In Depth:  history

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Debunking 3 myths about the origins of Christmas

Debunking 3 myths about the origins of Christmas

Ryan Burton King
Ryan Burton King

Christmas. 'It's the most wonderful time of the year,' Andy Williams croons. Or, as a cast of characters from Jim Henson's Creature Shop sang in The Muppet Christmas Carol, it is 'the summer of the soul in December'.

But for others, it is a season of woe, an opportunity to blow a cold frost wind over the festivities with assorted dubious claims, doubtless well-intentioned but badly thought through and poorly communicated.

Remembering William Tyndale,   500 years after key date

Remembering William Tyndale, 500 years after key date

Jonny Raine
Jonny Raine

We can be quite sure there won’t be any fuss made in wider society, but July 2025 marks a special anniversary. According to Encyclopædia Brittanica, 500 years before, in July 1525, the New Testament was first published in modern English having been translated by William Tyndale.

I’m not one for celebrating historical anniversaries just for the sake of it, but it made me wonder if this could be an opportunity. Could the anniversary be a means of sharing the Bible with our community? Could we make the most of this by connecting with people and making the gospel known via this historical marker? It’s worth making the most of every opportunity, right?

A specific providence: pioneering Trowbridge's Tabernacle Church
history

A specific providence: pioneering Trowbridge's Tabernacle Church

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Historically, Trowbridge in Wiltshire was a seedbed of Protestant Dissent. And one of the key vehicles of that dissent in this market town was the Tabernacle Church, a Congregationalist product of the First Great Awakening.

Central in the founding of this work was Joanna Turner (1732–1784), an ardent Methodist who was irrepressible in sharing the gospel and indefatigable in her efforts to extend the rule of Christ. After using her home as a house-church, she paid £500 for a small chapel to be built. This was later replaced by a meeting-house that was built in 1771 and measured 40 feet by 30 feet, which Joanna and her husband mostly funded. It was named the Tabernacle, after George Whitefield’s famous meeting-house in London. The church’s first minister (pictured) was John Clark (1746–1808).

A 'must read' for those doubting historical reliability of New Testament

A 'must read' for those doubting historical reliability of New Testament

Xander Coomber

Book Review TRUSTWORTHY: Thirteen arguments for the reliability of the New Testament

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Disability History Month: The dark and hidden past of disability

Disability History Month: The dark and hidden past of disability

Kay Morgan-Gurr
Kay Morgan-Gurr

It’s Disability History Month. This has happened every year from 16th November to 16th December since 2010.

Has your church ever done events around this, in the same way many do events around Black History Month?

Light in the darkness

Light in the darkness

David Lowries

Book Review RECLAIMING THE DARK AGES: How the Gospel Light Shone from 500 to 1500

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Amazing Grace: John Newton exemplified 'the great doctrine of love'

Amazing Grace: John Newton exemplified 'the great doctrine of love'

Ruth Eardley

According to theologian Jim Packer, John Newton was ‘the friendliest, wisest, humblest and least pushy of the 18th -century evangelical leaders’. At a recent church history lecture by Dr Lesley Rowe, Leicestershire folk were also pleased to learn that Newton had a special place in his heart for the county and visited on several occasions.

Newton was motherless from the age of six, boarded at a harsh school from the age of eight, taken to sea at 11 and an accomplished blasphemer by age 12. He was press-ganged into the Navy, flogged, enslaved and, famously, became captain of a slave-trading ship.

Fighting slavery
history

Fighting slavery

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Ownership, a recently published book by Sean McGever on the serious failings of some key 18th-century evangelicals, namely George Whitefield and Jonathan Edwards with regard to the issue of slavery, has been a great reminder of the fact that our heroes from that era were human beings like ourselves – broken and bent. And yet, there were some, thank God, who were steadfast in their denunciation of both slavery and slave trade.

One such figure was Abraham Booth (1734–1806), who has appeared on a couple of earlier occasions in this column. He was widely admired within the Particular Baptist denomination, the Christian community among which he ministered for most of his life. Benjamin Beddome, the great Baptist hymnwriter of the 18th century, is said to have exclaimed: ‘Oh, that Abraham Booth’s God may be my God’. Andrew Fuller, another Baptist leader of that era, once described Booth as ‘the first counsellor’ of their denomination.

