# Arthur Peake

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{{Short description|English biblical scholar (1865–1929)}}
{{for|the mountain in Alaska|Arthur Peak}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=November 2017}}
'''Arthur Samuel Peake''' (1865–1929) was an English biblical scholar, born at [Leek, Staffordshire](/source/Leek%2C_Staffordshire), and educated at [St John's College, Oxford](/source/St_John's_College%2C_Oxford). He was the first holder of the [Rylands Chair of Biblical Criticism and Exegesis](/source/Rylands_Professor_of_Biblical_Criticism_and_Exegesis) in the [University of Manchester](/source/Victoria_University_of_Manchester), from its establishment as an independent institution in 1904. He was thus the first non-Anglican to become a professor of divinity in an English university.<ref name="papers">[http://www.library.manchester.ac.uk/search-resources/guide-to-special-collections/atoz/arthur-samuel-peake-papers/ iyc.uo Arthur Samuel Peake Papers] [John Rylands Library](/source/John_Rylands_Library), Manchester</ref>

Peake popularized modern biblical scholarship, including the new "[higher criticism](/source/higher_criticism)." He approached the Bible not as the [infallible](/source/biblical_infallibility) word of God, but as the record of revelation written by fallible humans.<ref>Timothy Laursen,  "A. S. Peake, the Free Churches and modern biblical criticism." ''Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester'' (2004) 86#3 pp. 23-53 </ref>

==Early life==
Arthur Peake was born in Leek on 24 November 1865 into a family of long-established [Primitive Methodists](/source/Primitive_Methodism_in_the_United_Kingdom), of which his father was a minister. He had four brothers and two sisters. The family moved several times during Arthur's childhood, with longest stays at [Leintwardine](/source/Leintwardine), from where Arthur attended [Ludlow Grammar School](/source/Ludlow_Grammar_School), [Stratford](/source/Stratford-upon-Avon), where he studied at [King Edward VI School](/source/King_Edward_VI_School%2C_Stratford-upon-Avon) in Stratford-upon-Avon, and [King Henry VIII School, Coventry](/source/King_Henry_VIII_School%2C_Coventry). There he won a [classical](/source/classics) scholarship to study at [St John's College, Oxford](/source/St_John's_College%2C_Oxford).<ref name=Leslie>[https://archive.org/stream/MN41804ucmf_5/MN41804ucmf_5_djvu.txt memoir by Leslie Sillman Peake, his son].</ref>

Arriving in Oxford in 1883, he studied the classics without great success for two years,<ref name=Leslie/> but then switched to the study of theology, in which he excelled, winning a first-class degree and a further scholarship. Although he formed at this time an intention to seek [ordination](/source/ordination) in the Church of England, he was never ordained, remaining a Methodist [layman](/source/layman) for the rest of his life.<ref name=DNB>[http://www.oxforddnb.com/index/101035427/ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry]</ref>

==Academic career==
In 1890-92 he was a lecturer at [Mansfield College, Oxford](/source/Mansfield_College%2C_Oxford), and from 1890 to 1897 held a fellowship at [Merton College](/source/Merton_College%2C_Oxford).<ref name=DNB/>

In 1892, however, he was invited to become tutor at the Primitive Methodist Theological Institute in [Manchester](/source/Manchester), which was renamed Hartley College in 1906.<ref name=papers/><ref>[http://www.lutherkinghouse.org.uk/cms/home/hartley-victoria-college/history-of-hartley-victoria-college Luther King House] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091028121544/http://www.lutherkinghouse.org.uk/cms/home/hartley-victoria-college/history-of-hartley-victoria-college |date=28 October 2009 }}</ref> He was largely responsible for broadening the curriculum which intending Primitive Methodist ministers were required to follow, and for raising the standards of the training.<ref name=papers/>

In 1895-1912 he served as lecturer in the [Lancashire Independent College](/source/Lancashire_Independent_College), from 1904 to 1912 also in the [United Methodist College](/source/United_Methodist_College) at Manchester. In 1904 he was appointed Professor of Biblical Criticism and Exegesis in the (Victoria) University of Manchester. (This chair was in the Faculty of Theology established in that year; it was renamed "Rylands Professor, etc." in 1909.)

