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William Guthrie (minister)

William Guthrie (1620–1665) was a Scottish Covenanter minister and author. He was the first minister of Fenwick parish church in Ayrshire, Scotland. He is known primarily for his book on assurance, The Christian's Great Interest.

William Guthrie
the fool of Fenwick
A portrait prefixed to some additions of "The Christian's Great Interest"[1]
Personal details
Died10 October 1665
Brechin
BuriedBrechin Cathedral
NationalityScottish

William Guthrie, born 1620, was the eldest son of James Guthrie of Pitforthie, Forfarshire, by a daughter of Lyon of Easter-Ogle, in Tanadice parish. He be came an apt scholar, and on 5 June 1638 he graduated M.A. at the University of St Andrews, where his studies had been directed by his cousin, James Guthrie, then a regent in philosophy. He studied divinity under Samuel Rutherford. To free himself from what he considered purely worldly affairs, he made over Pitforthie to one of his brothers. He was licensed by the Presbtery of St Andrews in August 1642, and became tutor to the eldest son of John Campbell, first Earl of Loudoun, the Lord High Chancellor of Scotland. Some persons from Fenwick having heard him preach at a Fast-day service in Galston Kirk, they desired him to be called as the first minister of their newly created parish. That was done, and he was ordained 7 November 1644. Soon afterwards the General Assembly appointed him an army chaplain, and he was present at the engagement which took place at Mauchline Moor in June 1648. He also witnessed the covenanting defeat at Dunbar on 3 September 1650.[2] He joined the Protesters in 1651. On 8 August 1654 he was appointed by the English Council on a committee for supervising admissions to the ministry within the bounds of his own Synod. Refusing to submit to Episcopacy, he was deprived 24 July 1664. He went to Pitforthie, which had again come into his hands through the death of his brother, and following a period of ill-health, he died in the manse of his brother-in-law, Laurence Skinner, minister of Brechin, 10 October 1665, and was buried in the Cathedral there.[3]

Character

Hew Scott says he was a man of ready wit, who moved freely amongst his people, lived simply, and spent a great part of his leisure in such sports as fishing and fowling. When he preached his church was crowded, and his pastoral work was performed with undiminished fervour and success throughout all his ministry. He refused calls to Renfrew, Linlithgow, Stirling, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. Dr John Owen describes him as "one of the greatest divines that ever wrote." Guthrie's book, The Christian s Great Interest (which has been translated into several foreign tongues), was published to vindicate himself against a volume purporting to contain a series of his sermons on Isaiah 55. This appeared at Aberdeen about 1657 as A Clear, Attractive, Warming Beam of Light. In 1680 another work professing to be his was issued, with the title The Heads of some Sermons preached at Finnick in August 1662, but this also was disclaimed by his widow in a public advertisement. Most of his papers were seized in 1682, when Mrs Guthrie's house was raided by a party of soldiers instigated by the bishops. [3] Guthrie was a lifelong friend of Robert Traill.

Life

William Guthrie, Scottish presbyterian divine, was born in 1620 at Pitforthy, Forfarshire, of which his father was laird, his mother being of the house of Easter Ogle, parish of Tannadice, Forfarshire. William was the eldest of eight children; his three brothers were in the ministry; Robert died soon after license; Alexander (d. 1661) was minister of Strickathrow, Forfarshire; John, the youngest (d. 1669), minister of Tarbolton, Ayrshire, was ejected at the Restoration. William was educated at St. Andrews under his cousin James Guthrie. Having graduated M.A. on 5 June 1638, he studied divinity under Samuel Rutherford. Before entering the ministry he assigned the estate of Pitforthy to one of his brothers. He was licensed by St. Andrews presbytery in August 1642, and became tutor to James, lord Mauchline, eldest son of John Campbell, first earl of Loudoun, then lord high chancellor of Scotland. A sermon at Galston, Ayrshire, gained him a unanimous call to Fenwick (or New Kilmarnock), Ayrshire. James, eighth? lord Boyd of Kilmarnock, patron of the parish, a strong loyalist, opposed the choice, but Guthrie was ordained at Fenwick by Irvine presbytery on 7 November 1644. His preaching crowded his church, and his pastoral visitation was assiduous and successful. His health required outdoor exercise, and he was a keen sportsman and angler. A ready wit and unconventional dress earned him the appellation of 'the fool [jester] of Fenwick,' which appears even on title-pages of his sermons. He mixed with his parishioners on easy terms. Finding that one of them went fowling on Sunday, and made half-a-crown by it, he offered him that sum to attend the kirk, of which the man ultimately became an elder.[4]

