Christianity: Details about 'Henry Venn'

Index / Christianity / Conservative Christianity / Henry Venn /

Web christianity-guide.com

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Jesus-Shop

Useful Links


Christianity Portal
History of christianity Jesus Christ Old testament New testament Apocrypha Christian_music
Roman catholic Orthodox Christianity Protestantism Christian movements Mormons Baptists

Henry Venn (1725 - 1797), English evangelical divine, was born at Barnes, Surrey, and educated at Cambridge. He was one of the founders of the Clapham Sect, a small but highly influential evangelical group within the Anglican Church.

He took orders in 1747, and was elected fellow of Queens College, Cambridge, in 1749. After holding a curacy at Barton, Cambridgeshire, he became curate of St Matthew, Friday Street, London, and of West Horsley, Surrey, in 1750, and then of Clapham in 1754. In the preceding year he was lecturer of St Swithins, Londod Stone. He was vicar of Huddersfield from 1759 to 1771, when he exchanged to the living of Yelling, Huntingdonshire.

Besides being a leader of the evangelical



revival, he was well known as the author of The Compleat Duty of Man (London, 1763), a work in which he intended to supplement the teaching embodied in the anonymous Whole Duty of Man. A portrait of him, by John Russell, hangs in the National Portrait Gallery, London.

His son, John Venn (1750-1813), was one of the founders of the Church Missionary Society.

His grandson, also named Henry Venn, (February 10, 1796 - January 13, 1873), was honorary secretary of that society from 1841 to 1873. He expounded the basic principles of indigenous Christian missions later addressed and made widespread by the Lausanne Congress of 1974.

References

  • This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, a publication in the public domain.

Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Christianity: Preach
Christianity: Resurrection Of The Dead
Christianity: Sanctification
Buddhism: Abhidharma
New Age: Skeptics


 





Click here for our Jesus-Shop


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Henry_Venn". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.