Individual Christians: Difference between revisions

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====George Fox, d. 1691====
====George Fox, d. 1691====
George Fox was an English Dissenter and a major early figure — usually considered the founder of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers.  Toward the end of his life, he wrote a letter for general circulation pointing out that Abel, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David were all keepers of sheep or cattle, and that a learned education should not therefore be seen as a qualification for ministry. <ref> Marsh 1847, 364 </ref>
George Fox was an English Dissenter and a major early figure — usually considered the founder of the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as the Quakers.  Toward the end of his life, he wrote a letter for general circulation pointing out that Abel, Noah, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David were all keepers of sheep or cattle, and that a learned education should not therefore be seen as a qualification for ministry. <ref> Marsh 1847, 364 </ref>
====[[John Wesley]], d. 1791====
[[John Wesley]] was an 18th-century Anglican minister and powerful field-evangelist who was an early leader in the Methodist movement. While never formally separating from the Anglican Church, John Wesley acted on his own even so far as to ordain ministers by the laying on of hands, which he had found to be a Biblical example.


====Isaac Watts, d.1748====
====Isaac Watts, d.1748====
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====George Whitfield, d. 1770====
====George Whitfield, d. 1770====
George Whitfield was a minister in the Church of England and one of the leaders of the Methodist movement.  He travelled through America, England, Scotland, Ireland, Bermuda, Gibraltar, and The Netherlands.  Benjamin Franklin calculated, by pacing the area around George Whitfield where his voice was audible while preaching, that he could indeed speak to tens of thousands of people in a single sermon.  
George Whitfield was a minister in the Church of England and one of the leaders of the Methodist movement.  He travelled through America, England, Scotland, Ireland, Bermuda, Gibraltar, and The Netherlands.  Benjamin Franklin calculated, by pacing the area around George Whitfield where his voice was audible while preaching, that he could indeed speak to tens of thousands of people in a single sermon.  
====[[John Wesley]], d. 1791====
[[John Wesley]] was an 18th-century Anglican minister and powerful field-evangelist who was an early leader in the Methodist movement. While never formally separating from the Anglican Church, John Wesley acted on his own even so far as to ordain ministers by the laying on of hands, which he had found to be a Biblical example.


====Francis Asbury, d. 1816====
====Francis Asbury, d. 1816====