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Thomas Sherlock

  • ️Sat Jul 18 1761
Thomas Sherlock
Bishop of London
Church Church of England
Diocese Diocese of London
Elected 1748
Reign ended 1761 (death)
Predecessor Edmund Gibson
Successor Thomas Hayter
Other posts Bishop of Salisbury
1734–1748
Bishop of Bangor
1728–1734
Orders
Consecration c. 1728
Personal details
Born 1678
London
Died 18 July 1761
Buried All Saints Church, Fulham, London
Nationality British
Denomination Anglican
Parents William Sherlock
Profession Academic
Alma mater St Catharine's College, Cambridge

Thomas Sherlock (1678 – 18 July 1761) was a British divine who served as a Church of England bishop for 33 years. He is also noted in church history as an important contributor to Christian apologetics.

Life

He was the son of William Sherlock and was born in London. He was educated at Eton and at St Catharine's College, Cambridge,[1] and in 1704 succeeded his father as Master of the Temple, where he was very popular.

Sherlock died in 1761, and is buried in the churchyard of All Saints Church, Fulham, London.

Career

In 1714 he became master of his old college at Cambridge and vice-chancellor of the university, whose privileges he defended against Richard Bentley. In 1715, he was appointed dean of Chichester.

He took a prominent part in the Bangorian controversy against Benjamin Hoadly. He himself became bishop of Bangor in 1728; he was afterwards translated to Salisbury in 1734, and to London in 1748. Sherlock was a capable administrator, and cultivated friendly relations with Dissenters. In parliament he was of good service to his old schoolfellow Robert Walpole.

Writings

Funerary monument, All Saints, Fulham, London

He published against Anthony Collins's deistic Grounds of the Christian Religion a volume of sermons entitled The Use and Interest of Prophecy in the Several Ages of the World (1725); and in reply to Thomas Woolston's Discourses on the Miracles he wrote a volume entitled The Tryal of the Witnesses of the Resurrection of Jesus (1729), which soon ran through fourteen editions. His Pastoral Letter (1750) on the late earthquakes had a circulation of many thousands, and four or five volumes of Sermons which he published in his later years (1754–1758) were also at one time highly esteemed.

A collected edition of his works, with a memoir, in 5 vols. 8vo, by JS Hughes, appeared in 1830.

Sherlock's Tryal of the Witnesses is generally understood by scholars such as Edward Carpenter, Colin Brown and William Lane Craig, to be a work that the Scottish philosopher David Hume probably had read and to which Hume offered a counter viewpoint in his empiricist arguments against the possibility of miracles.

Apologetics

Since the Deist controversy Sherlock's argument for the evidences of the resurrection of Jesus Christ has continued to interest later Christian apologists such as William Lane Craig and John Warwick Montgomery. His place in the history of apologetics has been classified by Ross Clifford as belonging to the legal or juridical school of Christian apologetics.

References

  1. ^ Sherlock, Thomas in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.

Further reading

  • Colin Brown, Miracles and the Critical Mind, (Exeter: Paternoster/Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co, 1984). ISBN 0-8028-3590-2
  • Edward Carpenter, Thomas Sherlock 1678-1761, (London: SPCK, 1936).
  • Ross Clifford, John Warwick Montgomery's Legal Apologetic: An Apologetic for All Seasons, (Bonn: Verlag fur kultur und Wissenschaft, 2004). ISBN 3938116005
  • William Lane Craig, The Historical Argument for the Rsurrection of Jesus During the Deist Controversy, (Lewiston & Queenston: Edwin Mellen Press, 1985). ISBN 0-88946-811-7

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
William Dawes
Master of St Catharine's College, Cambridge
1714–1719
Succeeded by
Thomas Crosse
Church of England titles
Preceded by
William Baker
Bishop of Bangor
1728–1734
Succeeded by
Charles Cecil
Preceded by
Benjamin Hoadly
Bishop of Salisbury
1734–1748
Succeeded by
John Gilbert
Preceded by
Edmund Gibson
Bishop of London
1748–1761
Succeeded by
Thomas Hayter
v · d · eChancellors of the College of William & Mary
Colonial era

Henry Compton (1693–1700) • Thomas Tenison (1700–1707) • Henry Compton (1707–1713) • John Robinson (1714–1721) • William Wake (1721–1729) • Edmund Gibson (1729–1736) • William Wake (1736–1737) • Edmund Gibson (1737–1748) • Thomas Sherlock (1749–1761) • Thomas Hayter (1762) • Charles Wyndham (1762–1763) • Philip Yorke (1764) • Richard Terrick (1764–1776)

Post-colonial era

George Washington (1788–1799) • Vacant (1800–1858) • John Tyler (1859–1862) • Vacant (1863–1870) • Hugh Blair Grigsby (1871–1881) • Vacant (1882–1941) • John Stewart Bryan (1942–1944) • Vacant (1945) • Colgate Darden (1946–1947) • Vacant (1948–1961) • Alvin Duke Chandler (1962–1974) • Vacant (1975–1985) • Warren E. Burger (1986–1993) • Margaret Thatcher (1993–2000) • Henry Kissinger (2000–2005) • Sandra Day O'Connor (2005–2012) • Robert Gates (2012– )

v · d · eBishops of London
Post-Augustine
Post-Conquest

William the Norman · Hugh d'Orevalle · Maurice · Richard de Beaumis (uncle) · Gilbert Universalis · Robert de Sigello · Richard de Beaumis (nephew) · Gilbert Foliot · Richard FitzNeal · William of Sainte-Mère-Eglise · Eustace of Fauconberg · Roger Niger · Fulk Basset · Henry Wingham · Richard Talbot · Henry of Sandwich · John Chishull · Fulke Lovell · Richard Gravesend · Ralph Baldock · Gilbert Segrave · Richard Newport · Stephen Gravesend · Richard de Wentworth · Ralph Stratford · Michael Northburgh · Simon Sudbury · William Courtenay · Robert Braybrooke · Roger Walden · Nicholas Bubwith · Richard Clifford · John Kemp · William Grey · Robert FitzHugh · Robert Gilbert · Thomas Kempe · Richard Hill · Thomas Savage · William Warham · William Barons · Richard FitzJames

Post-Reformation

Cuthbert Tunstall · John Stokesley · Edmund Bonner · Nicholas Ridley · Edmund Bonner · Edmund Grindal · Edwin Sandys · John Aylmer · Richard Fletcher · Richard Bancroft · Richard Vaughan · Thomas Ravis · George Abbot · John King · George Montaigne · William Laud · William Juxon · Gilbert Sheldon · Humphrey Henchman · Henry Compton · John Robinson · Edmund Gibson · Thomas Sherlock · Thomas Hayter · Richard Osbaldeston · Richard Terrick · Robert Lowth · Beilby Porteus · John Randolph · William Howley · Charles Blomfield · Archibald Tait · John Jackson · Frederick Temple · Mandell Creighton · Arthur Winnington-Ingram · Geoffrey Fisher · William Wand · Henry Campbell · Robert Stopford · Gerald Ellison · Graham Leonard · David Hope · Richard Chartres

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