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Thomas M'Crie the Elder

Thomas M'Crie (sometimes known as Thomas McCree or Maccrae) (November 1772 – 5 August 1835) was a Scottish biographer and ecclesiastical historian, writer, and preacher born in the town of Duns, and educated at the University of Edinburgh. He became the leading minister of the Original Secession Church (Auld Licht Anti-Burgher). His work: "Life of Knox" (1813) was a means of vindicating the Scottish reformer John Knox who was a unpopular figure at the time. It was followed by a "Life of Andrew Melville" (1819). Melville was Knox's successor as the leader of the Reformers in Scotland. M'Crie also published histories of the Reformation in Italy and Spain. He received an honorary degree of D.D. in 1813, the first Secession minister to receive such an award.[1]

Thomas McCrie
BornNovember 1772
Died5 August 1835 (aged 62)
NationalityScottish
EducationUniversity of Edinburgh
Occupation(s)Pastor, Theologian
Theological work
Tradition or movement(1) Anti-Burgher
(2) Auld Light
(3) United Original Secession Church
Main interestsEcclesiology, Church History

Early life and education edit

Thomas M'Crie (called the Elder to avoid confusion with his son "the Younger") was a Scottish seceding divine and ecclesiastical historian. He, (the Elder) was himself the eldest son of Thomas McCrie, a substantial linen-weaver, by his first wife Mary (Hood), was born at Duns, Berwickshire, in November 1772. After passing through the parish school, he became an elementary teacher in neighbouring schools. In 1788 he entered at the Edinburgh University, but did not graduate.[2] He became, in May 1791, teacher of an Anti-burgher school at Brechin, Forfarshire. To qualify himself for the ministry, he studied divinity under Archibald Bruce of Whitburn, Linlithgowshire, professor of theology to the General Associate Synod (anti-burgher). He was licensed in September 1795 by the Associate Presbytery of Kelso, and ordained on 26 May 1796 as minister of the second associate congregation in Potterrow, Edinburgh. He early showed both literary and controversial ability.[3]

New testimony controversy edit

Since 1747, when the General Associate Synod seceded from the Associate Synod on the ground of the unlawfulness of the civic oath [see literature about Ebenezer Erskine and Adam Gib], changes had come over the minds of the Anti-burghers on the question of the mutual relations of civil and ecclesiastical authority. From the position that the civil power is to exercise itself in church matters under the guidance of ecclesiastical criticism, they had advanced to a view of the complete independence of church and state, and consequent denial of any place for civil authority in church affairs. This change of front was signalized by a 'new testimony,' adopted by the synod in May 1804. Bruce, McCrie, and two other ministers made repeated protests against this 'new testimony' as at variance with the older standards. At length, on 28 August 1806, they formed themselves into a "Constitutional Associate Presbytery". The synod deposed them (McCrie on 2 September) from the ministry. A lawsuit resulted (24 February 1809) in McCrie's ejection from the Potterrow meeting-house, when his congregation built a new one in Davie Street, out of West Richmond Street in Edinburgh. In 1827 the "Constitutional" body, joined by protesting members of the Burgher Synod, took the name of Original Seceders.[3]

Church historian edit

McCrie was drawn by this conflict about the first principles of ecclesiastical theory to a thorough and searching study of Scottish church history, in its organic connection with the national life, and with the general development of protestant civilisation. The first fruit of his labour was the life of Knox, finished in November 1811, Its breadth of treatment was something new in ecclesiastical biography. It effected a revolution in the public estimate of its subject, akin to that achieved by Carlyle's 'Cromwell,' though by different means. His biography of Melville (November 1819) pursues the theme of the Scottish national career under the influence of the Reformation. The post-Reformation church history of Scotland he did not treat with the same fulness: his life of Alexander Henderson, in the 'Christian Instructor,' vol. x., is little more than a personal sketch. Later he broke new ground in his histories of the Italian (1827) and Spanish (1829) movements of evangelical and free opinion at the era of the Reformation; which nothing is more admirable than the fairness of his dealing with schools of thought very different from his own. It is to be lamented that he did not live to execute a projected life of Calvin. 'His literary genius,' says Professor Lorimer, "was neither wholly historical nor wholly biographical, but found congenial employment in biographical history or historical biography, buying equal delight in the personal traits and minute facts appropriate to the one, and in the broad views and profound principles characteristic of the other. It is not often that biographers make good historians, or that historians are equally great in biography, but be was equally great in both" (Imperial Dict. of Biog. pt. xiii. p. 265[4]).[3]

