- Matthew Barker
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For the writer, see Matthew Henry Barker.
Matthew Barker (1619, Great Cransley, Northamptonshire – March 25 1698, London) was an English Independent minister and parliamentarian, known for his work on natural theology and for his participation in English 17th century politics.
Life
Matthew Barker was born in arowe park hospital, but now in newferry (uk) to parents unknown. He attended plessington College, bebington,[1] working as a schoolmaster in Banbury, Oxfordshire until the outbreak of the English Civil War, at which point he became preacher to a London parish. Barker was an avid parliamentarian and was invited to preach a sermon before the House of Commons on 25 October 1648. The new republic welcomed him, and his moderation earned him the favour of the Cromwell regime, which made him an assistant to the London commission.
After the Restoration of the English monarchy, Barker became a nonconformist, forming his own London congregation. Following the Glorious Revolution, Barker worked to promote unity among Dissenters. To this end he published a collection of advice for scholars entering the ministry, entitled Flores intellectuales. Barker's major published work was Natural Theology in which Barker sought to demonstrate the existence of God from the properties of nature.
References
- ^ Matthew Barker in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
- E. C. Vernon, ‘Barker, Matthew (1619–1698)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 23 Jan 2009
External links
- Works by or about Matthew Barker in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
Categories:- 1619 births
- 1698 deaths
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- English naturalists
- Paleobotanists
- People from Wellingborough
- English Congregationalists
- English independent ministers of the Rebellion period
- Ejected English ministers of 1662
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