Livingston to
Robe—Archibald Graham—Samuel Rutherford— Gabriel Cunningham—Public
Worship—Rous versus Barton—James Gartshore—Walter M‘Gill—Leighton—
Prelate versus Presbyter—A Parish Riot—Insult and Resignation—Michael
Robe—Elected to Easter Lenzie—James Hay— Parochial Cases and
Anecdotes—Cursing the Minister—Assistant to be Appointed.
The period of one hundred
years from the translation of William Livingston to the parish of
Lanark, to the ordination of James Robe, bridges over that sea of tumult
which arose from the steady and unswerving resistance which Scotsmen
offered to the sometimes violent, and sometimes insidious efforts of the
friends of Episcopacy, to impose upon Scotland that form of church
government and discipline. It was an eventful time. The religious
liberties of the people were assailed by every kind of political and
ecclesiastical enginery from the clansmen of Montrose to the Patronage
Act. Often discomfited, often persecuted, the Church in the end was
still triumphant, and is seen when the storm is laid riding gallantly on
the surface of the waters.
The first of the six
ministers who fill up this space in the history of Kilsyth is Archibald
Graham, A.M. He was a student of the University of Glasgow, and was
admitted to Monyabroch on the nth January, 1615, after the church had
been vacant for fourteen months. He took an interest in the welfare of
his university, and contributed a sum of money towards the establishment
of a college library. During the time he held the incumbency, he
followed the traditions of his predecessors, the illustrious Livingstons,
and eventually he shared the ecclesiastical fate which befell not only
Alexander and William but also John. He was called before the High
Commissioner’s Court in Edinburgh. The charge brought against him was
his opposition to Episcopacy and his disobedience in the matter of the
practice of the canons and constitutions. He was found guilty, and
deposed. He married Barbara, daughter of Thomas Livingston of Ballinton,
who predeceased him. He was minister for twenty-two years, and survived
his deposition eighteen years, dying May, 1655, aged 71 years. The
incumbency of Archibald Graham, nearly synchronises with the career of
the saintly Samuel Rutherford, Professor of Divinity in St. Mary’s
College, St. Andrews, and so well known amongst readers of devout
literature as the author of a serious of singular letters, in which he
indulges an exuberant but sanctified fancy, and which “are fraughted
with such massy thoughts as loudly speak a soul united to Jesus Christ
in the strongest embraces.” He wrote a number of able works, and his “
Lex, Rex: a Dispute for the Just Prerogative of King and People,” was
eventually ordered to be burned at the public cross of Edinburgh and at
the gates of his college. His personal influence was more salutary and
more extensive than his books. It filled the Church with what she
greatly needed in the midst of her theological and civil strifes, the
warmth of a sympathetic evangelical enthusiasm. His simple love of
Christ infected his students, and the people heard gladly the preachers
who had drunk of St. Mary’s Well.
Gabriel Cunningham, M.A.,
was the minister of Monyabroch when the battle of Kilsyth was fought. He
succeeded to the benefice on the 7th June, 1637. Seeing the fate which
had befallen his predecessors, and probably being of a timorous spirit,
he was deterred from following their resolute example. But be this as it
may, he conformed to the Episcopalian regulations, and remained minister
of the parish for twenty-nine years, when he died in September, 1665,
aged 54 years. His ministry was salutary, and in various ways he made
his influence felt for good. Amongst other things he instituted the
orderly observance of baptism and the Lord’s Supper. As yet there was no
Church Bible; the congregation repeated the Creed, said the Lord’s
Prayer, and sung the doxology after the Psalms. During his incumbency,
affairs of momentous importance transpired. Six weeks after his
appointment Jenny Geddes flung her stool in St. Giles. Six years later,
on the 1st July, 1643, the Assembly of Divines met at Westminster. It
contained 151 members, in addition to six Scottish Presbyterians, the
rest being Episcopalians, Independents, and English Presbyterians. The
labours of the Assembly were destined to influence the Church of
Scotland much more largely than the Church of England. The Westminster
Divines produced the “Confession of Faith,” the “Larger and Shorter
Catechisms,” and the “Directory of Public Worship.” That the Psalmody
might be improved they called to their aid two poets, Francis Rous, of
the House of Commons, afterwards of the party of Cromwell and an artful
political trimmer; and William Barton, a Leicestershire clergyman, who
each furnished them with a copy of the Psalms in metre. The Assembly
left the Long Parliament to decide between the versions. The Commons
chose Rous’s copy, the Lords Barton’s. Eventually Rous’s was adopted,
and after having received a few corrections, was issued to the Church of
Scotland. Although many efforts have been made to supplant this version
it still holds the field, and at this hour is as popular as it ever was.
