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Topic: John Frederick Denison Maurice


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  Frederick Maurice - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Frederick Denison Maurice (August 29, 1805 - April 1, 1872) was an English theologian.
While many "Broad Churchmen" were influenced by ethical and emotional considerations in their repudiation of the dogma of everlasting torment, Maurice was swayed by intellectual and theological arguments, and in questions of a more general liberty he often opposed the Liberal theologians.
Maurice also contributed many prefaces and introductions to the works of friends, as to Archdeacon Hare's Charges, Kingsley's Saint's Tragedy, etc. See Life by his son (2 vols., London, 1884), and a monograph by C.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Frederick_Maurice   (1023 words)

  
 §17. Frederick Denison Maurice; Newman’s "Grammar of Assent;" William George Ward. I. Philosophers. Vol. 14. ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Frederick Denison Maurice 9 had already an ecclesiastical career behind him when, in 1866, he succeeded Grote as professor at Cambridge.
Maurice’s influence was due to his personality more than to his books; and he was a social reformer and religious teacher rather than a philosopher.
John Henry Newman 10 was still less of a philosopher, though his Grammar of Assent propounds a theory of the nature and grounds of belief.
www.bonus.com /contour/bartlettqu/http@@/www.bartleby.com/224/0117.html   (326 words)

  
 MAURICE OF NASSAU - LoveToKnow Article on MAURICE OF NASSAU
Maurice soon showed himself to be a general second in skill to none of his contemporaries.
Maurice was opposed to the truce, but the advocates policy triumphed and henceforward there was enmity between them.
Oldenbarneveldt perished on the scaffold, and the share which Maurice had in securing the illegal condemnation by a packed court of judges of the aged pafriot must ever remain a stain upon his memory.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /M/MA/MAURICE_OF_NASSAU.htm   (588 words)

  
 MAURICE - LoveToKnow Article on MAURICE
He was ordained in 1834, and after a short curacy at Bubbenhall in Warwickshire was appointed chaplain of Guys Hospital, and became thenceforward a sensible factor in the intellectual and social life of London.
In 1866 Maurice was appointed professor of moral philosophy at Cambridge, and from 1870 to 1872 was incumbent of St Edwards in that city.
As a social reformer, Maurice was before his time, and gave his eager support to schemes for which the world was not ready.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /M/MA/MAURICE.htm   (1121 words)

  
 Frederick Denison Maurice
By far the most documented MAURICE is the famous divine of the mid 19th century, the man whom Tennyson described as “the greatest mind of the age”, Frederick Denison MAURICE.
The father of Frederick Denison MAURICE was born in Eastwood, Yorkshire on 3rd February 1766.
Frederick Denison’s son Frederick MAURICE was his first biographer and in the huge two volume tome, the only reference to Michael the elder describes him as “an orthodox Dissenting minister and farmer”.
members.ispwest.com /johnkirk/Denison.html   (965 words)

  
 Frederick Maurice -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
John Frederick Denison Maurice (August 29, 1805 - April 1, 1872) was an (An Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries) English (Someone who is learned in theology or who speculates about theology (especially Christian theology)) theologian.
While many "Broad Churchmen" were influenced by ethical and emotional considerations in their repudiation of the (A religious doctrine that is proclaimed as true without proof) dogma of everlasting torment, Maurice was swayed by intellectual and theological arguments, and in questions of a more general liberty he often opposed the Liberal theologians.
Maurice also contributed many prefaces and introductions to the works of friends, as to Archdeacon Hare's Charges, (Click link for more info and facts about Kingsley) Kingsley's Saint's Tragedy, etc. See Life by his son (2 vols., London, 1884), and a monograph by (Click link for more info and facts about C. Masterman) C.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/f/fr/frederick_maurice.htm   (1047 words)

