Online Encyclopedia

ADAM GIB (1714-1788)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 927 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ADAM GIB (1714-1788)  , Scottish divine and leader of the Antiburgher section of the Scottish
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Secession Church, was born on the 14th of
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April 1714 in the parish of Muckhart,
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Perthshire, and, on the completion of his
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literary and theological studies at
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Edinburgh and Perth, was licensed as a preacher in 1740 . His eldest
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brother being a prodigal he succeeded to the paternal estate, but threw the will into the fire on his brother's promising to reform . In 1741 he was ordained minister of the large Secession congregation of Bristo Street, Edinburgh . In 1745 he was almost the only minister of Edinburgh who continued to preach against
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rebellion while the troops of Charles
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Edward were in occupation of the
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town . When in 1747 " the Associate Synod," by a narrow majority, decided not to give full immediate effect to a
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judgment which had been passed in the previous
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year against the lawfulness of the " Burgess Oath," Gib led the protesting minority, who separated from their brethren and formed the Antiburgher Synod (April loth) in his own house in Edinburgh . It was chiefly under his influence that it was agreed by this ecclesiastical
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body at subsequent meetings to summon to the bar their " Burgher " brethren, and finally to depose and excommunicate them for contumacy . Gib's
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action in forming the Antiburgher Synod led, after prolonged litigation, to his exclusion from the
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building in Bristo Street where his congregation had met . In 1765 he made a vigorous and able reply to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, which had stigmatized the Secession as " threatening the peace of the country." From 1753 till within a short period of his
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death, which took place on the 18th of
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June 1788, he preached regularly in Nicolson Street church, which was constantly filled with an audience of two thousand persons . His dogmatic and fearless attitude in controversy earned for him the
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nickname " Pope Gib."
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Principal publications: Tables for the Four Evangelists (177o, and with author's name, 1800) ; The
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Present Truth, a Display of the Secession Testimony (2 vols., 1774); Vindiciae dominicae (Edin., 178o) . See Chambers's Eminent Scotsmen; also article
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UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH .

End of Article: ADAM GIB (1714-1788)
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