A find from the time of  Jeremiah?
defending our faith

A find from the time of Jeremiah?

Chris Sinkinson
Chris Sinkinson

News from Israel and its surroundings have obviously been dominated by tragedy and violence, so it is a relief to share the announcement of a recent archaeological discovery that connects with Biblical history.

Despite military mobilisation, local tensions and threat of missiles, archaeological excavations continue in the Holy Land. The well-known excavations around the Temple Mount have shed a great deal of light on the New Testament period and the time of Jesus. But the recent announcement takes us back much further, to the Old Testament time of the first Temple.

Clare Heath-Whyte: Biographer  of the neglected & ‘unfamous’

Clare Heath-Whyte: Biographer of the neglected & ‘unfamous’

Andrew Atherstone
Andrew Atherstone

Biography is perennially popular, one of the best-selling and most absorbing forms of historical writing.

Many biographies focus on the rich and famous, the movers and shakers, the politicians, warriors, celebrities and adventurers who have changed the world. But one of biography’s unique strengths is that it also allows marginal and neglected voices to take centre stage. Characters who are normally written out of the narrative step forward into the limelight. They may not have won great battles, led international campaigns, or created seismic shifts in global culture, but every life is fascinating and every voice has much to teach.

As Cadbury’s chocolate marks 200  years, do you know its Christian origins?

As Cadbury’s chocolate marks 200 years, do you know its Christian origins?

Janice Pibworth
Janice Pibworth

Cadbury is synonymous with chocolate and has been a household name for many years. The firm is celebrating its 200 years this year.

In 1824 John Cadbury opened his grocery shop in Birmingham, which sold tea, coffee and cocoa. The Cadbury business went into decline following the death of his wife, and then two of his sons, Richard and George, took over the firm. The Cadbury brothers struggled to make a profit for the first few years. Each brother contemplated career moves but eventually, with the successful developments surrounding chocolate manufacturing, the business flourished.

Unashamedly experiential
history

Unashamedly experiential

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Brilliana Harley (1598-1643) was a prolific letter writer. Close to 400 of her letters written from 1623 until her death in October 1643 have survived. They provide a detailed picture of her married life with husband Robert, the outbreak of the Civil War in Herefordshire, and the life of a family at odds with local political sentiment. The majority of these letters are to her eldest son Edward, or Ned, as she calls him.

Edward Harley (1624 –1700), Brilliana and Robert’s eldest son, went up to Magdalen Hall at Oxford University in 1638, which was to Oxford what Emmanuel College was to Cambridge, namely, a seedbed for Puritanism.

350 years on: the life and lyrics of Isaac Watts

350 years on: the life and lyrics of Isaac Watts

Terry Young
Terry Young

‘Religion never was designed to make our pleasures less’

I almost missed this anniversary and hadn’t realised that Isaac Watts was born not far from where I now live. He’s a hero of mine and given that I won’t be writing posts in another 350 years, I’ll make my pitch now for this unusual chap who cheerfully lived through perilous times.

Everyone has heard something he wrote. Even if church is absolutely not your thing, you’ll struggle to make it to New Years Day without hearing several arrangements of Joy to the World, a cheerful anthem with added zest from Handel’s magnificent melody. Meanwhile, the more mournful, O God our help in ages past, seems to be the sort of thing religious people sing, at least in films and dramas. I vaguely recall Ichabod Crane warbling it nervously in a Sleepy Hollow cartoon I saw as kid.

A forgotten classic

A forgotten classic

Gordon Robertson

Book Review REBECCA’S REVIVAL: Creating Black Christianity in the Atlantic World

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Brilliant Brilliana!
history

Brilliant Brilliana!

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Brilliana Harley (1598-1643) was born in 1598 at the seaport of Brill (after which she was named), near Rotterdam, daughter of Edward Conway and Dorothy Tracy Conway.

