In Depth:  Joy Horn

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Milestones 2019

Milestones 2019

Joy Horn

Joy Horn flags up Christian anniversaries worth noting in the coming year

EVENTS

Morgan Llwyd, said to be the first non-conformist minister in Wales, was born in 1619. Converted under Walter Cradock, he served as a chaplain in Oliver Cromwell’s New Model Army and became minister in Wrexham. His books have influenced Welsh national consciousness and literature to the present day.

A­ woman ­who ­understood ­children

A­ woman ­who ­understood ­children

Joy Horn

Book Review NOT WITHOUT TEARS: The Life of Favell Lee Mortimer

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Next year’s history

Next year’s history

Joy Horn

Joy Horn helps us to remember our Christian heritage

JANUARY

24. John Mason Neale, who is chiefly remembered for his hymns, was born in 1818 in Bloomsbury, London. A linguist, familiar with some 20 languages, and a poet, of High Anglican convictions, he revived many old carols and translated others from Greek and Latin. O come, o come, Emmanuel and Christ is made the sure foundation are two of the best known – and, of course, Good King Wenceslas.

Reformation sites

Reformation sites

Joy Horn

Joy Horn with some places to go as we remember the outworking of the Reformation in this country

Five hundred years seems a very long time ago.

Temperance & coffee

Temperance & coffee

Joy Horn

Book Review LADY HOPE: The life and work of Lady Hope of Carriden

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Remembering the year ahead

Remembering the year ahead

Joy Horn

Joy Horn highlights some significant anniversaries from Christian history coming up in 2015

EVENTS

Justin Martyr was put to death in Rome in 165. From a pagan background, he became a Christian aged about 30, and taught in Ephesus and Rome. He wrote two ‘Apologies’ or defences of Christianity against misrepresentation.

Necessary split?

Necessary split?

Joy Horn

Book Review A KIRK DISRUPTED: Charles Cowan MP and the Free Church of Scotland

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Anniversaries ‘14

Anniversaries ‘14

Joy Horn

Joy Horn with notable dates for the year ahead

EVENTS

Early in the year 664, the Synod of Whitby was held, summoned by the king of Northumbria. As a result, the ‘Celtic churches’, established through monks of Iona and Lindisfarne, accepted the practices of the ‘Roman churches’. This brought administrative advantages and theological dangers.

Seismic Simeon

Joy Horn

Book Review SILHOUETTES AND SKELETONS Charles Simeon of Cambridge

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Back catalogue

Joy Horn

Here are some encouragements and challenges from the past.

The monk Columba sailed from Ireland, with 12 companions, and after a perilous journey landed on the island of Iona in 563. He founded a monastery there to train young men for the evangelisation of the North Picts.

Past glories?

Joy Horn

Book Review VICTORIAN NONCONFORMITY

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Christian anniversaries 2012

Joy Horn

General

A famous letter was written in AD 112 by Pliny, the governor of Bithynia in Asia Minor, to the Roman emperor Trajan, asking for advice concerning the attitude to take in relation to groups of Christians in his province. This is a fascinating and vital piece of evidence concerning the activities of early Christians and the attitude of the Roman authorities to them.

Thomas Helwys founded the first Baptist congregation in Spitalfields, London, in 1612. He advocated the principle of religious liberty, and for this was thrown into Newgate prison, where he died by 1616.

Worst because most subtle

Joy Horn

Book Review VOICE OF NONCONFORMITY William Robertson Nicoll and the British Weekly

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Choice history

Joy Horn

Book Review THE REFORMATION Faith and Flames

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Past round-up

Joy Horn

Famous books

The Authorised Version of the Bible (or the King James’s Version) was published in 1611. The precise date when copies began to roll off the presses of the King’s printer seems to be unknown, but it must have been early in the year, as two further editions followed in 1611. It was first published as a large folio volume, intended for public reading in church, and was sold loose-leaf for ten shillings or bound for 12 shillings. It was the work of teams of scholars, whose brief was to revise the Bishops’ Bible of 1568, itself largely based on the work of William Tyndale.

Famous events

Pierre Viret, a Swiss/French Protestant Reformer, was born in 1511 at Orbe, a small town now in the Swiss canton of Vaud, and was converted from Roman Catholicism while studying at the University of Paris. A close associate of John Calvin, he was dubbed ‘The Smile of the Reformation’ for his sweet and winning demeanour and preaching.

Rhyme and religion

Joy Horn

Book Review TRAVEL WITH FRANCES RIDLEY HAVERGAL The English hymn writer and poet

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Celebrity theologians

Joy Horn

Book Review THE BREEZE OF THE CENTURIES Introducing Great Theologians from the Apostolic Fathers to Aquinas

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Lack of stomach

Joy Horn

Book Review CONFLICT AND CRISIS IN THE RELIGIOUS LIFE OF LATE VICTORIAN ENGLAND

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Memorabilia

Joy Horn

Famous books

John Knox’s book, God’s Eternal Predestination, was published in Geneva in 1560.

The Geneva Bible was published late in 1560 by a group of English people who had been exiles there during the persecution of Queen Mary I and led by William Whittingham. A handsome quarto volume, convenient for personal and family use, it had illustrations and marginal explanatory notes. It became the most widely used Bible of the English Protestants.

