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THOMAS GILLESPIE (1708-1774)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 22 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS GILLESPIE (1708-1774)  , Scottish divine, was born at Clearburn, in the parish of Duddingston, Midlothian, in 1708 . He was educated at the university of
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Edinburgh, and studied divinity first at a small theological seminary at Perth, and afterwards for a brief period under Philip Doddridge at Northampton, where he received ordination in
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January 1741 . In September of the same
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year he was admitted minister of the parish of Carnock, Fife, the
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presbytery of Dunfermline agreeing not only to sustain as valid the ordination he had received in England, but also to allow a qualification of his subscription to the church's doctrinal symbol, so far as it had reference to the sphere of the
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civil magistrate in matters of religion . Having on conscientious grounds persistently absented himself from the meetings of presbytery held for the purpose of ordaining one Andrew Richardson, an unacceptable presentee, as minister of
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Inverkeithing, he was, after an unobtrusive but useful
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ministry of ten years, deposed by the Assembly of 1752 for maintaining that the refusal of the
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local presbytery to act in this case was justified . He continued, however, to preach, first at Carnock, and afterwards in Dunfermline, where a large congregation gathered round him . His conduct under the sentence of deposition produced a reaction in his favour, and an effort was made to have him reinstated; this he declined unless the policy of the church were reversed . In 1761, in conjunction with Thomas Boston of
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Jedburgh and Collier of Colinsburgh, he formed a distinct communion under the name of " The Presbytery of
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Relief," —relief, that is to say, " from the yoke of patronage and the tyranny of the church courts." The Relief Church eventually became one of the communions combining to form the
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United Presbyterian Church . He died on the 19th of January 1774, His only
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literary efforts were an Essay on the Continuation of Immediate Revelations in the Church, and a
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Practical
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Treatise on Temptation . Both
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works appeared posthumously (1774) . In the former he argues that immediate revelations are no longer vouchsafed to the church, in the latter he traces temptation to the
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work of a
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personal devil . See
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Lindsay's
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Life and Times of the Rev . Thomas Gillespie; Smithers's
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History of the Relief Church; for the Relief Church see UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH .

End of Article: THOMAS GILLESPIE (1708-1774)
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