Among her ancestors were royalty, including William I and Henry II. Her father, Sir Edward Conway (later Viscount Conway), was the Governor of Brill at the time of her birth, hence her unique name. Brill was one of three so-called ‘Cautionary Towns’, key seaports in the Dutch Republic that had been garrisoned by English troops from 1585 onwards when the English aided the Dutch in their fight against the domination of the Spanish in what is known as the Eighty Years War or the Dutch Revolt (1566/1568–1648). They were governed as English colonies – hence the role of Brilliana’s father as the Governor of Brielle – and were eventually returned to the Dutch Republic in 1616.

Contending winsomely
history

Contending winsomely

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

In the very early 370s, an elder by the name of Palladius moved from the church in Caesarea in Cappadocia to live at a monastic community located on the Mount of Olives.

Among the members of this community was a certain Innocent, who was well known to Athanasius (c.299–373), the bishop of Alexandria, a legend in his own time due to his ardent defence of the full deity of Christ. It may well have been this contact with Innocent that prompted Palladius to write to the Egyptian pastor-theologian about a concern that vexed him. It had to do with the bishop of his home church, namely, Basil of Caesarea (c.330–379), as well-known today as Athanasius.

Heresy? ‘Heretic’? Really?
history

Heresy? ‘Heretic’? Really?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

I have long believed that significant care must be taken when using the word ‘heresy’.

It is causally thrown around with, it appears to me, little reflection on the implications of its assignation. If I say someone is teaching heresy, then I am calling that person a heretic. And heresy is a damnable sin (see 2 Peter 2:1; cf. 1 Timothy 4:1-5).

‘An active, mighty thing’
history

‘An active, mighty thing’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The German Reformer Martin Luther was insistent that our salvation is based upon faith alone.

‘Faith alone, … before works, and without works, appropriates the benefits of redemption, which is nothing other than justification, or deliverance from sin.’ Given such a theological affirmation, there have been some who have argued that Luther’s view of saving faith inevitably leads to indifference to good works. But this is a very unjust accusation.

The origins of Christendom
history

The origins of Christendom

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

‘One of the greatest blows to the kingdom of Satan in the history of the church’ is the way that the New England divine Jonathan Edwards once described it. His English evangelical contemporary, John Wesley, strongly disagreed however. He maintained that it initiated an age of iron, of doctrinal and spiritual compromise and weakened the church.

What were they talking about? None other than the formal embrace of Christianity by the Roman emperor Constantine and his clear favouring of the church in legal policies that he enacted after his 312 victory at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge over the pagan Maxentius.

2024: Anniversaries from Church History

2024: Anniversaries from Church History

Greg Noller

A Wife for Zwingli, Gold for Eric, Father Brown and the end of The Inklings.

525 Years

‘O God, do it again!’
history

‘O God, do it again!’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Sherwood Wirt, the editor of Decision, the magazine of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, called it ‘one of the great monumental literary achievements of the 20th century’.

The book in question? Arnold A. Dallimore’s two-volume Life of George Whitefield (1714- 1770). This work literally made Dallimore’s name a beloved one throughout English-speaking Evangelical and Reformed circles.

‘Lived faithfully a hidden life’
history

‘Lived faithfully a hidden life’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

As we noted in last month’s column, Benjamin Beddome, the 18th-century Baptist pastor, was in the habit of preparing a hymn to be sung at the close of the morning worship service, which would pick up the theme of his sermon.

Given this sermonic link of the vast majority of Beddome’s hymns it is not surprising to find that many of them are strongly doctrinal.

Honest history

Honest history

Roland Christopher

Book Review BULLIES AND SAINTS: An Honest Look at the Good and Evil of Christian History

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Perseverance in ministry
history

Perseverance in ministry

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Over the past two months, we have been considering the pastoral ministry of Benjamin Beddome at Bourton-on-the-Water.

In the first 15 years or so of his ministry, the church knew revival. But during the 1750s and the first half of the 1760s the numerical growth of the church began to slow. In 1751 the total number of members stood at 180. Between 1752 and 1754 none were added to the church and 15 members were lost through death. In 1755, though, there were 22 individuals who came into the membership of the church by baptism. Another year which saw a large accession to the church was 1764, when 28 new members were added. A good number must have died since the mid-1750s, for in that year the membership stood at 183. But the next 30 years of his ministry saw a decline in the church membership. And by 1795, the year that Beddome died, the church had 123 on the membership roll, 60 less than in 1764.

