Richard Vines
1600–1656
Hypothetical universalist; Master of Pembroke Cambridge.
Biography
Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge from 1644. Vines was one of the leading advocates of hypothetical universalism in the Assembly's atonement debates, arguing that Christ's death was sufficient for all and intended conditionally for all though efficacious only for the elect. He pressed the Davenant reading hard against Rutherford's strict particularism. Ejected at the Restoration's purge of Cambridge.
Principal works
- Calebs Integrity in Following the Lord Fully (1642)
- Gods Drawing and Mans Coming to Christ (1662)
English Presbyterian divine
The great majority of the sitting members were English parish ministers of Presbyterian conviction. They formed the drafting core of the Assembly, manning its three standing committees and supplying most of the text of the Confession, the two Catechisms, and the Directory for Public Worship.