A Manual on the Christian Sabbath

Argues the Christian Sabbath’s moral, perpetual obligation, defends the fourth commandment, and traces the early Church’s shift to observing the Lord’s Day and worship practices.

John Holmes Agnew (May 9, 1804 – October 12, 1865) was an American Presbyterian clergyman, scholar, and educator who graduated from Dickinson College and Princeton Seminary before serving briefly as a pastor and then moving into academia as a professor of languages at institutions including Washington College, Marion College, and the University of Michigan. He was notable as the first editor of The Eclectic Magazine and The Knickerbocker, authored A Manual on the Christian Sabbath, assisted in translating Winer’s Grammar of the New Testament, and later led Maplewood Female Seminary in Massachusetts, reflecting his breadth of influence in religious and literary circles. Agnew was widely respected for his scholarly gifts and genial character, and at his death in Peekskill, New York, he was remembered as a generous and learned figure in both church and education.

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