Sidrach Simpson
c. 1600–1655
Master of Pembroke College Cambridge; sharpest Independent polemicist.
Biography
Of Queens' College Cambridge, then St Mary Wolnoth in London until Laud's pressure drove him into exile in Rotterdam in 1638 (with Goodwin and Nye, where they formed the gathered Independent congregation that returned to England together in 1641). He served at St Mary Abchurch London, then (from 1650) Master of Pembroke College Cambridge. Of the Five Dissenting Brethren who signed the Apologeticall Narration, Simpson was the most polemical against the Presbyterian majority — his Reformation's Preservation (1643) had argued the gathered-church position in print before the Assembly was even called. Died at Pembroke Lodge in 1655.
Principal works
- An Apologeticall Narration (1644)
- Reformation’s Preservation (1643)
Independent / Dissenting Brethren
A small but articulate minority of Congregationalist divines — the 'Dissenting Brethren' — who pressed for a gathered-church polity against the Presbyterian majority. Their Apologeticall Narration (1644) and their dissents in the Grand Debate over church government shaped the Confession's carefully worded chapters and anticipated the Savoy Declaration of 1658.