  
 Church Times - ‘He was an inspiration for social witness’   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
MAURICE is remembered mostly today for his part in the formation of Christian Socialism, galvanised by the widespread alarm in 1848, the “year of revolutions”, concerning the supposed threat posed by the Chartists.
Maurice thought that the Church of England had abandoned its vocation to embrace and transform the nation, and that, in preaching the duties of the poor, it had ignored the duties of the rich.
Maurice’s theology combined two contrasting insights: a biblical theology that was content to accept the scriptures as a coherent living voice, and a metaphysical conviction of the universal nature of divine wisdom.
churchtimes.co.uk /churchtimes/website/pages.nsf/httppublicpages/6DAA217960C616C280257005006C6926   (2017 words)

  
 Frederick Maurice
Frederick Maurice, the son of Major-General John Frederick Maurice, was born in Dublin on 19th January 1871.
Maurice, whose job it was to keep accurate statistics of British military strength, knew that Lloyd George had been guilty of misleading Parliament about the number of men in the British Army.
Maurice believed that Lloyd George was deliberately holding back men from the Western Front in an attempt to undermine the position of Sir Douglas Haig.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /FWWmaurice.htm   (1232 words)

  
 Frederick Maurice biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
He was born at Normanston, Suffolk, the son of a Unitarian ministeropinions, and he ultimately found relief in a decision to take a further university course and to seek Anglican orders.
He was ordained in 1834, and after a short curacy at Bubbenh appointed chaplain of Guy's Hospital, and became a leading figure in the intellectual and social life of London.
The condition of the city's poor troubled him; the magnitude of the social questions involved was a opinions seemed to trust him even if their faith in other religious men and all religious systems had faded, and he had a power of attracting both the zealot and the outcast.
john-frederick-denison-maurice.biography.ms   (882 words)

  
 FREDERICK MAURICE FACTS AND INFORMATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
John Frederick Denison Maurice (August_29, 1805 - April_1, 1872) was an English theologian.
He was ordained in 1834, and after a short curacy at Bubbenhall in Warwickshire was appointed chaplain of Guy's_Hospital, and became a leading figure in the intellectual and social life of London.
During the early years of this period he was engaged in a hot and bitter controversy with Henry_Longueville_Mansel (afterwards dean of St Paul's), arising out of the latter's Bampton lecture on reason and revelation.
www.witwib.com /Frederick_Maurice   (984 words)

  
 Search Results for "Denison"
Denison Dam, 17,200 ft (5,243 m) long, on the Red River along the Texas-Okla. border, NW of Denison, Tex. The dam, built by the U.S. Corps of Engineers for flood...
Denison, Tex.; his nickname was "Ike." 1 Early CareerWhen he was two years...
Flowing from mountains to the W coast, its main tributaries are the Franklin and Denison from the N, and Serpentine and Olga to the S. In the 1980s it was...
www.bartleby.com /cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=col65&query=Denison   (283 words)

  
 Fenton John Anthony Hort - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fenton John Anthony Hort (April 23, 1828–November 30, 1892) was an English theologian.
He was born in Dublin, the great-grandson of Josiah Hort, Archbishop of Tuam in the 18th century.
He had been brought up in the strictest principles of the Evangelical school, but at Rugby he fell under the influence of Thomas Arnold and Archibald Campbell Tait, and his acquaintance with John Frederick Denison Maurice and Charles Kingsley finally gave his opinions a direction towards Liberalism.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Fenton_John_Anthony_Hort   (534 words)

  
 The Leaven of F. D. Maurice
Prominent among this "band of brothers" were John Malcolm Ludlow, a layman and barrister, and Charles Kingsley, country priest and novelist.
His desire was to ground all theology upon the name of God, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost -- not to begin with man and his sins; and to ground all human morality upon the relation in which man stands to God -- not upon dread of punishment or expectation of reward.
John warns his children of it with fathetly gentleness; but there is a sting in that very gentleness.
www.anglocatholicsocialism.org /maurice.html   (4322 words)

