Difference between revisions of "John Anderson"

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John Anderson <ref name="term_19731" />
John Anderson <ref name="term_19737" />
<p> an eloquent Wesleyan minister of England, was born at Gibraltar, Spain, where his father was garrisoned, Jan. 28, 1791. He entered the [[Methodist]] Society in 1808, the ministry in 1812; travelled many of the prominent circuits, such as [[Reading]] (1819 ), [[Manchester]] (1821), London, West (1824), City [[Road]] (1827), [[Leeds]] (1830 ), Manchester (1833), Leeds, West (1835), and Liverpool, North; and died in Liverpool, after severe suffering, April 11, 1840. Anderson was one of the eminent men of the [[Methodism]] of his time, to the principles of which he was most firmly attached. He preferred the charges against Dr. S.Warren in 1834, and his name was prominent in that celebrated case. He was tender and ardent in his friend-' ships, fervent in his piety, and zealously devoted to the duties of his calling. Few men of his time exceeded him in the eloquence and power of his pulpit and platform efforts. A speech he delivered at Leeds in 1830 on the abolition of slavery was pronounced by lord (then Mr.) Brougham as the most eloquent and masterly he had ever heard on that subject. He is the subject of the third sketch in Everett's 2d vol. of Wesleyan Takings. He published a Sermon, on the death of Adam Clarke (Leeds, 1832). See Minutes of British Conference, 1840; Wesleyan Meth. Mag. 1846, p. 417, 521; West, Sketches of Wesleyan Preachers, p. 322-335. </p>
<p> Anderson, John (1), D.D. </p> <p> an [[Associate]] minister, was born in England, near the Scotch border, about 1748. After completing the usual course of studies, he was licensed by the Associate or Secession Church of Scotland, but on account of a weak voice and hesitates manner his pulpit services were not acceptable. He came to [[America]] in 1783, arriving in [[Philadelphia]] some time in August. He spent several years in preaching in various sections of this country, and in 1788 he crossed the Alleghany Mountains and preached to congregations in Beaver County, Pa. He was ordained in Philadelphia Oct. 31, 1788, preached awhile in Eastern Pennsylvania, and in 1789 returned to the scene of his former labors. He was settled as pastor over the congregations of [[Mill]] [[Creek]] and Harman's Creek, Beaver Co,, in 1792. He was chosen professor of theology for the Associate Church during the same year. "A small two story log building was erected on the farm on which he lived for the accommodation of his theological students. A library was also collected, consisting of about a thousand volumes of rare and valuable works, most of which were donations from the brethren of the Associate Church in Scotland. In his office of professor he continued until the spring of 1819, when, owing to the infirmities of age, he resigned." He still attended to the duties of the pastoral office until his death, which occurred April 6, 1830. The number of students under his care was usually five or six, and perhaps never exceeded ten. His chief employment as a professor was in reading Marck's Medulla Theologice. These he enlarged on each repetition of them until they became so voluminous that, although he read each day of the week except Monday and Saturday from the middle of the day till from three to five o'clock during the four months of the session, he was not able, with his last class, to finish the whole system during the four years of their attendance. Among his publications are, Essays on Various Subjects relative to the [[Present]] State of [[Religion]] (Glasgow, 1782): '''''—''''' A [[Discourse]] on the [[Divine]] [[Ordinance]] of [[Singing]] [[Praise]] (Phila. 1793): '''''—''''' The [[Scripture]] [[Doctrine]] of the Appropriation, etc. (eod.): Vindicice Cantus Dominici (1800): [[Precious]] Truth (1806): '''''—''''' and a Series of Dialogues on Church [[Communion]] (Pittsburgh, 1820). See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, IX, 3, 17. </p>


== References ==
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_19731"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/anderson,+john+(2) John Anderson from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_19737"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/anderson,+john+(1),+d.d. John Anderson from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Revision as of 07:50, 15 October 2021

John Anderson [1]

Anderson, John (1), D.D.

an Associate minister, was born in England, near the Scotch border, about 1748. After completing the usual course of studies, he was licensed by the Associate or Secession Church of Scotland, but on account of a weak voice and hesitates manner his pulpit services were not acceptable. He came to America in 1783, arriving in Philadelphia some time in August. He spent several years in preaching in various sections of this country, and in 1788 he crossed the Alleghany Mountains and preached to congregations in Beaver County, Pa. He was ordained in Philadelphia Oct. 31, 1788, preached awhile in Eastern Pennsylvania, and in 1789 returned to the scene of his former labors. He was settled as pastor over the congregations of Mill Creek and Harman's Creek, Beaver Co,, in 1792. He was chosen professor of theology for the Associate Church during the same year. "A small two story log building was erected on the farm on which he lived for the accommodation of his theological students. A library was also collected, consisting of about a thousand volumes of rare and valuable works, most of which were donations from the brethren of the Associate Church in Scotland. In his office of professor he continued until the spring of 1819, when, owing to the infirmities of age, he resigned." He still attended to the duties of the pastoral office until his death, which occurred April 6, 1830. The number of students under his care was usually five or six, and perhaps never exceeded ten. His chief employment as a professor was in reading Marck's Medulla Theologice. These he enlarged on each repetition of them until they became so voluminous that, although he read each day of the week except Monday and Saturday from the middle of the day till from three to five o'clock during the four months of the session, he was not able, with his last class, to finish the whole system during the four years of their attendance. Among his publications are, Essays on Various Subjects relative to the Present State of Religion (Glasgow, 1782): A Discourse on the Divine Ordinance of Singing Praise (Phila. 1793): The Scripture Doctrine of the Appropriation, etc. (eod.): Vindicice Cantus Dominici (1800): Precious Truth (1806): and a Series of Dialogues on Church Communion (Pittsburgh, 1820). See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, IX, 3, 17.

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