Alexander Knox (1757-1831)
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- For other people with the same name, see Alexander Knox
Alexander Knox (17 March 1757-17 January 1831) was an Irish theological writer.
As a boy and young man, Alexander Knox befriended and corresponded with John Wesley, and - though he later asserted his theological independence from Methodism - he later published defences of Wesley against John Walker and Robert Southey.
In the 1790s Knox entered political life, briefly (in 1798) becoming private secretary to Lord Castlereagh and publishing Essays on the political circumstances of Ireland (1799) before retiring from politics in 1799.
Knox lived in or near Dublin for the final three deacdes of his life, becoming known as the 'sage of Bellevue'. Together with his friend John Jebb, bishop of Limerick, Knox developed a distinctive style of high-churchmanship (evidenced in his theology of sacraments) which also respected strains in evangelicalism, Methodism and seventeenth-century latitudinarianism. Knox wrote in defence of Catholic emancipation.
[edit] Works
- Essays on the political circumstances of Ireland during the administration of Lord Camden; with an appendix containing thoughts on the will of the people (1799)
- An Answer to the Rt Hon. P. Duigenan's Two Great Arguments Against the Full Enfranchisement of the Irish Roman Catholics (1810)
- On the Doctrine Respecting Baptism Held by the Church of England (1820)
- An Enquiry on Grounds of Scripture and Reason into the Use and Import of the Eucharistic Symbols (1824)
- Letters on the Re-Union of the Churches of England and Rome (1824)
[edit] External links
- Peter B. Nockles, ‘Knox, Alexander (1757–1831)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, Oct 2005, accessed 1 June 2007
- John Wesley and the Anglo-Catholic Revival by G.W. Taylor
- Wesley's Letters: Volume Six Events
- Eclectic Ethereal Encyclopedia
- Trinity College, Toronto
- Literature.org