Frederick William Robertson
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Frederick William Robertson (3 February 1816 – 15 August 1853), known as Robertson of Brighton, was an English
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.


Biography

Born in London, the first five years of his life were passed at Leith Fort, where his father, a captain in the
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, was then resident. The military spirit entered into his blood, and throughout life he was characterised by the qualities of the ideal soldier. In 1821 Captain Robertson retired to Beverley, where the boy was educated. At the age of fourteen he spent a year at
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, from which he returned to
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, and continued his education at the Edinburgh Academy and university. In 1834 he was articled to a solicitor in
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, but the uncongenial and sedentary employment soon broke down his health. He was anxious for a military career, and his name was placed upon the list of the 3rd Dragoons, then serving in
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. For two years he worked hard in preparing for the army, but, by a singular conjunction of circumstances and at the sacrifice of his own natural bent to his father's wish, he matriculated at
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, just two weeks before his commission was put into his hands. He did not find
Oxford Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the ...
wholly congenial to his intensely earnest spirit, but he read hard, and, as he afterwards said, "
Plato Plato ( ; grc-gre, Πλάτων ; 428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC) was a Greek philosopher born in Athens during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. He founded the Platonist school of thought and the Academy, the first institution ...
,
Aristotle Aristotle (; grc-gre, Ἀριστοτέλης ''Aristotélēs'', ; 384–322 BC) was a Greek philosopher and polymath during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. Taught by Plato, he was the founder of the Peripatetic school of ...
,
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,
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, Sterne, Jonathan Edwards; passed like the iron atoms of the blood into my mental constitution." At the same time he made a careful study of the Bible, committing to memory the entire
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both in English and in
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. The Tractarian movement had no attraction for him, although he admired some of its leaders. He was at this time a moderate
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in doctrine, and enthusiastically
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. Ordained in July 1840 by the
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, he at once entered on ministerial work in that city, and during his ministry there and under the influence of the
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Henry Martyn Henry Martyn (18 February 1781 – 16 October 1812) was an Anglican priest and missionary to the peoples of India and Persia. Born in Truro, Cornwall, he was educated at Truro Grammar School and St John's College, Cambridge. A chance encount ...
and
David Brainerd David Brainerd (April 20, 1718October 9, 1747) was an American Presbyterian minister and missionary to the Native Americans among the Delaware Indians of New Jersey. Missionaries such as William Carey and Jim Elliot, and Brainerd's cousin, t ...
, whose lives he studied, he carried devotional
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to an injurious length. In less than a year he was compelled to seek relaxation; and 'going to Switzerland he there met and married Helen, third daughter of Sir George William Denys, Bart. Early in 1842, after a few months' rest, he accepted a curacy in
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, which he retained for upwards of four years. The questioning spirit was first aroused in him by the disappointing fruit of evangelical doctrine which he found in Cheltenham, as well as by intimacy with men of varied reading. But, if we are to judge from his own statement in a letter from
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in 1846, the doubts which now actively assailed him had long been latent in his mind. The crisis of his mental conflict had just been passed in
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, and he was now beginning to let his creed grow again from the one fixed point, which nothing had availed to shift:
"The one great certainty to which, in the midst of the darkest doubt, I never ceased to cling—the entire symmetry and loveliness and the unequalled nobleness of the humanity of the Son of Man."
After this mental revolution he felt unable to return to Cheltenham, but after doing duty for two months at St Ebbe's, Oxford, he entered in August 1847 on his famous ministry at
Holy Trinity Church, Brighton The former Holy Trinity Church is a closed Anglican church in the centre of Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. Established in the early 19th century by Thomas Read Kemp, an important figure in Brighton's early political an ...
. Here he stepped at once into the foremost rank as a preacher, and his church was thronged with thoughtful men of all classes in society and of all shades of religious belief. His fine appearance, his flexible and sympathetic voice, his manifest. sincerity, the perfect lucidity and artistic symmetry of his address, and the brilliance with which he illustrated his points would have attracted hearers even had he had little to say. But he had much to say. He was not, indeed, a scientific theologian; but his insight into the principles of the spiritual life was unrivalled. As his biographer says, thousands found in his sermons "a living source of impulse, a practical direction of thought, a key to many of the problems of theology, and above all a path to spiritual freedom."
Rabbi Duncan John Duncan (1796 – 26 February 1870), also known as 'Rabbi' Duncan, was a minister of the Free Church of Scotland, a missionary to the Jews in Hungary, and Professor of Hebrew and Oriental Languages at New College, Edinburgh. He is best rem ...
, however, said of him, "Robertson believed that Christ did something or other, which, somehow or other, had some connection or other with salvation."John Brentnall, ''Just a Talker: Sayings of John ('Rabbi') Duncan'' (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1997), 182. Robertson's closing years were full of sadness. His sensitive nature was subjected to extreme suffering, arising mainly from the opposition aroused by his sympathy with the revolutionary ideas of the 1848 epoch. Moreover, he was crippled by incipient disease of the brain, which at first inflicted unconquerable lassitude and depression, and latterly agonising pain. On 5 June 1853 he preached for the last time, and on 15 August he died. For the last three years of his life he had lived at 60 Montpelier Road in the Montpelier area of Brighton; between 1847 and 1850 he lived at 9 Montpelier Terrace. Robertson's published works include five volumes of sermons, two volumes of expository lectures, on
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and on the epistles to the Corinthians, a volume of miscellaneous addresses, and an ''Analysis of "In Memoriam."'' See ''Life and Letters'' by Stopford A Brooke (1865).


References

*


Further reading

* Beardsley, Christina. http://www.lutterworth.com/lp/titles/unutter.htm'' Unutterable Love: The Passionate Life and Preaching of F.W. Robertson'', The Lutterworth Press (2009), . * Robertson, F. W., & Brooke, S. A. (1906). Life and letters of Fred. W. Robertson, M.A.: Incumbent of Trinity Chapel, Brighton, 1847–53. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner.


External links

* * *
FWRobertson.org
* Jakob Nieweg: Frederick William Robertson. –
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, J.B. Wolters, 1905 (dissertation)
Open Library
{{DEFAULTSORT:Robertson, Frederick William 1816 births 1853 deaths English sermon writers English theologians Writers from London Alumni of Brasenose College, Oxford