I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
Lancelot was an English bishop and scholar who held high positions in the Church of England during the reigns of Elizabeth I and James 1.
During the reign of James I he served successively as Bishop of Chichester (1605-9), Ely (1609-19) and Winchester ( 1619- 1626).
In 1571 he entered Pembroke College, Cambridge. He earned a BA and a MA.
In 1576 elected fellow at Pemborke. 11th June 1580 he was ordained. He was incorporated MA at Oxford.
He oversaw the translation of the King James version of the Bible .His name is the first on the list of divines appointed to compile the authorized version commissioned in 1604 and published in 1611. His elder brother Roger also served as a translator.
Once a year he would spend a vacation of a month with his parents. He would use this time to study European languages- eventually he acquired most of the modern languages of Europe.
He sought to defend and advance Anglican doctrine, criticising both Puritan and Roman Catholic teaching. He was renown his preaching. His most famous book was * Preces Privatae* (1648) - a collection of prayers.
Following the discovery of the Gunpowder Plot - November 5th 1605 - he was asked to prepare a sermon to be presented to the king in 1606. In the sermon he justified the need to commemorate the deliverance and defined the nature of celebrations.
Read* During Elizabeth’s reign and During the reign of James I*
Lancelot’s feast day is 25th September
Source
Wikipedia
Aphrahat was a Syriac Christian author of the third century. His ancestors were from the Persian /Sasanian Empire. All of his known works, the *Demonstrations * come from later in his life - 336-344.
Aphrahat is the Syriac version of the Persian name Frahat, which today would be Farhad.
The author, known as the Persian sage, also took the name Jacob at his baptism.
There is a suggestion that he became a bishop
Read about order and subjects of the 23 Demonstrations.
Earnest was originally a British mathematician and scientist. In his late twenties he became a liberal theologian and bishop. He became the leader of the Modernist movement in the Church of England. He was renowned as a pacifist during WW11.
1893 he went to Trinity College, Cambridge.
I1897 elected to a Trinity Fellowship.
1902 appointed as a lecturer in Mathematics and ordained as a deacon in the Church of England.
1903 ordained as a priest.
1906/8 appointed junior dean.
1908 appointed tutor.
1915 he left Cambridge, and his career in mathematics, to become Master of the Temple in London.
1918 he received a canonry at Westminster Abbey.
1924 became bishop of Birmingham (1924-53)
1953 retired after nearly 30 years due to poor health.
He was perhaps the best known liberal bishop of his time, identified with the modernist or broad church movement. His time as bishop was marked by continual controversy. His book The Rise of Christianity attacked many Christian claims including the virgin birth and the bodily resurrection of Christ.
Read Pacifism and Eugenics,
Earnest died, aged 79, at his home in Sussex.
William was a Church of Scotland minister, an author, radio and television presenter, and Professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism at the University of Glasgow. He wrote a popular set of New Testament Bible commentaries -sold 1.5 million.
He studied Classics and Divinity at Glasgow University (1925-9). He also studied at the University of Sam Ratulangi Manado (1932/3).
1933-47
He was minister at Trinity Church Renfrew from 1933-1946.
In 1947 he returned to the University of Glasgow as a lecturer in New Testament.
He became Professor of Divinity and Biblical Criticism in 1963. He then dedicated his life to making the best biblical scholarship available to the average reader. The Daily Study Bible was the result -17 commentaries on the N.T…
Today, in its updated version, it is called the New Daily Study Bible series.
Also In 2008 Saint Andrew Press took the study series and began to produce pocket-sized thematic titles called Insights. The books are introduced by contemporary authors, broadcasters and scholars.
William wrote many other popular books drawing on scholarship but written in a highly accessible style.
In his book The Mind of Jesus he states his aim was to make the figure of Jesus more vividly alive, so that we may know him better and love him more.- See list of Worksto appreciate the number of books that he wrote.
William described himself theologically as a * liberal evangelical.*
Source
Wikipedia
Thomas was born around 1495 in Norwich. He became a protestant martyr.
