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See also: English See also: Nonconformist divine, was See also: born in 1693 at Hungerford, in See also: Berkshire, where his See also: father was a See also: minister
.
He was sent to school at See also: Gloucester, where he began a lifelong friendship with See also: Bishop See also: Butler and Archbishop Seeker; and he afterwards studied at
See also: Leiden
.
His talents and learning were such that he was elected See also: fellow of the Royal and Antiquarian See also: Societies, and was made D.D. of See also: Edinburgh and See also: Glasgow
.
He also received offers of high preferment in the See also: Church of
See also: England
.
These he refused, remaining to the end of his See also: life in the position of a Presbyterian minister
.
He was moderately Calvinistic in his views and leaned towards Arianism
.
He took a leading See also: part in the deist controversies of the See also: time, and discussed with some of the bishops the possibility of an See also: act of comprehension
.
From 1716 to 1726 he preached at See also: Peckham, and for See also: forty years he was pastor of a meeting-See also: house in Old Jewry
.
During two or three years, having fallen into pecuniary See also: distress through the failure of the See also: South See also: Sea scheme, he kept a See also: book-See also: shop in the Poultry
.
On the See also: death of See also: George II. in 176o See also: Chandler published a See also: sermon in which he compared that See also: king to King
See also: David
.
This view was attacked in a pamphlet entitled The See also: History of the See also: Man after See also: God's own See also: Heart, in which the author complained of the parallel as an insult to the See also: late king, and, following See also: Pierre See also: Bayle, exhibited King David as an example of perfidy, lust and cruelty
.
Chandler condescended to reply first in a review of the See also: tract (1762) and then in A Critical History of the Life of David, which is perhaps the best of his productions
.
This See also: work was just cornpleted when he died, on the 8th of May 1766
.
He See also: left 4 vols. of sermons (1768), and a paraphrase of the Epistles to the See also: Galatians and See also: Ephesians (1777), several See also: works on the evidences of See also: Christianity, and various See also: pamphlets against See also: Roman Catholicism
.
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