Andrew John Jukes (1815– 1901) was an English theologian. He was educated at Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge. He was initially a curate in the Church of England at St. John's Church, Hull, but became convinced of Baptist teaching and underwent adult baptism at the George Street Chapel, Hull, on August 31, 1843. After leaving the Church of England, he joined the Plymouth Brethren.Jukes later left the Plymouth Brethren and founded an independent chapel in Hull. Among those influenced by Jukes was Hudson Taylor.
His works include:
Types in Genesis - Adam, Cain and Abel, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph. The Characteristic Differences of the Four Gospels The Names of God The Law of the Offerings - on Leviticus The Restitution of All Things - arguments for universal salvation after resurrection The Mystery of the Kingdom - typology in Kings I and II. The New Man and the Eternal Life Catholic Eschatology Examined - A Reply to the Rev. H. N. Oxenham The Way Which Some Call Heresy - against infant baptism in the Book of Common Prayer The Church of Christ The Drying up of the Euphrates, and the Kings of the East - against an identification with the Ottoman Empire. Try the Spirits - a defence of the Trinity Letters of Andrew Jukes - edited by Herbert H. Jeaffreson 1903 A Letter to a Friend on Baptism
This book originally published in 1862 has been reformatted for the Kindle and may contain an occasional defect from the original publication or from the reformatting.