He is believed to be the person who converted Hugh Latimer to the doctrines of the Reformers- he also died a martyr.
Around 1550 , aged only 15, he entered Trinity Hall, Cambridge University where he studied law.
Conversion
He was ‘struck’ by these words from 1 Timothy ch1 v15
This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came onto the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief.
‘Immediately I felt a marvellous comfort and quietness, in so much that my bruised bones lept for joy.’
Scripture became his chief study and In 1519 he took holy orders.
In 1525 he obtained a license to preach throughout the diocese of Ely.
In 1527 he was arrested for heresy. He recanted and was released but in 1531 he
was arrested again for spreading ideas critical of the hierarchical structure of the church and the cult of the saints, For this he was burnt at Lollards Pit, in Norwich,on 19 August 1531.
Afterwards it was alleged that his execution had been carried out without the proper authorisation by the state. THe result was Bishop Nix in 1534 was condemned on this charge and had his property confiscated.
( Thomas was nicknamed Little Bilney because of his short stature.)
Source
Wikipedia
Thomas was popularly known as the ‘Archbishop of Nonconformity’. He was noted for sermons and writings in defence of the principles of Noncomformity, devotional verse and for involvement in the cause of anti-slavery
After a short pastorate on the Isle of Wight he moved in 1829 to King’s Weigh House Chapel, London. There he continued to discharge the duties of the ministry until he resigned in 1869 (40 years). During his time there the congregation grew so large that a new chapel on Fish Street Hill was built. In 1834 he personally laid the foundation stone of the chapel.
He visited Canada and the USA in 1845 . Between 1857-9 he visited the Australian colonies.
He was twice chairman of the Congregational Union of England and Wales.
He worked to obtain reunion with the C.of E. He introduced the chanting of psalms into Congregational worship as one step towards this. He gave a special impulse with the publication of The Service of Song in the House of the Lord.
(See Books for other of his publications)
On the other hand he wrote Twenty -Four Reasons for Dissenting from the Church of England (1848).
He was an active member of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society formed in 1839. He wrote the biography of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, a leading parliamentary abolitionist.
Thomas’s liberality of view and breadth of ecclesiastical sympathy entitles him to be ranked, on questions of Nonconformity, among the most distinguished.
He gave his last sermon in November 1873. Following months of pain Thomas died,aged 76, on 24th February 1874.
He wrote the well known hymn Eternal Light! Eternal Light!
Source
Wikipedia
Dominic is best remembered for his part in St. John Henry Newman’s conversion. He is also commemorated for his work in his efforts to return England to the Catholic faith in the 19th Century.
He entered the Passionist Order, about 1814 as a lay brother and in 1818 he was ordained a priest. He lectured and taught at several places in Italy up until 1841 (20+years) when his wish to work in England as a missionary became a reality. During this period he had produced many theological and philosophical works.
He arrived in Folkestone in October 1841 - a little Italian priest in ‘comical’ attire. In February 1842 he secured possession of Aston Hall, Staffordshire. for the Passionists in England.
In October 1845 he received ( St. ) John Henry Newman into the Roman Catholic Church.
Dominic visited Littlemore where Newman made his confession to him.
(Newman relates in his ‘Apologia’ how Barberi arrived soaked from rain and as he was drying Newman knelt down and asked to be received into the Catholic Church.)
On 27th August 1849 he suffered a fatal heart attack on the train at Pangbourne, just outside Reading. Dominic is buried in St. Anne and Blessed Dominic Church, Sutton, Merseyside.
By the time of his death in 1849 he had established 3 Passsionist houses and several chapels in England. He had preached innumerable sermons and received 100s of converts.
In 1963 he was beatified by the RC church.
Rest in peace
Blessed Dominic Barberi
Source
Wikipedia
Robert was born in King’s Lynn, Norfolk He was educated at Cambridge.
He was an English protestant martyr who helped spread Lutheranism in England.
He was a prior at Austin Friars.
Thomas Bilney influenced him in embracing the teaching of the Reformers and in 1528 he escaped, to Antwerp for Germany where he formed a lasting friendship with Martin Luther.
In the summer of 1531, while in Wittenberg, he was commissioned to ascertain Luther and other continental divines opinion on the divorce proceedings between Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon. He spent several years going between England and Germany
A little more than a month after his protector, Thomas Cromwell, fell from favour, he was burnt as a heretic with two other Lutherans.
On July 1540, along with 5 other religious dissidents - 3 Lutheran and 3 Catholic-. he was drawn on hurdles from the Tower of London to Smithfield to be executed
Sources
Wilipedia
Briannica
The Hodder and Stoughton Book of Famous Christians.
Jean Guillaume de la Flechere was a Swiss born English divine and Methodist leader.
He emigrated to England in 1750 and began to work with John Wesley. He became a key interpreter of Wesleyan theology in the 18th century and one of Methodists first great theologians.
he became a fervent supporter of the Evangelical Revival. He was devoted to the Methodist concern for spiritual renewal and revival but maintained a never wavering commitment to the Church of .
He spent 25 years (1760-1785) working in the humble industrialising parish of Madeley in Shropshire. He believed the methodist model model functioned best within the parochial system and implemented his own brand of methodism in his own parish.
John Wesley chose John to lead the Methodist movement on his death but John Fletcher died first!
He worked with unique devotion and zeal. His wife Mary on his iron tomb gave this epitaph -unexampled labours.
Source
Wikipedia
Lorenzo Dow was an eccentric itinerant American evangelist. His wife, Peggy, (1780-1820)was almost as eccentric as her husband,
He is said to have preached,over 30 years, to more people than any other preacher of his era. He became an important figure and a well known writer.
His mannerisms in public speaking were like nothing ever seen before. He shouted, he screamed, he cried, he begged, he flattered, he insulted, he challenged people and their beliefs.
He often preached before open-air assemblies of 10,000 people or more and held his audience spellbound all over the USA and Great Britain.
Read the paragraphs * Missionary travels * and Travelling preacher.
He was unkempt- rarely washed and only had one set of clothing. His long hair and beard were described as never having met a comb.
He was a fierce abolitionist and occasionally forcibly ejected from towns.
His autobiography* The Stranger in Charleston or the Trial and Confession of Lorenzo Dow* (1822) was at one time the second best selling book in the USA exceeded only by the Bible.
Source
Wikipedia
Girolamo Savonarola or Jerome Savonarola was an ascetic Italian Dominican friar from Ferrara and was a preacher active during the Renaissance in France.
He was known for his prophecies of civic glory, the destruction of secular art and culture, plus his calls for Christian renewal. he denounced clerical corruption, despotic rule and the exploitation of the poor.
In 1495 when Florence refused to join Pope Alexander VI’s Holy League against the French he was summoned to Rome. He disobeyed and further defied the pope by preaching when banned .
May 1497 he was excommunicated. A trial by fire was proposed and popular opinion turned against him. On 23 May,along with two other monks who supported him, they were condemned, hanged and burnt in the main square in Florence.
Savonarola 's devotees , the Piagnomi, kept his republican freedom and religious reform alive well into the next century,
Isobel Selina Miller Kuhn - Belle - was a Canadian Christian missionary to the Lisu people of Yunnan Province, China and northern Thailand.
She served with the China Inland Mission, along with her husband John , as a Bible translator, church planter, Bible teacher, evangelist and author of 9 books about her experiences.
Rainy Seasons Bible Schools was opened by Isobel. During the dry season her ‘pupils’ worked hard on the land. When the floods came they were able to study.
From 1930-1954 Isobel and John were missionaries in China. Their missionary work was put on hold from 1950-2 because of the Chinese communist revolution.
In 1954 Isobel was diagnosed with cancer and she concentrated on writing her books.
Her first book By Searching is an autobiography of her early life in a Christian home and her eventual conversion, aged 20, to being a born again Christian. ISBN 978-0853639111
Irene Howat in her book Gold from Dark Mines looks at Isobel 's searching and 5 other well known Christians and their build-up to their conversions.
