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Frederick Denison Maurice. Priest, Professor, Theologian, Author Founder of Christian Socialists August 29, 1805-April 1, 1872. Frederick Denison Maurice. August 29, 1805-April 1, 1872 I wanted a daguerreotype rather than a painting because a daguerreotype tells the real story .
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Frederick Denison Maurice Priest, Professor, Theologian, Author Founder of Christian Socialists August 29, 1805-April 1, 1872
Frederick Denison Maurice August 29, 1805-April 1, 1872 I wanted a daguerreotype rather than a painting because a daguerreotype tells the real story
Frederick Denison Maurice • Born in Normanton, Suffolk to a controversial progressive Unitarian minister • Studied civil law at Trinity College, Cambridge, starting in 1823 • Refused the law degree in 1827 because he could not subscribe to the 39 Articles of Religion as was required by the university • Later converted to the Anglican Church in the wake of several personal problems
Pastoral Career • Returned to school at Exeter College, Oxford to study towards ordination • Graduated in 1831 with a classics degree • Ordained as Anglican priest in 1834 • Chaplain of Guy’s Hospital • Rector of two parishes, including St. Peter’s, Vere St.
Teaching Career • Professor of English literature and history at King’s College, London • In 1846 became chair of theology • Dismissed from these in 1853 for involvement in the Christian Socialist movement • Resumed teaching at Queen’s College, London, which he co-founded • Founded the Working Men’s College • Professor of moral theology at Cambridge
19th c Christian Socialist movement • Formed in 1848 by Maurice, Charles Kingsley (novelist), and J. M. Ludlow (attorney) following plethora of crushed revolutions • Exported writings precipitated development of US Protestant Social Gospel movement • Collapsed in 1854 b/c of poor organization • US Social Gospel movement persisted until disillusionment by WWI
Major Bibliography of F. D. Maurice • The Kingdom of Christ (1838) • Investigated the causes and remedies of schisms • A much respected work of ecumenical literature to this very day • Theological Essays (1853) • The “unorthodox” (read socialist) perspectives cost him his professorships at King’s College • King’s College now has an F. D. Maurice Professorship in Moral and Social Theology ;-)
Bibliography, cont’d • Eustace Conway, or the Brother and Sister • A novel • The Unity of the New Testament • The Epistle to the Hebrews • The Religions of the World • Moral and Metaphysical Philosophy • The Church a Family
Bibliography, cont’d • The Old Testament • The Prophets and Kings of the Old Testament • Lectures on Ecclesiastical History • The Doctrine of Sacrifice • The Patriarchs and Lawgivers of the Old Testament
Bibliography, cont’d • The Epistles of St. John • The Commandments as Instruments of National Reformation • On the Gospel of St. Luke • The Conscience: Lectures on Casuistry • The Lord’s Prayer: A Manual • Many originated as sermons or lectures
Quotations • “We have been dosing our people with religion when what they want is not this but the living God.” • “Competition is put forth as the law of the universe. That is a lie. The time has come for us to declare that it is a lie, by word and deed.”
Quotations, cont’d • “Christian Socialism will commit us at once to the conflict we must engage in sooner or later with the unsocial Christians and the unchristian Socialists.” • “I do not think we are to praise the liturgy but to use it. When we do not want it for our life, we may begin to talk of it as a beautiful composition.”
Personal life • First wife was Anna Barton, sister-in-law of close friend John Sterling • Second wife was half-sister of another friend • One son, Sir John Frederick Maurice • One grandson, Frederick Barton Maurice • Also principal of the Working Men’s College in the post WWI era
Collect of F. D. Maurice Almighty God, you restored our human nature to heavenly glory through the perfect obedience of our Savior Jesus Christ: Keep alive in your Church, we pray, a passion for justice and truth; that, like your servant Frederick Denison Maurice, we may work and pray for the triumph of the kingdom of your Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever. Amen.
Sources • Lesser Feasts and Fasts, 2000 • Bruce L. Shelley, Church History in Plain Language, 2nd ed. Nashville: Thomas Nelson, 1995. • Wikipedia