Divinity professor edit

On 3 February 1813 the Edinburgh University made him D.D., a degree often conferred on English nonconformists, but never before on a Scottish dissenter. After the death of Bruce, in 1816, McCrie acted till 1818 as his successor in the chair of divinity. Coincident with his entrance on this office, he published in the 'Christian Instructor' (January-March 1817) a powerful critique on Sir Walter Scott's representations of the covenanters (in Old Mortality), in which he proved himself a better antiquary than the great novelist (Scott, Journal, ii. 404 n.). Subsequently he published, either separately in magazines, a number of biographies and reviews of biographies, chiefly Scottish.[3]

Death and burial edit

McCrie died in Edinburgh on 5 August 1835, and was buried on 12 August, in Greyfriars' churchyard; a deputation from the general assembly of the church of Scotland attended the funeral.[3]

Denominational affiliations edit

McCrie's career illustrates the history of various denominations within the secession 'family'.

1. He was ordained in 1796 as a minister of the Anti-Burgher Secession Synod.

2. He was one of the 'Old Lights' who left the Anti-Burgher Secession Synod in 1806 to form the "Constitutional Associate Presbytery".

3. In 1827 the 'Old Light' Anti-Burgher Constitutional Associate Presbytery united with the 'Synod of Protesters' (which had left the New Licht' Anti-Burgher Synod in 1820-1) to form the 'Associate Synod of Original Seceders', also known as the Original Secession Church. McCrie remained a minister of this denomination until his death in 1835.

Family edit

M'crie married twice, in 1796, he married Janet, daughter of William Dickson of Swinton, Berwickshire, by whom he had:

  • (1) Thomas M'Crie {called the Younger}
  • (2) William M'Crie, merchant in Edinburgh
  • (3) Jessie M'Crie, married to Archibald Meikle of Flemington
  • (4) John M'Crie, died October 1837
  • (5) George M'Crie (1811–1878), minister of Clola, Aberdeenshire, poet, and author of The Religion of Our Literature (1875).

He married for a second time in 1827 to Mary, fourth daughter of Robert Chalmers, minister at Haddington, who survived him and received a pension from government on the ground of her husband's services to literature.[3]

Works edit

The chief of them was an Account of the concluding part of the Life and the Death of that illustrious man, John Knox, the most faithful Restorer of the Church of Scotland, being a translation from the work of Principal Smeton. It also included a Memoir of Mr. John Murray, minister of Leith and Dunfermline, in the beginning of the 17th century; a Sketch of the Progress of the Reformation in Spain, with an account of the Spanish Protestant Martyrs; The Suppression of the Reformation in Spain; the Life of Dr. Andrew Rivet, the French Protestant minister; the Life of Patrick Hamilton; the Life of Francis Lambert, of Avignon; and the Life of Alexander Henderson.

The journal in which they appeared was of limited circulation, and its literary merits were little appreciated so that these admirable articles were scarcely known beyond the small circle of subscribers to the Christian Magazine, most of whom were Seceders.

  • The Duty of Christian Societies towards each other, in relation to the Measures for Propagating the Gospel, which at present engage the attention of the Religious World; a Sermon, preached in the meeting-house, Potter Row, on occasion of a Collection for promoting a Mission to Kentucky. 1797.
  • Statement of the Difference between the Profession of the Reformed Church of Scotland as adopted by Seceders, and the Profession contained in the New Testimony and other Acts lately adopted by the General Associate Synod; particularly on the Power of Civil Magistrates respecting Religion, National Reformation, National Churches, and National Covenants. Edinburgh, 1807.
  • Letters on the late Catholic Bill, and the Discussions to which it has given rise. Addressed to British Protestants, and chiefly Presbyterians in Scotland. By a Scots Presbyterian. Edinburgh, 1807.
  • Free Thoughts on the late Religious Celebration of the Funeral of her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte of Wales; and on the Discussion to which it has given rise in Edinburgh. By Scoto Britannus. 1817.
  • Two Discourses on the Unity of the Church, her Divisions, and their Removal. Edinburgh, 1821.
  • Sermons (posthumous volume). Edinburgh, 1836.
  • Lectures on the Book of Esther (posthumous), Edinburgh, 1838.[5]