Isobel died on March 20th 1957 with her John at her side. Her funeral was held at Wheaton College Church.
When I get to heaven they aren’t going to see much of me but my heels, for I’ll be hanging over the golden wall keeping an eye on the Lisu church!
Isobel Kuhn
(Note
Her father was a roentgenologist - a person who uses x-rays in the diagnosis of illness an disease.)
Sources
Wikipedia 4 excellent pages of notes
Gold From Dark Mines Irene Howat ch7 p173-p203 (ISBN 1 -85792-943-8)
James Gilchrist Lawson was a popular American Baptist evangellst Christian author and hymn writer of the early twentieth century.
He wrote and compiled biographical sketches for Deeper Experiences of Famous Christians (1911) **** is a landmark text in Pentecostal and Charismatic history. **
Deeper Experiences is the one book , other than the Bible, that has most influenced me Professor Dallas Willard
He wrote Greatest Thoughts about God
the compiler of this volume is able to give to the world the very cream of religious thoughts concerning God
James was also editor of The Marked Reference Bible
Read the notes .
Deeper Experiences ,over 100 years later, is still available in paperback
William Trewartha Bray was the eldest of three children He was born in the village of Twelveheads, Cornwall, England.
After leaving school he became a miner in Cornwall for 7 years. He was a drunkard and prone to riotous behaviour.
In 1821 he married Joanna, a lapsed Methodist. They had 9 children -two were orphans
In November 1823, following a close escape from a mining accident, he was converted* *after reading John Bunyan’s Visions of Heaven and Hell.
He became well known as an unconventional Cornish preacher - his sermons were enlivened by spontaneous outbursts of singing and dancing.
His biographer, F.W. Bourne, quoted Billy as saying
If they put me in a barrel, I would shout glory out through the bunghole! Praise the Lord
about people who complained about his enthusiastic singing and shouting.
He generously gave help to other people. He raise enough funds to build three new Methodists chapels. The one in Kerley Downs was nicknamed 'Three Eyes ’ because it had three windows and was later dedicated to him in 1984.
In 2012 Michael Bentley wrote a children’s book about Billy.
Johann or Johannes Agricola (originally Schneider, than Schnitter) was a German Protestant Reformer during the Protestant Reformation.
He was born at Eisleben where he is sometimes called M agister Islebius.
He studied at Wittenberg where he gained the friendship of Martin Luther. Together, in 1519 they attended the great assembly of German divines at Leipzig where he acted as recording secretary.
After some time in Wittenberg he went in Frankfurt in 1525 to establish the Protestant mode of worship. Within a month he was called to Eisleben where he taught at St. Andrew’s school and preached in the Nicolai church until 1526…
In 1536 he was recalled to Wittenberg and initially welcomed by Luther. Back in 1526 they had controversial disagreement over the binding obligation of the law on Christians- this broke out more violently then before. He was unable to appease the Adiaphoristic controversy. (See * Controversyand note from Britannica)
He wrote an attack shortly after Luther had given him shelter when he was fleeing persecution. Luther had nothing further to do with him.
He escaped to Berlin where Joachim II, Elector of Brandenburg, appointed him court preacher and general superintendent. He held both posts until his death 30 years later. His career there was one of great activity and influence.
He died during an epidemic of plague on 22nd September 1566.
He wrote a number of theological works (See Writings)
Sources
Wikipedia
Britannica
George Abbot was an English divine who was Archbishop of Canterbury form 1611-1633. He was a translator of the King James Version of the Bible.
He also served as the fourth chancellor of the University of Dublin from 1612-1633.
He was a conscientious prelate , though narrow in view and often harsh towards both separatists and roman catholics.
He wrote a large number of works and was one of the translators of the 1611 King James version of the Bible.
George accidently shot a gamekeeper in 1621. A commission met to consider whether he was fit for the primacy- King James exercised his vote in his favour.
Gustavus Paine notes that George was both translator of the 1611 Bible and the only Archbishop Canterbury to kill a human being.
He was born and buried in Guildford. His legacy there is a hospital, a secondary school, a pub and a statue in the High Street.