The general assembly appointed him an army chaplain, and in this capacity he was present at the engagement with the royal army at Mauchline Moor in June 1648. On 8 March 1649 he declined a call to Renfrew, and later calls to Linlithgow, Stirling, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. He sat in the general assembly which met at Edinburgh on 7 July 1649. After 'Dunbar drove' (3 Sept. 1650) he returned to Fenwick. In 1651, when the church of Scotland was divided between 'resolutioners' and 'protesters', he adhered to the latter party, and was moderator of a synod which they held in Edinburgh. On 8 August 1654 he was appointed by the English privy council one of the 'triers' for the province of Glasgow and Ayr. At the Restoration he was prominent in his efforts for the maintenance of the presbyterian system, proposing at the synod of Glasgow and Ayr (2 April 1661) an address to parliament for protection of the liberties of the church. He was obliged to be satisfied with a declaration against 'prelatical' episcopacy, without allusion to the covenants. William Cunningham, ninth earl of Glencairn, to whom he had rendered some services and who was now chancellor, interposed on his behalf with Andrew Fairfoul, archbishop of Glasgow, and afterwards with Fairfoul's successor, Alexander Burnet, but to no purpose. 'It cannot be,' said Burnet, 'he is a ringleader and a keeper up of schism in my diocese.' On 24 July 1664 Burnet's commissioner declared the parish of Fenwick vacant, an act of questionable legality. Guthrie remained some time in the parish, but did not preach again. In the autumn of 1665 he returned to his paternal estate of Pitforthy, which had again come into his possession by his brother's death. He had been subject for years to attacks of kidney stone disease, and now suffered from ulceration of the kidneys. He died on 10 October 1665, in the house of his brother-in-law, Lewis Skinner, minister at Brechin, and was buried in Brechin Church.[4]

Family life

In August 1645 he married Agnes (who survived him), daughter of David Campbell of Skeldon House in the parish of Dalrymple, Ayrshire. He had two sons and four daughters, but left only two daughters: Agnes, married to Matthew Miller of Glenlee, Ayrshire, and Mary, married to Patrick Warner, minister of Irvine; her daughter, Margaret, married Robert Wodrow, the church historian.[4][5]

Works

‘The Christian's Great Interest,’ &c., 1658(?). This book, which is based on sermons from Isaiah lv., has passed through numerous editions (e.g. 4th edition, 1667, 8vo; Glasgow, 1755, 8vo; Edinburgh, 1797, 12mo), and has been translated into French, German, Dutch, Gaelic (1783, 12mo, and 1845, 12mo), and ‘into one of the eastern languages, at the charge of the honourable Robert Boyle.’ Its publication was occasioned by the issue of a surreptitious and imperfect copy of notes of the sermons, issued at Aberdeen, 1657, with the title ‘A Clear, Attractive, Warming Beam of Light,’ &c. In 1680, 4to, appeared ‘The Heads of some Sermons preached at Fenwick in August 1662, by Mr. William Guthrie;’ his widow, by public advertisement, disclaimed this publication as unauthentic. ‘A Collection of Lectures and Sermons, preached mostly in the time of the late persecution,’ &c., Glasgow, 1779, 8vo, contains seventeen sermons transcribed from Guthrie's manuscripts by the editor, J. H. (i.e. John Howie). This volume was reprinted as ‘Sermons delivered in Times of Persecution in Scotland,’ Edinburgh, 1880, 8vo, with biographical notices by the Rev. James Kerr, Greenock. Most of Guthrie's papers were carried off in 1682, when his widow's house was searched by a party of soldiery.[4]
Hew Scott:

