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Robert Govett

Robert Govett (1813–1901). Born on February 14, 1813, in Staines, Middlesex, England, to Robert Govett Sr., an Anglican vicar, and Sarah Romaine, Robert Govett was a British theologian and independent pastor of Surrey Chapel, Norwich. Converted in his youth, he studied at Worcester College, Oxford (BA 1834, MA 1837), becoming a fellow in 1836. Ordained in 1837, he served as curate in Bexley, Kent, and St. Stephen’s, Norwich, but resigned in 1844, rejecting infant baptism after his own immersion baptism at St. Mary’s Baptist Chapel. Opening Surrey Chapel in 1854, he preached to about 200 members until his death, emphasizing eschatology and a partial rapture. Govett authored over 30 works, including The Apocalypse: Expounded by Scripture (1861–1865, as “Matheethees”) and Earth’s Earliest Ages (1876), praised by Charles Spurgeon, who said, “Mr. Govett wrote a hundred years before his time, and the day will come when his works will be treasured as sifted gold.” Unmarried, he died on February 20, 1901, in Norwich, saying, “The Scriptures alone reveal God’s truth.”