  
 Frederick Dennison Maurice
Maurice rejected individualism, with its competition and selfishness, and suggested a socialist alternative to the economic principles of laissez faire.
Maurice was attracted to the socialist and educational ideas of Robert Owen.
Maurice was a supporter of Chartism and after the decision by the House of Commons to reject the recent Chartist Petition in 1848, he joined with
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /REmaurice.htm   (610 words)

  
 John Brinley and Elizabeth Doups (Dupps) Family Tree   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
John Brinley, father not certain, was in Kentucky in the late 1700's with Mathias,Jacob, Henry another Johnand Jacob Brinley.
They show John's son Hiram moving to Texas as Hiram Brinlee, however Hiram had a different wife than the Texas Hiram, different children names and died years before the Hiram in Texas.
In addition John's Hiram is buried in the Applegate Cemetery beside his father John, not in Texas.
www.brinley.net /reports/INjohn.html   (5722 words)

  
 AIM25: King's College London College Archives: MAURICE, Professor Frederick Denison (1805-1872)
Some papers, including Maurice's letters of orders, were given to King's College in 1949 by the Rt Rev John Victor Macmillan, Bishop of Guildford (whose wife was the daughter of Major-General Sir Frederick Maurice, grandson of Frederick Denison Maurice).
Maurice's letters to Sara Coleridge and the Hare letter were given to King's College by the Reverend Anthony D Coleridge in 1951.
In 1854, 55 volumes were presented to King's College by F D Maurice and in 1926 Major General Sir F Maurice gave to King's College Library c350 volumes on theology from the library of F D Maurice, which were dispersed through the library's collection.
www.aim25.ac.uk /cats/6/3018.htm   (717 words)

  
 Victorian Visionaries - Christian History
Maurice was later one of the founders of the Christian Socialist Movement.
Maurice was widely respected for his Christian character, and his charismatic personality had a gravitational pull on many writers including MacDonald, Charles Kingsley, and John Ruskin.
Along with his friend F. Maurice (whom he called "Master" after being deeply affected by The Kingdom of Christ), Kingsley was concerned with the plight of the working classes in Victorian England and was one of the founders of the Christian Socialist Movement.
www.christianitytoday.com /ch/2005/002/10.24.html   (2724 words)

  
 Maurice, Frederick Denison --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
In the 19th-century English tradition of reform politics, Christian socialism was offered as a cure for society's ills by Frederick Denison Maurice, John Malcolm Ludlow, and Charles Kingsley—all of whom were Anglican clergymen.
French author and journalist Maurice Leblanc is best known as the creator of the French gentleman-thief turned detective Arsène Lupin, who is featured in more than 60 of Leblanc's crime novels and short stories.
Canadian professional ice hockey player Maurice Richard was known as The Rocket and played as a hard-hitting forward (right wing).
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9051506?tocId=9051506   (763 words)

  
 Muir, John -- Mulford, Elisha: in Cornell University's Making of America
Muir, John, Studies in the Sierra: A Wind Storm in the Forests of the Yuba.
Muir, John, Studies in the Sierra: The Glacier Meadows of the Sierra.
Muir, John, Studies in the Sierra: The Passes of the Sierra.
cdl.library.cornell.edu /moa/browse.author/m.230.html   (168 words)

  
 3_733 19/10/53   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
William Bowman (1816-1892) ophthalmologist; on staff of King's College Hospital; was associated in foundation of St. John's House for the training of nursesT 1844; Bowman was therefore already in sympathy with F.N.'s plans when they met and became a life long friend and ally.
John Frederick Denison Maurice (1805-1872) trained first as a barrister, then in 1834 ordained in the Church of England.
In 1853 Maurice was forced to resign his positions as professor of history and literature, and of divinity at King's College, London, on doctrinal grounds.
www.florence-nightingale.co.uk /goldie/goldieitems/3_733.htm   (165 words)

