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Ebor
February 24th 2006, 12:30 PM
Lately I've been tyring to find a biography on Mattew Henry but to no avail. Why is it so difficult? I've looked on Amazon, Google, I went to my local book store and they looked through thier nearly endless databases and the only thing that I could find is his comentary. I will admit though that one can learn alot about Matthew Henry through his comentaries and I also did find a small biography on Wiki, but other than that, I can't find any books on his life. Please help.

Adam
February 26th 2006, 02:36 AM
Lately I've been tyring to find a biography on Mattew Henry but to no avail. Why is it so difficult? I've looked on Amazon, Google, I went to my local book store and they looked through thier nearly endless databases and the only thing that I could find is his comentary. I will admit though that one can learn alot about Matthew Henry through his comentaries and I also did find a small biography on Wiki, but other than that, I can't find any books on his life. Please help.
From the 9th Ed. Encyclopaedia Britannica after 1865:
HENRY, Matthew (1662-1714), the author of the well known and justly popular Exposition of the Old and New Testaments, was born at Broad Oak, a farm-house on the confines of Flintshire and Shropshire, on the 18th of October, 1662. He was the son of Philip Henry, one of the 2000 ministers who were ejected from their livings in 1662 for refusing to conform to the Act of Uniformity. Unlike the majority of his fellow-sufferers, Philip Henry, who through his life was the possessor of private means, was spared all personal privation or hardship, as the consequence of his nonconformity, and was thus enabled to give a good education to his son. Having received his preliminary education from his father and a tutor named Turner, Henry was next removed to an academy at Islington, whence he proceeded to become a student of law at Gray's Inn. His legal studies, however, had not advanced far when he relinquished them for theology, to which he thenceforth devoted himself. In 1687 he became a minister of a Presbyterian congregation at Chester, whence in 1712 he was translated to Hackney. Two years later (June 2, 1714), he died suddenly of apoplexy at Nantwich, while on a journey from Chester to London. Henry's Exposition, the work by which he is now chiefly remembered, is a commentary of a practical and devotional rather than of a critical kind, ranging over the whole of the Old Testament and extending into the New as far as to the end of the Acts. At this point it was broken off by the author's death, but the work was finished by a number of clergymen, whose names are recorded in most editions of the book. In a critical point of view, it may be said to be quite valueless; yet its unfailing good sense, its discriminating thought, its high moral tone, its simple piety, and its altogether singular felicity of practical application, combine with the well-sustained flow of its racy English style to secure for it, and deservedly, the foremost place among works of its class.
[and in small print, continuing]
Besides the Exposition, Matthew Henry wrote a Life of Mr.Philip Henry; The communicant's Companion; Directions for Daily Communion with God; A Method for Prayer; and A Scriptural Cathechism, all of which, along iwth numerous sermons, have been frequently reprinted, both separately and in complete editions of his Miscellaneous Works. His life has been written by W. Tong (London, 1816), by Davis (prefixed to Exposition, ed. 1844, by Hamilton (Christian Biography, 1853), by C. Chapman, (1859), and by J. B. Williams (1828, new ed. 1865).
(From Vol XI, p. 602b in my 1905 New Werner [American] Edition [In effect the 10th Ed., but in this case no doubt unchanged from the 9th Ed, except possibly as to page number.])
Adam

Ebor
February 26th 2006, 03:51 PM
Thanks Adam. This should help me get started on further digging.

-Push the Button Frank-

One Bad Pig
February 26th 2006, 05:28 PM
There's a ~100 page biography at the beginning of my six-volume set of Matthew Henry's Commentary.

Ebor
March 1st 2006, 12:04 PM
Who published it?

One Bad Pig
March 1st 2006, 11:00 PM
Hendrickson Publishers, Inc:

ISBN: 0-943575-51-6

I got in on Amazon.com a couple years ago.