  • The Christian s Great Interest (probably 1658 ; numerous editions)
  • Two Sermons (Glasgow, 1701)
  • A Collection of Lectures and Sermons preached mostly in the Time of the late Persecution, edited by J[ohn] H[owie] (Glasgow, 1779; reprinted as Sermons delivered in Times of Persecution [with biographical notices by James Kerr, minister of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Greenock] (Edinburgh, 1880)
  • Crumbs of Comfort: or Grace in its various Degrees, and yet Oneness in Kind (n.p., 1681). [5]

Bibliography

  • Hew Scott's Fasti Eccles. Scoticanæ;
  • Howie's Biographia Scoticana (1775), edition of 1862 (Scots Worthies), p. 429 sq.
  • Chambers's Gazetteer of Scotland, 1832, i. 424
  • Memoir and Original Letters, by Muir, 1854 (originally published 1827)
  • Grub's Eccl. Hist. of Scotland, 1861, vol. iii.
  • Anderson's Scottish Nation, 1872, ii. 313, 389 sq.
  • Kerr's Sermons in Times of Persecution, 1880, p. 81 sq., 659 sq. (gives also sermon by John Guthrie)
  • Irvine's Book of Scotsmen, 1881, p. 187.[4]
  • Wodrow's Anal., i., 47, 169, 243;[6] iii., 69;[7]
  • A true and exact Copy of Letters of Horning, or formal Excommunication past by Mr William Guthrie (n.p., 1681)
  • Inq. Ret. Gen., 5001
  • Acts of Ass.
  • Acts of ParL, vi., pt. 2, 138
  • Muir's Memoir and Original Letters (1827)
  • The Scots Worthies
  • Carslaw's Guthrie of Fenwick (Paisley, 1900)
  • Thomson's Martyr Graves of Scotland, 102
  • Johnston's Treasury of the Scottish Covenant, 324[8]
  • Hewison's Covenanters, ii., 184[9]
  • Black's Brechin
  • Dict. Nat. Biog.

[3]

External links

  • Guthrie, William (1620–1665). "The Christian's Great Interest" HTML Version Retrieved 2010-07-23.
  • Biography of William Guthrie - ccel.org Retrieved 2010-07-23
  • Memoir of William Guthrie from The Christian's Great Interest at ccel.org Retrieved 2010-07-23

