CYCLOPEDIA of BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL and ECCLESIASTICAL LITERATURE Carentius- Chapin, Asahel by James Strong & John Mcclintock
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THE AGES DIGITAL LIBRARY REFERENCE CYCLOPEDIA of BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL and ECCLESIASTICAL LITERATURE Carentius- Chapin, Asahel by James Strong & John McClintock To the Students of the Words, Works and Ways of God: Welcome to the AGES Digital Library. We trust your experience with this and other volumes in the Library fulfills our motto and vision which is our commitment to you: MAKING THE WORDS OF THE WISE AVAILABLE TO ALL — INEXPENSIVELY. AGES Software Rio, WI USA Version 1.0 © 2000 2 Carentius (or Corentinus), in early Christian history, was, (1) bishop of Cornouailles, Brittany; commemorated May 1. (2) Saint, bishop, and confessor, mentioned in the Auctaria to Usuard, Patrolog. Lat. 123, May 18. It is uncertain whether or not he is the same with St. Corentinus. He is commemorated May 18. Carentocus SEE CAIRNECH (3). Carera (Lat. Carrerius, Or Cuprerius), Alessandro a jurisconsult of Padua, was born in 1543, and died Aug. 20,1626, leaving, among several treatises, one De Potestate Pontif. Rom. (Padua, 1599); and another De Somnus, etc. (ibid. 1575). —Landon, Eccles. Dict. s.v.; Jocher, Allgemeines Gelehrten-Lexikon, s.v. Carey, Alice and Phoebe SEE CARY. Carey, Arthur a minister of the Protestant Episcopal Church, was born near London, England, June 26, 1822. When he was eight years of age his family removed to New York City. In 1836 he joined the sophomore class of Columbia College, and graduated in 1839. In October of that year he entered the General Theological Seminary, N.Y., and graduated in 1842. He was admitted to the order of deacon, July 2,1843. His ordination proceeded, however, under protest, as two of his examiners declared their conviction that he held views radically at variance with Protestantism. The ordination was subsequently the source of earnest debate, and called forth a large number of pamphlets. In September of the same year he was invited to become assistant pastor of the Church of the Annunciation, New York city, which he subsequently accepted. In December he was attacked by a violent fever; when he had somewhat recovered, he embarked with his father for Cuba, March 23, 1844, but died on shipboard, near Havana, April 4, following. See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, v, 799. 3 Carey, Charles Stokes an English Congregational minister, was born in London, Sept. 17,1828. He was religiously disposed from childhood, joined the Church in 1845, entered Hackney College in 1849 to prepare for the ministry, and was ordained at Bassingbourne in 1853, where he remained three years. He afterwards preached successively at Harwich, Bungay, and Leytonstone, and died at the last-named place, June 8,1875. Mr. Carey was an able, forcible, fluent, and thoroughly evangelical preacher. His sermons were well thought out, his extensive reading and retentive memory gave him much facility and illustration, and he always preached without notes. See (Lond.) Cong. Year-book, 1876, p. 322. Carey, Eustace an English Baptist, nephew of the Rev. Dr. William Carey, was born at Paulerspury, Northamptonshire, March 22, 1791, and baptized by Dr. Ryland. He studied at Bristol College, and, having offered himself for service in Baptist missions, was ordained in January, 1814, after which he sailed to India, and, with two others, founded the Calcutta mission as distinguished from the Serampore mission. His health failing, he returned to England in 1825, and was employed as the traveling agent of the Baptist Missionary Society. His chief literary work is the Life of his uncle, Dr. Carey. He died in London, July 19,1855. Carey, Joel a German Reformed minister, was born June 1, 1814. His name first occurs in the minutes of the synod of Ohio as a licentiate of the Maumee classis. He was ordained in 1848, and labored-as a missionary in Napoleon, O., up to the time of his death, Sept. 21, 1849. See Harbaugh, Fathers of the Germ. Ref. Church, 4:494. Carey, John an Irish Methodist preacher, was born at Faughart, near Dundalk, in 1784. He was converted at fifteen, joined the Methodists, entered the ministry of the Irish Conference in 1809, and for forty-five years labored as a preacher of the Gospel with acceptance and success, when failing health led him to become a supernumerary in 1854. He continued to toil as he had strength, 4 and died at Droghleda, March 2, 1874. See Minutes of the British Conference, 1874, p. 27. Carey, Robert E. a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church South, was born at Lagrange, Franklin Co.. Ala., February, 1846. He joined the Church in 1864, and in 1865 united with the Montgomery Conference. From that time to the close of