- Silvester Jenks
Silvester Jenks (c. 1656 - December 1714) was an English Catholic priest and theologian.
Born in
Shropshire , Jenks attended theEnglish College, Douai , where he served as Professor of Philosophy from 1680 to 1686. He later served as a preacher to James II. After theGlorious Revolution in 1688, he fled toFlanders . Upon his return to England, he laboured as a missionary in or near London and was appointedArchdeacon ofSurrey andKent . In 1711, he was electedVicar Apostolic of the Northern District, but he died before his consecration.Among Jenks's works are:
*"A Contrite and Humble Heart"
*"Practical Discourses on the Morality of the Gospel"
*"The Blind Obedience of a Humble Penitent the Best Cure for Scruples"
*"The Whole Duty of a Christian"
*"A Short Review of the Book of Jansenius"A portrait engraved by
le Pouter in 1694 is prefixed to a Paris edition of "A Contrite and Humble Heart"."This article incorporates text from the 1913 "
Catholic Encyclopedia " article " [http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_%281913%29/Silvester_Jenks?oldid=343878 Silvester Jenks] " by Edwin Burton, a publication now in thepublic domain ."
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