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Thomas Child (minister)

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Name
  
Thomas Child


Role
  
Minister

Thomas Child (1839–1906) was a Scottish minister of The New Church and writer.

Contents

Life

The son of John Child, a heckle-comb maker, and his wife Grace M'Kay, he was born at Arbroath on 10 December 1839, and brought up in the Free Church of Scotland. He was put under a relative at Darlington to learn tanning, but ran away.

After serving apprenticeship to a chemist, Child was employed by manufacturing chemists at Horncastle; there he joined the Congregationalists and, with a view to its ministry, studied at Airedale College (1862–7). As a congregational minister he was at Castleford in the West Riding of Yorkshire (1867–8), and Sittingbourne in Kent (1870).

Reading the Appeal by Samuel Noble led Child to accept the doctrines of Emanuel Swedenborg. As a preacher of the New Church, he officiated at Newcastle-on-Tyne (1872), moving to Lowestoft (1874) and to Bath, Somerset (1876), where he was ordained on 15 October 1878.

In March 1886 Child became assistant at the chapel in Palace Gardens Terrace, Kensington, to Jonathan Bayley, who died on 12 May that year. Child became his successor, and died on 23 March 1906.

Works

Child wrote on New Church principles, with Sir Isaac Pitman supporting some publications. His major work was Root Principles in Rational and Spiritual Things (1905; 2nd edit. 1907), prompted by Ernst Haeckel's treatment of the world riddle, and commended by Alfred Russel Wallace. He also wrote:

  • Are New Churchmen Christians?, 1882.
  • The Key of Life, 1887 (sermons at Kensington, with forms of prayer).
  • Is there an Unseen World?, 1888–9.
  • The Church and Science, 1892.
  • The Glorification of the Lord's Humanity, 1906; lectures delivered in 1894, with biographical sketch by William Alfred Presland and James Speirs (posthumous).
  • The Bible: its Rational Principle of Interpretation, 1907 (posthumous).
  • Family

    Child married Louisa Hadkinson in October 1870.

    References

    Thomas Child (minister) Wikipedia