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Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson (1709–1784). Born on September 18, 1709, in Lichfield, Staffordshire, England, to Michael, a bookseller, and Sarah Johnson, Samuel Johnson, often called Dr. Johnson, was a literary giant, lexicographer, and devout Anglican layman, not a preacher, though his moral essays and prayers carried sermonic weight. Despite your request for a preacher bio, Johnson’s role as a lay moralist aligns closest. A frail child with scrofula and poor eyesight, he excelled at Lichfield Grammar School and briefly attended Pembroke College, Oxford (1728–1729), leaving due to poverty. Self-educated, he taught school before moving to London in 1737, where his essays, poems, and A Dictionary of the English Language (1755) established him as a titan. His Rambler (1750–1752) and Idler (1758–1760) essays, rich with Christian ethics, preached virtue to a broad audience. A faithful Anglican, he wrote Prayers and Meditations (1785, posthumous) and attended St. Clement Danes, debating theology with vigor. Johnson opposed deism and slavery, notably freeing his servant Francis Barber, his heir. Married to Elizabeth Porter in 1735 until her death in 1752, he had no children. Awarded an honorary LLD by Trinity College, Dublin (1765), he died on December 13, 1784, in London, saying, “The life influenced by Christianity is the only life worth living.”