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See also: American Congregational clergyman, was See also: born in Lowton, in the parish of Winwick, near Liverpool, See also: England, of a See also: family which was in reduced circumstances but entitled to bear a coat-of-arms
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He studied at Winwick grammar school, of which he was appointed a master in his fifteenth See also: year, and See also: left it in 1612 to become master of a newly established school at Toxteth See also: Park, Liverpool
.
After a few months at Brasenose See also: College, See also: Oxford, he began in See also: November 1618 to preach at Toxteth, and was ordained there, possibly only as deacon, early in 1619
.
In August–November 1633 he was suspended for See also: nonconformity in matters of ceremony; and in 1634 was again suspended by the visitors of See also: Richard See also: Neile, archbishop of See also: York, who, hearing that he had never worn a surplice during the fifteen years of his See also: ministry, refused to reinstate him and said that " it had been better for him that he had gotten Seven Bastards." He had a See also: great reputation as a preacher in and about Liverpool; but, advised by letters of See also: John
See also: Cotton and See also: Thomas
See also: Hooker, and persuaded by his
2 Mather was made a licenser of the
See also: Press in 1674 when the General See also: Court abolished the See also: monopoly of the Cambridge Press
.
own elaborate formal " Arguments tending to prove the Removing from Old-England to New
.
. . to be not only lawful, but also necessary for them that are not otherwise tyed, but See also: free," he left England and on the 17th of See also: August 1635, and landed in See also: Boston after an " extraordinary and miraculous deliverance " from a terrible See also: storm
.
As a famous preacher " he was desired at Plimouth, Dorchester, and See also: Roxbury." He went to Dorchester, where the See also: Church had been greatly depleted by migrations to Windsor,
See also: Connecticut; and where, after a delay of several months, in August 1636 there was constituted by the consent of magistrates and See also: clergy a church of which he was " teacher " until his See also: death in Dorchester on the 22nd of See also: April 1669
.
He was an able preacher, " aiming," said his biographer, " to shoot his arrows not over his See also: people's heads, but into their See also: Hearts and Consciences "; and he was a See also: leader of New England See also: Congregationalism, whose policy he defended and described in the See also: tract Church See also: Government and Church See also: Covenant Discussed, in an Answer of the Elders of the Severall Churches of New England to Two and See also: Thirty Questions (written 1639; printed 1643), and in his Reply to Mr Rutherford (1647), a polemic against the See also: Presbyterianism to which the See also: English Congregationalists were then tending
.
He drafted the Cambridge Platform, an ecclesiastical constitution in seventeen chapters, adopted (with the omission of Mather's See also: paragraph favouring the " See also: Half-way Covenant," of which he strongly approved) by the general See also: synod in August 1646
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In 1657 he drafted the declaration of the Ministerial See also: Convention on the meaning and force of the Half-way Covenant; this was published in 1659 under the title: A Disputation concerning Church Members and their See also: Children in Answer to XXI
.
Questions
.
With Thomas Welde and John See also: Eliot he wrote the " See also: Bay Psalm See also: Book," or, more accurately, The Whole Booke of Psalmes Faithfully Translated into English Metre (164o), probably the first book printed in the English colonies
.
He married in 1624 Katherine Hoult or See also: Holt (d
.
1655), and secondly in 1656 Sarah Hankredge (d
.
1676), the widow of John Cotton
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Of six sons, all by his first wife, four were ministers: See also: SAMUEL (1626-1671), the first See also: fellow of Harvard College who was a graduate, See also: chaplain of Magdalen College, Oxford, in 1650-1653, and pastor (1656-1671, excepting suspension in 1660-1662) of St See also: Nicholas's in See also: Dublin; NATHANIEL (1630-1697), who graduated at Harvard in 1647, was See also: vicar of See also: Barnstaple, See also: Devon, in 1656-1662, pastor of the English Church in See also: Rotterdam, his See also: brother's successor in Dublin in 1671-1688, and then until his death pastor of a church in See also: London; ELEAZAR (1637-1669), who graduated at Harvard in 1656 and after preaching in Northampton, Massachusetts, for three years, became in 1661 pastor of the church there; and INCREASE MATHER (q.v.)
.
Horace E
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Mather, in his Lineage of Richard Mather (See also: Hartford, Connecticut, 1890), gives a See also: list of 8o clergymen descended from Richard Mather, of whom 29 See also: bore the name Mather and 51 other names, the more famous being See also: Storrs and Schauffier
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See The See also: Life and Death of That Reverend See also: Man of See also: God, Mr Richard Mather (Cambridge, 167o; reprinted 185o, with his Journal for 1635, by the Dorchester Antiquarian and See also: Historical Society), with an introduction by Increase Mather, who may have been the author; W
.
B
.
Sprague's See also: Annals of the American Pulpit, vol. i
.
(New York, 1857) ; Cotton Mather's See also: Magnolia (London, 1702) ; an essay on Richard Mather in Williston See also: Walker's Ten New England Leaders (New York, 1901); and the
See also: works referred to in the article on Increase Mather._ (R
.
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