References

Citations
Sources
  • Anderson, William (1877). "Guthrie, William". The Scottish nation: or, The surnames, families, literature, honours, and biographical history of the people of Scotland. Vol. 2. A. Fullarton & co. pp. 389-392.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Baillie, Robert; Laing, David (1841–1842c). The letters and journals of Robert Baillie ... M.DC.XXXVII.-M.DC.LXII. Vol. 3. Edinburgh: R. Ogle. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
  • Blaikie, William Garden (1888). ""William Guthrie" in Chapter 6: The Covenanting Period". The preachers of Scotland from the sixth to the nineteenth century. Twelfth series of the Cunningham lectures. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark. pp. 122–129. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  • Chambers, Robert; Thomson, Thomas (1857). A biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen. New ed., rev. under the care of the publishers. With a supplementary volume, continuing the biographies to the present time. Vol. 4. Glasgow: Blackie. pp. 556-559. Retrieved 20 April 2019.
  • Dunlop, William (1845). Tweedie, William King (ed.). Select biographies. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: Printed for the Wodrow Society. pp. 33-66. Retrieved 2 August 2019.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Gordon, Alexander (1890). "Guthrie, William" . In Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney (eds.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 23. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 382–383.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Grub, George (1861). An ecclesiastical history of Scotland : from the introduction of Christianity to the present time. Vol. 3. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  • Hewison, James King (1913b). The Covenanters. Vol. 2. Glasgow: John Smith and son. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
  • Howie, John (1870). "William Guthrie". In Carslaw, W. H. (ed.). The Scots worthies. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson, & Ferrier. pp. 320-335.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Irving, Joseph (1881). The book of Scotsmen eminent for achievements in arms and arts, church and state, law, legislation, and literature, commerce, science, travel, and philanthropy. Paisley: A. Gardner. pp. 187-188. Retrieved 11 July 2019.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Johnston, Archibald, Lord Warriston (1919). Fleming, David Hay (ed.). Diary of Sir Archibald Johnston of Wariston (Volume 2: 1650-1654). 2. Vol. 18. Edinburgh: Printed at the University Press by T. and A. Constable for the Scottish History Society. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  • Johnston, John C. (1887). Treasury of the Scottish covenant. Andrew Elliot. pp. 324-326.
  • Livingstone, John (1845). Tweedie, William King (ed.). Select biographies. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: Printed for the Wodrow Society. pp. 335. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  • Scott, Hew (1915). "William Guthrie". Fasti ecclesiæ scoticanæ; the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation. Vol. 3). Edinburgh : Oliver and Boyd. pp. 93-94. Retrieved 26 February 2019.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Smellie, Alexander (1903). "Sabbath Morning in Fenwick". Men of the Covenant : the story of the Scottish church in the years of the Persecution (2 ed.). New York: Fleming H. Revell Co. pp. 173-187. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  • Wells, Vaughan T. "Guthrie, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11791. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Whyte, Alexander (1894). "William Guthrie". Samuel Rutherford and some of his correspondents; lectures delivered in St. George's Free Church Edinburgh. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson and Ferrier. pp. 141-150. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  • Wodrow, Robert (1835). Burns, Matthew (ed.). The history of the sufferings of the church of Scotland from the restoration to the revolution, with an original memoir of the author, extracts from his correspondence, and preliminary dissertation. Vol. 1. Glasgow: Blackie, Fullarton & co., and Edinburgh: A. Fullarton & co. p. 427. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
  • Wodrow, Robert (1842a). Leishman, Matthew (ed.). Analecta: or, Materials for a history of remarkable providences; mostly relating to Scotch ministers and Christians. Vol. 1. Glasgow: Maitland Club. p. 277. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  • Wodrow, Robert (1842c). Leishman, Matthew (ed.). Analecta: or, Materials for a history of remarkable providences; mostly relating to Scotch ministers and Christians. Vol. 3. Glasgow: Maitland Club. pp. 66-70. Retrieved 8 July 2019.