References edit

Citations
Sources
  • Anderson, William (1877). "M'Crie, Thomas". The Scottish nation: or, The surnames, families, literature, honours, and biographical history of the people of Scotland. Vol. 2. A. Fullarton & co. pp. 711-712.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Chambers, Robert (1870). Thomson, Thomas (ed.). A biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen. London : Blackie and son. pp. 4-11.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "M'Crie, Thomas". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 206–207.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Cousin, John William (1910), "M'Crie, Thomas", A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature, London: J. M. Dent & Sons – via Wikisource  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Gordon, Alexander (1893). "McCrie, Thomas (1772-1835)". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 35. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 12–14.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Kirk, James (2004). "McCrie, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17406. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • M'Crie, Thomas (The Younger) (1842). The life of Thomas M'Crie, D.D. : author of "Life of John Knox," "Life of Melville," etc., etc. Philadelphia : William S. Young.
  • M'Crie, Thomas (The Elder) (1855a). M'Crie, Thomas (The Younger) (ed.). The works of Thomas M'Crie, D.D. Vol. 1 (new ed.). Edinburgh: W. Blackwood.
  • M'Crie, Thomas (The Elder) (1855b). M'Crie, Thomas (The Younger) (ed.). The works of Thomas M'Crie, D.D. Vol. 2 (new ed.). Edinburgh: W. Blackwood.
  • M'Crie, Thomas (The Elder) (1855c). M'Crie, Thomas (The Younger) (ed.). The works of Thomas M'Crie, D.D. Vol. 3 (new ed.). Edinburgh: W. Blackwood.
  • M'Crie, Thomas (The Elder) (1855d). M'Crie, Thomas (The Younger) (ed.). The works of Thomas M'Crie, D.D. Vol. 4 (new ed.). Edinburgh: W. Blackwood.
  • McKerrow, John (1839a). History of the Secession Church. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: William Oliphant and Son.
  • McKerrow, John (1839b). History of the Secession Church. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: William Oliphant and Son.
  • Miller, Hugh (1874). My schools and schoolmasters, or, The story of my education (23 ed.). Edinburgh : W.P. Nimmo.
  • Scott, David (1886). Annals and statistics of the original Secession church: till its disruption and union with the Free church of Scotland in 1852. Edinburgh : A. Elliot.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Small, Robert (1904a). History of the congregations of the United Presbyterian Church, from 1733 to 1900. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: David M. Small.
  • Small, Robert (1904b). History of the congregations of the United Presbyterian Church, from 1733 to 1900. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: David M. Small.
  • Thomson, Andrew; Struthers, Gavin (1858). Historical sketch of the origin of the Secession Church and the History of the rise of the Relief Church. Edinburgh and London: A. Fullerton and Co.
  • Waller, John Francis; Eadie, John (1876). Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography (PDF). Glasgow: W. Mackenzie. p. 262.

External links edit

Academic offices
Preceded by Professor of Theology of the
'Old Light' Anti-Burgher Secession Church
in Scotland

1816-1818
Vacant
Title next held by
George Paxton as Professor of Theology
of the Original Secession Church
in Scotland

