Contribution to Religious Life
With independent religious leanings, Philip Doddridge declined offers which would have led him into the
Anglican ministry, or the bar; and in 1719 chose instead to enter the liberal academy for Nonconformists or Dissenters at Kibworth in Leicestershire. Here he was taught by the Rev.
John Jennings, whom Doddridge briefly succeeded in
1723.
Later that year, at a general meeting of Nonconformist ministers, Philip Doddridge was chosen to conduct the academy being newly established at
Market Harborough. In the same year, he received an invitation to be pastor to an independent congregation at
Northampton, which he also accepted. Here his popularity as a preacher is said to have been chiefly due to his "high susceptibility, joined with physical advantages and perfect sincerity." His sermons were mostly practical in character, and his aim was to cultivate in his hearers a spiritual and devotional frame of mind.
Throughout the 1730s and 1740s Philip Doddridge continued his academic and pastoral work, and developed close relations with numerous early religious revivalists and independents, through extensive visits and correspondence. Through this approach he helped establish and maintain a circle of influential independent religious thinkers and writers, including
Dr Isaac Watts. He also became a prolific author and hymn-writer. In 1736 both the universities at
Aberdeen gave him the degree of D.D. However, these multifarious labours, led to so many engagements and bulky correspondence, that it interfered seriously both with his preaching and academic duties (he had some 200 students to whom he lectured on philosophy and theology, in the mathematical or Spinozistic style).