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8 - Puritan Preachers and their Patrons

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2017

Susan Hardman Moore
Affiliation:
Senior Lecturer, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh
Diarmaid MacCulloch
Affiliation:
Professor of the History of the Church, University of Oxford
Anthony Milton
Affiliation:
Professor of History, University of Sheffield
Kenneth Fincham
Affiliation:
Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Kent
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Summary

On 1 August 1654 Simeon Ashe preached the funeral sermon at Rotherhithe, Surrey, for Thomas Gataker, BD, rector for forty-three years and an ‘eminently learned and faithful minister of Jesus Christ’. Ashe published the sermon some months later to which he appended an account of Gataker's life and his ‘patient, comfortable death’. In the epistle dedicatory to ‘my much honored brethren, the Presbyterian ministers of the gospel within the province of London’, Ashe began by mourning the recent loss not only of Gataker but also of William Gouge and Jeremiah Whitaker, ‘members of, but also cordial friends unto our provincial assembly’. Although he mentions the loss of other Presbyterian worthies, naming George Walker, Herbert Palmer, Thomas Edwards, John Gere, Henry Roborough and Christopher Love, he goes on to celebrate the seventy-year struggle to establish the classical system against ‘prelatical power and oppression’, citing ‘a bright crowd of so many witnesses’, who ‘may be relieving to our grieving hearts’. It is altogether a salute to a clerical elite of preachers ‘by your loving brother and fellow laborer in the work of the gospel’, a salute to preachers but no mention of their patrons.

Ashe's narrative of Gataker's life, however, tells a different story. According to Ashe, Gataker's father, a Catholic, was a younger son of a Shropshire gentry family, dispatched to make his way to the inns of court. In turn young Thomas was sent off to St John's, Cambridge, where he met Richard Stock who became a lifelong friend; from St John's Gataker was invited to become one of the fellows of Sidney Sussex College, then in the process of being founded. While waiting for the completion of the new college, he was hired as a tutor by an Essex family, where in addition to instructing the father in Hebrew and the son in Latin literature, he began the practice of explicating biblical passages at family devotions every morning, an exercise which the suffragan bishop of Colchester witnessed and which prompted him to urge the young Gataker to take holy orders, a course seconded by his college tutor, Henry Alvey.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2006

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