Joseph Stennett
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Joseph Stennett (1663 – 11 July 1713) was an English
Seventh Day Baptist Seventh Day Baptists are Baptists who observe the Sabbath as the seventh day of the week, Saturday, as a holy day to God. They adopt a covenant Baptist theology, based on the concept of regenerated society, conscious baptism of believers by immers ...
minister and hymnwriter.


Youth and marriage

Joseph Stennett was born in 1663 at
Abingdon, Berkshire Abingdon-on-Thames ( ), commonly known as Abingdon, is a historic market town and civil parish in the ceremonial county of Oxfordshire, England, on the River Thames. Historically the county town of Berkshire, since 1974 Abingdon has been admini ...
, England of pious parents, Edward Stennett and Mary (Quelch) Stennett. He attended
Wallingford Grammar School Wallingford Grammar School was a grammar school in the town of Wallingford, Oxfordshire (formerly Berkshire), England, succeeded by Wallingford School when comprehensive education was introduced in 1973. History When Walter Bigg, thought to h ...
. He was also tutored by his father, Edward, and older brother, Jedudah, and learned French, Italian, and Hebrew. Both his father and his brother had written Hebrew grammars. Joseph's heart was turned to Christ at an early age. In 1685, at the age of 22, he moved to London where he worked as a tutor. In 1688, Joseph Stennett married a daughter of George Guill, a French Protestant refugee. Joseph Stennett was the father of Joseph Stennett, D. D., the grandfather of Dr.
Samuel Stennett Samuel Stennett (1 June 1727 – 24 August 1795) was a Seventh Day Baptist minister and hymnwriter. Pastor and hymnwriter He was born in Exeter but at the age of 10 his family moved to London, where his father served as the minister of the Bapti ...
and Samuel's brother Joseph, the latter whom also had a son named Joseph.


Ministry

In 1690, Joseph was ordained pastor of the Sabbatarian Baptist (Seventh Day Baptist) congregation meeting in London, at Pinner's Hall, where he served until his death in 1713.
Hanserd Knollys Hanserd Knollys (1599–1691) was an English particular Baptist minister. Life He was born at Cawkwell, Lincolnshire, about 1599. He was educated privately under a tutor, was for a short time at Great Grimsby grammar school, and afterwards ma ...
, among others, spoke at his ordination. The church's first pastor had been
Francis Bampfield Francis Bampfield (circa 1615 - 16 February 1684) was an English Nonconformist preacher, and supporter of Saturday Sabbatarianism. Born into a family of Devon gentry, he began as a conservative supporter of the Church of England, but gradually ...
, who died in 1684 in
Newgate Prison Newgate Prison was a prison at the corner of Newgate Street and Old Bailey Street just inside the City of London, England, originally at the site of Newgate, a gate in the Roman London Wall. Built in the 12th century and demolished in 1904, t ...
. The Pinner's Hall congregation grew to between 120 and 150 members during Stennett's pastorate. In his early ministry Stennett preached also, on Sabbath evenings, at the Devonshire Square Seventh Day Baptist Church. He mastered Hebrew. Early on, he was tutored by his father, Edward Stennett (died 1690), also a Baptist minister, and author of ''The Royal Law Contended For'' (1658) and ''The Seventh Day Sabbath'' (1664). He had also corresponded with Baptists in
Newport, Rhode Island Newport is an American seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Newport County, Rhode Island. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, Rhode Island, Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, ...
between 1668 and 1674, encouraging them as they organized the first Seventh Day Baptist Church in America in 1671. Joseph Stennett was a
Particular Baptist Reformed Baptists (sometimes known as Particular Baptists or Calvinistic Baptists) are Baptists that hold to a Calvinist soteriology (salvation). The first Calvinist Baptist church was formed in the 1630s. The 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith w ...
, and often supplied pulpit for Sunday churches as well. He was chosen to represent the body of Baptists and other Dissenters in regards to national affairs. Several sermons preached on public occasions were published, and one sermon (''National Thanksgiving'', 1704) won him the favour of Queen Anne.


Death

After falling ill, Stennett followed the advice of his doctor and retired to the home of his brother-in-law, Mr. Morton, in Knaphill, Buckinghamshire, England. However the advice proved of little avail and he died there in 1713, at the age of 49.


