ADDENDA on St Maelrubha and
Ecclesiastical History.
The following Notes are principally
gleaned from Dr Reeves' paper on St Maelrubha (Proc. Soc. Antiq.
Scot., vol. iii., p. 258 et seq.), and from "Bishop Forbes'
Journals," &c, by Rev. J. B. Graven (1886):—
St Maelrubha was
eighth in descent, on his father's side, from Niall of the Nine
Hostages, Sovereign of Ireland, through Eoghan (who died in 465),
one of Niall's sons, and on his mother's side he was akin to St
Comgall, the great abbot of Bangor, in the county of Down. He was
born 3rd January 642, and trained at the monastery of Bangor, of
which, according to some, he became abbot. In 671, following the
example of St Columba, he went to Scotland, probably in the first
instance to Iona, and in 673 he founded the church of Applecross,
which became the nucleus of a conventional establishment, following
the order of Bangor, and for a long time affiliated to that
monastery. He founded a church on an island on Loch Maree,—both
island and loch still bearing his name in the corrupted form of
Maree. He preached Christianity in the adjoining districts.
Maelrubha's Seat, near Loch Clair, is so named because it was a
place where he preached. He died at Ferintosh, whilst discharging
his sacred office, on Tuesday, 21 st April 722, at the age of
eighty. There is a tradition that he suffered martyrdom at the hands
of the Danes, but it seems inconsistent with existing records. His
body was removed to Applecross, and there interred. He acquired so
great a reputation for sanctity that he was regarded as the patron
saint of this part of Scotland, whence he extended his influence
both in the islands and on the mainland. His work in the parish of
Gairloch did not die with this holy man. Isle Maree became the
residence of a priest. Later on two churches were erected within the
parish,—the church dedicated to St Maelrubha at Gairloch, and a
church near the head of Loch Maree, then called Loch Ewe. In all
probability this church stood (as tradition has it) by the small
well that still bears the name of Tobar Mhoire, or "Mourie's well."
No doubt St Maelrubha had himself hallowed the spot by blessing the
well, or preaching close to it. From the numerous dedications of
churches to his memory, not only here but elsewhere, we learn how
laborious must have been his missionary work. The name Maelrubha is
compounded of Mael, a servant, and Rubha or Ruba, patience. It has
been corrupted in almost endless variety. There are the following
amongst many undoubted corruptions:—
Contemplating these corruptions of Maelrubha, one cannot but
conjecture that the name Smiorsair, given to a hamlet two miles
north of Tobar Mhoire, is derived from the name of the saint, and
that perhaps some other Gairloch names may have had the same origin.
At and near Applecross are many names connected with the saint and
his successors.
The churches founded by St Columba
and St Malrubha not having the assistance of a powerful body like
the Church of Rome (with which they had no connection), gradually
fell into decay. Later on the Romish Church stepped in and gathered
up the threads of languishing Christianity; but the inaccessible
Gairloch seems to have had no place in church history for some
centuries. No doubt Christianity was maintained by a few pious
priests amid the clan contests and general turbulence that filled
the long interval before the Reformation. That casting off of the
Roman yoke made little difference on the west coast. It seems most
likely that the Rev. Farquhar MacRae, ordained vicar of Gairloch in
1608, was brought up as a Roman Catholic, and no doubt his learned
hearer, Sir George Hay, was so too; but neither they nor the common
people seem to have objected to the change made by the Reformation,
nor can we suppose that it affected them to any appreciable extent.
The simple ritual of the Highland churches was scarcely capable of
any change; and it is not likely that forms and ceremonies were much
debated in Gairloch.
It was far different when the
change came from Presbyterianism to Episcopacy. The Highlanders
clung to the old faith, and stoutly struggled against the
introduction of Presbyterianism.
The diocese of
Ross at the Revolution (1680) comprised within its bounds thirty-two
parishes divided into four presbyteries or " exercises," one of
which was Gairloch. Of the thirty-one clergy (one parish was vacant)
nine were deprived of their livings by the Presbyterians ; one
voluntarily demitted, declining to obey the new powers; one offered
to submit to the new church government (his services were declined);
of one parish we have no account; and the remaining nineteen
continued (without submission to presbytery) to hold their benefices
to their deaths. Of this last class was the Rev. Roderick Mackenzie,
Episcopal minister of Gairloch, whose masterly disregard of the
Presbytery has been stated (page 65).
When the
long incumbency of the Rev. Roderick Mackenzie was brought to a
close by his death in 1710, the presbytery resolved to have a
minister of their own settled in Gairloch. The Rev. John Morrison
was nominated, and the Rev. Thomas Chisholm was sent to Gairloch to
take preliminary measures. At a meeting held at Kiltearn, 28th
February 1711, Mr Chisholm reported "that, in obedience to the
presbytery's appointment, he had gone to the parish of Gerloch in
order to have preached att that church and serve the edict for Mr
Morrison's admission; but after he was come near to said church he
was seized upon by a partie of men and carried back again about six
miles, and that being let go by them, he had essayed again to go to
the said church another way, and that he was again seized upon by
another partie of men, and carried back by them to Kan-loch-ow,
where he was detained by them for some time as a prisoner, and
thereafter by other parties coming successively was carried back
till he was a great way out of the parish, and not let go till
Sabbath afternoon; but that while he was detained prisoner
(understanding that he was designedly carried back lest he should
preach at Gerloch) he had read and intimat the said edict before six
or seven persons, within ane house at Kan-loch-ow, which is one of
the preaching places of the said parish, and he returned the said
edict endorsed by him with the attestation of his having executed
the same in the foresaid manner. The Rev. John Morrison was admitted
minister of Gairloch,—not at Gairloch, for that was impossible, but
at Kiltearn. The story of his treatment by the tenants of Sir John
Mackenzie of Coul, and of Sir John's declaration to him, has been
recorded (pp. 65, 66). It seems the presbytery represented Sir
John's conduct to the General Assembly, but he set them at defiance,
and apparently with impunity.
When the Presbytery
of Gairloch was constituted in 1724, only two ministers •were found
in its bounds.
The subsequent progress of
Presbyterianism in Gairloch is recorded in Part I., chap. xvi.
Notwithstanding the statement of the Rev. Daniel Mackintosh in the "
Old Statistical Account "(1792), that there was then no division or
dissent in the parish, it seems that there were at least a few who
still clung to Episcopacy, for we find from a quotation given in "
Bishop Forbes' Journal," that in the end of the eighteenth and
beginning of the nineteenth century Episcopal " pastors took it by
turns to wander over the west of Ross, through Strath-Garve,
Torridon, and Gairloch, and thence into Skye and the Long Island,
ministering to the detached families who still kept up a connection
with them." |