Abstract
In evangelical scholarship, John Gill has recently gained prominence for his relationship to the ‘hyper-Calvinism’ that was developing throughout eighteenth-century English nonconformity. The attention which has been given to this aspect of his thought has, however, eclipsed a wider appreciation of his legacy. Standing between the radical baptists of the seventeenth century and the mainstream dissent of the Victorian age, Gill is shown to have a crucial place in the development of a native millenarian tradition.
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More From: Evangelical Quarterly: An International Review of Bible and Theology
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