Published works

The writings of Joseph Stennett were collected after his death and published in 1732 in four volumes (The Works Of the late Reverend and Learned Mr. Joseph Stennett: In Five Volumes To which is prefix'd Some Account of his Life, London, 1732). The "fifth" volume was to have included the anti-pedobaptist treatise previously published (in 1704), ''An Answer to Mr. Russen's Book...'', but was not, due to lack of funds. His works include: * Hymns in Commemoration of the Sufferings of our Blessed Saviour Jesus Christ, Compos’d for the Celebration of His Holy Supper, 1697, (second edition revised & expanded 1705, third edition 1709) ** ** * A Version of Solomon's Song of Songs together with the XIVth Psalm, 1697 (second edition, 1703; third edition, 1709) * An Answer to Mr. David Russen's Book entitled: Fundamentals without a Foundation or a True Picture of the Anabaptists, 1704 ** * Hymns Compos'd for the Celebration of the Holy Ordinance of Baptism, 1712 (second edition, 1722) ** * A translation of Dacier's Plato and other works from the French ** ** * Various sermons Joseph Stennett was the first significant Baptist hymnwriter. Isaac Watts (who was thirteen years younger than Joseph Stennett) praised Stennett, and included Stennett hymns in his noteworthy ''Hymns and Spiritual Songs in Three Books'', published in 1707.


Hymns written


Another Six Days Work Is DoneCome Every Pious HeartAgain Our Weekly Labors EndBehold The Grave Where Jesus LayBehold The Savior On The CrossCome Let Us All, Who Here Have SeenCome Lowly Souls, that mournIn That Most Dark And Doleful NightJehovah We In Hymns Of PraiseJesus! O Word Divinely Sweet!Return, My Soul, Enjoy Thy RestSee How The Willing Converts TraceThe Great Redeemer We AdoreThou Art All Love My Dearest LordThus Was The Great Redeemer Plung'dThus We Commemorate The Day'Tis Finished, The Redeemer CriesWith Lowly Minds And Lofty SongGracious Redeemer, How DivineOur Lord, When Cloth'd With Mortal FleshLord, All These Works Of ThineMy Soul, Let All Thy Nobler PowersImmortal Praise Be Given
*Whene’er One Sinner Turns to God *I own I love; 'tis no uncomely fire *Blest Day! Ordain'd by God *When the Creator of the world had given *Sacred Body of our Lord, The *When th' ancient world God's patience try'd *O Bless'd Redeemer! in thy side *When from Egyptian slavery The Hebrews were redeem'd *When fam'd Bethesda's waters flow'd *In such a grave as this *See in what grave our Saviour lay


References


Other sources

* *''Seventh Day Baptists in Europe and America'', vols I & II, 1910 *
Thomas Crosby Thomas Crosby (21 June 1840 – 13 January 1914) was an English Methodist missionary known for his work among the First Nations people of coastal British Columbia, Canada. Thomas Crosby was born in 1840 in Pickering, Yorkshire, to (Wesleyan) M ...
, ''The History of the English Baptists'', 1738, reprinted 1979 *John Rippon, ''A Selection of Hymns from the Best Authors, Intended to be an Appendix to Dr. Watts Psalms and Hymns'', 1787 *Isaac Watts, ''Hymns and Spiritual Songs in Three Books'', 1707 * reprinted 1962 *B. A. Ramsbottom, ''Through Cloud and Sunshine: Four Generations of Faithful Witness-the story of the Stennett Family'', 1982 *W. T. Whitley, ''A Baptist Bibliography'', vols I & II, 1916 *''Puritan Pulpit'', Fall 1989, Vol 1, No. 3 *Charles Spurgeon, ''Our Own Hymn-Book''. Reprinted by Pilgrim Press, N.D.


External links


Joseph Stennett
at th
Eighteenth-Century Poetry Archive (ECPA)
at Cyber Hymnal {{DEFAULTSORT:Stennett, Joseph 1663 births 1713 deaths Christian hymnwriters English hymnwriters 17th-century English Baptist ministers Seventh Day Baptists