Hezekiah Burton (1632–1681) was an English theologian .
Life
He was educated in Sutton-on-Lound and at Magdalene College, Cambridge ,[ 1] where he became a Fellow.
He was an associate of a number of intellectual figures of the day, in particular Richard Cumberland whose De legibus naturae he edited and to which he contributed an Address to the Reader . He is mentioned in Pepys's Diary . He was chaplain to Orlando Bridgeman , and used the contact to support Cumberland.
He was characterised as a Latitudinarian . He associated with John Tillotson and Edward Stillingfleet , involved with them and John Wilkins in an abortive proposal for a comprehension of presbyterians within the Church of England , communicated by Bridgeman to Richard Baxter and others in early 1668. Anthony Wood says that a club formed by Wilkins to promote comprehension used to meet at the 'chambers of that great trimmer and latitudinarian, Dr. Hezekiah Burton.'[ 2]
A position as rector of Barnes he obtained through Tillotson in 1680 was cut short by his death from illness. He had previously been a prebendary of Norwich , and from 1668 rector of St George the Martyr Southwark .
Works
Several Discourses, viz., I. of purity and charity, II. of repentance, III. of seeking first the kingdom of God (1684)
A Second Volume of Discourses (1685)
References
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : "Burton, Hezekiah ". Dictionary of National Biography . London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
International National People Other