Peake was also active as a layman in wider Methodist circles, and did a great deal to further the [reunion of Methodism](/source/Methodist_Union) which took effect in 1932, three years after his death. In the wider ecumenical sphere Peake worked for the [National Council of Evangelical Free Churches](/source/National_Council_of_Evangelical_Free_Churches), serving as president in 1928, and was a member of the [World Conference on Faith and Order](/source/World_Conference_on_Faith_and_Order) held in Lausanne in 1927. He published and lectured extensively, but is best remembered for his one-volume [commentary on the Bible](/source/Peake's_Commentary) (1919), which, in its revised form, is still in use.<ref name=papers/>

The [University of Aberdeen](/source/University_of_Aberdeen) made him an honorary [D. D.](/source/Doctor_of_Divinity) in 1907. He was a governor of the [John Rylands Library](/source/John_Rylands_Library). In 1924 he was president of the [Society for Old Testament Study](/source/Society_for_Old_Testament_Study).

==Personal life==
Peake married Harriet Mary Sillman (of Oxford) on 29 June 1892: their three sons were Leslie Sillman Peake (b. 1900), Arnold Arthur Peake (b. 1903) and Clive Talbot Peake (b. 1905).<ref>Wilkinson ''Arthur Samuel Peake'', 1971, p. xi</ref> 
==Selected publications==
Among Dr. Peake's publications are:  
* ''A Guide to Biblical Study'' (1897)
* ''The Problem of Suffering in the Old Testament'' (1904)  
* ''The Religion of Israel'' (1908)  
* ''Critical Introduction to the New Testament'' (1909)  
* ''Heroes and Martyrs of Faith'' (1910)
* ''The Bible: its Origin, its Significance, and its Abiding Worth'' (1913)  
* ''Germany in the Nineteenth Century'' (1915)
* ''[A Commentary on the Bible](/source/Peake's_Commentary)'' (with the assistance of A. J. Grieve for the New Testament) (1919)
* ''The Servant of Yahweh'': lectures given at London and Manchester, 1904-26 (1931) (edited posthumously)
Dr. Peake also wrote separate commentaries on Hebrews (1902; Century Bible), Colossians (1903; Expositor's Greek Testament), Job (1905; Century Bible), Jeremiah (1910–12; Century Bible), and Isaiah xl-lxvi (1912).   
A portrait of him is at the John Rylands University Library, University of Manchester.

==References==
<references/>
* Obituary in ''Bulletin of the John Rylands Library'', XIV, pp.&nbsp;1–8

==Further reading==
* Timothy Laursen,  "A.S. Peake, the Free Churches and modern biblical criticism." ''Bulletin of the John Rylands University Library of Manchester'' (2004) 86#3 pp 23–53.
*Young, D. M. (2017) ''Change and Decay: Primitive Methodism from late Victorian times till World War 1'' (Stoke-on-Trent: Tentmaker Publications)
* {{BBKL|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110205043232/http://www.bautz.de/bbkl/p/peake_a_s.shtml|autor=[Christof Mauch](/source/Christof_Mauch)|artikel=Arthur Samuel Peake|band=7|spalten=122-123}}
*www.primitivemethodism.com

===Primary sources===
*Peake, A. S.; (Howard, W. F., ed.) (1938) ''Recollections and Appreciations''. London: Epworth Press (includes some of his minor works, mainly obituary notices of other scholars)
*Peake, Leslie Sillman (1930) ''Arthur Samuel Peake: a memoir''. London: Hodder and Stoughton (by Peake's eldest son)
*Wilkinson, John T., ed. (1958) ''Arthur Samuel Peake, 1865-1929: essays in commemoration by Elsie Cann, W. E. Farndale ... [and others], and selections from his writings''. London: Epworth Press
*Young, D. M. (2017) ''Change and Decay: Primitive Methodism from late Victorian times till World War 1'' (Stoke-on-Trent: Tentmaker Publications)
*www.primitivemethodism.com
*[https://www.library.manchester.ac.uk/rylands/special-collections/a-to-z/detail/?mms_id=992983876600101631 A.S. Peake Papers], [John Rylands Library](/source/John_Rylands_Library) University of Manchester

==External links==
* {{NIE}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Peake, Arthur Samuel}}
Category:People from Leek, Staffordshire
Category:English biblical scholars
Category:1865 births
Category:1929 deaths
Category:People educated at King Henry VIII School, Coventry
Category:Alumni of St John's College, Oxford
Category:Fellows of Merton College, Oxford
Category:Bible commentators
Category:Academics of the University of Manchester
Category:19th-century Christian biblical scholars
Category:19th-century British biblical scholars
Category:20th-century Christian biblical scholars
Category:Methodist biblical scholars
Category:Clergy from Staffordshire
Category:John Rylands Research Institute and Library
Category:Presidents of the Society for Old Testament Study
Category:20th-century British biblical scholars

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