Sir Walter Scott was opposed to altering it, and pronounced it “ with
all its acknowledged occasional harshness, so beautiful, that any
alterations must eventually prove only so many blemishes.”
The ministry of James
Gartshore, M.A., was of very brief duration. He was in favour with the
authorities of his time. Having been minister of Penningham parish, he
was admitted minister of Monyabroch in 1666. Having been minister of the
parish for seven years, he was translated to Cardross.
The third and last
Episcopal minister of Monyabroch was the Rev. Walter M‘Gill, M.A.,
translated from Wig-ton, and admitted, April, 1675. His ministry of
sixteen years’ duration was marked by unobtrusive effectiveness, and
illustrated in his own person by the sweetest and gentlest Christian
graces. His behaviour was meekness itself, and his counsels moderation.
Bad men can ruin good systems, and good men may make even obnoxious
systems palatable. Although the people had little regard for prelacy,
they still held in good esteem this clergyman who went out and in
amongst them discharging his kindly ministrations. He was popular
amongst all classes, and seems to have given himself with all diligence
to the carrying out of his ministry in the spirit of the saintly Robert
Leighton. In some respects this prelate was immeasurably superior to the
clergy of his time. His intellectual power was acknowledged, and his
piety undoubted. He possessed an unruffled temper. He seldom smiled, and
was never known to laugh. He was appointed to the See of Dunblane, and
afterwards to the See of Glasgow, that through the exercise of his
conciliatory spirit he might persuade the stem men of the West to
embrace Episcopacy. He failed, and failed disastrously. When Leighton
was unsuccessful there are some who think that the reconciliation of
prelacy and presbytery may well be finally abandoned. This may be, but
still it is impossible not to observe whilst acknowledging his charity
and devotion, that Leighton’s character was too partial and one-sided to
commend itself strongly to the northern mind. Leighton had no want of
love to God, but he miserably lacked a real love to man. He was formed
for contemplation, and stood aloof from human sympathies and ties. In
the Scotland of that time there is nothing to be wondered at that
Leighton was misunderstood, that the energetic ministers of the day
thought, when he allowed them to hold sessions and presbyteries, “he was
straking cream in their mouths,” or that “they should have judged him
void of any doctrinal principles, and very much indifferent to all
professions which bore the name of Christian.” At an earlier date
Leighton might have been the Erasmus, never the Luther of the
Reformation* In devotion and piety Walter M'Gill was a reflection of his
bishop, but he possessed that which Leighton wanted, a sympathetic
disposition, a warm heart, and of a consequence he commended Episcopacy
to his parishioners with a success which his ecclesiastical superior had
never known. There is undeniable testimony that, so far from being
misunderstood, M'Gill was greatly appreciated. When, after a reign of
twenty-eight years, Episcopacy was again thrown off, and the
Presbyterians found themselves in the ascendant, they proceeded to
depose the Episcopal clergy wholesale.
Amongst others, sentence
was passed on M‘Gill, and the Presbytery of Glasgow elected one of their
number to preach the church vacant. It was, however, much easier to
depose him in the presbytery than to oust him from the parish. The
matter was bruited abroad, and when the eventful Sunday came, from far
and near the people began to congregate in the churchyard. It soon
became apparent from the eager disputations that the crowd were about
equally divided into two factions. The one party was for the
Presbyterian order, and the other was against the deposition as a harsh
and unwarrantable step. The latter not only embracing all the
Episcopalians but also those favourable to Mr. M‘Gill personally, were
probably the larger and stronger party. Again they were led by Lord
Kilsyth’s chamberlain, and animated by the presence of Lord Kilsyth
himself. When the deputy of the presbytery was seen drawing near, the
noise of the crowd greatly increased, and a regular hubbub immediately
ensued. Those favourable to the new order cheered the advance of the
delegate, those in favour of the incumbent greeted his approach with
derision. In the excitement men forgot the holy associations of the
church and the graveyard. When the emissary of the presbytery approached
the church, it was through a lane formed by the factions grouped on
either side. When he was nearing the door, Lord Kilsyth’s chamberlain
stepped forward and stood in front of him. The minister demanded to be
allowed to go about his duty, but the chamberlain denied him access to
the church. After this altercation the pent-up feelings of the crowd
could be no longer restrained, and with such weapons as they could
muster, they flew at each other, infuriated by the wildest passion. The
shouts of the men, the screaming of the women, the rapid movements of
fists and sticks, strong men wrestling together amongst the
grave-stones, and all about a form of church government, may all be
taken as illustrative of a peculiar but distinctive trait of the
national character. The fracas continued for a considerable time, and so
violent was the struggle that one man was killed and many severely
injured. The strife terminated in favour of the M‘Gill faction. They
drove their opponents from the churchyard, and prevented the service of
the edict of the presbytery.
