Brightman, Thomas
BRIGHTMAN, THOMAS: Puritan and Presbyterian;
b. at Nottingham 1562; d. at Hawnes (5 m.
s. by e. of Bedford) Aug. 24, 1607. He studied
at Queen's College, Cambridge (B.A., 1581; M.A.,
1584; B.D., 1591), became a fellow there in 1584,
and rector of Hawnes in 1592. He was one of
the fathers of Presbyterianism in England; as
Thomas Cartwright says, "The bright star in
the Church of God." He subscribed the Presbyterian
Books of Discipline. He was a famous
expositor of Revelation (Apocalypsis Apocalypseos,
Frankfort, 1609, Heidelberg, 1612, Eng.
transl., A revelation of the Revelation, Amsterdam,
1615, Leyden, 1616) and of Daniel from xi. 36 to
end of xii. (Basel, 1614, which edition has notes on
Canticles; Eng. transl., London, 1644). He opened
up a new path in the exposition of the Apocalypse
by making two distinct millenniums: the
first, from Constantine until 1300, in this corresponding
with the common orthodox view; the
second, from 1300 to 2300, which was a new departure,
by which he was enabled to find a place
for the future conversion of the Jews, and a more
glorious condition of the Church on earth, which
he gains by a symbolical interpretation of Rev
xxi. and xxii. His views greatly modified the
Puritan interpretation of the Apocalypse, and
were expounded by different writers and reproduced
in different forms long after his death. His
collected works appeared London, 1644.