Source: Moses D. Hoge, “Portraitures of Four Pastors” in Proceedings of the Celebration of the Eightieth Anniversary of Its Organization [First Presbyterian Church of Richmond, Va.], May 1, 1892.

Thomas Verner Moore is buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee.

Thomas Verner Moore is buried at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Nashville, Tennessee.

Eulogy on the Life and Character of the Late John Zug, Esq.: Delivered at the Request of the Temperance Societies of Carlisle, Pa., in the Methodist Episcopal Church, on the Evening of September 18, 1843 (1843)

The Missionary Bearing of Calvinism (1844)

Relative Influence of Presbytery and Prelacy on Civil and Ecclesiastical Liberty (1845)

The Reformation the Source of American Liberty (1846)

The Relation of Christianity to Modern Civilization (1846)

Howison’s History of Virginia (1848)

The Lord’s Day, The Christian Sabbath (1849)

Thomas Carlyle (1849)

Rev. Thomas Chalmers (1849)

Morell’s Philosophy of Religion (1850)

Inspiration of the Scriptures: Morell’s Theory Reviewed (1850)

Unity of the Human Race (1851)

William Penn (1852)

English Infidelity (1852)

Zechariah (1853-1854)

Importance of Religion to Public Men: A Funeral Discourse on the Death of Robert Craig, of Roanoke, Late a Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1853)

But a Step Between Man and Death: A Discourse Delivered at the Funeral of Samuel Taylor, Esq., in the First Presbyterian Church, Richmond, Va., Feb. 24th, 1853 (1853)

The Mother’s Vision: The Birth-Day in Heaven of Mary Ann; Her Second Year Among the Angels (1853)

Socrates (1853)

Thoughts on Following a Child to the Grave (1853)

To Frank, on His Birth-Day (1853)

The Ethnological Objection: The Unity of the Human Race (1853)

Christianity and the Fall of the Roman Empire (1854)

Emily: Her Second Birth-Day Among the Angels (1854)

To My Sister F— on Her Birthday (1854)

God’s Method of Saving the World (1855)

A New Translation and Exposition of Malachi (1855)

God’s University; or, The Family Considered as a Government, a School, and a Church, the Divinely-Appointed Institute for Training the Young for the Life that now is, and for that which is to come (1855)

Names and Surnames (1856)

Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi (1856)

The Cherubic Symbol (1857)

Foreshadowings of the Judgment (1857)

The Ascension (1857)

The Christian Lawyer, or, The Claims of Christianity on the Legal Profession: a Discourse Delivered at the Funeral of Richard W. Flournoy, Esq., in the First Presbyterian Church, Richmond, Va., December 1st, 1857 (1858)

The Last Days of Jesus (1858)

The Power and Claims of a Calvinistic Literature: A Sermon on Behalf of the Assembly’s Board of Publication (1859)

God our Refuge and Strength in this War: A Discourse Before the Congregations of the First and Second Presbyterian Churches, on the Day of Humiliation, Fasting and Prayer, Appointed by President Davis, Friday, Nov. 15, 1861 (1861)

To a Christian in the Army (1861)

What Can I Do? (1861)

Timothy’s Office (1862)

Our Citizen Prisoners (1863)

The Victory Won: A Memorial of the Rev. Wm. J. Hoge, D. D., Late Pastor of the Tabb Street Presbyterian Church, Petersburg, VA (1864)

April 17, 1865 Letter to Phineas D. Gurley (1865)

The Bible the Light-House of the World (1866)

Father, Let Thy Smiling Face (1866, 1901)

The Character of the True Child of God (1867)

Religion and Medicine (1867)

The Bible and Civil Law (1867)

The Culdee Church (1868)

The Corporate Life of the Church (1868)

Rev. Thomas Verner Moore, D.D. (1889)

Why Are You Not a Communicant? (n.d.)


This 2-part article appeared in the January and April 1849 issues of The Methodist Quarterly Review.

This 2-part article appeared in the July and October 1850 issues of The Methodist Quarterly Review.

This 6-part article appeared in the January, April, and July 1853, and the January, April, and July 1854 issues of The Quarterly Review of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.

This 2-part article appeared in the January and April 1855 issues of The Methodist Quarterly Review.

Moore’s is the second of two prize essays contained in this PDF file.

Moore’s is the second of two prize essays contained in this PDF file.

This September 16, 1863 letter from T.V. Moore to Capt. James M. Brown was published in the October 14, 1863 issue of The Franklin Repository [Chambersburg, Pa.] (transcript available here).

Source: Remembering Lincoln: A Project of Ford’s Theater

Source: Remembering Lincoln: A Project of Ford’s Theater