Sneha Girap (Editor)

Henry Taylor (clergyman)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Henry Taylor

Died
  
1785

Role
  
Clergyman

Education
  
Queens' College, Cambridge

Books
  
Thoughts on the nature of the grand apostacy

Henry Taylor (1711–1785) was a Church of England clergyman and religious controversialist.

Henry Taylor was educated at Newcome's School in Hackney, and then at Queens' College, Cambridge. He was Rector of Wheatfield, Oxfordshire from 1737 to 1746, Vicar of Portsmouth from 1745 and Rector of Crawley from 1755. He was an Arian who used various pseudonyms in religious controversies with William Warburton, Soame Jenyns and Edward Gibbon.

Works

  • (as Indignatio), Confusion Worse Confounded, 1772. (Against Warburton)
  • (anon.)A Full Answer to a ... Late View of the Internal Evidence of Christian Religion, 1777. (Against Jenyns)
  • (as Khalid E'bn Abdallah), An Enquiry into the Opinions of the Learned Christians, 1777
  • Thoughts on the nature of the grand apostacy; with reflections on the 15th chapter of Mr Gibbon's History, 1781
  • The apology of Benjamin Ben Mordecai to his friends, for embracing Christianity; in seven letters to Elisha Levi ... together with an eighth letter, on the generation of Jesus Christ, 1784
  • References

    Henry Taylor (clergyman) Wikipedia