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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: CHR-CLI |
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CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815189o) , English divine, son of John Dearman Church, brother of Sir Richard Church (q.v.), a merchant, was born at Lisbon on the 25th of April 1815, his early years being mostly spent at Florence. After his father's death in 1828 he was sent to a school of a pronounced evangelical type at Redlands, Bristol, and went in 1833 to Wadham College, Oxford, then an evangelical college. He took first-class honours in 1836, and in 1838 was elected fellow of Oriel. One of his contemporaries, Richard Mitchell
Frome
His task as dean was a complicated one. It was (1) the restoration of the cathedral; (2) the adjustment of the question of the cathedral revenues with the Ecclesiastical Commissioners; (3) the reorganization of a conservative cathedral staff with anomalous vested rights. He described the intention of his appointment to be " that St Paul's should waken up from its long slumber." The first year that he spent at St Paul's was, writes one of his friends, one of " misery " for a man who loved study and quiet and the country, and hated official pomp and financial
gift of " high and fine and saneand robust decision." Though of unimpressive stature, he had a strong magnetic influence over all brought into contact with him, and though of a naturally gentle temperament, he never hesitated to express censure if he was convinced it was deserved. In the pulpit the voice of the dean was deliberately monotonous, and he employed no adventitious gesture. He may be described as a High Churchman, but of an essentially rational type, and with an enthusiasm for religious liberty that made it impossible for him to sympathize with any unbalanced or inconsiderate demands for deference to authority. He said of the Church of England that there was " no more glorious church in Christendom than this inconsistent English Church." The dean often meditated resigning his office, though his reputation as an ecclesiastical statesman stood so high that he was regarded in 1882 as a possible successor to Archbishop Tait. But his health and mode of life made it out of the question. In 1888 his only son died; his own health declined, and he appeared for the last ,time in public at the funeral of Canon Liddon in 1890, dying on 9th December 1890, at Dover. He was buried at Whatley. The dean's chief
series , an Essay on Dante (1878), The Oxford Movement
great
See Life and Letters of Dean Church, by his daughter, M. C. Church (1895); memoir by H. C. Beeching in Dici. Nat. Biog.; and D. C. athbury, Dean Church (1907). (A. C. BE.) End of Article: CHURCH, RICHARD WILLIAM (1815189o) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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