Would you like a box of dates?

Joy Horn

Famous books

The final Latin version of Calvin’s Institutes was published in 1559. The six chapters of the first edition (1536) had now become 80, assembled in four books. This has been called ‘the most influential theological work of the Protestant Reformation’, but it is nevertheless accessible, interesting and inspiring to the 21st-century general reader.

C.I. Scofield’s dispensational, pre-millennial Bible was published in 1909, and gained a wide circulation.

Our inspiring heritage

Joy Horn

Book Review THE EMERGENCE OF EVANGELICALISM

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Don't look back?

Joy Horn

Famous books

John Knox’s The First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women was published in 1558. This splendid title was an attack on the ‘unnatural rule of women’, namely Mary I of England and Mary of Lorraine, the dowager queen of Scotland.

Richard Baxter’s A Call to the Unconverted to Turn and Live … from the Living God was published in 1658.

Faith in fiction

Joy Horn

Book Review CAUGHT IN THE WEB A Tale of Tudor Times

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Ichabod: the glory is departed?

Joy Horn

Book Review GATHERING TO HIS NAME The story of Open Brethren in Britain and Ireland

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Anniversaries in 2007

Joy Horn

Famous books

The Geneva New Testament was published in English (the first English New Testament printed in Roman type, with verse divisions) in 1557.

Richard Baxter’s A Call to the Unconverted was published in 1657.

Anniversaries in 2006

Joy Horn

Famous books

Three notable books were published in 1656: Blaise Pascal’s Lettres Provinciales, John Bunyan’s Some Gospel Truths opened, and Richard Baxter’s The Reformed Pastor.

Isaac Watts’s Horae Lyricae was published in 1706.

To die for

Joy Horn

Book Review THE MARTYRS OF MARY TUDOR The burning of Protestants during England’s ‘Reign of Terror’

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Honour her

Joy Horn

Book Review LADY JANE GREY NINE-DAY QUEEN OF ENGLAND

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Some significant anniversaries in 2005

Joy Horn

Thomas Tallis was born in 1505. One of the first composers of English Protestant church music, his music is still much performed and recorded.

1555 was the peak year for the burning of Protestants under Queen Mary Tudor, some of whom are mentioned individually below. In all, about 290 died this excruciating death - men, women and even young people, and preponderantly working-class - and thereby ensured that Mary's attempt to re-establish Roman Catholicism died with her.

Look back with thanks - anniversaries in 2004

Joy Horn

General

Robert Bruce, Scottish minister, was born in 1554. Having opposed King James VI's design to introduce bishops into the Church of Scotland, he was banished from Edinburgh and for several years confined to Inverness, but great crowds attended whenever he was able to preach.

James Buchanan, Scottish Free Church theologian, was born in 1804. Like most Scottish evangelicals, he left the established church in 1843, and became minister of St. Stephen's Free Church, Edinburgh, and later professor in New College.

A day to remember - Anniversaries for 2003

Joy Horn

Anniversaries for 2003

General

Robert Estienne, the leading printer in Geneva at the time of the Reformation, was born in 1503. He printed Bibles in French, using roman type rather than the heavy 'Black Letter' type, which made for greater ease of reading, and from 1551 introduced the practice of numbering individual verses, which has been followed in English translations.

Lilias Trotter, missionary to Algeria, was born in London in 1853. A gifted painter and sensitive writer, she formed the Algiers Mission Band (now Arab World Ministries).

Unexpected delights

Joy Horn

Book Review A TREASURY OF ANGLO-SAXON ENGLAND: Faith and wisdom in the lives of men and women, saints and kings

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Biblical benefactor

Joy Horn

Book Review SELINA, COUNTESS OF HUNTINGDON

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Unforgettable

Joy Horn

The Bible often tells us to remember the Lord's dealings in the past, so that we might have light on the present. As we enter a new year, it is good to recall evangelical history.

GENERAL

The monastery of Iona was sacked by Viking raiders in 802. It had been founded by Columba, whose monks evangelised much of Scotland and northern England.

2001 - a Grace odyssey

Joy Horn

General

The Council of Chalcedon in 451 affirmed that the divine and human natures are united in the person of Christ.

The Officers' Christian Union was founded in 1851.

Anniversaries 2000

Joy Horn

PEOPLE

Augustine wrote his Confessions about the year 400, describing his life and conversion - a spiritual classic.

Christianity was established in Iceland in the year 1000.

Religion in Victorian Britain - 1 - Traditions

Joy Horn

Book Review Religion in Victorian Britain: 1, Traditions,

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KEEP A QUIET HEART

Joy Horn

Book Review By Elisabeth Elliot OM Publishing. 270 pages Elisabeth Elliot is well-known as the author of Through Gates of Splendour, the story of the martyrdom at the hands of Auca Indians in Ecuador of five missionaries, among whom was her husband, Jim. She subsequently worked at Bible translation among the same Indian tribe, with her three-year old daughter, telling the story in The savage my kinsman. Since then, she has engaged in a speaking and writing ministry. Her second husband died of cancer.

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The Decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam

Joy Horn

Book Review The Dhimmi: Jews and Christians Under Islam

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