- Benjamin Whichcote
Benjamin Whichcote (1609 - 1683), British Establishment and
Puritan divine, Provost ofKing's College, Cambridge , and leader of theCambridge Platonists . He was born in Stoke inShropshire . He enteredEmmanuel College, Cambridge in 1628. In 1637, he was ordained, adeacon andpriest at the same time. In 1643, he married and took up priestly duties in a Cambridge-dispensed church inNorth Cadbury, Somerset . In 1644, he became Provost of King's College due to Parliamentary control of the universities; however, he was the only new head of house who did not subscribe to theNational Covenant . In 1650, during theInterregnum , he advisedOliver Cromwell on the subject of toleration of Jews.Upon the Restoration, he was removed from his position at King's College, but he was reinstated when he accepted the Act of Uniformity in 1662. From that time to 1666 (when it burned), he was the curate of St. Anne's church, Blackfriars. In 1668, he was made the vicar of
St Lawrence Jewry .He was of liberal views, and one of the leaders of the
Cambridge Platonists . In 1650, he was involved in a controversy with his former teacher and friendAnthony Tuckney . He was opposed to the doctrine of total depravity and adopted a semi-Pelagian position, holding that man is the "child of reason" and therefore not, as the Puritans held, of a completely depraved nature. He argued that there are some questions that are beyond the ability of reasonable and religious people to solve, and therefore he argued for religious toleration. He was accused at various times by various persons of being an Arminian, Socinian, and Latitudinarian.His works were nearly all published after his death and include "Select Notions of B. Whichcote" (1685), "Select Sermons" (1689), "
Discourses " (1701), and "Moral and Religious Aphorisms" (1703).References
*Cross, F.L. and E.A. Livingstone. "The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church." London: Oxford UP, 1978.
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