On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
Sarah , daughter &t \ Tdfei K earrel ^ esq . of Wynnhall , in Denbigh shire , sister of the late Hev . Timothy Kenrick * Himself an only cliild , he lived to be the patriarch of forty descendants , some of whom have returned to the land , of their fathers , while the majority remain on the other side of
( KrTttllntfcr ™ " " ~ K . On Thursday , the 1 lth of April last , the Rev . Rowland Hill , after an illness of about a week . Mr . Hill was born in August , 1744 . He was the son of sir Rowland Hill , Bart , of Hawkestone , an ancient and highly respectable Shropshire family .
Mr . Hill received his early education at Eton college , whence he was sent to St . John ' s college , Cambridge ,, where he took the degree of M . A ) with some reputation . Before he was of age to take orders , he occasionally
preached at the Tabernacle , and at the Tottenham-court-road chapel , which ihre ^ som way of his receiving ordination . The bishop of Bath and Wells at length was induced to admit him to deacon ' s
orders , which was the highest step he was permitted to attain in the hierarchy . He was , however , always tenacious of his clerical character , regarding himself as an episcopal clergyman . One of the first public occasions upon which be distinguished himself , was in delivering
a funeral pratiott on the death of Toplady , who had forbidden a funeral sermon to be preached on the occasion , and who , moreover , had expressed his disapprobation of some of Mr . Hill ' s uncanonical proceedings , although his young friend stood high in his esteem .
In 17 B ~ 3 rMr . Hill laid the first stone of Surrey chapel , which was opened in 1784 ; but , although he was usually considered as the pastor , preaching there constantly during * the winter , the chapel was not licensed as under his pastoral care . He generally spent a considerable portion of the summer in visiting va-
Untitled Article
rious parts of the United Kingdom , preaching in places of worship of almost every denomination which ¦ wo uld admit of his services , and occasionally to large assemblies in the open air . The remainder of the summer he usually passed at Wotton - under- Edge . _ Jarloucestei : shirp
where he had a house and a chapel . About the time that he opened Surrey Chapel , he married Miss Mary Tudway , sister of Clement Tudway , esq . M . P . for Wells , by whom he had no issue . Mrs . Hill died a fe \ v years ago .
As a preacher he was extremely unequalj as well as systematicall y unmethodical ; generally rambling , but pithy ; often throwing out the most striking remarks , and sometimes-interspersing touches of genuine pathos , amid nmch that bordered on the ludicrous . Yet still it
was felt that he did not mean to trifle , that there was in him no real want of reverence -towards sacred things . In the devotional part of therservice he was uniformly chaste , solemn , and fervent . Of late years the majesty of venerable age added not a little to the effect of bis
instructions . His rising to rebuke the tempestuous discord of the Bible Society anniversary , May , 1831 , will not soon be forgotten . His physical powers bad long been in a declining state , but his intellectual energies remained almost unimpaired to the end of his existence , The last time he spoke in public was
on the evening of Tuesday , the 2 ( of April , wh ^ n , as a last token of his esteem for Sunday-school teach * - ers , he preached to a considerable number ofth m \ , at the Surrey Chapel , from a text to which he was very partial , 1 Cor . xv . 58 , 'Be ye steadfast , unmoveable , always abounding in the work of the Lord ; forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not
in vain m the Lord . The last sermon he preached to his sorrowing congregation was on Lord ' s day , the 31 st March , and it is said to have
Untitled Article
^^ fe ^ ES ^ 0 ^ W ^ € E ; & 1 &
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 1, 1833, page 219, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2617/page/27/
-