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See also: English divine, was See also: born at Hardingstone, near Northampton, on the 26th of See also: February 1714, and was educated at the grammar school of Northampton, and at Lincoln See also: College, See also: Oxford
.
Here he came under the influence of See also: John
See also: Wesley and the Oxford methodists; ultimately, however, while retaining his regard for the men and his sympathy with their religious aims, he adopted a thoroughly Calvinistic creed, and resolved to remain in the See also: Anglican See also: Church
.
Having taken orders in 1737, he held several curacies, and in 1752 succeeded his
See also: father in the See also: family livings of See also: Weston Favell and Collingtree
.
He was never robust, but was a See also: good parish See also: priest and a zealous writer
.
His See also: style is often bombastic, but he displays a rare appreciation of natural beauty, and his See also: simple piety made him many See also: friends
.
His earliest See also: work, Meditations and Contemplations, said to have been modelled on Robert Boyle's Occasional Reflexions on various Subjects, within fourteen years passed through as many See also: editions
.
Theron and Aspasio, or a series of Letters upon the most important and interesting Subjects, which appeared in 1755, and was equally well received, called forth some adverse See also: criticism even from Calvinists, on account of tendencies which were considered to See also: lead to antinomianism, and was strongly objected to by Wesley in his Preservative against unsettled Notions in See also: Religion
.
Besides carrying into See also: England the theological disputes to which the Marrow of See also: Modern Divinity had given rise in Scotland, it also led to what is known as the Sandemanian controversy as to the nature of saving faith
.
See also: Hervey died on the 25th of See also: December 1758
.
A " new and See also: complete " edition of his See also: Works, with a memoir, appeared in 1797
.
See also Collection of the Letters of See also: James Hervey, to which is prefixed an account of his
See also: Life and See also: Death, by Dr Birch
(1760)
.
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