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TITLE: "The Bedell Lectures 1887"
"The Religious Aspect of Evolution"
***** VERY RARE copy signed by G. T. & Julia Bedell (see picture) *****
AUTHOR: James McCosh, President of Princeton College
DATE PUBLISHED: 1888 by G. P. Putnam's Son's, New York & London
BINDING: Hardback
PAGES: 109
CONDITION: Good. Clean/clear text. Please email me with any questions you may have about this books condition or contents before buying.
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Gregory T. Bedell
Gregory Thurston Bedell (August 27, 1817 – March 11, 1892) was the third Episcopal Bishop of Ohio.
Early life
Bedell was born in Hudson, New York in 1817, the son of Rev. Gregory Townsend Bedell of Staten Island and his wife, Penelope Thurston Bedell. While an infant, Bedell's family moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina. In 1822, they moved again to Philadelphia where his father became the rector of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Bedell was given a thorough preparation for college in Dr. Muhlenberg's increasingly admired school in Queen's County, New York. After gaining the diploma from the Institute at Flushing, Bedell attended Bristol College, an Episcopal institution not destined for a long life. He graduated in 1836 and headed to Alexandria to be prepared for ordination at the Virginia Theological Seminary, graduating in 1840.
Bedell was ordained deacon that same year by his great-uncle, Bishop Richard Channing Moore, and was ordained priest by the same bishop in 1841. After his ordination to the priesthood, he served as rector of Church of the Holy Trinity in West Chester, Pennsylvania.[4] Two years later, Bedell moved to Church of the Ascension in New York City, where he remained until his elevation to the episcopate. While there, Bedell earned a doctorate of divinity from Norwich University. In 1845, Bedell married Julia Strong. They had three children, all of whom died in infancy.
Bishop of
Ohio
Bedell was
consecrated assistant Bishop of Ohio in 1859. He was the 67th bishop
in the ECUSA, and was consecrated in St. Paul's Church, Richmond, Virginia by
Bishops William Meade, Charles Pettit
McIlvaine, and John Johns, along with other
co-consecrators. He served as assistant bishop for
fourteen years and, during the American Civil War,
preached loyalty to the Union. When Bishop McIlvaine died in 1873, Bedell
succeeded him as the third Bishop of Ohio. In 1875, the diocese was divided
into northern and southern parts, and Bedell remained bishop of the northern
part, which retained the name "Ohio". Theologically, Bedell leaned
toward the evangelical side of the Episcopal Church, in contrast to the
growing Tractarian movement. That one coming out of
Muhlenberg's Church Institute at Flushing (and from 1836, College Point NY)
sympathized more with the evangelical element of Anglican Christianity should
not surprise us; for Muhlenberg called himself an "Evangelical Catholic"
Christian. The first half of the term connoted the spontaneous, Spirit-driven
aspect of the Faith; the latter stood for order, structure, and the orthodox
dogmas of the historic Catholic Church of the Creed. While many of the Flushing
and College Point alumni identified with the High Church and (later)
Anglo-Catholic wings of the PECUSA, many did not.
Bedell resigned
his episcopal duties in 1889, owing to physical infirmity, and died in 1892
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