John Murton (theologian) explained

John Murton (1585 – c. 1626), also known as John Morton, was a co-founder of the Baptist faith in Great Britain.

John Murton had been a furrier by trade in Gainsborough-on-Trent and was a member of the 1607 Gainsborough Congregation that relocated to Amsterdam. Murton had been a close disciple of John Smyth while in Holland, and eventually Murton returned to London with Thomas Helwys and his church.

Murton possibly spent time in prison with Helwys before his death, and then became elder of the congregation. Murton continued Helwys' traditions until 1624 when he had a falling out with the congregation. Murton wrote several books influencing later Baptists, such as Roger Williams[1] [2] who opened his influential book, "The Bloudy Tenent by reprinting parts of John Murton's anonymously published tract, A Most Humble Supplication of the King's Majesty's Loyal Subjects (1620)."[3]

Notes and References

  1. L. Russ Bush, Tom J. Nettles, Baptists and the Bible: the Baptist doctrines of Biblical inspiration and religious authority in historical perspective (Moody Press, 1980)https://books.google.com/books?id=E4R7AAAAMAAJ
  2. First Freedom: The Baptist Perspective on Religious Liberty (B&H Publishing Group, 2007)https://books.google.com/books?id=U4esKOiTWGQC
  3. JESSICA R. STERN, "A Key into The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution: Roger Williams, the Pequot War, and the Origins of Toleration in America," Early American StudiesVol. 9, No. 3 (Fall 2011), p. 602, accessible on JSTOR