  
 Frederick Denison Maurice, Priest and Theologian
F D Maurice was born in 1805, the son of a Unitarian clergyman.
Soon after his ordination, Maurice became Professor of English Literature and History at King's College, London, and in 1846, Professor of Theology as well.
He begins an Essay by considering an objection to traditional Christian theology: for example, the objection that the instructions supposedly given by God to the Israelites to massacre the inhabitants of Canaan are morally indefensible.
justus.anglican.org /resources/bio/134.html   (429 words)

  
 Fenton John Anthony Hort   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Fenton John Anthony Hort (April 23, 1828 - November 30, 1892) was an EnglandEnglish theologian/.
In 1850 Hort took his degree, being third in the classical tripos, and in 1852 he became fellow of his college.
In 1854, in conjunction with John Eyton Bickersteth MayorJEB Mayor and Lightfoot, he established the ''Journal of Classical and Sacred Philology'', and plunged eagerly into theological and patristic study.
www.infothis.com /find/Fenton_John_Anthony_Hort   (496 words)

  
 Denison --  Encyclopædia Britannica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
The city of Sherman lies to the south and Lake Texoma, impounded on the Red River by Denison Dam, to the northwest.
Founded in the 1840s, it was named for General Sidney Sherman, a cavalry officer during the Texas Revolution and an early railroad promoter.
The plain extends 150 to 250 miles (240 to 400 kilometers) inland to a series of hills that sweep across Texas from Denison on the Red River...
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9029937?tocId=9029937   (797 words)

  
 World of Quotes - F. D. Maurice Quotes.
Commemoration of Frederick Denison Maurice, Priest, teacher, 1872 Infant Baptism...
Commemoration of Frederick Denison Maurice, Priest, teacher, 1872 It is better, safer, truer language to speak of individual depravity than of universal depravity.
It reveals to us a fact: it tells us what we really are; it says, This is the form in which God created you, to which He has restored you; this is the work which the Eternal Son, the God of Truth and Love, is continually carrying on within you.
www.worldofquotes.com /author/F.-D.-Maurice/1   (731 words)

  
 [No title]
The essay by R. Pantini is translated from "Nuova Antologia." Contents: George Frederick Watts by W. West; The Art of George Frederick Watts by Romualdo Pantini.
John Ruskin and Frederick Denison Maurice on "Notes on the Construction of Sheepfolds." Ed.
This work consists of an editor's preface explaining the background of this work, followed by six letters by either Ruskin or Maurice in which the arguments in Ruskin's Sheepfolds concerning the nature of the church and its membership are discussed.
www.asu.edu /lib/speccoll/prb/prb_w.htm   (1147 words)

  
 [No title]
He was father of the well-known }{\b\fs24 John Frederick Denison Maurice}{\fs24, who went to Cambridge from here in 1823.
He pluckt }{\b\fs24 John Bawn}{\fs24 out of a meeting by the hair of his head; he also caused the forms and bench es to be cut to pieces, and with his staff broke five glass windows to pieces, not leaving one whole Quarry.
}{\b\fs24 John Wesley}{\fs24 's visits to the parish extended over a long period; his Journal records a visit to Frenchay on April 25th, 1739, when he dined with }{\b\fs24 Anthony Purver}{\fs24.
www.frenchaymuseumarchives.co.uk /Archives/Elliott/05_other_churches.rtf   (1928 words)

  
 [No title]
Her grandfathers, John of Penfillan and Walter of Templand, also a Welsh, though of another--the gipsy--stock, vied for her baby favours, while her mother's quick and shifty tempers seem at that date to have combined in the process of "spoiling" her.
In 1832 John, again by Jeffrey's aid, obtained a situation at £300 a year as travelling physician to Lady Clare, and was enabled, as he promptly did, to pay back his debts.
Carlyle's relation to John Sterling drew out the sort of affection which best suited him--the love of a master for a pupil, of superior for inferior, of the benefactor for the benefited; and consequently there is no line in the record of it that jars.
www.gutenberg.org /dirs/etext06/8carl10.txt   (15355 words)

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