william, guthrie, minister, william, guthrie, 1620, 1665, scottish, covenanter, minister, author, first, minister, fenwick, parish, church, ayrshire, scotland, known, primarily, book, assurance, christian, great, interest, william, guthriethe, fool, fenwicka, . William Guthrie 1620 1665 was a Scottish Covenanter minister and author He was the first minister of Fenwick parish church in Ayrshire Scotland He is known primarily for his book on assurance The Christian s Great Interest William Guthriethe fool of FenwickA portrait prefixed to some additions of The Christian s Great Interest 1 Personal detailsDied10 October 1665BrechinBuriedBrechin CathedralNationalityScottishWilliam Guthrie born 1620 was the eldest son of James Guthrie of Pitforthie Forfarshire by a daughter of Lyon of Easter Ogle in Tanadice parish He be came an apt scholar and on 5 June 1638 he graduated M A at the University of St Andrews where his studies had been directed by his cousin James Guthrie then a regent in philosophy He studied divinity under Samuel Rutherford To free himself from what he considered purely worldly affairs he made over Pitforthie to one of his brothers He was licensed by the Presbtery of St Andrews in August 1642 and became tutor to the eldest son of John Campbell first Earl of Loudoun the Lord High Chancellor of Scotland Some persons from Fenwick having heard him preach at a Fast day service in Galston Kirk they desired him to be called as the first minister of their newly created parish That was done and he was ordained 7 November 1644 Soon afterwards the General Assembly appointed him an army chaplain and he was present at the engagement which took place at Mauchline Moor in June 1648 He also witnessed the covenanting defeat at Dunbar on 3 September 1650 2 He joined the Protesters in 1651 On 8 August 1654 he was appointed by the English Council on a committee for supervising admissions to the ministry within the bounds of his own Synod Refusing to submit to Episcopacy he was deprived 24 July 1664 He went to Pitforthie which had again come into his hands through the death of his brother and following a period of ill health he died in the manse of his brother in law Laurence Skinner minister of Brechin 10 October 1665 and was buried in the Cathedral there 3 Contents 1 Character 2 Life 3 Family life 4 Works 5 Bibliography 6 External links 7 ReferencesCharacter EditHew Scott says he was a man of ready wit who moved freely amongst his people lived simply and spent a great part of his leisure in such sports as fishing and fowling When he preached his church was crowded and his pastoral work was performed with undiminished fervour and success throughout all his ministry He refused calls to Renfrew Linlithgow Stirling Glasgow and Edinburgh Dr John Owen describes him as one of the greatest divines that ever wrote Guthrie s book The Christian s Great Interest which has been translated into several foreign tongues was published to vindicate himself against a volume purporting to contain a series of his sermons on Isaiah 55 This appeared at Aberdeen about 1657 as A Clear Attractive Warming Beam of Light In 1680 another work professing to be his was issued with the title The Heads of some Sermons preached at Finnick in August 1662 but this also was disclaimed by his widow in a public advertisement Most of his papers were seized in 1682 when Mrs Guthrie s house was raided by a party of soldiers instigated by the bishops 3 Guthrie was a lifelong friend of Robert Traill Life EditWilliam Guthrie Scottish presbyterian divine was born in 1620 at Pitforthy Forfarshire of which his father was laird his mother being of the house of Easter Ogle parish of Tannadice Forfarshire William was the eldest of eight children his three brothers were in the ministry Robert died soon after license Alexander d 1661 was minister of Strickathrow Forfarshire John the youngest d 1669 minister of Tarbolton Ayrshire was ejected at the Restoration William was educated at St Andrews under his cousin James Guthrie Having graduated M A on 5 June 1638 he studied divinity under Samuel Rutherford Before entering the ministry he assigned the estate of Pitforthy to one of his brothers He was licensed by St Andrews presbytery in August 1642 and became tutor to James lord Mauchline eldest son of John Campbell first earl of Loudoun then lord high chancellor of Scotland A sermon at Galston Ayrshire gained him a unanimous call to Fenwick or New Kilmarnock Ayrshire James eighth lord Boyd of Kilmarnock patron of the parish a strong loyalist opposed the choice but Guthrie was ordained at Fenwick by Irvine presbytery on 7 November 1644 His preaching crowded his church and his pastoral visitation was assiduous and successful His health required outdoor exercise and he was a keen sportsman and angler A ready wit and unconventional dress earned him the appellation of the fool jester of Fenwick which appears even on title pages of his sermons