Islay Burns
Islay Burns (1817–1872) was a Scottish theologian and writer.
Islay Burns | |
---|---|
Church | St. Peter's Free church, Dundee |
Personal details | |
Born | 16 January 1817 |
Died | 20 May 1872 |
Life
Burns was born on 16 January 1817 at the manse of Dun in Forfarshire, where his father William Hamilton Burns was parish minister in the Church of Scotland, and his wife, Elizabeth Chalmers.[1] The family moved to Kilsyth near Glasgow in his youth.[2]
He received the chief part of his education at the grammar school of Aberdeen, under Dr. James Melvin, a celebrated teacher of Latin, and then studied divinity at Marischal College and University of Aberdeen, and the University of Glasgow.
He was ordained in 1843 to the charge of St. Peter's Free church, Dundee, in succession to Robert Murray M'Cheyne, a man of eminent spirituality and power. In 1863 he received an honorary degree of D.D. from the University of Aberdeen, and in 1864 was chosen as Professor of Apologetics and Systematic Theology in the theological college of the Free Church, at Lynedoch Place in Glasgow. In this office he remained during the rest of his life. Burns was remarkable for a combination of evangelical fervour with width of culture and sympathy, a strong æsthetic faculty and a highly charitable spirit. To the diligent and successful discharge of his duties, first as a minister of the gospel and then as a professor, he added considerable literary activity.
He died at home 4 Sardinia Terrace in Glasgow.[3]
Publications
His chief writings were A Series of Essays on the Tractarian and other Movements in the Church of England, published in the British and Foreign Evangelical Review, History of the Church of Christ, with special reference to the delineation of faith and life, The Pastor of Kilsyth, which is a sketch of the life of his father. A posthumous volume of Select Remains was published in 1874.
Family
He was brother of William Chalmers Burns.
In 1845 he married Catharine Sarah Brown, sister of Prof David Brown. Their eight children included Rev Islay Ferrier Burns (1854-1924).
References
Citations
- Burns 1860.
- Ewing, William Annals of the Free Church
- Glasgow Post Office Directory 1872
Sources
- Blaikie, William Garden (1886). "Burns, Islay". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 07. London: Smith, Elder & Co. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Burns, Islay; Blaikie, William Garden (1874). Burns, James Chalmers (ed.). Select remains of Islay Burns, D.D., of the Free Church College, Glasgow, Edited by Rev. James C. Burns. With memoir by Rev. W. G. Blaikie. London: James Nisbet.
- Burns, Islay (1853). The Sanctity of Home: Being Words of Counsel and Incitement to Christian Fathers and Mothers. Edinburgh: William P. Kennedy.
- Burns, Islay (1860). The Pastor of Kilsyth ; or, Memorials of the life and times of the Rev. W. H. Burns D.D. London: T. Nelson.
- Burns, Islay (1870). Memoir of the Rev. Wm. C. Burns, M.A., missionary to China from the English Presbyterian Church. New York: Robert Carter and Brothers.
- Burns, Islay (1870c). Praxis Primaria: progressive exercises in the writing of Latin, with introductory notes on syntax and idiomatic differences and an appendix on Latin style. London: Blackie.
- Burns, Islay (1884). The first three Christian centuries : a history of the Church of Christ, with a special view to the delineation of Christian faith and life from A.D. 1 to A.D. 313. London: Nelson.
- Guthrie, Charles John Guthrie, Lord (1902). Genealogy of the descendants of Rev. Thomas Guthrie, D.D., and Mrs. Anne Burns or Guthrie : connected chiefly with the families of Chalmers and Trail, to which Mrs. Guthrie belonged, through her mother, Mrs. Christiana Chalmers or Burns, and her great-grandmother, Mrs. Susannah Trail or Chalmers : also incidental references to the families of Guthrie and Burns: comp. from family records, letters, diaries / by Charles John Guthrie. Edinburgh: A. Elliott. pp. 25, 97.
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