Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Kidderminster" ¶ 17
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Puritan and minister
The Puritan minister Increase Mather dismissed the word as bereft of power.
1678, Harvard College ; A. M. 1681, honorary doctorate 1710, University of Glasgow ) was a socially and politically influential New England Puritan minister, prolific author and pamphleteer ; he is often remembered for his role in the Salem witch trials.
" The Puritan minister began to embrace the sentiment that smallpox was an inevitability for anyone, both the good and the wicked, yet God had provided them with the means to save themselves.
Dartmouth was founded by Eleazar Wheelock, a Puritan minister from Columbia, Connecticut, who had previously sought to establish a school to train Native Americans as missionaries.
Cotton Mather, influential New England Puritan minister, portrait by Peter Pelham.
* February 13 Cotton Mather, New England Puritan minister ( b. 1663 )
* February 27 Samuel Parris, English-born Puritan minister ( b. 1653 )
* August 23 Increase Mather, American Puritan minister ( b. 1639 )
* Samuel Parris ( 1653 1720 ), Puritan minister during the Salem witch trials
* Thomas Tregosse, Puritan minister
* John Williams ( minister ) ( 1664 1729 ), New England Puritan minister who became famous for The Redeemed Captive, his account of his captivity by the Mohawk
* Richard Culmer, the infamous Puritan minister known locally as Blue Dick Culmer, was presented to the living but the people rejected him and his name-to this day-is still omitted from the role of incumbents in the church porch.
For the Puritan author and minister see Arthur Dent ( Puritan ).
Clyfton was a Puritan minister who believed that the Church of England ought to institute strict reforms to eliminate all vestiges of Catholic practices.
* John Russell ( clergyman ) ( 1626 1692 ), Puritan minister
* February 12-Cotton Mather, New England Puritan minister ( born 1663 )
* February 12-Cotton Mather, New England Puritan minister, prolific author and pamphleteer ( died 1728 )
Buckingham, who continued in office as chief minister into the reign of James's son, Charles I, was responsible for a policy of war against Spain and France, and was assassinated by a Puritan fanatic, John Felton, in 1628 as he prepared an expedition to relieve the Huguenots of La Rochelle.
He then had a guardian named Downes who moved him to another private school at St Albans where he was much influenced by the Presbyterian minister Samuel Clarke ( not to be confused with Samuel Clarke, ( 1599 1683 ), the English clergyman and Puritan biographer ).
* John Norton ( Puritan divine ), author, minister at Ipswich 1636
He was a Puritan minister who was involved with the government of the colony, the administration of Harvard College, and most notoriously, the Salem witch trials.
Roger Morrice ( 1628 1702 ) was an English Puritan minister and political journalist.

Puritan and Richard
He was the son of Increase Mather, and grandson of both John Cotton and Richard Mather, all also prominent Puritan ministers.
Isaac Ambrose ( 1604-January 20, 1663 / 1664 ) was an English Puritan divine, the son of Richard Ambrose, vicar of Ormskirk, and was probably descended from the Ambroses of Lowick in Furness, a well-known Roman Catholic family.
Gallery of famous 17th-century Puritan theologians: Thomas Gouge, William Bridge, Thomas Manton, John Flavel, Richard Sibbes, Stephen Charnock, William Bates ( Puritan ) | William Bates, John Owen ( theologian ) | John Owen, John Howe ( Puritan ) | John Howe, Richard Baxter.
Various strands of Calvinist thought of the 17th century were taken up by different parts of the Puritan movement, and in particular Amyraldism was adopted by some influential figures ( John Davenant, Samuel Ward, and to some extent Richard Baxter ).
“ Fathers and mothers have ‘ disordered and disobedient children ,’” said the Puritan Richard Greenham, “ because they have been disobedient children to the Lord and disordered to their parents when they were young .” Because the duty of early childcare fell almost exclusively on women, a woman's salvation necessarily depended upon the observable goodness of her child.
It sums up the issues between the Puritan school and that of Richard Hooker, and was posthumously published.
* December 22 Richard Alleine, English Puritan clergyman ( b. 1611 )
* Bushman, Richard L. From Puritan to Yankee: Character and the Social Order in Connecticut, 1690 1765 ( 1967 )
The statue of Roger Williams at Roger Williams UniversityMoore ( 1963 ) traces the ' negative ' approach of the orthodox Puritan writers ( Bradford, Winthrop, Morton, Cotton Mather, Hutchinson, Winsor, and Dexter ), the ' romantic ' approach ( George Bancroft, Vernon Parrington, Ernst, and Brockunier ) and the ' realistic ' approach ( Backus, H. Richard Niebuhr, Roland Bainton, and Hudson ), and regards the work of Mauro Calamandrei, who was followed by Perry Miller and Ola Winslow, as crucial.
Parliament appointed Protestant commissioners loyal to their cause to subdue the colonies, and two of them, the Virginian William Claiborne and Puritan leader Richard Bennett, took control of the colonial government in St. Mary's City in 1652.
" As such, Miller told Cleese that the episode would interpret Petruchio as an early Puritan, and that the part was not to be acted along the traditional lines of the swaggering bully a la Richard Burton in Zeffirelli's 1967 adaptation.
He was a direct descendant of John Deming, ( 1615 1705 ) an early Puritan settler and original patentee of the Connecticut Colony, and Honor Treat, the daughter of Richard Treat ( 1584 1669 ) an early New England settler, Deputy to the Connecticut Legislature and also a Patentee of the Royal Charter of Connecticut, 1662.
Hobart married as his second wife in America Rebecca Ibrook, daughter of his fellow Puritan Richard Ibrook.
Several members of the Puritan Bennett family also came to settle the area, including Richard Bennett who led the Puritans to neighboring Nansemond in 1635, and later became governor of the Virginia Colony.
* 1638-Official ban of Christianity in Japan with death penalty ; The Fountain Opened, a posthumous work of the influential Puritan writer Richard Sibbes is published, in which he says that the gospel must continue its journey " til it have gone over the whole world.
Among the first writers whose works he edited were the Puritan writers, Richard Sibbes, Thomas Brooks and Herbert Palmer.
Richard Baxter ( 12 November 1615 8 December 1691 ) was an English Puritan church leader, poet, hymn-writer, theologian, and controversialist.
He was the son of Richard Mather, and the father of Cotton Mather, both influential Puritan ministers.

Puritan and Baxter
Richard Baxter ( November 12, 1615-December 8, 1691 ) the English Puritan church leader, divine scholar and controversialist, called by Dean Stanley " the chief of English Protestant Schoolmen " lived in Bridgnorth town centre, in 1640.
He was a Puritan, admired by fellow-clergy including Richard Baxter and Henry Maurice.
:: Richard Baxter ; Meaning of Work ; Justification of Profit ; Jewish vs. Puritan Capitalism ; Puritanism and Culture ; Saving and Capital ; Paradox of Asceticism and Rich ; Serving Both Worlds ; Citizenry Capitalistic Ethic ; Iron Cage of Capitalism.
With Perkins, Preston, Baxter and Henry Newcome, he was a moderate and non-Presbyterian Puritan.
It was only after the hall burned that it acquired the moniker " Saints ' Rest ", which came from the Puritan devotional The Saints ' Everlasting Rest, written by Richard Baxter in 1650.
Similar charges were leveled against the Puritan great, Richard Baxter, who dealt frequently with Cyrus and Peter du Moulin.
* Statue of Richard Baxter, 17th century English Puritan church leader and divine scholar.

0.368 seconds.