his life, April 14, 1872, he filled the various appointments assigned him with, zeal, efficiency, and success. See Minutes of Annual Conferences of the M. E. Church South, 1872, p. 689. Carey, Samuel a Unitarian minister, was born .at Newburyport, Mass., Nov. 24, 1785. He graduated at Harvard College in 1804, studied divinity at Cambridge for three years, and was invited to preach on probation in King’s Chapel, Boston, in November, 1808. He afterwards received a call, and, having accepted, was ordained and installed Jan. 1, 1809. Here he labored for six years, and died in 1815. He published a number of Discourses. See Sprague, Annals of the Amer. Pulpit, 8, 424. Carey, Walker a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church South, was born in the Cherokee Nation, May, 1814. He was brought up in absolute ignorance, becoming a full-grown man without knowing how to read a word in any language, or understanding anything about Christianity. At the age of twenty-five, through the instrumentality of a fellow-Cherokee, he was brought to Christ. He was immediately employed by missionaries as an interpreter. His power in the pulpit was soon felt, and he was licensed to preach, aid’ in 1846 received into the Indian Mission Conference. By close application he soon learned to read the Bible, and in a few years became ‘an able minister of the Gospel. He traveled nearly all the circuits in the Cherokee Nation, and some of them several times. He died March 15, 1869. Mr. Carey was earnest and laborious, social and influential, deeply pious and very successful. See Minutes of Annual Conferences of the ‘.1. E. Church South, 1869, p. 375. 5 Carfrae, Patrick, D.D. a Scotch clergyman of Carniehaugh, was licensed to preach in 1765, presented to the living at Morham in 1766, and transferred to Dunbar in 1795. He resigned in 1820, retired to Bowerhouses, and died there, March 4, 1822, aged eighty Rears. He was known as one of the most eloquent and accomplished preachers of his day, and in his later years, because he took to reading his sermons, he was designated “Paper Pate.” His publications were, A Letter to Scotia’s Bard, which elicited a reply (Burns, Works, vol. 2): — Account of Morham. See Fasti Eccles. Scoticanae 1, 341, 369-70. Cargill, David, A.M. an English Wesleyan missionary, was converted under the Methodist ministry while pursuing his studies at the University of Aberdeen. In 1832 he was sent as a missionary to the Friendly Islands. In 1835 he and Mr. Cross commenced the Christianization of the Fiji cannibals of Laguemba. After a visit to England, Cargill was reappointed to the Friendly group with a special view to employing his learning for the translation of the Scriptures into the native tongue. Expectations were blasted, however, by his sudden death, at Vavao, April 24, 1843, only five months after his brave coadjutor, Cross, had laid down his weary life on a neighboring island. Cargill wrote a Life of his wife, Margaret, with Notices of the Progress of Christianity in Tonga and Fiji (Lond. 1853, 12mo). See Minutes of the British Conference, 1844; Newcombe, Cyclop. of Miss. 1854, p. 721; Missions in Tonga and Fiji, etc. SEE CROSS, WILLIAM. Cargill, James Harvey a Methodist Episcopal minister, was born at Jackson, Susquehanna Co., Pa., in May, 1828. He was converted in 1839, began exhorting at the age of nineteen, graduated at Wyoming Seminary, and in 1852 was admitted into the Wyoming Conference, wherein he labored with distinguished ability and large success till his sudden death, July 4,1855. Mr. Cargill was a young man of great promise in the ministry. See Minutes of Annual Conferences, 1855, p. 579. 6 Cargill, Thomas, A.M. a Scotch clergyman, took his degree at King’s College, Aberdeen, in 1610, was admitted to the living at Caterline in 1623, continued in November, 1662, and died before Sept. 4, 1678. See Fasti Eccles. Scoticanae, 3, 877. Cargillites is a name sometimes given to the Covenanters (q.v.) of Scotland, from Mr. Donald Cargill, one of their leading ministers. Cariani, Giovanni an Italian historical and portrait painter of great merit, was born at Bergamo, according to some authorities about 1510, but there are pictures by him dated 1514 and 1519. In the church of San Gottardo at Bergamo is his celebrated painting representing the Virgin and Infant in the Clouds. See Spooner, Biog. Hist. of the Fine Arts, s.v.; Rose, General Biog. Dict. s.v. Cariatto SEE CHARIATHO. Caribert SEE CHARIBERT. Carilefus (Calais, Or Cales), Saint was born of noble parents in the territory of Auvergne, and entered a monastery at Miscy, then under St. Maximinus. Not long after he went into retirement at Le Mans, and still later, obtaining from Childebert some land, he built thereon the monastery of St. Calais du Desert. He probably lived between 517 and 542. His remains were removed in 1171 and 1653. His day is July 21.