Online Encyclopedia

THOMAS HALYBURTON (1674–1712)

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Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 868 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THOMAS HALYBURTON (1674–1712)  , Scottish divine, was born at Dupplin, near Perth, on the 25th of December 1674 . His
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father, one of the ejected ministers, having died in 1682, he was taken by his
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mother in 1685 to
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Rotterdam to escape persecution, where he for some time attended the school founded by Erasmus . On his return to his native country in 1687 he completed his elementary
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education at Perth and
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Edinburgh, and in 1696 graduated at the university of St Andrews . In 1700 he was ordained minister of the parish of
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Ceres, and in 1710 he was recommended by the synod of Fife for the chair of
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theology in St Leonard's College, St Andrews, to which accordingly he was appointed by Queen Anne . After a brief
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term of active professorial
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life he died from the effects of overwork in 1712 . The
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works by which he continues to be known were all of them published after his
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death . Wesley and
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Whitefield were accustomed to commend them to their followers . They were published as follows: Natural Religion Insufficient, and Revealed Religion Necessary, to Man's Happiness in his
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Present State (1714), an able statement of the orthodox Calvinistic criticism of the deism of Lord Herbert of Cherbury and Charles Blount;
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Memoirs of the Life of Mr Thomas Halyburton (1715), three parts by his own hand, the
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fourth from his
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diary by another hand; The
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Great Concern of Salvation (1721), with a word of commendation by I . Watts; Ten Sermons Preached Before and After the Lord's Supper (1722); The Unpardonable Sin Against the
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Holy Ghost (1784) . See Halyburton's Memoirs (1714) .

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