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JOHN PEARSON (1612-1686)

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 29 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN PEARSON (1612-1686)  ,
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English divine and scholar, was born at
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Great Snoring, Norfolk, on the 28th of
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February 1612 . From
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Eton he passed to Queen's College, Cambridge, and was elected a scholar of King's in
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April 1632, and a
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fellow in 1634 . On taking orders in 1639 he was collated to the Salisbury prebend of Nether-
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Avon . In 164o he was appointed
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chaplain to the lord-keeper Finch, by whom he was presented to the living of Thorington in Suffolk . In the
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Civil War he acted as chaplain to George Goring's forces in the west . In 1654 he was made weekly preacher at St Clement's, Eastcheap, in
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London . With Peter Gunning he disputed against two
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Roman Catholics on the subject of
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schism, a one-sided account of which was printed in Paris by one of the Roman Catholic disputants, under the title Scisme Unmask't (1658) . Pearson also argued against the Puritan party, and was much interested in Brian Walton's polyglot Bible . In 1659 he published in London his celebrated Exposition of the Creed, dedicated to his parishioners of St Clement's, Eastcheap, to whom the substance of the
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work had been preached several years before . In the same
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year hepublished the
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Golden Remains of the ever-memorable Mr John Hales of Eton, with an interesting memoir . Soon after the Restoration he was presented by Juxon, bishop of London, to the rectory of St Christopher-le-
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Stocks; and in 166o he was created doctor of divinity at Cambridge, appointed a royal chaplain, prebendary of Ely, archdeacon of Surrey, and master of Jesus College, Cambridge . In 1661 he was appointed Lady Margaret professor of divinity; and on the first day of the ensuing year he was nominated one of the commissioners for the review of the liturgy in the
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conference held at the Savoy .

There he won the esteem of his opponents and high praise from

Richard Baxter . On the 14th of April 1662 he was made master of Trinity College, Cambridge . In 1667 he was admitted a fellow of the Royal Society . In 1672 he published at Cambridge Vindiciae epistolarum S . Ignatii, in 4to, in answer to
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Jean Daille . His defence of the authenticity of the letters of Ignatius has been confirmed by J . B . Lightfoot and other
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recent scholars . Upon the
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death of John Wilkins in 1672, Pearson was appointed to the bishopric of Chester . In 1682 his Annales cyprianici were published at Oxford, with John Fell's edition of that
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father's
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works . He died at Chester on the 16th of
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July 1686 . His last work, the Two
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Dissertations on the Succession and Times of the First Bishops of Rome, formed with the Annales Paulini the
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principal
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part of his Opera
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post/mina, edited by Henry Dodwell in 1688 .

See the memoir in Biographia Britannica, and another by

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Edward Churton, prefixed to the edition of Pearson's Minor Theological Works (2 vols., Oxford, 1844) . Churton also edited almost the whole of the theological writings .

End of Article: JOHN PEARSON (1612-1686)
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