John Spenser (Jesuit) Explained

John Spenser (alias Vincent Hatcliffe and John Tyrrwhit, 1601–1671)[1] was an English Jesuit theologian.

Life

Spenser was born in Lincolnshire; converted to Catholicism while a student at Christ's College, Cambridge; entered the Society of Jesus in 1627; and was ordained in 1632.[2] Spenser served in a number of different locations:

Spenser took part, at Whitsuntide, 1657, in a conference, much spoken of at the time, with two Anglican divines, Dr. Peter Gunning and Dr. John Pearson, afterward bishops. All the disputants, including Spenser's Catholic colleague, Dr. John Lenthall, M.D., were Cambridge men, and may have known one another.

Works

An account of the conference was published in Paris, 1658, under the title, Schism Unmasked, probably by Spenser. His other works include:

External links

Spencer, John (1601-1671).

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. Book: Tavard . George Henry . The Seventeenth-Century Tradition: A Study in Recusant Thought . 2022 . Brill . 9789004477216 . 105.
  2. Book: Foley . Henry . Records of the English province of the Society of Jesus ... in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries . 1875 . Oxford University . 726 . 28 September 2023.