True faith: ‘A matter of  both head and heart...’
history

True faith: ‘A matter of both head and heart...’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Benjamin Beddome, whose life and ministry we began to look at last month, first visited Bourton-on-the-Water in the spring of 1740.

Over the next three years he laboured with great success in the Bourton church. Significant for the shape of his future ministry was a local revival that took place under his ministry in the early months of 1741. Around 40 individuals were converted, including John Collett Ryland, a leading Baptist minister in the latter half of the 18th century, now chiefly remembered for a stinging rebuke he gave to young William Carey.

Glimpses of ‘a hidden life’
history

Glimpses of ‘a hidden life’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

For some odd reason, I am drawn to the lives of Christians who can only be regarded as obscure or marginal to the main story of Christianity that is usually told in our church history books.

So, for example, I am currently writing a life of Benjamin Beddome (1718–1795), who pastored a Baptist work in the village of Bourton-on-the-Water in the Cotswolds for over 50 years. The English historian A.C. Underwood well described him as a ‘Calvinist of the best type’, passionate in preaching, ardent in prayer for revival, eager for the conversion of the lost, and the strengthening of his people.

Rome’s efficient killers
history

Rome’s efficient killers

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

One of the key aspects of the backdrop of the gospel accounts of the life and ministry of the Lord Jesus in Palestine is Roman rule.

It is there at the beginning of the story, with Augustus Caesar passing a decree to take a census of all within the Empire (Luke 2:1). Our Lord’s ministry begins, we are told, in the 15th year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar (14 –37 AD), the son of Augustus’ wife from a previous marriage. And it is there at the end of the story when, during the reign of Tiberius, Jesus is crucified.

Rome’s common grace
history

Rome’s common grace

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The Jewish Rabbis in the second century after the birth of Christ liked to imagine Rome standing before the judgment seat of God in the last days.

When the Lord God asks them to account for their rapacious wars and conquests, the Romans reply: ‘Lord of the world, we have established many markets, we have built many baths, we have increased much silver and gold, and we have done all this simply that the Israelites might study the Torah without distraction’. The plea is of course brushed aside. The Lord who searches the hearts knows the real reason: hedonistic self-enjoyment and lust for power were the real reasons. Jewish hatred for Roman rule is well known. But this story is grudging admission of the achievements of the Pax Romana that was at its height in the second century AD.

Christians are ‘atheists’?!
history

Christians are ‘atheists’?!

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

In the minds of some Roman authors, like the first-century BC imperial poet Virgil, Roman rule of the Mediterranean was a gift of the gods to the Roman people.

Early Christians, though, saw it through the eyes of the Biblical understanding of history: it was the Sovereign Lord of history, the God who had revealed Himself definitively in Jesus Christ, who had ultimately caused the political dominance of Rome to take place. And he had done so through a variety of what we call secondary causes.

Ten reasons why Christian  history is good for you
history

Ten reasons why Christian history is good for you

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Here are ten good reasons why we should know what has gone before us.

1. God takes history seriously. Consider how much of the Old and New Testament is historical narrative. In its very being Christianity is deeply rooted in historical events, like the call of Abraham, the ministry of the Prophets, and the incarnation, death and resurrection of Christ.

Learning from the far-reaching spiritual  impact of one Sunday School teacher

Learning from the far-reaching spiritual impact of one Sunday School teacher

Elizabeth Trenckmann

Do you ever wonder the secrets of those who are mightily used by God?

‘Her devotional hour was not a routine, nor a discipline born of fear or habit. She opened her Bible with eager anticipation in sacred silence of personal fellowship with God.’ She stood in front of the university college group with intentions of only being the short-term interim Sunday School teacher. David Cowie, a student, remembers his first experience with her. He said: ‘Not only do I remember the pink silk dress and the pink picture hat with white roses, but I remember her lesson verbatim.’

