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THEOPHILUS LINDSEY (1723—1808)

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 720 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THEOPHILUS LINDSEY (1723—1808)  ,
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English theologian, was born in
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Middlewich,
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Cheshire, on the loth of
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June 1723, and was educated at the Leeds
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Free School and at St John's College, Cambridge, where in 1747 he became a
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fellow . For some time he held a curacy in
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Spitalfields,
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London, and from 1754 to 1756 he travelled on the continent of
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Europe as tutor to the young duke of Northumberland . He was then presented to the living of Kirkby-Wiske in
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Yorkshire, and after exchanging it for that of Piddletown in Dorsetshire, he removed in 1763 to Catterick in Yorkshire . Here. about 1764 he founded one of the first
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Sunday
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schools in England . Meanwhile he had begun to entertain anti-Trinitarian views, and to be troubled in conscience about their inconsistency with the
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Anglican belief; since 1769 the intimate friendship of Joseph Priestley had served to foster his scruples, and in 1771 he
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united with Francis Blackburne, archdeacon of Cleveland (his
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father-in-law), John Jebb (1.736–1786), Christopher Wyvill (1740—1822) and Edmund Law 1703–1787), bishop of Carlisle, in preparing a petition to parliament with the prayer that clergymen of the church and graduates of the
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universities might be relieved from the burden of subscribing to the
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thirty-nine articles, and " restored to their undoubted rights as Protestants of interpreting Scripture for themselves." Two
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hundred and fifty signatures were obtained, but in
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February 1772 the House of
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Commons declined even to receive the petition by a majority of 217 to 71; the adverse
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vote was repeated in the following
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year, and in the end of 1773, seeing no prospect of obtaining within the church the
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relief which his conscience demanded, Lindsey resigned his vicarage . In
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April 1774 he began to. conduct Unitarian services in a
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room in Essex Street, Strand, London, where first a church, and afterwards the Unitarian offices, were established . Here he remained till 1793, when he resigned his charge in favour of John Disney (1746-1816), who like himself had
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left the established church and had become his colleague . He died on the 3rd of November x8o8 . Lindsey's chief
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work is An
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Historical View of the State of the Unitarian
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Doctrine and Worship from the Reformation to our own Times (1783) ; in it he claims, amongst others, Burnet; Tillotson . S . Clarke, Hoadly and
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Sir I . Newton for the Unitarian view .

His other publications include

Apology on Resigning the Vicarage of Catterick (1774), and Sequel to the Apology (1776); The
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Book of
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Common Prayer reformed according to the plan of the
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late Dr
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Samuel Clarke (1774) ;
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Dissertations on the Preface to St John's Gospel and on praying to Jesus Christ (1779); Vindiciae Priestleianae (1788); Conversations upon Christian
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Idolatry (1792) ; and Conversations on the Divine Government, showing that everything is from
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God, and for good to all (1802) . Two volumes of Sermons, with appropriate prayers annexed, were published posthumously in 181o; and a
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volume of
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Memoirs, by Thomas Belsham, appeared in 1812 .

End of Article: THEOPHILUS LINDSEY (1723—1808)
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