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C.H. Mackintosh

Charles Henry Mackintosh (1820–1896). Born in October 1820 in Glenmalure Barracks, County Wicklow, Ireland, to a Scottish military family, C.H. Mackintosh was a Plymouth Brethren preacher, Bible teacher, and author whose writings shaped evangelical thought. Converted at 18 in 1838 through a letter from his sister and reading John Nelson Darby’s Operations of the Spirit, he briefly attended Trinity College, Dublin, but left to pursue ministry, influenced by Darby’s dispensationalism. By 1843, he was preaching among the Brethren, known for clear, devotional expositions, though he avoided Darby’s exclusivist disputes. Mackintosh worked as a schoolmaster in Westport, Ireland, until 1853, when he dedicated himself fully to itinerant preaching and writing across Ireland and England. His six-volume Notes on the Pentateuch (1862–1880), originally magazine articles, remains his magnum opus, blending typology with practical Christianity, selling widely despite his modest lifestyle. Other works include Miscellaneous Writings and tracts like The All-Sufficiency of Christ, emphasizing grace over law. Under the pseudonym “C.H.M.,” he edited Things New and Old magazine, reaching thousands. Married to Emma Browne in 1843, he had four children and lived simply in Dublin and London, prioritizing gospel work over wealth. Health issues, including asthma, slowed him later, and he died on November 2, 1896, in Cheltenham, England, saying, “The Word of God is the only safe guide for our feet.”