A forgotten heroine who should be known today:  60 years of faithful, daily, humble service

A forgotten heroine who should be known today: 60 years of faithful, daily, humble service

Adrian Russell

The province of Sindh in Pakistan suffered appallingly from flooding last year. This province and the people who live there may be unfamiliar to you, but this location was the home of one of the lesser-known Christian heroines of faith, Blanche Brenton Carey.

Blanche, the daughter of a Brixham vicar, joined the Church of England Zenana Missionary Society in 1884 and became one of their pioneer missionaries, serving in Karachi from 1885 to 1950. Her deep desire was to tell the women and girls of Sindh about her Saviour Jesus Christ.

Church history: is it relevant? Is it useful?  What I say to sceptical theological students

Church history: is it relevant? Is it useful? What I say to sceptical theological students

Matthew Bingham

I have the privilege of teaching church history to theological students.

And though they are almost always too polite to say so outright, a fair few of their number come to the study of the past with a bit of scepticism. Is this relevant? Is this useful? Is this actually helping me to ‘grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ’ (2 Pet. 3:18)?

Are evangelicals utterly  ignorant of the Middle Ages?
history

Are evangelicals utterly ignorant of the Middle Ages?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

A number of years ago I was invited to give two talks at a major Reformed conference in America.

I was thrilled by the invitation as I had enormous respect – and still do, I need to add – for the ministry behind the conference.

A man of rare wisdom
history

A man of rare wisdom

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Although Richard Greenham of Dry Drayton, whom we met last month, was well known and appreciated as a gospel preacher, it was as a pastoral counsellor that Greenham excelled.

His 20th-century biographer John Primus has argued persuasively that in this area Greenham was ‘an ecclesiastical titan who used his extraordinary gifts to make enormous contributions to God’s church and kingdom’.

A forgotten Puritan rural hero
history

A forgotten Puritan rural hero

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The last 50 years have seen a profuse flowering of books and articles on English Puritanism, its leaders, its theology, and its social and political impact.

Yet, even so, one occasionally comes across certain significant individuals who have been largely overlooked. Richard Greenham (c.1540/45–94) certainly falls into this category.

Learning from the Puritans: life as pilgrimage

Learning from the Puritans: life as pilgrimage

Tim Chester
Tim Chester

We have much to learn from the spirituality of the 17th-century Puritan movement. One perhaps surprising example of this is their emphasis on pilgrimage.

In the Old Testament, Jerusalem was seen as a place of pilgrimage. The annual feasts encouraged worshippers to journey to Jerusalem. The Psalms of Ascent testify to the significance of this journey. But with the coming of Jesus the nature of pilgrimage changes. Jesus himself is the temple (John 2:18-22), so we come to Him rather than journeying to a physical location (1 Peter 2:4-5). Nevertheless, in the medieval world, pilgrimage became a major feature of spirituality and a major money-spinner if you could establish yourself as a holy destination. Pilgrimage was a physical act that required physical movement. For some it was an act that earned merit before God. Others journeyed to sacred relics or sites since these were thought to have inherent power. It was a chance to pray to a saint at his or her shrine for a miracle or for time off purgatory.

‘Men without chests’ and 
 preaching to the emotions
history

‘Men without chests’ and preaching to the emotions

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

One of the hallmarks of Evangelicalism is its insistence on the necessity of conversion. But this is, of course, not unique to the Evangelical movement.

Did not the North African pioneer of Christian Latin, Tertullian, make the same point thus: ‘The soul is not born Christian; it becomes Christian’?

Legacy of controversy
history

Legacy of controversy

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Hugh Dunlop Brown’s (1858–1918) friendship with C.H. Spurgeon through the desperate days of the Downgrade Controversy over the Scriptures in the 1880s made him a witness to the toll that this controversy took on the London Baptist minister.

The Downgrade Controversy was when Spurgeon aired concerns about the Baptist Union in relation to Scripture, the atonement, hell and universalism. He withdrew from the denomination in 1887 as a result.

Lord, make us ambitious!
history

Lord, make us ambitious!

