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REGINALD JOHN CAMPBELL (1867— )

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 130 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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REGINALD

JOHN CAMPBELL (1867— )  ,
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British Congregationalist divine, son of a
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United
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Free Methodist minister of Scottish descent, was born in
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London, and educated at
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schools in Bolton and Nottingham, where his
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father successively removed, and in
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Belfast, the home of his grandfather . At an early age he taught in the high school at
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Ashton,
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Cheshire, and was already married when in 1891 he went to
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Christchurch, Oxford, where he graduated in 1895 in the honours school of
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modern
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history . He had gone to Oxford with the intention of becoming a clergy-man in the Church of England, but in spite of the influence of Bishop Gore, then head of the Pusey House, and of Dean Paget (afterwards bishop of Oxford), his Scottish and Irish
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Nonconformist
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blood was too strong, and he abandoned the idea in order to take up
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work in the Congregational
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ministry . He accepted a call, on leaving Oxford, to the small Congregational church in Union Street,
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Brighton, and quickly became famous there as a preacher, so much so that on Joseph Parker's
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death he was chosen as his successor (1903) at the City Temple, London . Here he notably enhanced his popularity as a preacher, and became one of the recognized leaders of Nonconformist opinion . At the end of 1906 he attracted widespread attention by his vigorous
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propagation of what was called the " New
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Theology," a restatement of Christian beliefs to harmonize with modern critical views and beliefs, and published a
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book with this title which gave rise to considerable discussion .

End of Article: REGINALD JOHN CAMPBELL (1867— )
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