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See also: English Presbyterian divine, was See also: born at See also: Bromsgrove in See also: Worcestershire, probably in 1627
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He was the elder son of See also: Richard See also: Flavel, described in See also: con-temporary records as " a painful and eminent See also: minister." After receiving his early See also: education, partly at home and partly at the grammar-See also: schools of Bromsgrove and Haslar, he entered University See also: College, See also: Oxford
.
Soon after taking orders in 165o he obtained a curacy at Diptford, See also: Devon, and on the See also: death of the See also: vicar he was appointed to succeed him
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From Diptford he re-moved in 1656 to See also: Dartmouth
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He was ejected from his living by the passing of the See also: Act of Uniformity in 1662, but continued to preach and administer the sacraments privately till the Five Mile Act of 1665, when he retired to Slapton, 5 M. away
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He then lived for a See also: time in See also: London, but returned to Dartmouth, where he laboured till his death in 1691
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He was married four times
.
He was a vigorous and voluminous writer, and not without a See also: play of See also: fine fancy
.
His See also: principal See also: works are his Navigation Spiritualized (1671); The Fountain of See also: Life, in See also: forty-two Sermons (1672) ; The Method of See also: Grace (168o) ; Pneumatologia, a See also: Treatise on the Soul of See also: Man (1698); A Token for Mourners; Husbandry Spiritualized (1699)
.
Collected See also: editions appeared throughout the 18th century, and in 1823 See also: Charles Bradley edited a 2 vol. selection
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