He mixed with his parishioners on easy terms Finding that one of them went fowling on Sunday and made half a crown by it he offered him that sum to attend the kirk of which the man ultimately became an elder 4 The general assembly appointed him an army chaplain and in this capacity he was present at the engagement with the royal army at Mauchline Moor in June 1648 On 8 March 1649 he declined a call to Renfrew and later calls to Linlithgow Stirling Glasgow and Edinburgh He sat in the general assembly which met at Edinburgh on 7 July 1649 After Dunbar drove 3 Sept 1650 he returned to Fenwick In 1651 when the church of Scotland was divided between resolutioners and protesters he adhered to the latter party and was moderator of a synod which they held in Edinburgh On 8 August 1654 he was appointed by the English privy council one of the triers for the province of Glasgow and Ayr At the Restoration he was prominent in his efforts for the maintenance of the presbyterian system proposing at the synod of Glasgow and Ayr 2 April 1661 an address to parliament for protection of the liberties of the church He was obliged to be satisfied with a declaration against prelatical episcopacy without allusion to the covenants William Cunningham ninth earl of Glencairn to whom he had rendered some services and who was now chancellor interposed on his behalf with Andrew Fairfoul archbishop of Glasgow and afterwards with Fairfoul s successor Alexander Burnet but to no purpose It cannot be said Burnet he is a ringleader and a keeper up of schism in my diocese On 24 July 1664 Burnet s commissioner declared the parish of Fenwick vacant an act of questionable legality Guthrie remained some time in the parish but did not preach again In the autumn of 1665 he returned to his paternal estate of Pitforthy which had again come into his possession by his brother s death He had been subject for years to attacks of kidney stone disease and now suffered from ulceration of the kidneys He died on 10 October 1665 in the house of his brother in law Lewis Skinner minister at Brechin and was buried in Brechin Church 4 Family life EditIn August 1645 he married Agnes who survived him daughter of David Campbell of Skeldon House in the parish of Dalrymple Ayrshire He had two sons and four daughters but left only two daughters Agnes married to Matthew Miller of Glenlee Ayrshire and Mary married to Patrick Warner minister of Irvine her daughter Margaret married Robert Wodrow the church historian 4 5 Works Edit The Christian s Great Interest amp c 1658 This book which is based on sermons from Isaiah lv has passed through numerous editions e g 4th edition 1667 8vo Glasgow 1755 8vo Edinburgh 1797 12mo and has been translated into French German Dutch Gaelic 1783 12mo and 1845 12mo and into one of the eastern languages at the charge of the honourable Robert Boyle Its publication was occasioned by the issue of a surreptitious and imperfect copy of notes of the sermons issued at Aberdeen 1657 with the title A Clear Attractive Warming Beam of Light amp c In 1680 4to appeared The Heads of some Sermons preached at Fenwick in August 1662 by Mr William Guthrie his widow by public advertisement disclaimed this publication as unauthentic A Collection of Lectures and Sermons preached mostly in the time of the late persecution amp c Glasgow 1779 8vo contains seventeen sermons transcribed from Guthrie s manuscripts by the editor J H i e John Howie This volume was reprinted as Sermons delivered in Times of Persecution in Scotland Edinburgh 1880 8vo with biographical notices by the Rev James Kerr Greenock Most of Guthrie s papers were carried off in 1682 when his widow s house was searched by a party of soldiery 4 Hew Scott The Christian s Great Interest probably 1658 numerous editions Two Sermons Glasgow 1701 A Collection of Lectures and Sermons preached mostly in the Time of the late Persecution edited by J ohn H owie Glasgow 1779 reprinted as Sermons delivered in Times of Persecution with biographical notices by James Kerr minister of the Reformed Presbyterian Church Greenock Edinburgh 1880 Crumbs of Comfort or Grace in its various Degrees and yet Oneness in Kind n p 1681 5 Bibliography EditHew Scott s Fasti Eccles Scoticanae Howie s Biographia Scoticana 1775 edition of 1862 Scots Worthies p 429 sq Chambers s Gazetteer of Scotland 1832 i 424 Memoir and Original Letters by Muir 1854 originally published 1827 Grub s Eccl Hist of Scotland 1861 vol iii Anderson s Scottish Nation 1872 ii 313 389 sq Kerr s Sermons in Times of Persecution 1880 p 81 sq 659 sq gives also sermon by John Guthrie Irvine s Book of Scotsmen 1881 p 187 4 Wodrow s Anal i 47 169 243 6 iii 69 7 A true and exact Copy of Letters of Horning or formal Excommunication past by Mr William Guthrie n p 1681 Inq Ret Gen 5001 Acts of Ass Acts of ParL vi pt 2 138 Muir s Memoir and Original Letters 1827 The Scots Worthies Carslaw s Guthrie of Fenwick Paisley 1900 Thomson s Martyr