thomas, crie, elder, eldest, same, name, thomas, crie, younger, thomas, crie, sometimes, known, thomas, mccree, maccrae, november, 1772, august, 1835, scottish, biographer, ecclesiastical, historian, writer, preacher, born, town, duns, educated, university, ed. For his eldest son of the same name see Thomas M Crie the Younger Thomas M Crie sometimes known as Thomas McCree or Maccrae November 1772 5 August 1835 was a Scottish biographer and ecclesiastical historian writer and preacher born in the town of Duns and educated at the University of Edinburgh He became the leading minister of the Original Secession Church Auld Licht Anti Burgher His work Life of Knox 1813 was a means of vindicating the Scottish reformer John Knox who was a unpopular figure at the time It was followed by a Life of Andrew Melville 1819 Melville was Knox s successor as the leader of the Reformers in Scotland M Crie also published histories of the Reformation in Italy and Spain He received an honorary degree of D D in 1813 the first Secession minister to receive such an award 1 Thomas McCrieBornNovember 1772DunsDied5 August 1835 aged 62 NationalityScottishEducationUniversity of EdinburghOccupation s Pastor TheologianTheological workTradition or movement 1 Anti Burgher 2 Auld Light 3 United Original Secession ChurchMain interestsEcclesiology Church History Contents 1 Early life and education 2 New testimony controversy 3 Church historian 4 Divinity professor 5 Death and burial 6 Denominational affiliations 7 Family 8 Works 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editThomas M Crie called the Elder to avoid confusion with his son the Younger was a Scottish seceding divine and ecclesiastical historian He the Elder was himself the eldest son of Thomas McCrie a substantial linen weaver by his first wife Mary Hood was born at Duns Berwickshire in November 1772 After passing through the parish school he became an elementary teacher in neighbouring schools In 1788 he entered at the Edinburgh University but did not graduate 2 He became in May 1791 teacher of an Anti burgher school at Brechin Forfarshire To qualify himself for the ministry he studied divinity under Archibald Bruce of Whitburn Linlithgowshire professor of theology to the General Associate Synod anti burgher He was licensed in September 1795 by the Associate Presbytery of Kelso and ordained on 26 May 1796 as minister of the second associate congregation in Potterrow Edinburgh He early showed both literary and controversial ability 3 New testimony controversy editSince 1747 when the General Associate Synod seceded from the Associate Synod on the ground of the unlawfulness of the civic oath see literature about Ebenezer Erskine and Adam Gib changes had come over the minds of the Anti burghers on the question of the mutual relations of civil and ecclesiastical authority From the position that the civil power is to exercise itself in church matters under the guidance of ecclesiastical criticism they had advanced to a view of the complete independence of church and state and consequent denial of any place for civil authority in church affairs This change of front was signalized by a new testimony adopted by the synod in May 1804 Bruce McCrie and two other ministers made repeated protests against this new testimony as at variance with the older standards At length on 28 August 1806 they formed themselves into a Constitutional Associate Presbytery The synod deposed them McCrie on 2 September from the ministry A lawsuit resulted 24 February 1809 in McCrie s ejection from the Potterrow meeting house when his congregation built a new one in Davie Street out of West Richmond Street in Edinburgh In 1827 the Constitutional body joined by protesting members of the Burgher Synod took the name of Original Seceders 3 Church historian editMcCrie was drawn by this conflict about the first principles of ecclesiastical theory to a thorough and searching study of Scottish church history in its organic connection with the national life and with the general development of protestant civilisation The first fruit of his labour was the life of Knox finished in November 1811 Its breadth of treatment was something new in ecclesiastical biography It effected a revolution in the public estimate of its subject akin to that achieved by Carlyle s Cromwell though by different means His biography of Melville November 1819 pursues the theme of the Scottish national career under the influence of the Reformation The post Reformation church history of Scotland he did not treat with the same fulness his life of Alexander Henderson in the Christian Instructor vol x is little more than a personal sketch Later he broke new ground in his histories of the Italian 1827 and Spanish 1829 movements of evangelical and free opinion at the era of the Reformation which nothing is more admirable than the fairness of his dealing with schools of thought very different from his own It is to be lamented that he did not live to execute a projected life of Calvin His literary genius says Professor Lorimer was neither wholly historical nor wholly biographical but found congenial employment in biographical history or historical biography buying equal delight in the personal traits and minute facts appropriate to the one and in the broad views and profound principles characteristic of the other It is not often that biographers make good historians or that historians are equally great in biography but be was equally great in both Imperial Dict of Biog pt xiii p 265 4 3 Divinity professor editOn 3 February 1813 the Edinburgh University made him D D a degree often conferred on English nonconformists but never before on a Scottish dissenter After the death of Bruce in 1816 McCrie acted till 1818 as his successor in the chair of divinity Coincident with his entrance on this office he published in the Christian Instructor January March 1817 a powerful critique on Sir Walter Scott s representations of the covenanters in Old Mortality in which he proved himself a better antiquary than the great novelist Scott Journal ii 404 n Subsequently he published either separately in magazines a number of biographies and reviews of biographies chiefly Scottish 3 Death and burial editMcCrie died in Edinburgh on 5 August 1835 and was buried on 12 August in Greyfriars churchyard a deputation from the general assembly of the church of Scotland attended the funeral 3 Denominational affiliations editMcCrie s career illustrates the history of various denominations within the secession family 1 He was ordained in 1796 as a minister of the Anti Burgher Secession Synod 2 He was one of the Old Lights who left the Anti