'Edward King' (
1829 -
8 March,
1910) was an
English bishop. King was the second son of the Reverend Walker King,
Archdeacon of
Rochester and
rector of Stone, Kent. King graduated from
Oriel College,
Oxford, he was ordained in 1854, and four years later became chaplain and lecturer at Cuddesdon Theological College (now
Ripon College (Cuddesdon). He was principal at Cuddesdon from 1863 to 1873, when he became
Regius Professor of pastoral theology at
Oxford and
canon of
Christ Church. To the world outside he was only known at this time as one of Dr Pusey's most intimate friends and as a leading member of the
English Church Union. But in Oxford, and especially among the younger men, he exercised an exceptional influence, due, not to special profundity of intellect, but to his remarkable charm in personal intercourse, and his abounding sincerity and goodness.
In 1885 Dr King was made
bishop of Lincoln. The most eventful episode of his episcopate was his prosecution (1888-1890) for
ritualistic practices before the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Edward White Benson, and, on appeal, before the
judicial committee of the Privy Council. Dr King, who loyally conformed his practices to the archbishop's judgment, devoted himself unsparingly to the work of his diocese; and, irrespective of his High Church views, he won the affection and reverence of all classes by his real saintliness of character. The bishop, who never married, died in Lincoln.
Edward King is commemorated in the calendar of the Church of England (with the status of a Lesser Festival or ‘black letter day’) on 8 March, the date of his death.
References
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External links
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Project Canterbury: Edward King