Edward Bickersteth (priest)

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Other people". Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Rev. Edward Bickersteth (19 March 1786 – 28 February 1850) was an evangelical Anglican clergyman from the prominent English Bickersteth family.

Life

File:Watton-at-Stone church and graveyard.jpg
Watton-at-Stone church where Bickersteth worked with Thomas Birks

He was born at Kirkby Lonsdale, Westmorland, the fourth son of Henry Bickersteth, a surgeon. Bickersteth attended Kirkby Lonsdale Grammar School and practised as a solicitor at Norwich from 1812 to 1815.

Within the space of only 11 days in December 1815 he was ordained both as a deacon and priest.[1] In January 1816 travelled to Africa to inspect and report on the work of the Church Missionary Society (CMS). He continued to travel overseas in connection with the work of the CMS throughout his life. He was the secretary of the CMS from 1824 to 1831.[2]

On receiving the living of Watton, Hertfordshire, in 1830, he resigned his secretaryship, but continued to lecture and preach, both for the CMS and the Society for the Conversion of the Jews. He was instrumental in the merger of the Anglican Central Committee and the Continental Society in 1840 to form the Foreign Aid Society which supported evangelical Protestant ministry on the continent of Europe.Template:Sfn

Bickersteth met Lord Ashley in 1835. The Earl made a visit of several days to Watton Rectory in the summer 1836. Following this visit the pair became friends, with Bickersteth becoming one of the reformer's close advisers.[3]

Bickersteth was a leading speaker at the annual assemblies of the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews,Template:Sfn whose activities he keenly supported.Template:Sfn He preached at the Episcopal Jews' Chapel in Bethnal Green by 1837.Template:Sfn He stood against Jewish emancipation, which he equated with "renounc[ing] our own Christianity and seek[ing] to turn their [i.e. Jewish] hopes from their own inheritance".Template:Sfn

He was active in promoting the Evangelical Alliance, whose founding assembly of 1 October 1845 in Liverpool he joined on the conviction that it represented the fulfilment of prophecy, although he had initially hesitated due to the leading role of the Scottish Dissenting Presbyterians in the initiative.Template:Sfn[4] He strongly opposed the Tractarian Movement, and was one of the founders of the 1849 created Irish Church Missions, and also of the 1841 created Parker Society, societies.Template:Sfn Bickersteth's library was sold at auction by Edmund Hodgson on 17 February 1851 (and 11 following days). It contained over 3900 lots. A copy of the catalogue is available at Cambridge University Library (shelfmark Munby.c.116(6)).

Writings

His works include A Scripture Help (London, 1816), which has been translated into many European languages, and Christian Psalmody (London, 1833), a collection of over 700 hymns, which forms the basis of the Hymnal Companion (London, 1870), compiled by his son, Edward Henry Bickersteth, bishop of Exeter (1885–1890).Template:Sfn

The corpus of Bickersteth's texts was published in 15 volumes as The Works of the Rev. Edward Bickersteth with Robert Carter & Brothers in New York in 1855.

Selected publications

Family

Bickersteth was the brother of Henry, Baron Langdale, Master of the Rolls (1836–1851), and uncle of Robert Bickersteth, Bishop of Ripon (1857–1884).

His wife Sarah, whom Bickersteth married in 1812, was the eldest daughter of Thomas Bignold of Norwich, together they had six children. Edward Henry Bickersteth (1825–1906) Bishop of Exeter was his only son and Edward Bickersteth, founder of the Cambridge Mission to Delhi and later bishop of South Tokyo, his grandson.Template:Sfn His son-in-law was Thomas Rawson Birks, his eventual biographer.Template:Sfn

Edward Bickersteth, Dean of Lichfield, was his nephew.

References

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  3. Shaftesbury, A biography of the Seventh Earl 1801–1885, p. 100, Georgina Battiscombe, 1974, Template:ISBN.
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Attribution

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Sources

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