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Elijah Goodwin

Elijah Goodwin (January 16, 1807 – September 3, 1879) was an American preacher and writer whose ministry helped shape the early Restoration Movement, advocating for a return to New Testament Christianity. Born in Champaign County, Ohio, to Aaron Goodwin and Mary Chapman, he moved with his family at age three to the Illinois Territory, settling in the American Bottom near St. Louis, before relocating to Gibson County, Indiana, in 1813 due to harsh conditions. Raised in a Methodist household by devout parents and grandparents, he received limited formal education but taught himself Greek to study Scripture, becoming a self-educated minister. Goodwin’s preaching career began after his conversion in 1828 under the influence of “Christian” preachers in Daviess County, Indiana, rejecting Methodist traditions for a simpler, Bible-based faith. Ordained around 1830, he became a prominent evangelist in Indiana, preaching across the state and later serving as pastor of the Central Christian Church in Indianapolis from 1865 until his death. Known for sermons emphasizing salvation by grace through faith and obedience, he co-edited The Christian Record from 1843 to 1860, amplifying his call to restore primitive Christianity. Married to Eliza Timberlake in 1830, with whom he had several children, Goodwin died at age 72 in Indianapolis, Indiana, leaving a legacy as a pioneer of the Restoration Movement’s spread in the Midwest.