caroline Day in 1880, he had one daughter, Jessie, and faced personal loss with his wife’s death in 1910. Forsyth died on November 11, 1921, in London, saying, “The Cross is not a compromise but a conquest.”