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

It would have been in the late 1880s, when the ministry of C. H. Spurgeon was drawing to a close, that a Dubliner by the name of Hugh Dunlop Brown (1858–1918) attended worship at Spurgeon’s Tabernacle with a few thousand other men and women and children.

As Spurgeon came to preach he caught sight of Brown in the congregation and immediately exclaimed: ‘I see my friend Brown from Dublin; will he please come round and help me.’ One can well imagine that it was a rare occasion for Spurgeon to invite a man out of the vast audiences that attended on his preaching to help him in the pulpit. But then Hugh Brown was a remarkable man, though I dare say his name has been forgotten a little over a century since his stepping into heaven.

Bob Shaker: books not fluff
history

Bob Shaker: books not fluff

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

On 14 February 2014, Bob Shaker, just shy of 100 years old by exactly a month, went to be with his Lord, the Lord Christ.

Bob and his four sisters and a couple of brothers, were originally from Syria and were raised in the Syrian Orthodox Church. He came to faith as a young man at Jarvis Street Baptist Church in Toronto and was discipled under the famous fundamentalist preacher T.T. Shields (1873–1955). Bob went on to serve as one of the deacons at Jarvis Street during the 1950s.

Aquinas: the joy of sex?
history

Aquinas: the joy of sex?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The 16th-century Reformation is often remembered as a rediscovery of the heart of the gospel and the way of salvation, but it was also a recovery of a Biblical view of marriage and sex.

The medieval Roman Catholic Church had affirmed the goodness of marriage, but at the same time argued that celibacy was a much better option for those wanting to pursue a life of holiness and serve God vocationally. Many medieval authors had problems especially with marital intercourse for pleasure.

Do we value heroes?
history

Do we value heroes?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Real-life heroes are not in style in contemporary Western culture.

Ours has become a culture of cynicism and shaming, one in which heroes have no place. Even the traditional comic-book heroes like Batman and Captain America (two of my personal favourites when I was a young teenager!) have become troubled, deeply-flawed individuals.

A Mohawk called Molly
history

A Mohawk called Molly

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

When Jonathan Edwards was ministering at Stockbridge, he encouraged his son, the future theologian-pastor Jonathan Edwards, Jr., to spend time learning the culture and language of the Oneida.

The boy went with a missionary, Gideon Hawley, to an Oneida village at the head of the Susquehanna, about 200 miles away from his family. The young boy was here from April 1755 to mid-January 1756. What amazing confidence the senior Edwards and his wife Sarah must have had in a sovereign God to send their son into such a potentially dangerous place!

Those who ‘rest in  unvisited tombs’
history

Those who ‘rest in unvisited tombs’

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

In a recent statement regarding some of the cultural turmoil in North America, historian Owen Strachan, the Provost and Research Professor of Theology at Grace Bible Theological Seminary in Conway, Arkansas, made an observation about church history that I found quite surprising. He noted that ‘epic stands for truth … are usually taken alone, so high is their cost’.

I found it quite surprising because my own study of church history has given me a fundamentally different perspective. It is a perspective that I have learned inductively from church history (be it the Apostolic era with the Pauline circle, or the Cappadocian Fathers, or the Celtic Church, or the Reformers, or the Puritan brotherhood, or the Evangelical revivals of the 18th century), and it is namely this: God never does a great work in the history of the church except through a band of brothers and sisters.

Evangelical weaknesses?
history

Evangelical weaknesses?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

When did Evangelicalism as a movement emerge?

Is it a relative newbie, as some would assert, a creation of the 1940s out of the ruins of Fundamentalism or is it even more recent, a product of the Sixties? Or does it have much older roots?

The munificent Mrs Coade  and her 650 stones
history

The munificent Mrs Coade and her 650 stones

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The name of the stone merchant Eleanor Coade (1733–1821) is known today to few beyond the circle of architectural historians.

But in her day, hers was a name that bespoke excellence. Eleanor owned a highly-successful, artificial stone factory in Lambeth, London, which bore her name.

The Valentine’s Day Massacre & our Capone complex

The Valentine’s Day Massacre & our Capone complex

Rachel Jones
Rachel Jones

Valentine’s Day. If those two words are a bit of an emotional massacre for you, don’t worry – this column concerns a literal one instead.

