Josiah Miller

Josiah Miller (1832 – 1880) was an English Congregationalist minister and hymnologist.

Life

The son of the Rev. Edward Miller, he was born at Putney, Surrey, on 8 April 1832. At age 13 he was articled to an engineering surveyor at Westminster; but he later gave up his articles and entered Highbury College, where he studied for the independent ministry. He graduated B.A. in 1853 and M.A. in 1855 at London University.[1]

He was appointed pastor successively at Dorchester in 1855, at Long Sutton, Lincolnshire, in 1860, and at Newark, Nottinghamshire, in 1868. He gave up this last post in order to become secretary of the British Society for the Propagation of the Gospel Among the Jews. Subsequently he succeeded the Rev. J. Robinson as secretary to the London City Mission.[1]

He died on 22 December 1880, and was buried at Abney Park.[1]

Works

His principal works are:

  • ‘Our Hymns: their Authors and Origin. Being Biographical Sketches of the principal Psalm and Hymn Writers (with Notes on their Psalms and Hymns),’ London, 1866; intended to be a companion to the New Congregational Hymn Book.
  • ‘Our Dispensation: or, the place we occupy in the Divine History of the World,’ London, 1868.
  • ‘Singers and Songs of the Church; being Biographical Sketches of the Hymn-Writers in all the principal collections,’ 2nd edit. London, 1869.
  • ‘Christianum Organum; or, the Inductive Method in Scripture and Science. With an Introduction by J. H. Gladstone,’ London, 1870.[1]
gollark: Wait, how would you know about stupidly expensive FTL travel for thousands of years before you had even figured out what the speed of light was?
gollark: There may also be different stuff produced in each system, or at least some stuff produced more cheaply in some.
gollark: I don't think anyone knows the answer to that.
gollark: … that would do it, why did I never think of that... but you still need room for the ship component stuff.
gollark: Happily, you can construct more tanks on site from resources there, but I ran into issues of the docking port orientations getting messed up, and wobbliness.

References

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cooper, Thompson (1894). "Miller, Josiah". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

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