Feeling running high, the
presbytery wisely desisted from taking further action in the case, and
it would have been well if Mr. M'Gill had been allowed to spend the
remainder of his days in the doing of the work he loved so well, and
which was so warmly appreciated by his parishioners. This, however, he
was not allowed to do, or rather, could not do after a manner consistent
with his own honour. The party opposed to the continuance of his
ministry, smarting under the pain of their defeat, so utterly lost
command of themselves as to offer him personal violence- Not being cast
in the heroic mould, he demitted his charge, February, 1691, three years
after the rabbling. At this crisis two hundred curates were expelled,
but it is matter of regret that so faithful a pastor as Walter M‘Gill
should have been one of them. He retired to Edinburgh, but did not long
survive the trying ordeal through which he had passed. He died on the
20th June, 1694, aged 57. He was thrice married* First, to Janet Keir,
daughter of Captain W. Keir, on the 1st April, 1664. Secondly, to Janet
Bell, January, 1691. And, thirdly, in the August of that same year to
Janet Chein, who survived him and subsequently married the minister of
Tranent.
With the resignation of
Walter M‘Gill, Episcopacy came to an end in Monyabroch. It not only
ceased to be represented by a public minister, it became extinct
altogether, and from that time until the time of the present incumbent,
no Episcopal clergyman has conducted the public worship of the parish.
It may not be wholly correct to describe the Rev. Michael Robe, M.A., as
the successor of Walter M‘Gill. He was sprung from a Cumbernauld family
who held those estates now in the possession of Messrs. Brown and
Duncan. He studied at the University of Edinburgh, and was a young man
of good parts and ripe scholarship. He became a tutor in the family of
the distinguished James Wodrow, afterwards Professor of Divinity in the
University of Glasgow. Robe was appointed to a meeting-house in the
Newtown of Monyabroch, and received ordination 7th December, 1687. He
ministered to the parishioners who rejected Episcopacy. His stay was
short. After three years he was appointed minister of the parish of
Easter Lenzie (Kirkintilloch) and Cumbernauld in 1690. Seeing he was the
father of the renowned James Robe, one of the foremost ministers of his
time, it is interesting to note in this connection that he attacked with
great vigour those who fostered schismatical divisions in the Church,
and frequently proclaimed against the stage as a spring of vice and
leading to error and profanity. Whilst in Monyabroch he married Isabella
Dundas, the 6th February, 1688, and besides James had another son
Thomas. He died 1718, in his 74th year.
The Rev. James Hay was
translated from Kilmalcolm, and his induction took place the 29th
December, 1692. He was a laborious and faithful minister, and in the
yellowing leaves of the parish records there is to be obtained many an
interesting glimpse into the habits and circumstances of the people. The
names of the elders are names still familiar in the parish. These,
amongst others, may be mentioned: John Murdoch, James Rennie, Walter
Rankine, John Young, William Gray, John Provan, Andrew Adam, Patrick
Grindlay, John Baird, John Burns, John Shearer. They had to deal with
many a curious case, but there is not one, excepting those where parties
were fugitives from discipline, that was not brought to a satisfactory
termination. A parishioner was accused “of using charms to cure his
beasts that were not well.” He had employed a professional charmer, but
there being a paucity of witnesses, he was "seriously exhorted to beware
of these things” and dismissed. Lists were regularly given in of those
who habitually absented themselves from public worship. The elders had
difficulties with the poor, and they decreed that “no poor should have
charity unless they came to kirk and attended diets of examination if
able.” They became unmannerly, and troubled the members of session,
privately blaiming them for uncharitableness. To put an end to this,
they had to appear before the session before receiving their allowances.
