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See also: born at Kirkcaldy, where his See also: father, See also: John Gillespie, was parish
See also: minister, on the 21st of See also: January 1613, and entered the university of St Andrews as a " See also: presbytery See also: bursar " in 1629
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On the completion of a brilliant student career, he became domestic See also: chaplain to John See also: Gordon, 1st Viscount See also: Kenmure (d
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1634), and afterwards to John See also: Kennedy, See also: earl of Cassillis, his See also: conscience not permitting him to accept the episcopal ordination which was at that See also: time in Scotland an indispensable condition of induction to a parish
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While with the earl of Cassillis he wrote his first See also: work, A Dispute against the See also: English Popish Ceremonies obtruded upon the See also: Church of Scotland, which, opportunely published shortly after the " Jenny
See also: Geddes" incident (but without the author's name) in the summer of 1637, attracted considerable See also: attention, and within a few months had been found by the privy council to be so damaging that by their orders all available copies were called in and burnt
.
In See also: April 1638, soon after the authority of the bishops had been set aside by the nation, Gillespie was ordained minister of See also: Wemyss (Fife) by the presbytery of Kirkcaldy, and in he same See also: year was a member of the famous See also: Glasgow See also: Assembly, before which he preached (See also: November 21st) a See also: sermon against royal interference in matters ecclesiastical so pronounced, as to See also: call for some remonstrance on the See also: part of See also: Argyll, the See also: lord high See also: commissioner
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In 1642 Gillespie was translated to See also: Edinburgh; but the brief See also: remainder of his See also: life was chiefly spent in the conduct of public business in See also: London
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Already, in 1640, he had accompanied the commissioners of the See also: peace to See also: England as one of their chaplains; and in 1643 he was appointed by the Scottish Church one of the four commissioners to the Westmins er Assembly
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Here, though 'the youngest member of the Assembly, he took a prominent part in almost all the protracted discussions on church See also: government, discipline and worship, supporting See also: Presbyterianism by numerous controversial writings, as well as by an unusual fluency and readiness in debate
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Tradition long preserved and probably enhanced the record of his victories in debate, andespecially of his encounter, with John See also: Selden on Matt. xviii
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15-17
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In 1645 he returned to Scotland, and is said to have See also: drawn the See also: act of assembly sanctioning the See also: directory of public worship
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On his return to London he had a See also: hand in drafting the See also: Westminster confession of faith, especially See also: chap. i
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Gillespie was elected moderator of the Assembly in 1648, but the laborious duties of that office (theSee also: court continued to sit from the 12th of See also: July to the 12th of See also: August) told fatally on an overtaxed constitution; he See also: fell into See also: consumption, and, after many See also: weeks of See also: great weakness, he died at Kirkcaldy on the 17th of See also: December 1648
.
In acknowledgment of his great public services, a sum of £1000 Scots was voted, though destined never to be paid, to his widow and See also: children by the committee of estates
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A See also: simple tombstone, which had been erected to his memory in Kirkcaldy parish church, was in 1661 publicly broken at the See also: cross by the hand of the See also: common hangman, but was restored in 1746
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His See also: principal publications were controversial and chiefly against Erastianism: Three sermons against See also: Thomas Coleman; A Sermon before the
See also: House of Lords (August 27th), on Matt. iii
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2, Nihil Respondem and Male Audis; See also: Aaron's See also: Rod Blossoming, or the Divine See also: Ordinance of Church-government vindicated (1646), which is deservedly regarded as a really able statement of the See also: case for an exclusive spiritual jurisdiction in the church; One See also: Hundred and Eleven Propositions concerning the See also: Ministry and Government of the Church (Edinburgh, 1647)
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The following were posthumously published by his See also: brother: A See also: Treatise of See also: Miscellany Questions (1649) ; The Ark of the New Testament (2 vols., 1661–1667) ; Notes of Debates and Proceedings of the Assembly of Divines at Westminster, from See also: February 1644 to January 1645
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See See also: Works, with memoir, published by Hetherington (Edinburgh, 1843–1846)
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