Burgher Secession Synod in 1806 to form the Constitutional Associate Presbytery 3 In 1827 the Old Light Anti Burgher Constitutional Associate Presbytery united with the Synod of Protesters which had left the New Licht Anti Burgher Synod in 1820 1 to form the Associate Synod of Original Seceders also known as the Original Secession Church McCrie remained a minister of this denomination until his death in 1835 Family editM crie married twice in 1796 he married Janet daughter of William Dickson of Swinton Berwickshire by whom he had 1 Thomas M Crie called the Younger 2 William M Crie merchant in Edinburgh 3 Jessie M Crie married to Archibald Meikle of Flemington 4 John M Crie died October 1837 5 George M Crie 1811 1878 minister of Clola Aberdeenshire poet and author of The Religion of Our Literature 1875 He married for a second time in 1827 to Mary fourth daughter of Robert Chalmers minister at Haddington who survived him and received a pension from government on the ground of her husband s services to literature 3 Works editThe chief of them was an Account of the concluding part of the Life and the Death of that illustrious man John Knox the most faithful Restorer of the Church of Scotland being a translation from the work of Principal Smeton It also included a Memoir of Mr John Murray minister of Leith and Dunfermline in the beginning of the 17th century a Sketch of the Progress of the Reformation in Spain with an account of the Spanish Protestant Martyrs The Suppression of the Reformation in Spain the Life of Dr Andrew Rivet the French Protestant minister the Life of Patrick Hamilton the Life of Francis Lambert of Avignon and the Life of Alexander Henderson The journal in which they appeared was of limited circulation and its literary merits were little appreciated so that these admirable articles were scarcely known beyond the small circle of subscribers to the Christian Magazine most of whom were Seceders The Duty of Christian Societies towards each other in relation to the Measures for Propagating the Gospel which at present engage the attention of the Religious World a Sermon preached in the meeting house Potter Row on occasion of a Collection for promoting a Mission to Kentucky 1797 Statement of the Difference between the Profession of the Reformed Church of Scotland as adopted by Seceders and the Profession contained in the New Testimony and other Acts lately adopted by the General Associate Synod particularly on the Power of Civil Magistrates respecting Religion National Reformation National Churches and National Covenants Edinburgh 1807 Letters on the late Catholic Bill and the Discussions to which it has given rise Addressed to British Protestants and chiefly Presbyterians in Scotland By a Scots Presbyterian Edinburgh 1807 Free Thoughts on the late Religious Celebration of the Funeral of her Royal Highness the Princess Charlotte of Wales and on the Discussion to which it has given rise in Edinburgh By Scoto Britannus 1817 Two Discourses on the Unity of the Church her Divisions and their Removal Edinburgh 1821 Sermons posthumous volume Edinburgh 1836 Lectures on the Book of Esther posthumous Edinburgh 1838 5 References editCitations Cousin 1910 Kirk 2004 a b c d e f Gordon 1893 Waller amp Eadie 1876 Anderson 1877 Sources Anderson William 1877 M Crie Thomas The Scottish nation or The surnames families literature honours and biographical history of the people of Scotland Vol 2 A Fullarton amp co pp 711 712 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Chambers Robert 1870 Thomson Thomas ed A biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen London Blackie and son pp 4 11 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 M Crie Thomas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 206 207 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Cousin John William 1910 M Crie Thomas A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature London J M Dent amp Sons via Wikisource nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Gordon Alexander 1893 McCrie Thomas 1772 1835 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 35 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 12 14 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Kirk James 2004 McCrie Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 17406 Subscription or UK public library membership required M Crie Thomas The Younger 1842 The life of Thomas M Crie D D author of Life of John Knox Life of Melville etc etc Philadelphia William S Young M Crie Thomas The Elder 1855a M Crie Thomas The Younger ed The works of Thomas M Crie D D Vol 1 new ed Edinburgh W Blackwood M Crie Thomas The Elder 1855b M Crie Thomas The Younger ed The works of Thomas M Crie D D Vol 2 new ed Edinburgh W Blackwood M Crie Thomas The Elder 1855c M Crie Thomas The Younger ed The works of Thomas M Crie D D Vol 3 new ed Edinburgh W Blackwood M Crie Thomas The Elder 1855d M Crie Thomas The Younger ed The works of Thomas M Crie D D Vol 4 new ed Edinburgh W Blackwood McKerrow John 1839a History of the Secession Church Vol 1 Edinburgh William Oliphant and Son McKerrow John 1839b History of the Secession Church Vol 2 Edinburgh William Oliphant and Son Miller Hugh 1874 My schools and schoolmasters or The story of my education 23 ed Edinburgh W P Nimmo Scott David 1886 Annals and statistics of the original Secession church till its disruption and union with the Free church of Scotland in 1852 Edinburgh A Elliot nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Small Robert 1904a History of the congregations of the United Presbyterian Church from 1733 to 1900 Vol 1 Edinburgh David M Small Small Robert 1904b History of the congregations of the United Presbyterian Church from 1733 to 1900 Vol 2 Edinburgh David M Small Thomson Andrew Struthers Gavin 1858 Historical sketch of the origin of the Secession Church and the History of the rise of the Relief Church Edinburgh and London A Fullerton and Co Waller John Francis Eadie John 1876 Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography PDF Glasgow W Mackenzie p 262 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Thomas M Crie Works by Thomas M Crie the Elder at Project Gutenberg Letters translated by Thomas M Crie Academic offices Preceded byArchibald Bruce Professor of Theology of the Old Light Anti Burgher Secession Church in Scotland1816 1818 VacantTitle next held byGeorge Paxton as Professor of Theology of the Original Secession Church in Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas M 27Crie the Elder amp oldid 1223792207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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