Streaming Videos
Abandon Your Beloved Sin - Puritan Robert Bolton
A video published by Christian Praise and Worship in Songs, Sermons, and Audio Books on June 23rd, 2017
Abandon Your Beloved Sin - Puritan Robert Bolton
http://www.puritanaudiobooks.net/
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/user/stack45ny
SUPPORT MINISTRY: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5022374
Puritans playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL147B764889A13CCA
Robert Bolton (1572-1631) was an English clergyman and academic, noted as a preacher. He was born on Whit Sunday in Blackburn,Lancashire, the sixth son of Adam Bolton of Backhouse. He attended what is now Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School, Blackburn, where his father was a founding governor, and was described as ‘the best scholar in the school’. At age 18, he was admitted in 1592 to Lincoln College, Oxford, where John Randall was. He was a gifted student, but the next year his father’s death caused him financial problems. Richard Brett supported him. He transferred to Brasenose College where there was a Lancashire fellowship available, and proceeded B.A. there on 2 December 1596; and was chosen in 1602 as a fellow of the college, taking his M.A. on 30 July. He was not particularly religious at this period, and was unimpressed with the preaching of William Perkins; Bolton said he thought Perkins was “a barren empty fellow.”
On James I’s visit to the university in 1605, he was appointed to hold a disputation in the royal presence on natural philosophy, and his majesty was loud and frank in laudation of Bolton. He was also appointed lecturer in logic and moral and natural philosophy. A school friend named Anderton made a plan with Bolton to travel to a Catholic seminary in Flanders, but this fell through. Under the influence of Thomas Peacock of Brasenose he then proceeded B.D. in 1609, having decided to become a clergyman in the church of England. In 1610, now aged 37, he was presented by Sir Augustine Nicolls, a judge and occasional preacher, to the rectory of Broughton, Northamptonshire. Bolton died, after a lingering sickness of a quartan ague, on Saturday, 17 December 1631, being then in his sixtieth year. He was buried 19 December in the chancel of his own church St. Andrew’s, Broughton, where there is a monument.
The content above belongs exclusively to Stack45NY and is provided on HopeLife.org for purely non-profit purposes to help extend the reach of their ministry.