Nichols 1824, p. 525. Joseph Mede was a pious Arminian of the good old practical school : his humble and unobtrusive conduct on this occasion is a fine trait in his character, and affords a fair specimen of the gentleness and long-suffering of the private ministers of the Arminian persuasion during that period, of whom there were great numbers whose duty did not call them into the ranks of public defenders of the benign doctrines of General Redemption, [...] Nichols, James (1824). Calvinism and Arminianism Compared in their Principles and Tendency. Vol. 2. London: Longman.
Newton developed a method for the interpretation of prophecy based on the writings of the early seventeenth-century Cambridge divine, Joseph Mede. Mede's views were widely accepted and the scheme that Newton propounded to bring consistency to the unravelling of prophetic symbolism was not in itself controversial.(PDF)Archived 6 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
Jue, Jeffrey K., ed. (2006), "Biography", Heaven upon earth, INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF THE HISTORY OF IDEAS, vol. 194, Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, pp. 7–16, doi:10.1007/1-4020-4293-0_2, ISBN978-1-4020-4293-5, retrieved 12 October 2023{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
Newton developed a method for the interpretation of prophecy based on the writings of the early seventeenth-century Cambridge divine, Joseph Mede. Mede's views were widely accepted and the scheme that Newton propounded to bring consistency to the unravelling of prophetic symbolism was not in itself controversial.(PDF)Archived 6 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine