John Rowe (minister) explained

John Rowe (1626–1677) was an English clergyman, minister to an important Congregationalist church in London.

Biography

He was born in Crediton, Devon.[1] He was educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge and Oxford, where he attended New Inn Hall.[2]

His 1653 book Tragi-comoedia took an incident in his parish of Witney as a judgement on those attending dramatic productions. The floor of an upper room of The White Hart Inn collapsed during a performance by travelling players of Mucedorus.[3]

In 1654 he was appointed lecturer to Westminster Abbey.[4] In October 1656 he preached to Parliament, then giving thanks for a naval victory in the Caribbean.[5] In 1659 at the State Funeral of John Bradshaw, the President of the Court that had condemned Charles I, he gave the eulogy. However, he was displaced from his position by the Restoration of 1660, and in 1662 refused to conform, losing his status and being ejected as Anglican minister.[6]

After some moves, he established a church in Holborn, London, where he was assisted by Theophilus Gale.[7]

Thomas Rowe (1657–1705) was his son. He took over the church after Gale’s death, and moved it to Girdlers’ Hall, which opened in 1681 in Basinghall Street.[8] [9] It had Isaac Watts in its congregation.[10] Henry Grove, friend of Watts, was Rowe’s nephew.[11]

Notes and References

  1. [Walter Wilson (biographer)|Walter Wilson]
  2. University of Oxford College Histories: From Their Foundations to the Twentieth Century (1998), pp. 144-5.
  3. Alexandra Walsham, Providence in Early Modern England (1999), p. 7.
  4. Daniel Neal, Joshua Toulmin, The History of the Puritans, Or Protestant Nonconformists: From the Reformation in 1517, to the Revolution in 1688 (1837), p. 209
  5. [Christopher Hill (historian)|Christopher Hill]
  6. Web site: Gary Brady . The Great Ejection 1662: October 2007 . Greatejection.blogspot.com . 2005-09-19 . 2016-05-11.
  7. Gale, Theophilus . 11 . 397.
  8. Walter Wilson, History & Antiquities of the Dissenting Churches - Vol. 2 (reprinted 2001), p. 514.
  9. Web site: Girdlers' Hall, Basinghall Street . October 10, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20081011063540/http://www.oldlondonmaps.com/viewspages/0290.html . October 11, 2008 .
  10. Web site: Issac Watts . Hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com . 2016-05-11.
  11. Alan P. F. Sell, Testimony and Tradition: Studies in Reformed and Dissenting Thought (2005), p. 91.