The St Valentine’s Day Massacre of 1929 belongs in that category of ‘events from the GCSE History curriculum that have indelibly lodged in my brain’, ready and waiting to be deployed at a pub quiz one day – or indeed, an en article.

Should we own property?
history

Should we own property?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

One of the most influential Europeans in the past two millennia has to be Benedict of Nursia.

He was born in Italy around 480 when the Ostrogoths ruled the peninsula, and died in 547 at the monastery he founded at Monte Cassino. He established an order of monks and gave them a rule of life that shaped the world of medieval monasticism till the rise of the Franciscans and the Dominicans in the 13th century.

From Gnosticism to LGBT rights to our Christian thinking

From Gnosticism to LGBT rights to our Christian thinking

David Shepherd
David Shepherd

Recently, I have been struck by the parallels between the ever-louder pronouncements from the LGBT lobby and the influence of Gnosticism on the early church.

From the late first century, ‘fashionable’ Greek philosophy began to infiltrate the church. Gnosticism was one such philosophy that gained an early foothold. It was characterised by a dualism in which the entirety of physical existence was believed to be inherently deceptive and evil, while the unseen spirit world was believed to be inherently full of goodness and truth.

Controversy and anger
history

Controversy and anger

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

In the midst of her controversy with the London pastor William Huntington over the gospel and the law, the Particular Baptist authoress and hymn writer Maria de Fleury made a telling point.

She rightly noted: ‘Angry passions and bitter words ought never to be brought into the field of religious controversy; they can neither ornament nor discover truth, but they can grieve and quench that Holy Spirit, in whose light alone we can see light, and without whose divine illuminations, we shall walk in darkness.’

Scrolling through the Bible
history

Scrolling through the Bible

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

The Bible is bound up with history in many ways. One of them is the basic way that the Bible has come down to us.

The most prominent medium by which the Scriptures were recorded for us was on papyrus, which is largely unique to the Nile Delta in Egypt and began to be used for writing books as far back as the third millennium BC.

Jesus, jam and a Christian businessman

Jesus, jam and a Christian businessman

Peter Lupson

This year marks the 150th anniversary of a brand established by William Hartley that is still thriving today.

Despite the worldwide fame of his jam, Hartley himself is not a familiar figure to the public. Few know that he was a devout Christian whose stated purpose in life was to ‘serve the Lord every day to the best of my ability’. His business practice reflected his faith, earning him a reputation for integrity, quality and outstanding care for his customers and employees. Nothing gave him greater joy than to share his immense wealth with others.

The reduction of fatherhood
history

The reduction of fatherhood

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Over the past two centuries, there has been a steady recession of the social role of fatherhood. Fathers have either gradually moved or been moved from the heart to the margins of family life.

Overall, the cultural story of fatherhood in the West has been essentially downhill since the Industrial Revolution of the late 18th and 19th centuries. But at the outset of the 18th century, fathers were regarded as primary and irreplaceable caregivers in the family.

How should Christians  disagree?
history

How should Christians disagree?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

At the outset of his invasion of Scotland in the summer of 1650, Oliver Cromwell remarked that theological disagreements (and surely he is thinking in part of the differences among the English and Scottish Puritans that had led them to war) are endemic to the life of the church in a world marred by sin.

Disagreements are a sad reality with which Christians have to contend. Nonetheless, Christians can control the way that they participate in such disputes.

First for Reformation women

Emily Lucas
Emily Lucas

The Reformation Fellowship has hosted its first Theological Conference for Women, with over 150 joining on Zoom from around the world, including the Philippines and America. ‘The Fear of the Lord’ conference opened with a seminar by Union’s President and Professor of Theology, Mike Reeves.

Many women are used to speaking of a desire to walk in fear of the Lord, of using the phraseology and seeking to live this life of wisdom. However, to speak of fear in association with God can also breed wrongful association, particularly as we live in a culture, as Reeves describes, that is ‘allergic to fear’. Reeves gave a rich, refreshing recapturing of the true sense of what it means to have and live in fear of the Lord. Drawing on his recently published Rejoice and Tremble, Reeves passionately and eloquently refreshed the hearts of the saints attending with the truth that the fear of God, true saintly fear of God, is the Bible’s great balm for today’s fears and anxieties.