Source
Wikipedia
Pierre Abelard, born Pierre ie Pellet, was a French scholastic, philosopher, leading logician, poet, composer and musician of the 12th century.
He is considered a forerunner of Rousseau, Kent and Spinoza. He is sometimes credited as a chief forerunner of modern empiricism.
He is considered to be the most significant forerunner also of the modern self-reflective autobiography - The History of my Calamities -his publicly distributed letter.
In history and popular culture he is best known for his passionate and tragic love affair with his brilliant student and eventual wife, Heloise d’Argenteuil. They had a son, Astrolabe, before he was castrated by her uncle Fulbert’s men. In shame he embraced the monastic life. Afterwards both went into monasteries.
In Catholic theology he is best known for his development of the concept of limbo, and his introduction of the moral influence theory on Atonement.
He wrote a number of books and modern editions and translations of his work are available. (See List)
Pierre is considered one of the founders of the secular university and pre-Renaissance secular philosophical thought.
Sources
Wikipedia
Britannica
Denis was a French Catholic who served as Archbishop of Paris (1840-8).
He was killed by a ‘stray’ bullet during the June Days uprising in Paris.
On June 23rd 1848 a large segment of the citizens of Paris rioted because the French government had decided to close the National Workshops it had recently created.
Paris was facing starvation. Denis, as archbishop, was begged by Frederic Ozanam to intervene to stop the bloodshed. He mounted the barricades bearing a green branch as a sign of peace. He was lead to believe his personal involvement peace might be restored between the military and the insurgents As he began to speak there was an exchange of fire arms - a ‘stray’ bullet hit Denis which would prove fatal. He was taken to his palace where he died on 27th June.
A public funeral was held on 7th July. The crowd following the cortege was estimated at 200,000.
His cause for canonization has commenced and he is venerated as a Servant of God within the Catholic Church.
Source
wikipedia
Aelred of Rievaulx was an English Cistercian monk, abbot from 1147 until his death (20 years later) . He best known as a writer. Both Anglicans and Catholics regard him as a saint.
His early education was probably at the cathedral school in Durham. From about the age of 14 he spent time at the court of King David I of Scotland in Roxburgh, rising to the rank of echonomus (steward or master of the Household)…
He left the court aged 24, in 1134, to enter the Cistercian abbey of Rievaylx in Yorkshire.
He was the son of Eilaf, a priest, so he was forbidden, when he became an adult, by the 1095 Council of Claremont, ordination as a priest so he became a monk.
( This was done in part to prevent the inheritance of benefices.)
In 1142 he travelled to Rome. On his return he became novice master at Rievaulx. In 1143 appointed abbot of the new Ravesby Abbey. 1147 elected abbot of Rievaulx, a position he held until his death in 1167.
All of Aelred’s works have appeared in translation, most in English and French.
( See Writings)
David Knowles, a historian of monasticism in England , describes him, for efforts in writing and administration, as the St. Bernard of the North, a singularly attractive character, no other English monk of the twelfth century so lingers in the memory.
Adrian IV, originally Nicholas Breakspear, was born in Abbot’s Langley, Hertfordshire. he was educated in Franceand became ab Augustine monk and abbot in 1137. While on a trip to Rome he was retained in papal service and elevated to cardinal (c1150).
He went on various diplomatic missions to Catalonia, Scandinavia and Sweden.
He was appointed bishop of Alano around 1140.
He became pope in 1154 on the death of Pope Anastasius IV. For unknown reasons, probably at the request of his predecessor, he was elected pope by the other cardinals. He was unable to complete his coronation service due to the state of politics in Rome. Afterwards he decisively restored the papal authority.
He crowned Frederick I (Barbarossa) Holy Roman Emperor. They had a stormy relationship - it started badly and got progressively worse.
His relationship with England seemed to have remained generally good. He showered St.Albans Abbey with privileges and granted Henry ll policies where he could.
Sources
Wikipedia
*The Hodder & Stoughton Book of famous Christians * by Tony Castle