Baptist Heritage

BENJAMIN KEACH

keach.jpg (3619 bytes)Keach joined a Baptist church early in life, and began to preach at age 18. For the next 10 years, he worked as an evangelist in towns and villages, often being persecuted for his principles as a Baptist and Nonconformist. Upon publication of The Child’s Instructor, he was fined, pilloried, and imprisoned.

In 1668, Keach moved to London and became pastor of a Baptist church which met first in private houses, and later in Horselydown, Southwark. There a large congregation gathered around him, to which he ministered with great acceptance until his death. He was the was the first to introduce singing to Baptist congregations.

Keach’s works include:

bulletThe Child’s Instructor; or, a New and Easy Primer, 1664
bulletExpositions of the Parables in the Bible, 1671
bulletWar with the Powers of Darkness, 1676
bulletTropologia, a Key to Open Scripture Metaphors, 1682
bulletDistressed Sion Relieved, or the Garment of Praise for the Spirit of Heaviness (London: 1689)
bulletThe Breach Repaired in God’s Worship; or Singing of Psalms, Hymns & Spiritual Songs Proved to be a Holy Ordinance of Jesus Christ (London: J. Hancock, 1691)
bulletSpiritual Melody, 1691
bulletA Feast of Fat Things: Containing Several Scripture Songs and Hymns, 1696
bulletSpiritual Songs: Being the Marrow of the Scripture (London: John Marshal, 1700)