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John Collins

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John Theodore Cameron Bucke Collins (25 August 1925 – 8 December 2022) was a British Anglican priest who was instrumental in the charismatic revival movement in the Church of England .

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13-904: John Collins , or Jon Collins , may refer to: Arts and entertainment [ edit ] John Collins (painter) , 18th century British landscape painter John Collins (poet) (1742–1808), English orator, singer, and poet John Churton Collins (1848–1908), English literary critic John H. Collins (director) (1889–1918), American director and screenwriter John Collins (jazz guitarist) (1913–2001), American jazz guitarist John Collins (cartoonist) (1917–2007), Canadian cartoonist Johnny Collins (1938–2009), British folksinger John D. Collins (born 1942), British actor known for Allo 'Allo John Collins (theatre director) (born 1969), American experimental theater director John Collins (Australian musician) (born 1971), bass guitarist for Powderfinger John Collins (musician/researcher) , musician in

26-558: A publication now in the public domain :  Cust, Lionel Henry (1887). " Collins, John (1725?-1759?) ". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography . Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co. John T. C. B. Collins Previously from a high church background, Collins was converted to Evangelical Christianity at an Iwerne camp . He studied at Haileybury and Clare College, Cambridge , before training for ordination at Ridley Hall, Cambridge , and undertaking his first curacy at All Soul's Langham Place under

39-568: The Michigan murders John C. Collins (born 1949), American theoretical particle physicist John A. Collins (abolitionist) (1810–1879), American abolitionist C. John Collins , American academic and professor of Old Testament Jon Collins (educator) , American educator Other uses [ edit ] John Collins (cocktail) , an alcoholic beverage See also [ edit ] John Collins-Muhammad (born 1991), American politician Jon R. Collins (1923–1987), associate justice of

52-1421: The National Hockey League John Collins (rower) (born 1989), British rower John Collins (basketball) (born 1997), American basketball player in the NBA Jon Collins (born 1960s), American basketball player in the 1980s Johnny Collins (sprinter) , winner of the 2000 4 × 400 meter relay at the NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships Other people [ edit ] John Collins (mathematician) (1625–1683), English mathematician John Baptist Collins (died 1794), French pirate John Collins (merchant) (died 1795), merchant in Quebec John A. Collins (1810–1900), American abolitionist and utopian from Skaneateles Community John Collins Covell (1823–1887), American educator and school administrator John S. Collins (1837–1928), American Quaker farmer who moved to southern Florida John H. Collins (academic) (1902–1981), American classical scholar John Collins (British businessman) (born 1941), former head of National Power John Joseph Collins (born 1944), Irish barrister John J. Collins (born 1946), Irish biblical studies scholar John Norman Collins (born 1947), perpetrator of

65-463: The Supreme Court of Nevada Collins (surname) Jack Collins (disambiguation) John Collings (disambiguation) Sean Collins (disambiguation) Collins John (born 1985), Dutch footballer Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title John Collins . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

78-1110: The U.S. Air Force John Collins (nuncio) (1889–1961), Irish bishop and diplomat in Liberia John T. C. B. Collins (1925–2022), Anglican priest and leading figure in the charismatic movement Sports [ edit ] Association football [ edit ] John Collins (footballer, born 1942) , English professional footballer John Collins (footballer, born 1945) , English professional footballer and manager John Collins (footballer, born 1949) (1949–2020), Welsh professional footballer John Collins (footballer, born 1968) , Scottish international footballer and manager Other sports [ edit ] John Collins (New Zealand cricketer) (1868–1943), New Zealand cricketer Shano Collins (John Francis Collins, 1885–1955), American baseball player John Collins (Fijian cricketer) (fl. 1895), Fijian cricketer John W. Collins (1912–2001), American chess player John Collins (rugby union) (1939–2007), New Zealand rugby union player John Collins (sports executive) (born 1961), COO of

91-2018: The West African music scene Military [ edit ] John Collins (Bengal Army officer) (died 1807), British colonel in the Bengal Native Infantry John Collins (VC) (1880–1951), English sergeant who was awarded a Victoria Cross John Augustine Collins (1899–1989), Royal Australian Navy officer Politics [ edit ] American politicians [ edit ] John Collins (Continental Congress) (1717–1795), Rhode Island delegate to Continental Congress John Collins (governor) (1776–1822), American manufacturer and Governor of Delaware John Collins (Seattle politician) (1835–1903), American politician and businessman John F. Collins (mayor of Providence) (1872–1962), mayor of Providence, Rhode Island, 1939–1941 John F. Collins (1919–1995), mayor of Boston, Massachusetts, 1960–1968 Other politicians [ edit ] John Collins (died 1597) , MP for Hythe John Collins (Andover MP) (1624–1711), English academic and politician John Collins (Surveyor General) (died 1795), Surveyor General of Provincial Canada John Collins (Canadian politician) (1922–2016), physician and politician in Newfoundland, Canada John Henry Collins (1880–1952), nationalist politician and solicitor in Northern Ireland Religion [ edit ] John Collins (Independent minister) (c. 1632–1687), English Independent minister John J. Collins (bishop) (1856–1934), American-born Catholic bishop in Jamaica John Collins (priest) (1905–1982), radical Anglican canon at St Paul's Cathedral John A. Collins (chaplain) (1931–2003), Chief of Chaplains of

104-574: The everyday life of any believing Christian." In 1980 Collins was appointed vicar of Holy Trinity Brompton , previously a sparsely-attended high church parish that he transformed into a bastion of the Charismatic Movement with an evening congregation of roughly 1,000. The parish would also function as the base for a church planting effort, taking over struggling parishes and moving them to an evangelical style of worship. Collins married Diana Kimpton (d. 2013), an actress, in 1955, having met at

117-542: The incumbency of John Stott . Collins began his transition to a charismatic bent at an all-night prayer vigil in the winter of 1963, in what became known as the "Night of Prayer." According to Collins, "the 'visitation of the Holy Spirit' lasted three weeks and transformed his rundown church of St Mark’s, Gillingham and young curates into catalysts for what would become known as the " Charismatic Renewal " in Britain." Despite

130-447: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John_Collins&oldid=1255557067 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Human name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages John Collins (painter) John Collins (1725?–1759?)

143-414: The skepticism of his ecclesiastical superiors, Collins went on to become a key figure in the charismatic movement , which according to the historian Diarmaid MacCulloch was "one of the great surprises of 20th-century Christianity...A holiness movement [that] sprang out of the teaching of the early Methodists, proclaiming that the Holy Spirit could bring an intense experience of holiness or sanctification into

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156-670: Was a British landscape painter. Collins was from an early age patronised by the aristocracy. At the expense of the Duke of Ancaster, the Marquis of Exeter, and others, he travelled in Italy and studied his art there. On his return to England, he painted scenes for one of the principal theatres in London. He died of an infectious fever at a silversmith's in Henrietta Street, Covent Garden, about 1758 or 1759. He

169-406: Was aged between thirty and forty, and left a wife and two children. The best known of his works are a set of landscape views from Tasso's 'Gerusalemme Liberata.' They are painted in a truly romantic style, and have a fine scenic effect. They were engraved by Paul Sandby , Edward Rooker , P. C. Canot , and others, and published by his widow. [REDACTED]  This article incorporates text from

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