Edward Payson
Edward Payson (25 July 1783 – 22 October 1827) was an American Congregational preacher. He was born on 25 July 1783 at Rindge, New Hampshire, where his father, Seth Payson (1758-1820), was pastor of the Congregational Church. His uncle, Phillips Payson (1736-1801), pastor of a church in Chelsea, Massachusetts, was a physicist and astronomer. Edward Payson graduated at Harvard in 1803, was then principal of a school at Portland, Maine, and in 1807 became junior pastor of the Congregational Church at Portland, where he remained, after 1811, as senior pastor, until his death on 22 October 1827. Archibald Alexander suggested in 1844 that that "no man in our country has left behind him a higher character for eminent piety than the Rev. Edward Payson."[1]
The most complete collection of his sermons, with a memoir by Asa Cummings originally published in 1828, is the Memoir, Select Thoughts and Sermons of the late Rev. Edward Payson (3 vols., Portland, 1846; Philadelphia, 1859). Based on this is the volume, Mementos of Edward Payson (New York, 1873), by the Rev. E. L. Janes of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Edward was the father of Elizabeth Prentiss.
References
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Archibald Alexander, Thoughts on Religious Experience, p. 220.
External links
- Edward Payson at Enrichment Journal
- A memoir of the Rev. Edward Payson, D.D., late of Portland, Maine (1830)
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- 1783 births
- 1827 deaths
- People from Cheshire County, New Hampshire
- Harvard University alumni
- American religious leaders
- People from Portland, Maine
- American Congregationalist ministers