Английская Википедия:Charles Vince (Baptist)

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Файл:Charles Vince.jpg
Charles Vince

Charles Vince (1823–1874) was a noted and popular Baptist minister in Birmingham, England, at the Graham Street chapel from 1852 to 1874.[1] He was one of the religious leaders developing Birmingham's Civic Gospel, with his predecessor at the chapel George Dawson, and Henry William Crosskey.[2]

Life

Vince was born in Farnham, Surrey, into a Congregationalist background: his father was a carpenter and builder. He attended a local school, run by a nephew of William Cobbett, became an apprentice to Mason & Jackson, the firm for which his father worked, and joined the local Mechanics' Institute. After a Baptist conversion, he entered Stepney College in 1848. He was then assigned to the Mount Zion Chapel, in Graham Street, Birmingham.[3][4][5] He has been described as a "charismatic preacher".[6]

As a figure of the Birmingham "civic renaissance" (or "civic gospel"), a movement promoted by Dawson's supporters, Vince spoke for causes including the Reform League, the National Education League, and the Liberal Association. He was also personally popular as a minister.[7] He defended the radicalism of George Edmonds in an 1868 funeral sermon for him.[8]

Файл:Key Hill Charles Vince monument.jpg
Vince's memorial in Key Hill Cemetery

Vince was an influential participant in Birmingham's social institutions, and a member of Birmingham's first school board. He died on 22 October 1874, at age 51, and was buried at Key Hill Cemetery, Hockley.[3][9]

Works

  • Lessons for Christian labourers from the lives of the Jesuits (1861)
  • The Child's Book of Praise (1863)
  • Lights and Shadows in the Life of King David (1870)
  • The Unchanging Saviour, and other sermons (1875)
  • Christian Hymns for Public Worship (1876), with Henry Platten[10]

Family

Vince left a widow and seven children.[11] They included Charles Anthony Vince (born 1855), an academic, head of Mill Hill School, Liberal Unionist and local historian of Birmingham;[12] and James Herbert Vince.[13] The fourth son, W. B. Vince, was a solicitor and worked for the Birmingham Post before dying young.[14]

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control