Augustine of Hippo was born in the Roman province of Africa (modern-day Tunisia/Algeria) in the year 354. His mother, Monnica, was a devout Christian, but his father Patrick only became a Christian believer at the end of his life (in 370). Early in life, Augustine enrolled as a catechumen (preparing for Christian baptism), but did not go through with it. Aged 17, Augustine began a relationship with a slave girl and they had a child together, Adeonatus. While Augustine was later estranged from his son's mother, he and Adeonatus remained in touch with one another. Moving to cosmopolitan Carthage for his studies, Augustine was caught up in sexual promiscuity, famously praying, "Give me continence and chastity, but not just yet." Straying from his Christian upbringing, he tried various belief systems: the teachings of Cicero, the religion of the Manichees, and later Neo-Platonism. Augustine pursued a career in rhetoric, and accepted a position as lecturer in Milan in 384. ...
The beginnings of what became Ebenezer Baptist Church in Bury go back to Andrew Nuttall (1784-1846) from Haslingden who came to live in Bury and started the "cause" as a branch of West Street Church in Rochdale, and later taken on by the "County Home Mission". In 1844, the Home Mission appointed Joseph Harvey as its missioner, and this led to the church being constituted in 1845 with fifteen members including Joseph Harvey (the founding pastor) and Andrew Nuttall. During Harvey's pastorate, in 1853, the church moved into a permanent building on Knowsley Street (on the site of the present Art Picture House opposite the travel interchange). There may have been another Baptist church building on Spring Street completed in 1852. Sometime around 1853, Joseph Harvey would baptise as a believer Franklin Howorth (d.1882), former minister of Bank Street Unitarian Chapel in Bury. Howorth amicably resigned the ministry at Bank Street and in 1854 started the "Free Ch...