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  • Submitted: Jul 19 2013 01:45 PM
  • Last Updated: Jul 19 2013 01:45 PM
  • File Size: 8.55MB
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  • Author: Benson, Joseph
  • MySword Version:: 1.X

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Author:
Benson, Joseph

MySword Version::
1.X

Joseph Benson was one of the most eminent and influential Methodist ministers in England after the death John Wesley. The Methodist Conference requested that he write a commentary and nearly a decade of work, the commentary was complete. The Methodist Conference officially endorsed the work. The commentary is mostly expositional with some exegetical comments with Hebrew/Greek analysis.

Dr. Adam Clarke said Benson is "a sound scholar, a powerful and able preacher, and a profound theologian".

Charles Spurgeon in Commenting & Commentaries -- A Catalogue of Biblical Commentaries and Expositions noted that Benson's work was characterized by "solid learning, soundness of theological opinion, and an edifying attention to experimental and practical religion. Necessary to Methodist Students."

Frank Baker of Asbury's Journals noted, "It is amazing to realize that within a generation four massive commentaries on the whole Bible were published by British Methodists: Thomas Coke, six volumes, 1801-09; Adam Clarke, eight volumes, 1810-26; Joseph Benson, five volumes, 1811-18; Joseph Sutcliffe, two volumes, 1834-39."

The e-Sword Edition
This is the complete 8 volume commentary, with over 60 megabytes of commentary, presented in verse by verse format.

Two thirds of the commentary is on the Old Testament, with the final one third on the New Testament.

See the Genesis book comments for the Preface to the Commentary and the Introduction to the Old Testament. See the Matthew book comments for the Introduction to the New Testament

About Joseph Benson
One of the most eminent of the early Methodist ministers in England, Joseph Benson was born at Melmerby, in Cumberland, Jan. 25, 1748. At sixteen he became a Methodist and was converted. In 1766 Mr. Wesley appointed him classical master at Kingswood School. He devoted himself closely to philosophy and theology, studying constantly and zealously.

Joseph Benson became a Methodist circuit rider in 1771. A close associate of Wesley, he was chosen to be a member of the Legal One Hundred who governed the Conference at Wesley's death and he was president of the Conference two times. As one of post-Wesley Methodism's most popular preachers, he sometimes addressed crowds of over twenty thousand.

Wesley established an extensive organization, including the circuit riding system and a media or press to showcase books, pamphlets, and a monthly magazine. After the death of John Wesley, Joseph Benson took over the Methodist/Wesleyan movement and the organization that Wesley created.

During the Bristol dispute of 1794 he led the conservative Church Methodists and was against moves which suggested that the Methodists were breaking ties with the Church of England; he was one of the last leaders to contend for the methods and philosophy of eighteenth-century Wesleyan Methodism.

The circulation of The Methodist Magazine rose from ten thousand to twenty-four thousand per issue on his watch, and it was one of the most widely read periodicals in pre-Victorian England. He was an able writer, serving as apologist against Joseph Priestley, as biographer of John Fletcher, and as author of a multi-volume commentary on the Bible.

Benson was influential in Methodism, and through the press, especially the magazine, he was able to extend his influence to non-Methodists as well. He and other Methodist leaders, through preaching and publication, disseminated their conservative social and political credo and may be credited in part with creating a climate in which the seeds of Victorianism could thrive.



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