John Blackburn (minister)

John Blackburn (1792–1855) was an English Congregationalist minister, for many years at Claremont Chapel, London.[1] He was a prominent, conservative leader of the Congregational movement.[2]

John Blackburn

Life

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He was born to a religious family in the Minories, London.[3] His father John Blackburn (died 1834) made scales, and belonged to a livery company.[2][4]

In early life Blackburn entered the Baptist College, Stepney, but then switched to Hoxton Academy. He worked for the Irish Evangelical Society, in Sligo. He then became pastor at Finchingfield, from 1815.[3][5][6]

In 1822, Blackburn became minister at the Claremont Chapel, Pentonville Road, London.[7] His congregation included Thomas Wilson, who had had the chapel built, and Hugh Owen.[8]

Blackburn was Secretary of the Congregational Union of England and Wales, 1834–1847,[2] and of the Christian Instruction Society.[9] He supported the Church of Ireland;[10] and was an opponent of the British Anti-State Church Association formed in the 1840s, writing against it in the Congregational Magazine, which he edited from 1818 to 1845.[2][11] The Wyclyffe Society (or Wiclyffe) he founded in the 1840s, a text publication society for the works of John Wyclif, did not get further than one volume, edited by Robert Vaughan; and was later disparaged by Harold Herbert Williams. The Wyclif Society (1882–1925) printed all Wyclif's works.[2][12][13]

Blackburn married the second daughter of Robert Smith of Beslyns, Great Bardfield.[14]

In 1848, Blackburn was made an inspector of the Congregational chapels in Wales, with Henry Richard.[15] In 1849, he was in Maidstone Gaol, as a debtor.[16]

On 16 June 1855, John Blackburn died. He was buried in Abney Park.[8]

Works

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  • Reflections on the Moral and Spiritual Claims of the Metropolis (1827)[17]
  • The True Character and Probable Results of American Revivals (1830)[18]
  • The Stability of the Church of God, Independent of Political Changes (1833)[19]
  • The Salvation of Britain Introductory to the Conversion of the World (1835)[20]
  • The Evils of Improper Books (1838)[21]
  • The Prophecy of Daniel Regarding the Four Great Dynasties (1838)[22]
  • The Social Evils of Christendom are Not Sanctioned by the Bible (1839)[23]
  • National Warnings: A Sermon, Preached on Behalf of the Distressed Manufacturers (1842)[24]
  • The Three Conferences Held by the Opponents of the Maynooth College Endowment Bill in London and Dublin (1845)[25]
  • The Mountain-Monarchies Dissolved at the Presence of the Lord. A Lecture on the Recent Revolutions in Europe (1849)[26]
  • Nineveh, Its Rise and Ruin; as Illustrated by Ancient Scriptures and Modern Discoveries (1852)[27]

In "Remarks on Ecclesiastical Architecture as applied to Nonconformist Chapels", published in The Congregational Year Book (1847), Blackburn was a proponent of the Gothic style, typically shunned at the time by nonconformists.[7] He wrote the introduction to the Wycliffe Society's publication of the works of David Clarkson.[28] He wrote an introduction and appendix to an edition (1838) of John M. Mason's The Claims of Episcopacy Refuted, replying to Bishop John Henry Hobart.[29]