Martin Luther’s most 
 dangerous moment
history

Martin Luther’s most dangerous moment

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

On 18 April, 1521, almost exactly 500 years ago, Martin Luther experienced what was probably the most dangerous moment of his entire life.

He had been asked to appear before the Holy Roman Emperor, the Spaniard Charles V, at the imperial Parliament (Diet) which had been called to meet at Worms, which was situated on the Upper Rhine, about 40 miles south of Frankfurt.

David Zeisberger’s zest for  spreading the gospel
history

David Zeisberger’s zest for spreading the gospel

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

When William Carey drew up his paradigm-changing book An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathens in 1792, he included a mini-history of missions.

He cited examples of missionaries passionate for the expansion of the rule of Christ. In this mini-history, he referenced a remarkable missions-minded community, the Moravians. Carey’s words about this 18th-century body of believers are tantalisingly brief, but indicative of their influence upon him. ‘When I came to evangelism and missions,’ Carey noted, ‘none of the moderns have equalled the Moravian Brethren in this good work’.

Are there more Dead Sea Scrolls yet to be  discovered?
defending our faith

Are there more Dead Sea Scrolls yet to be discovered?

Chris Sinkinson
Chris Sinkinson

The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls was one of the most important archaeological finds of the 20th century, and of incalculable significance for Biblical studies and apologetics. Newly-announced Biblical fragments retrieved from the Dead Sea region remind us that the story is not over yet.

In 1947 three Bedouin boys were herding their sheep and goats near the Dead Sea when they discovered the first of what became known as the Qumran caves. In the cave were ten jars, mostly empty, but one of which contained three leather scrolls. A later trip retrieved even more scrolls from the cave. What they had discovered were only the first of many ancient Jewish manuscripts that had been hidden in the caves during Roman times.

Learning gentleness
history

Learning gentleness

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

In recent days, I have been again impressed with the significance of a name that was well-known among British evangelicals in the last decades of the long 18th century, but today is mostly forgotten, namely, that of Abraham Booth (1734–1806).

The son of a Nottinghamshire farmer, Booth became a stocking weaver in his teens. He had no formal schooling and was compelled to teach himself to read and to write. His early Christian experience was spent among the General, i.e. Arminian, Baptists, but by 1768 he had undergone a complete revolution in his soteriology and had become a Calvinist. Not long after this embrace of Calvinism he wrote The Reign of Grace, from Its Rise to Its Consummation (1768), which the 20th-century Scottish theologian John Murray regarded as ‘one of the most eloquent and moving expositions of the subject of divine grace in the English language’.

Should we really have  blessed assurance?
history

Should we really have blessed assurance?

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

Whether or not a person could know with certainty that he or she was saved from divine judgment and divine wrath has been a controversial issue in the history of the church.

The New Testament writers assume that it is part and parcel of the normal Christian experience (see, for example, 1 John 3:14). During the Middle Ages, however, Thomas Aquinas bracketed this experience as extraordinary, and argued that only a special revelation from God could give assurance.

400 years on, how the Mayflower Pilgrims can still inspire us...

400 years on, how the Mayflower Pilgrims can still inspire us...

Martyn Whittock
Martyn Whittock

In 1620, 102 ill-prepared settlers landed two months later than planned, in the wrong place on the eastern coast of North America.

They were a mixture of ‘saints’ (asylum-seeking members of separatist Puritan congregations) and ‘strangers’ (economic migrants necessary for the financial success of the venture). By the next summer, half of them were dead. Yet, from this inauspicious beginning, the impact of the Mayflower settlement still resonates 400 years later.

The church and the 
 bubonic plague in later 
 Stuart England
history

The church and the bubonic plague in later Stuart England

Michael Haykin
Michael Haykin

As we saw last month, the church has not always responded to epidemics or pandemics well.

But one sterling occasion when she did was during the outbreak of the bubonic plague in southern England in 1665.