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See also: English Puritan divine, better known, especially in See also: Europe, as Amesius, was See also: born of an See also: ancient See also: family at See also: Ipswich, See also: Suffolk, in 1576, and was educated at the See also: local grammar school and at Christ's See also: College, Cambridge, where, as throughout his See also: life, he was an omnivorous student
.
He was considerably influenced by his tutor, the celebrated See also: William Perkins, and by his successor, a
See also: man of kindred intellect and fervour, See also: Paul Bayne
.
He graduated B.A. and M.A. in due course, and was chosen to a fellowship in Christ's College
.
He was universally beloved in the university
.
His own college (Christ's) would have chosen him for the mastership; but a party opposition led to the election of See also: Valentine Cary, who had already quarrelled with See also: Ames for disapproving of the surplice and other outward symbols
.
One of Ames's sermons became See also: historical in the Puritan controversies
.
It was delivered on St See also: Thomas's
See also: day (1609) before the feast of Christ's nativity, and in it he rebuked sharply " lusory lotts " and the " heathenish debauchery " of the students during the twelye days ensuing
.
The scathing vehemence of his denunciations led to his being summoned before the See also: vice-chancellor, who suspended him " from the exercise of his ecclesiastical See also: function and from all degrees taken or to be taken," After Cary's election he See also: left the university and would have accepted the See also: great See also: church of Colchester, but the
See also: bishop of See also: London refused to See also: grant institution and induction
.
Like persecution awaited him elsewhere, and at last he passed over to
See also: Holland, being aided by certain wealthy English merchants who wished him to controvert the supporters of the English church in
See also: Leiden
.
At See also: Rotterdam, clad in the fisherman's habit donned for the passage, he opposed Grevinchovius (See also: Nicholas Grevinckhoven, d
.
1632), See also: minister of the Arminian or Remonstrant church, and overwhelmed him with his logical reasoning from Phil. ii
.
13, " It is See also: God that worketh in us both to will and to do." The fisherman-controversialist made a great stir, and from that day became known and honoured in the Low Countries
.
Subsequently Ames entered into A. controversy in See also: print with Grevinchovius on universal redemption and election, and cognate problems
.
He brought together all he had maintained in his Coronis ad Collationem Hagiensem—his most masterful See also: book, which figures largely in Dutch church See also: history
.
At Leiden, Ames became intimate with the venerable Mr See also: Goodyear, pastor of the English church there
.
While thus See also: resident in See also: comparative privacy he was sent for to the Hague by See also: Sir Horatio See also: Vere, the English governor of See also: Brill, who appointed him a minister in the army of the states-general, and of the English soldiers in their service, a See also: post held by some of the greatest of See also: England's exiled Puritans
.
He married a daughter of Dr See also: Burgess, who was Vere's See also: chaplain, and, on his See also: father-in-See also: law's return to England, succeeded to his place
.
It was at this See also: time he began his memorable controversy with See also: Episcopius, who, in attacking the Coronis, railed against the author as having been " a disturber of the public See also: peace in his native country, so that the English magistrates had banished him thence; and now, by his See also: late printed Coronis, he was raising new disturbances in the peaceable See also: Netherlands." It was a miserable See also: libel and was at once rebutted by Goodyear
.
The Coronis had been primarily prepared for the See also: synod of See also: Dort, which sat from See also: November 1618 until May 1619
.
At this celebrated synod the position of Ames was a See also: peculiar one
.
The High Church party in England had induced Vere to dismiss him from the chaplaincy; but he was still held, deservedly, in such reverence, that it was arranged he should attend the synod, and accordingly he was retained by the Calvinist party at four florins a day to See also: watch the, proceedings on their behalf and advise them when necessary
.
A proposal to make him See also: principal of a theological college at Leiden was frustrated by Archbishop See also: Abbot; and when later invited by the
See also: state of See also: Friesland to a professoriate at See also: Franeker;
the opposition was renewed, but this time abortively
.
He was installed at Franeker on the 7th of May 1622, and delivered a most learned discourse on the occasion on " Urim and Thummin." He soon brought renown to Franeker as professor, preacher, pastor and theological writer
.
He prepared his Medulla Theologiae, a See also: manual of Calvinistic See also: doctrine, for his students
.
His De Conscientia, ejus Jure et Casibus (1632), an attempt to bring ChristianSee also: ethics into clear relation with particular cases of conduct and of See also: conscience, was a new thing in Protestantism.' Having continued twelve years at Franeker (where he was rector in 1626), his See also: health gave way, and he contemplated removal to New England
.
But another door was opened for him
.
He yearned for more frequent opportunities of preaching to his See also: fellow-countrymen, and an invitation to Rotterdam gave him such opportunity
.
His See also: friends at Franeker were passionately opposed to the transference, but ultimately acquiesced
.
At Rotterdam he See also: drew all See also: hearts to him by his eloquence and fervour in the pulpit, and his irrepressible activity as a pastor
.
Home-controversy engaged him again, and he prepared his Fresh Suit against Ceremonies—the book which made See also: Richard See also: Baxter a See also: Nonconformist
.
It ably sums up the issues between the Puritan school and that of See also: Hooker
.
It was posthumously published
.
He did not long survive his removal to Rotterdam
.
Having caught a cold from a
See also: flood which inundated his See also: house, he died in November 1633, at the age of fifty-seven, apparently in needy circumstances
.
He left, by a second wife, a son and a daughter
.
His valuable library found a home in New England
.
Few Englishmen have exercised so formative and controlling an influence onSee also: European thought and opinion as Ames
.
He was a master in theological controversy, shunning not to See also: cross swords with the formidable Bellarmine
.
He was a See also: scholar among scholars, being furnished with extraordinary resources of learning
.
His See also: works, which even the Biographia Britannica (1778) testifies were famous over Europe, were collected at See also: Amsterdam in 5 vols
.
4to
.
Only a very small proportion was translated into his See also: mother See also: tongue
.
His Lectiones in omnes Psalmos Davidis (1635) is exceedingly suggestive and terse in its See also: style, reminding of See also: Bengel's See also: Gnomon, as does also his Commentaries utriusque Epist
.
S
.
Petri
.
His " Replies " to Bishop See also: Morton and Dr Burgess on " Ceremonies " tell us that even kinship could not prevent him from " contending earnestly for the faith."
See See also: John
See also: Quick's MS
.
Icones Sacrae Anglicanae, which gives the fisherman anecdote on the See also: personal authority of one who was See also: present ; Life by Nethenus prefixed to collected edition of Latin works (5 vols., Amsterdam, x658); Winwood's Memorials, vol. iii
.
PP
.
346—347; Neal's Puritans, i . 532;See also: Fuller's Cambridge (Christ's College) ; Hanbury's Hist
.
Memorials, i
.
533; Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, vol. vi., See also: fourth series, 1863, PP
.
576-577
.
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