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TUCKER, John, clergyman, born in Amesbury, Massachusetts, 19 September, 1719; died in Newbury, Massachusetts, 22 March, 1792. He was graduated at Harvard in 1741, studied theology, and on 20 November, 1745, was ordained as colleague minister of Newbury, Massachusetts. His theological opinions were Arminian, and in his controversies with Calvinistic clergymen he enlivened argument with wit and satire. The dissident members of his congregation seceded to join the Presbyterian society of which Jonathan Parsons was pastor. Mr. Tucker received the degree of D. D. from Harvard in 1787. Among his publications were "Four Sermons" (1756) ; " On the Doctrines and Uncharitableness of Jonathan Parsons" (1757); "An Account of an Ecclesiastical Council, to which is annexed a Discourse, being a Minister's Appeal to his Hearers as to his Life and Doctrines" (1767); and a Dudleian lecture at Harvard on "The Validity of Presbyterian Ordination" (1778).
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