Early career and inauguration After he received a license to preach from the
Presbytery of New York on March 7, 1827, Young's career in the ministry began following his graduation from Princeton. In 1828, he moved to
Lexington, Kentucky, where he was appointed to the pastorate of McChord Presbyterian Church (now
Second Presbyterian Church), Centre's presidency became vacant in October 1830 when
Gideon Blackburn resigned the office. At the recommendation of
Archibald Alexander,
President of Centre College Young inherited a college described by a Centre historian as "small and poor"; it was one which had graduated just 24 or 25 students over the course of its eleven-year history. and was successful in raising $6,000 () to sponsor two new professors. He also succeeded in raising money from residents of Danville and other parts of Kentucky. He served on the college faculty as a professor of
logic and
moral philosophy, and taught
belles-lettres and
political economy when those positions were unfilled. The curriculum during Young's tenure consisted of
classics, mathematics,
natural science and history, "taught within a Christian framework". The college catalogue from 1866 notes that each day of classes began with the "worship of God" and that religious instruction and sermons, held on the first Monday of each week, were required for all students. He became concerned with the behavior of the students as his tenure progressed; in an 1845 report to the Board of Trustees, he made note of the increased rate of
drunkenness among the students and noted "[the College] has been in a worse condition in respect to good order than it has ever been since I have been connected with it". While a member of Centre's faculty, he was elected to membership of the
Beta Theta Pi fraternity; this practice of electing members of a college's board of trustees or faculty was relatively common in the fraternity at the time. Centre graduated a fair proportion of its first notable alumni during his time in office; the class of 1855 alone consisted of
John Y. Brown,
Thomas Theodore Crittenden,
Boyd Winchester, and
William Campbell Preston Breckinridge. Other graduates during his term included
John C. Breckinridge (1838),
John Christian Bullitt (1849),
John Marshall Harlan (1850), and
Andrew Phelps McCormick (1854).
Ministry and involvement with the Presbyterian Church In 1834 Young became the pastor of the
Danville Presbyterian Church, which served students and the town at large. He was popular with his congregation, which grew in size rapidly. A few years later, the Presbyterian Church found itself embroiled in the
Old School–New School controversy, an 1837 schism that split the church into "Old School" traditional
Calvinist theological conservatives and "New School"
revivalists. He was a part of the "Old School", as were the
Synod of Kentucky, many other southern synods, and both of Danville's Presbyterian Churches at which he had preached. Around this time he was offered the presidency at
Transylvania University due to his successes in Danville, though he ultimately opted to stay at Centre. In 1852, the congregation had outgrown the building, and he founded a second church, the Second Presbyterian Church, to accommodate the many students that attended. The church remained operational until 1969, when the building was vacated and the congregations joined at the original First Presbyterian Church. Young was among the delegates from the Synod of Kentucky to the 1853 General Assembly of the "Old School" Presbyterian Church, held in
Philadelphia. On May 20, 1853, the second day of the meeting, he was elected to the office of
moderator, earning the bare minimum number of votes necessary for a majority, 126 out of an available 251, and winning election on the first ballot. Commenting on his performance as moderator, a correspondent from
The New York Times noted that he was "of decided ability". On May 23, he and the other delegates from the Synod of Kentucky petitioned the General Assembly for $60,000 () to be put towards land and trusts to build a "Seminary of the first class" in "the West", with a plot of "ten or more acres" in Danville being named as a specific location. This seminary opened in Old Centre in 1853 as the Danville Theological Seminary and moved to downtown Danville, in
Constitution Square, the following year. ==Personal life and death==