Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Reverend |
Robert Sanderson | |
Bishop of Lincoln | |
Diocese: | Diocese of Lincoln |
Term: | 24 October 16601663 (d.) |
Predecessor: | Thomas Winniffe |
Successor: | Benjamin Lany |
Other Post: | Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford (&) |
Birth Date: | 19 September 1587 |
Birth Place: | Sheffield, West Riding of Yorkshire, England |
Buried: | St Mary's Church, Buckden |
Religion: | Anglican |
Spouse: | Ann Nelson |
Alma Mater: | Lincoln College, Oxford |
Consecration: | 28 October 1660 |
Consecrated By: | Brian Duppa |
Robert Sanderson (19 September 158729 January 1663) was an English theologian and casuist.
He was born in Sheffield in Yorkshire and grew up at Gilthwaite Hall, near Rotherham.[1] He was educated at Lincoln College, Oxford. Entering the Church, he rose to be Bishop of Lincoln.
His work on logic, Logicae Artis Compendium (1615), was long a standard treatise on the subject. It enjoyed at least ten editions during the seventeenth century and was widely read as a textbook. Sanderson's biographer, Izaak Walton writes that by 1678, 'Logicae' had sold 10,000 copies. In her introduction to the 1985 facsimile edition, E. J. Ashworth writes that "The young Isaac Newton studied Sanderson's logic at Cambridge, and as late as 1704." Thomas Heywood of St. John's College, Ashworth adds, recommended Newton "Sanderson or Aristotle himself". Sanderson's logic remained popular even after the appearance of the influential Port-Royal Logic.
Sanderson's sermons were also admired; but he is perhaps best remembered for his Nine Cases of Conscience Resolved (1678), in consideration of which he has been placed at the head of English casuists. He left large collections of historical and heraldic matter in MS.
At the Stuart Restoration, he was elected to the See of Lincoln on 13 October 1660, confirmed 24 October and consecrated a bishop on 28 October. He was a Calvinist in theology and believed only some individuals were predestined to salvation and eternal life by their calling from God.[2] He further believed that the church, being the small group of pious individuals, kept the nation adverse destinies.
Sanderson is today perhaps best known as the subject of one of Izaak Walton's Lives, published in 1678.
|-