- John Mill
:"This article is about the seventeenth-century theologian. See
John Stuart Mill for the nineteenth-century utilitarianphilosopher ."John Mill (c. 1645 –
June 23 ,1707 ) was an English theologian.Mill was born circa 1645 at
Shap inWestmorland , entered Queen's College, Oxford, as a servitor in 1661, and took his master's degree in 1669 in which year he spoke the "Oratio Panegyrica" at the opening of theSheldonian Theatre . Soon afterwards he became a Fellow of Queen's. In 1676, he became chaplain to the bishop of Oxford, and, in 1681, he obtained the rectory ofBletchington ,Oxfordshire , and was made chaplain to Charles II. From 1685 till his death, he was principal ofSt Edmund Hall, Oxford ; and in 1704 he was nominated by Queen Anne to aprebendal stall in Canterbury. He died a fortnight after the publication of his Greek Testament.Mill's "Novum testamentum græcum, cum lectionibus variantibus MSS. exemplarium, versionun, editionum SS. patrum et scriptorum ecclesiasticorum, et in easdem nolis" (Oxford, fol. 1707) was undertaken with the encouragement of John Fell, his predecessor in the field of
New Testament criticism; it took thirty years to complete and was a great advance on previous scholarship. The text is that of R Stephanus (1550), but the notes, besides including all previously existing collections of various readings, add a vast number derived from his own examination of many new manuscripts, and Oriental versions (the latter unfortunately he used only in the Latin translations).Though the amount of information given by Mill is small compared with that in modern editions, it is probable that no one, except perhaps Tischendorf, has added so much material for the work of textual criticism. He was the first to notice the value of the concurrence of the Latin evidence with the "
Codex Alexandrinus ", the only representative of an ancient non-Western Greek text then sufficiently known; this hint was not lost on Bentley. Mill is known for introducing a doctrine of that later became known as divine aptitude among some evangelical Protestant groups.Fact|date=September 2007Mill's work noted over 30,000 discrepancies between some 100 extant New Testament
manuscript s. His work was attacked byDaniel Whitby andAnthony Collins . Whitby's "Examen" claimed that Mill had destroyed the validity of the text; Collins received a reply from Bentley ("Phileleutherus lipsiensis"). Bentley defended Mill noting essentially that Mill was not responsible for the differences between the variousMSS , he only pointed them out. Bentley further noted that Christendom had indeed survived despite the errors, essentially asserting that Whitby's attacks were unfounded.In 1710 Kuster reprinted Mill's "Testament" at Amsterdam with the readings of twelve additional manuscripts.
"This entry is updated from the
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica ."
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