Graves of Scotland 102 Johnston s Treasury of the Scottish Covenant 324 8 Hewison s Covenanters ii 184 9 Black s Brechin Dict Nat Biog 3 External links EditGuthrie William 1620 1665 The Christian s Great Interest HTML Version Retrieved 2010 07 23 Biography of William Guthrie ccel org Retrieved 2010 07 23 Memoir of William Guthrie from The Christian s Great Interest at ccel org Retrieved 2010 07 23References EditCitations Smellie 1903 p 176 f Wells a b c Scott 1915 p 93 94 a b c d e Gordon 1890 a b Scott 1915 p 94 Wodrow 1842a Wodrow 1842c Johnston 1887 Hewison 1913b SourcesAnderson William 1877 Guthrie William The Scottish nation or The surnames families literature honours and biographical history of the people of Scotland Vol 2 A Fullarton amp co pp 389 392 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Baillie Robert Laing David 1841 1842c The letters and journals of Robert Baillie M DC XXXVII M DC LXII Vol 3 Edinburgh R Ogle Retrieved 19 July 2019 Blaikie William Garden 1888 William Guthrie in Chapter 6 The Covenanting Period The preachers of Scotland from the sixth to the nineteenth century Twelfth series of the Cunningham lectures Edinburgh T amp T Clark pp 122 129 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Chambers Robert Thomson Thomas 1857 A biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen New ed rev under the care of the publishers With a supplementary volume continuing the biographies to the present time Vol 4 Glasgow Blackie pp 556 559 Retrieved 20 April 2019 Dunlop William 1845 Tweedie William King ed Select biographies Vol 2 Edinburgh Printed for the Wodrow Society pp 33 66 Retrieved 2 August 2019 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Gordon Alexander 1890 Guthrie William In Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds Dictionary of National Biography Vol 23 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 382 383 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Grub George 1861 An ecclesiastical history of Scotland from the introduction of Christianity to the present time Vol 3 Edinburgh Edmonston and Douglas Retrieved 8 July 2019 Hewison James King 1913b The Covenanters Vol 2 Glasgow John Smith and son Retrieved 22 July 2019 Howie John 1870 William Guthrie In Carslaw W H ed The Scots worthies Edinburgh Oliphant Anderson amp Ferrier pp 320 335 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Irving Joseph 1881 The book of Scotsmen eminent for achievements in arms and arts church and state law legislation and literature commerce science travel and philanthropy Paisley A Gardner pp 187 188 Retrieved 11 July 2019 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Johnston Archibald Lord Warriston 1919 Fleming David Hay ed Diary of Sir Archibald Johnston of Wariston Volume 2 1650 1654 2 Vol 18 Edinburgh Printed at the University Press by T and A Constable for the Scottish History Society Retrieved 17 July 2019 Johnston John C 1887 Treasury of the Scottish covenant Andrew Elliot pp 324 326 Livingstone John 1845 Tweedie William King ed Select biographies Vol 1 Edinburgh Printed for the Wodrow Society pp 335 Retrieved 2 August 2019 Scott Hew 1915 William Guthrie Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation Vol 3 Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd pp 93 94 Retrieved 26 February 2019 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Smellie Alexander 1903 Sabbath Morning in Fenwick Men of the Covenant the story of the Scottish church in the years of the Persecution 2 ed New York Fleming H Revell Co pp 173 187 Retrieved 11 July 2019 Wells Vaughan T Guthrie William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 11791 Subscription or UK public library membership required Whyte Alexander 1894 William Guthrie Samuel Rutherford and some of his correspondents lectures delivered in St George s Free Church Edinburgh Edinburgh Oliphant Anderson and Ferrier pp 141 150 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Wodrow Robert 1835 Burns Matthew ed The history of the sufferings of the church of Scotland from the restoration to the revolution with an original memoir of the author extracts from his correspondence and preliminary dissertation Vol 1 Glasgow Blackie Fullarton amp co and Edinburgh A Fullarton amp co p 427 Retrieved 7 April 2019 Wodrow Robert 1842a Leishman Matthew ed Analecta or Materials for a history of remarkable providences mostly relating to Scotch ministers and Christians Vol 1 Glasgow Maitland Club p 277 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Wodrow Robert 1842c Leishman Matthew ed Analecta or Materials for a history of remarkable providences mostly relating to Scotch ministers and Christians Vol 3 Glasgow Maitland Club pp 66 70 Retrieved 8 July 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Guthrie minister amp oldid 1024058436, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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