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See also: English See also: Nonconformist divine, was See also: born at Truro in See also: Cornwall, on the 14th of See also: January 1835, the son of Patrick See also: Mackennal, a See also: Scot, who had settled in Cornwall
.
In 1848 the See also: family removed to See also: London, and at sixteen he went to See also: Glasgow University
.
In 1854 he entered See also: Hackney See also: College to prepare for the Congregational See also: ministry, and in 1857 he graduated B.A. at London University
.
After holding pastorates at See also: Burton-on-Trent (1856-1861), See also: Surbiton (1862-1870), See also: Leicester (1870-1876), he finally accepted the pastorate of the Congregational See also: Church at Bowdon,
See also: Cheshire, in 1877, in which he remained till his See also: death
.
In 1886 he was chairman of the Congregational Union, which he represented in 1889 at the triannual See also: national council of the See also: American Congregational churches
.
The first See also: international council of Congregationalists held in London in 1891 was partly cause, partly consequence, of his visit, and Mackennal acted as secretary
.
In 1892 he became definitely associated in the public mind with a See also: movement for See also: free church federation which See also: grew out of a series of meetings held to discuss the question of home See also: reunion
.
When the See also: Lambeth articles put forward as a basis of union were discussed, it was evident that all the free churches were agreed in accepting the three articles dealing with the See also: Bible, the Creed and the Sacraments as a basis of discussion, and were also agreed in rejecting the See also: fourth article, which put the historic episcopate on the same level as the other three
.
Omitting the Anglicans, the representatives of the remaining churches resolved to develop Christian fellowship by See also: united See also: action and worship wherever possible
.
Out of this grew the Free Church Federation, which secures a measure of co-operation between the See also: Protestant Evangelical churches throughout See also: England
.
Mackennal's public action brought him into association with many well-known See also: political and religious leaders
.
He was a lifelong advocate of international See also: peace, and made a remarkable declaration as to the Christian See also: standard of national action when the Free Church Federation met at See also: Leeds during the See also: South See also: African War in 19oo
.
Besides a See also: volume of sermons under the title Christ's Healing Touch, Mackennal published The Biblical Scheme of Nature and of See also: Man, The Christian Testimony, the Letters to the Seven Churches of See also: Asia, The See also: Kingdom of the See also: Lord Jesus and The Eternal See also: God and the Human Sonship
.
These are contributions to exegetical study or to theological and progressive religious thought, and have elements of permanent value
.
He also made some useful contributions to religious See also: history
.
In 1893 he published the See also: Story of the English Separatists, and later the Homes and Haunts of the See also: Pilgrim Fathers; he also wrote the See also: life of Dr J
.
A
.
Macfadyen of Manchester
.
In 19o1 he delivered a series of lectures at See also: Hartford Theological Seminary, See also: Connecticut, U.S.A., published under the title The See also: Evolution of See also: Congregationalism
.
He died at See also: Highgate on the 23rd of See also: June 1904
.
See D
.
Macfadyen, Life and Letters of See also: Alexander Mackennal
(1905)
.
(D
.
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