Notes

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  1. ^ The Congregational Year Book 1856 : Containing the Proceedings of the Congregational Union for 1855 and General Statistics of the Denomination. Jackson and Walford. 1856. pp. 208–210.
  2. ^ a b c d e Pope, Robert (21 November 2013). T&T Clark Companion to Nonconformity. T&T Clark. p. 270. ISBN 978-0-567-65538-7.
  3. ^ a b Waddington, John (1880). Congregational History, 1700-1800: In Relation to Contemporaneous Events, Education, the Eclipse of Faith, Revivals and Christian Missions. Longmans. p. 198.
  4. ^ Watts, Trevor. "Sir John Bickerton Williams, Congregational Apologist Kt., 1792-1855 (Cont.)" (PDF). The Congregational History Circle Magazine. 2 (3): 16 note.
  5. ^ McClintock, John; Strong, James (1885). Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature: Supplement. Harper & Brothers. p. 527.
  6. ^ https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/13120424.pdf
  7. ^ a b Jones, Robert Tudur; Bebbington, David William; Dix, Kenneth; Ruston, Alan (2006). Protestant Nonconformist Texts: The nineteenth century. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-7546-3850-6.
  8. ^ a b French, James Branwhite (1883). Walks in Abney park, with life-photographs of ministers whose names are found there. p. 32.
  9. ^ Waddington, John (1880). Congregational History, 1850-1880. Longmans, Green, And Company. p. 202.
  10. ^ Ellens, J. P. (November 2010). Religious Routes to Gladstonian Liberalism: The Church Rate Conflict in England and Wales 1852-1868. Penn State Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-271-04283-1.
  11. ^ Congregational Union of England and Wales (1891). History of Congregationalism. Congregational Union of England and Wales. p. 17.
  12. ^ Tudur Jones, R. "Vaughan, Robert (1795–1868)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28142. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ Williams, Sir Harold Herbert (1971). Book Clubs & Printing Societies of Great Britain and Ireland. Gryphon Books. p. 71. ISBN 978-0-8103-3749-7.
  14. ^ The Evangelical Magazine and Missionary Chronicle. 1850. p. 297.
  15. ^ Davies, William Edward (1885). Sir Hugh Owen, His Life and Life-work. National Eisteddfod Association. p. 31.
  16. ^ Great Britain (1849). The London Gazette. T. Neuman. p. 2975.
  17. ^ Blackburn, John (1827). Reflections on the Moral and Spiritual Claims of the Metropolis. A discourse ... introductory to the second series of lectures to mechanics, established by the Society for Promoting Christian Instruction in London and its Vicinity. With an appendix, etc. B. J. Holdsworth.
  18. ^ Blackburn, John (1830). The True Character and Probable Results of American Revivals. A Discourse ... With an Appendix. Holdsworth & Ball.
  19. ^ Blackburn, John (1833). The Stability of the Church of God, Independent of Political Changes. A Discourse, Etc. Jackson & Walford.
  20. ^ Blackburn, John (1835). The Salvation of Britain Introductory to the Conversion of the World. A Discourse ... With Notes and Illustrations. London.
  21. ^ Blackburn, John (1838). The Evils of Improper Books, Etc.
  22. ^ Blackburn, John (1838). The Prophecy of Daniel Regarding the Four Great Dynasties, Fulfilled in the Successive Rise and Overthrow of the Babylonian, Persian, Macedonian and Roman Empires, Etc.
  23. ^ Blackburn, John (1839). The Social Evils of Christendom are Not Sanctioned by the Bible, Etc.
  24. ^ Blackburn, John (1842). National Warnings; a sermon, etc. Jackson & Walford.
  25. ^ Blackburn, John (1845). The Three Conferences Held by the Opponents of the Maynooth College Endowment Bill in London and Dublin ... 1845. Containing a Vindication of the Author from the Aspersions of the Dissenting Press. Jackson & Walford.
  26. ^ Blackburn, John (1849). The Mountain-Monarchies Dissolved at the Presence of the Lord. A Lecture on the Recent Revolutions in Europe ... With an Historical Retrospect of 1848. Jackson & Walford.
  27. ^ Blackburn, John (1852). Nineveh, Its Rise and Ruin; as Illustrated by Ancient Scriptures and Modern Discoveries: a Course of Lectures, Delivered at Claremont Chapel, London; with Additions and Supplementary Notes.
  28. ^ Clarkson, David; Blackburn, John (1846). Select Works of the Reverend and Learned David Clarkson. Blackburn and Pardon. p. iii.
  29. ^ Mason, John Mitchell (1838). The Claims of Episcopacy Refuted in a Review of the Essays of Bishop Hobart and Other Advocates of Diocesan Episcopacy. With an Introduction and Appendix by J. Blackburn.