• Bio
  • Summary
  • Transcript
  • Download
Evan H. Hopkins

Evan H. Hopkins (September 16, 1837 – June 4, 1919) was an English preacher and Bible teacher whose ministry shaped the Keswick holiness movement and evangelical Anglicanism over five decades. Born in Santa Ana, New Grenada (now Colombia), to Evan Hopkins, a civil engineer overseeing a silver mine, and an unnamed mother, he moved to England in 1848 and later to Melbourne, Australia, attending the College of Chemistry and Government School of Mines. Initially pursuing science, he converted in 1858 in Dorsetshire, England, under a coastguardsman’s witness, prompting him to study divinity at King’s College, London, where he was ordained a deacon in 1865 and a priest in 1866. Hopkins’ preaching career began as curate in Silvertown, London, followed by 30 years as vicar of Holy Trinity, Richmond (1870–1900), where a 1873 crisis of faith led him to embrace sanctification by faith after hearing Robert Pearsall Smith. His sermons, emphasizing “holiness by faith,” became a cornerstone of the Keswick Convention from 1875 until 1915, drawing thousands with their scriptural depth and practical call to victorious living. Author of The Law of Liberty in the Spiritual Life (1884) and other works, he preached across the British Isles. Married to Isabella Sarah Kitchin in 1870, with whom he had three children—Isabel, Margaret, and Henry—he died at age 81 in Leatherhead, Surrey, England.