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Richard Bernard (1568–1641) was an English clergyman and writer.


Life
Bernard was born in Epworth and received his education at Christ's College, Cambridge, where he matriculated in 1592, obtained his BA in 1595, and an MA in 1598. His university education was paid for by Frances and who were supporters of radical protestants. He was married in 1601 and had six children. From 1612 to 1641 he lived in and preached in Batcombe.

Bernard was a , but a moderate one. Milton and the Jacobean Church of England, Daniel W. Doerksen, Early Modern Literary Studies 1.1 (1995): 5.1–23 Bernard advocated a joyful approach to life, instead of the more serious and pious disposition that was encouraged at the time. Bernard wrote:

He flirted with nonconformity with the when he was first preaching. He lost his job over his dissent in on 15 March 1605. He formed his own congregation of about 100 in 1606 in a separatist church, but then returned to his parish post in Worksop in 1607. He still refused to make the sign of the cross during baptisms, however. This led to him being brought before church courts again in 1608 and 1611. The Pilgrims, Leiden, and the Early Years of Plymouth Plantation, Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs, Chapter 1, page 2; Jeremy Dupertuis Bangs 2006, The Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (SMDPA), Copyright 2007.

When he was at Worksop he associated with well-known Puritans William Brewster (1567–1644), a passenger on the , and John Robinson (1575–1625), who organised the voyage.

Bernard wrote an influential handbook for ministers entitled , which was published in 1607 and 1621. His most popular book was The Isle of Man (1627) which went through 16 printings by 1683. He led his generation in his advocacy for the imprisoned, the poor, and the Jews, the latter argument was made in an essay titled "." within the book, .Grosart, Alexander Balloch. "Bernard, Richard" Dictionary of National Biography . London: Oxford University Press. 1921. v.2, pp. 386-7.

He frequently wrote against Separation, which put him in conflict with Robinson and the churches.

His daughter Mary married , co-founder of the state of , in 1629. Roger and Mary Williams emigrated to the New World in 1631.

His predecessor at Batcombe was Philip Bisse; he was succeeded as preacher there by the Puritan theologian .


Published work
  • 1602, 1607, 1612
  • , 1607
  • , 1608 (Also ? – no copies exist)
  • , 1609
  • , 1609
  • , 1610
  • , 1610
  • , 1612, 1629
  • , 1613
  • , 1616, 1628, 1650? ()
  • , 1616
  • , 1616
  • , 1617
  • , 1619
  • , 1621
  • , 1621
  • , 1623, 1624
  • , 1626
  • 1627, 1628, 1629, 1630, 1640, 1632, 1634, 1635, 1648, 1658, 1659, 1668, 1674, 1677, 1683; 1719, 1778, 1997
  • A Guide to Grand-Jury Men, , 1627, 1629, 1630
  • Ruth's Recompense, 1628
  • , 1629
  • , 1630, 1631, 1632, 1635, 1640
  • Christian See To Thy Conscience Or A Treatise Of The Nature, The Kinds And Manifold Differences Of Conscience, 1631
  • The Ready Way to Good Works, 1635
  • , 1641
  • , 1641
  • , Richard Bernard; John Bernard, London, 1641, 1661
  • , 1641
  • , 1642
  • An Epistle Directed To All Justices Of Peace In England And Wales, 1642
  • , 1644
  • , 1661, 1664
  • Collected works in Latin and English, 1598 (?), 1607, 1614, 1629 and 1641.
  • Bernard's first publication was a translation of the Latin poet , which had at least six editions.


See also
  • A Guide to Grand-Jury Men
  • King James I


Notes


Further reading
  • K. R. Narveson, "Richard Bernard," The Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 281: British Rhetoricians and Logicians, 1500–1660, Second Series, Detroit: Gale, 2003, pp. 14–25.

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