The new arrangement only lasted for a short time. Intimation was made
that “no burials were to be brought into the churchyard after the sermon
was begun, and that all who did not partake of the sacrament were to be
deprived of the privileges of baptism.” They took steps against those
“who vagued and wandered to the woods and parks after public worship on
the Lord’s day.” Penny weddings were prevalent. The minister discouraged
them, and one held at Auchencloach gave rise to much scandal. Mary Lyle
and Janet Sinclair were before the court on the charge of promiscuous
dancing. The former confessed that “she danced a springe with Wigtoun’s
footman.” They were admonished that “if they did not carry better in
tyme comminge, they would be made publick examples.” A scandal was
tabled^ against a farmer that “ he had thacked and crowned his stacks on
the Lord’s day.” Witnesses were examined but no action taken.
The blacksmith of
Queenzieburn was an occasion of trouble. Having publicly in his smithy
maintained that catechisings or examinations were not warranted by the
Word of God, he was summoned before the session. In defence he said he
had spoken in point of argument to try what answers those to whom he was
speaking could give. He was informed that such expressions were of
dangerous consequence and stumbled those that were weak. He was sharply
rebuked, and ordered to be more cautious in the future. In a few months
the smith was involved in another affair, an attempt to poison the mind
of a young woman against the young man to whom she was engaged. John
Forrester, the young man, was deeply wounded by the smith’s conduct and
language. In the libel which he prosecuted, he averred, amongst other
things, that the smith said “there was no grace in his face, and that
there was no grace of God within the place where he dwells—meaning the
toune of Kilsyth—save only three families, and that they worshipped God
politically.” The smith denied the charges, but the court found the case
fully proved, and he was appointed to appear in the place of public
repentance next Lord’s day. Cases of slander were of frequent
occurrence, and it is pleasant to read how frequently the session were
able to reconcile differences and restore broken friendships. That a man
should curse his neighbour was rightly regarded as a most heinous
offence. The discriminating reader will regard one illustration of this
sphere of parochial administration as sufficient. Walter Zuill
complained in his libel against Agnes Hog, making mention that Agnes
Hog, in Nether Gavell, abused him after the following manner. First: She
wishing he might be his own hangman. Secondly: She wishing God’s curse
upon him.
Thirdly: That as many
might wonder at him as there are grass piles on the ground. Fourthly:
That witches and warlocks might be his company through eternity.
Fifthly: That he might
be--here and hereafter.”
The case was put to
trial, and Agnes was condemned to do public penance.
In one of these cases
there is evidence of the estimation in which Mr. Hay was held. A
parishioner, having cursed the minister, “wishing the devil to be both
in him and in his words,” and having denominated his wife u a toothless
old runt,” he was called to answer for the expressions used. The
parishioner confessed that he had used part of the language, but that he
had received great provocation, as the minister“ had taken his maillen
over his head.” One of the witnesses called was William Sword of
Auchinvole, who had been a tenant of the Kirklands, the Bogside, and he
deponed that, than the minister, “ he had never lived beside a better
neighbour, that he had visited him when he was sick, and had lent him
money and other things that he stood in need of.” This was a long case,
and part of it, as was proper, was heard while another minister—Michael
Robe of Cumbernauld—was moderator. Eventually the parishioner was
pronounced a malignant and notorious liar. Strange to say, after a long
time had passed away he came forward and confessed his fault and was
publicly rebuked.
During Mr. Hay’s ministry
the sum collected at the church door ranged from twenty to forty
shillings Scots, and the salary of the kirk officer was ten merks a year
and four loads of coals. On the 1st June, 1710, the session having taken
into consideration "the valetudinary condition of our minister Mr. James
Hay, and the earnest desire he expresses to have an assistant in the
work of the Lord among us, and having several times heard Mr. James
Stewart, Preacher of the Gospel, unto our great satisfaction ... do
therefore unanimously concur in chusing the said James Stewart to be
assistant to our said minister.” The help had come too late to be of
service. That was the last session meeting at which this faithful pastor
was present. In the month following he passed to his rest in the
seventieth year of his age and the twenty-third of his ministry. |