Martin Fynch


Martin Fynch or Finch was an English ejected minister.

Life

Martin Fynch of Norfolk was born about 1628. He was admitted pensioner at Trinity College, Cambridge in January 1645/46, where he took B.A. in 1646/47, and was Scholar in 1647. He entered the ministry about 1648. He ministered at Tetney, Lincolnshire from at least 1653, from which his Milk for Babes, his Animadversions and his Manuall of Practicall Divinity were published. He was ejected from the vicarage of Tetney by the uniformity act of 1662.
In 1668 he was in Norwich, where he acted as one of three "heads and teachers" of a congregation of three hundred independents, who met for worship in the house of John Tofts, a grocer, in St. Clement's parish. On the issuing of the indulgence of 1672, Fynch took out a licence to preach in the house of Nicholas Withers, in St. Clement's. He became pastor of the independent congregation in succession to John Cromwell. Their meeting-place was the west granary in St. Andrew's parish. Fynch removed his flock to a brewhouse in St. Edmund's parish, which he fitted up as a meeting-house; and after the passing of the Toleration Act he secured a site in St. Clement's parish, being "part of the Friars' great garden", on which a handsome building was erected, originally known as the "New Meeting", but since 1756 called the "Old Meeting". John Stackhouse was Fynch's colleague from about 1691.
With the presbyterian minister at Norwich, John Collinges, D.D., who died 18 January 1691, Fynch was in close relations, both personal and ecclesiastical. In accordance with the terms of the "happy union", these divines agreed to discard the dividing names "presbyterian" and ‘independent’ and co-operate simply as dissenters. Fynch preached Collinges's funeral sermon, and defended his memory in reply to a pamphlet by Thomas Grantham.
Fynch suffered from failing eyesight, and was a victim to calculus. He died on 13 February 1697, and was buried in the graveyard on the north side of his meeting-house, immediately behind the pulpit. The epitaph on his flat tombstone is the main authority for the dates of his biography. "He was a man of most remarkable seriousness, meekness, prudence, and patience under that most calamitous distemper, the stone , mingled with the greatest zeal to do good to the souls of men; which qualities commanded the veneration of that great assembly, and kept matters in peace there." After his death there was a rupture in his congregation, which lasted for twenty years.

Works

He saw two volumes of the works of Thomas Allen through the press after the author's death :