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Sir Robert Anderson

Sir Robert Anderson (1841–1918). Born on May 29, 1841, in Dublin, Ireland, to a Scottish Presbyterian family, Sir Robert Anderson was a lay preacher, theologian, and barrister, not an ordained minister, known for his influential writings on biblical prophecy and apologetics. Raised in a Christian home, he grappled with faith until age 19, when a sermon by Rev. John Hall in 1860 led to his conversion, accepting salvation as God’s unconditional gift. Educated at Trinity College, Dublin (BA, 1862), he was called to the Irish Bar in 1863 and later served as Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police and Chief of Scotland Yard’s Criminal Investigation Department (1888–1901), notably during the Jack the Ripper case. Anderson preached at various evangelical gatherings, including the YMCA and Prophecy Investigation Society, and was loosely tied to the Plymouth Brethren, though he later attended Trinity Presbyterian Church in London due to concerns over unstructured meetings. His books, like The Coming Prince (1895), Daniel in the Critics’ Den (1902), The Silence of God (1897), and Redemption Truths (1903), defended biblical inerrancy and explored Daniel’s prophecies, notably calculating Christ’s entry into Jerusalem to April 6, AD 32. Married to Lady Agnes Moore in 1873, he had five children; their son Arthur wrote his biography. Knighted by Queen Victoria in 1896 and made Knight Commander by King Edward VII in 1901, Anderson died on November 15, 1918, in London, saying, “The Scriptures are God’s voice, and we must hear them clearly.”