James Hannington, , , , first bishop of eastern equatorial Africa : a history of his life and work, 1847-1885 . Christ shall move ;That he may lean upon His arm and say, Dost Thou, dear Lord, approve ? Wordsworth. On the third of November, 1875, Hannington wasagain in Oxford, to receive his degree. He foundat St. Mary Hall, alone of his former companions, theRev. David Johnston, Minister of the Church of Scotlandin the Orkneys, a Biblical Student, and holder of theKenicott Hebrew Scholarship, the tenure of which re-quired him to reside in Oxford during the MichaelmasTerm


James Hannington, , , , first bishop of eastern equatorial Africa : a history of his life and work, 1847-1885 . Christ shall move ;That he may lean upon His arm and say, Dost Thou, dear Lord, approve ? Wordsworth. On the third of November, 1875, Hannington wasagain in Oxford, to receive his degree. He foundat St. Mary Hall, alone of his former companions, theRev. David Johnston, Minister of the Church of Scotlandin the Orkneys, a Biblical Student, and holder of theKenicott Hebrew Scholarship, the tenure of which re-quired him to reside in Oxford during the MichaelmasTerm of that year. The following entry refers to thismeeting : Had a long and profitable converse with David John-ston ; he told me that he never had had any hope of myconversion, I seemed so utterly given over to the world. Mr. Johnston was not the only one of his former ac-quaintances who were unaware of the change which hadpassed over his life, and the tenor of it. On one occasion, shortly before the correspondencewhich has been given in Chapter VII., one of Hanning-tons college friends was spending the month of Septem-(126). w^-


Size: 1720px × 1452px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, booksubjectchurchofengland, booksubjectmissiona