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  1. Benjamin Wills Newton (12 December 1807 – 26 June 1899) was an English evangelist, author of Christian books, and leader of a Plymouth church. His congregation and others around Plymouth became known as the Plymouth Brethren.

  2. Benjamin Wills Newton. Born: 12th December 1807. Died: 26th June 1899. Appears in Pridham / Borlase / Tregelles / Newton / Lloyd / Howard / Biggs Family Tree. Intro, Biographical Information, Notes etc: Books & Pamphlets: An Erroneous Mode of Stating the Gospel Considered (27 pp)

  3. Sep 5, 2019 · Altogether, Mr. Newton's teaching was spot on and was the long-held view of the church. His concerns about Darbyism and his new pre-trib, dispensational doctrine, were warranted.

  4. Jun 3, 2014 · Of those men who were influential in the very early days of the "brethren movement", and in the recovery of truth relating to church gathering and prophecy, Benjamin Wills Newton was the youngest. He was born on 12th December, 1807 just eleven days after the death of his father, and brought up, the only child of his widowed mother.

  5. Volume 7 - Prospects of the Ten Kingdoms of the Roman Empire Considered: Being the Third Series of Aids to Prophetic Enquiry. by B.W. Newton. 0001.

  6. * Benjamin Wills Newton had helped found the Plymouth Brethren movement, along with John Nelson Darby. Darby later broke with Newton, and the Darbyites labeled Newton a heretic. See the footnotes we have appended to Spurgeon's original notes from the issue of The Sword and the Trowel that prompted this letter to the editor. [Back to text.]

  7. Benjamin Wills Newton is known for his writings and for his connection with the Plymouth Brethren. The first half of the nineteenth century in Great Britain saw the founding of a movement known as Brethrenism.

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