Daniel Cawdry
Daniel Cawdry (Cawdrey) (1588–1664) was an English clergyman, member of the Westminster Assembly, and ejected minister of 1662.
Life
He was the youngest son of Robert Cawdry, and was educated at Sidney Sussex College and Peterhouse, Cambridge.[1] From about 1617 to 1625 he was rector of Little Ilford.[2] He was instituted to the living of Great Billing, Northamptonshire, in 1625, 'in the presentation of the king by wardship of Christopher Hatton, esq.'[3] Along with James Cranford and William Castle, he preached often at Northampton.[4][5]
He became one of the leading members of Westminster Assembly from 1643, and was vicar of St Martin-in-the-Fields in London from 1644 to 1648.[6] He was one of the presbyterian ministers who signed the address to General Fairfax remonstrating against all personal violence against the king Charles I. At the Restoration he was recommended to Lord Clarendon for a bishopric. Instead he refused to submit to the Act of Uniformity 1662, and was ejected. He retired to Wellingborough, where he died in October 1664 in his seventy-sixth year.[5]
Works
He was a voluminous writer of controversial works, both against the Anglicans on the one side and the Independents on the other; and he took on both Henry Hammond and John Owen. He considered religious toleration "the last and most desperate design of Antichrist."[5][7]
His works include:[5][8]
- Sabbatum Redivivum; or, the Christian Sabbath vindicated, 1641 (with Herbert Palmer).
- The Good Man a Publick Good, 1643.[5][9]
- The Inconsistency of the Independent Way with Scripture and itself, 1651.
- An Answer to Mr. Giles Firmin's Questions concerning Baptism, 1652.
- A Diatribe concerning Superstition, Will-worship, and the Christmas Festival, 1654.
- Independence, a Great Schism, proved against Dr. (John) Owen's Apology, 1657.
- Survey of Dr. Owen's Review of his Treatise on Schism, 1658.
- A Vindication of the Diatribe against Dr. Hammond; or, the Account audited and discounted, 1658,
- Bowing towards the Altar Superstitious; being an answer to Dr. Duncan's "Determination", 1661.[5][10]
Theophilus Brabourne answered him on the Sabbatarian question.[11]
He also published devotional works and sermons.
Notes
- ^ "Cawdrey, Daniel (CWDY606D)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ "Little Ilford | British History Online".
- ^ "Parishes: Great Billing | British History Online".
- ^ Peter Gaunt, The English Civil War: the essential readings (2000), p. 111.
- ^ a b c d e f "Cawdry, Daniel" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- ^ "Appendix: Vicars of St. Martin-in-the-Fields | British History Online".
- ^ Sathan Discovered (1657); see John Marshall, John Locke, toleration and early Enlightenment culture: religious intolerance and arguments for religious toleration in early modern and 'early Enlightenment' Europe (2006), p. 333.
- ^ For a complete list of his sermons and works see Peter Wallace's Bibliography.
- ^ Daniel Cawdrey in Auburn University's Special Collections
- ^ This was against Eleazar Duncon; "Duncon, Eleazar" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- ^ DNB article on Brabourne.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Cawdry, Daniel". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- v
- t
- e
- John Arrowsmith
- Simeon Ashe
- Robert Baillie
- Thomas Baylie
- Robert Blair
- Samuel Bolton
- John Bond
- William Bridge
- Ralph Brownrigg
- Anthony Burges
- Cornelius Burges
- Jeremiah Burroughs
- Adoniram Byfield
- Richard Byfield
- Edmund Calamy
- Archibald Campbell
- John Campbell
- Richard Capel
- Joseph Caryl
- Thomas Case
- Daniel Cawdry
- William Cecil
- Francis Cheynell
- John Clotworthy
- Thomas Coleman
- John Conant
- Edward Conway
- John Cook
- Edward Corbet
- Robert Crosse
- Robert Devereux
- Robert Douglas
- Calybute Downing
- John Dury
- John Earle
- John Elphinstone
- Daniel Featley
- Basil Feilding
- Nathaniel Fiennes
- William Fiennes
- Thomas Ford
- Thomas Gataker
- George Gillespie
- John Glynne
- Thomas Goodwin
- William Gouge
- William Greenhill
- William Grey
- John Hacket
- Matthew Hale
- Henry Hammond
- Robert Harley
- John Harris
- Robert Harris
- Arthur Haselrig
- Alexander Henderson
- Philip Herbert
- Charles Herle
- Thomas Hill
- Richard Holdsworth
- Edward Howard
- Joshua Hoyle
- Archibald Johnston
- John Ley
- John Lightfoot
- Richard Love
- William Lyford
- John Maitland
- Stephen Marshall
- John Maynard
- William Mew
- Edward Montagu
- George Morley
- Matthew Newcomen
- William Nicholson
- Philip Nye
- Herbert Palmer
- Algernon Percy
- Andrew Perne
- William Pierrepont
- John Pym
- Edward Reynolds
- Robert Reynolds
- Henry Rich
- Francis Rous
- Benjamin Rudyerd
- Samuel Rutherford
- Robert Sanderson
- Henry Scudder
- Lazarus Seaman
- Obadiah Sedgwick
- John Selden
- Josias Shute
- Sidrach Simpson
- William Spurstowe
- Edmund Staunton
- Peter Sterry
- Oliver St John (1580–1646)
- Oliver St John (1598–1673)
- William Strode
- William Strong
- Zouch Tate
- Henry Tozer
- Anthony Tuckney
- William Twisse
- Henry Vane the Elder
- Henry Vane the Younger
- Richard Vines
- George Walker
- Samuel Ward
- Thomas Westfield
- Philip Wharton
- Jeremiah Whitaker
- John White
- Bulstrode Whitelocke
- John Wilde
- Henry Wilkinson
- Walter Yonge
- Thomas Young