John Durie (1596-1680),
Protestant divine, fourth son of Robert Durie, was born at Edinburgh in
1596. He was educated for the ministry at Sedan, under his cousin Andrew
Melville, and at Leyden where his father had settled. In 1624 he came to
Oxford. In 1628 he was minister to the English Company of Merchants, at
Elbing, West Prussia, then in the hands of Gustavus Adolphus. In 1630,
the factory failing, he returned to England, on the advice of the
English Ambassador, Sir Thomas Roe, who met him at Elbing, and who
favoured his plan of negotiation with the Reformed and Lutheran
Churches. He received some support from Archbishop Abbot and Bishops
Bedell and Hall. With letters from them he visited Gustavus Adolphus.
Gustavus showed sympathy, and promised him letters to the Protestant
princes of Germany. He attended the Courts and Churches, the State
Assemblies and Synods of Hesse, Hanau, the Wetteran, and Leipzig in
1631, and of Heilebron (where an evangelical league was formed),
Frankfort, and Holland in 1632. Gustavus fell at Lutzen. Oxenstiern
refused " formal " sanction to Durie's scheme for a General Assembly of
the Evangelical Churches.
At the end of 1633, being heaVily in debt (Cat.
State Papers, Dom.
Ser. 1633-34), he returned to England, and in 1634 was ordained priest
with a license of non-residence. He was made one of the King's
chaplains, and preferred to a small living in Lincolnshire which cost
him more for a curate than he received. The same year he attended the
Great Frankfort Assembly. The Transylvanian States sent him counsel and
advice, and having the credentials of Archbishops Laud and Ussher,
Bishops Hall, Morton, and Davenant, and twenty English doctors of
divinity, he published his Declarations
of English Divines, along
with his Latin treatise, Sententice
de Pads rationibus Evangelicis. Though
he was supported at Frankfort by Roe, he obtained only a general
acknowledgment of his services, and the defeat of the Swedes at
Nordlingen put an end to the meeting. After a short sojourn in England,
he started in July 1635 for the Continent, and laboured for a year in
the Netherlands. In June 1636 he went to Sweden, whither he had been
invited by Matthia, chaplain to Gustavus Adolphus, and propounded his
views to the Lutherans at Stockholm and Upsala. For two years he carried
on a voluminous correspondence with Hamburg and the Free Cities. His
Swedish negotiations failed. Queen Christina ordered him out of the
kingdom in February 1637-38.
Although ill in bed, he vowed never to slacken his efforts for religious
unity. In 1639 he visited Denmark without success, and afterwards went
to Brunswick, Hildersheim, and Zelle, where the reigning Dukes
countenanced his views, and a treaty of alliance between all the
Brunswick and Liineburg churches was planned with the aid of Calixtus.
Early in 1640 he held meetings at Oldenburg and Hainault, and again at
Hamburg and the Free Cities, but the joint views of himself and Calixtus
were strongly opposed. He now passed through North and South Holland,
sent memorials and letters throughout France and Switzerland, and at
length arrived in England in 1640-41.
Durie attached himself to the Royalists, and accepted
office at the Hague as chaplain and tutor to Mary, Princess of Orange.
In 1642-43 he resigned this "uncomfortable position," and became
minister to the Merchant Adventurers at Rotterdam. He was summoned to
attend the Assembly of divines, and after two years' delay he returned
to London, arriving in November 1645. He was one of those who drew up
the Westminster Confession and Catechisms.
He remained in England until 1654, continuing his
negotiations throughout Europe for Christian unity. In 1645 he preached
before Parliament "Israel's Call to Moab out of Babylon," published in
1646. The Parliament granted him a sum of money equivalent to the value
of his offices, but he declares he never received a penny. He was
married about April 1645 to an Irish lady, an aunt of Lady Ranelagh, who
had taken great interest in his Christian work. The lady's estate was
worth £400 a year. No rents for a long time were forthcoming, yet she
provided a garrison for Parliament " against the rebels " in Ireland. In
1650, Durie was appointed library-keeper, under Whitelocke, of the
books, medals, and manuscripts of St. James's, and had lodgings there.
To carry out his second plan of negotiations, Durie left
England in April 1654. He now had the approbation of Cromwell and the
assistance of the English universities. Labouring through the Low
Countries and part of High Germany, he reached Switzerland and presented
Cromwell's let^Hto the assembled divines at Aargau, and his scheme was
well entertained. He then visited the churches of the reformed cantons,
passed on to Frankfort-on-the-Maine, Weimar, Gotha, Brunswick, Hesse,
Hanau, Nassau, Hainault, and the Netherlands, and was favourably
received at Synods and meetings in all these states from 1654 to
1656-57. He made Amsterdam his headquarters until the latter year. His
acceptance of the new ecclesiastical system in England under the
Commonwealth brought on him many reproaches. He now limited his ground
to unity of opinion on the Apostles' Creed,Ten Commandments, and Lord's
Prayer, but being neglected and acrimoniously attacked, chiefly by
Lutherans, he was compelled to seek rest in England, whither he returned
early in i656~57.
At the Restoration (1660) he endeavoured to renew his work through
Lord-Chancellor Hyde and the Duke of Manchester. His letter to the King
in vindication of his action under the Commonwealth was unanswered, and
Bishop Juxon declined an interview. In 1661-62 he proceeded to Cassel,
where the landgrave of Hesse favoured his plans. The landgrave's widow
after her husband's death in 1663 continued to favour Durie, and
assigned him comfortable quarters at Cassel. From 1663 to 1668 Durie
disputed in South Germany, Switzerland, and Alsace. In the latter year
the great elector rejected all his plans, and although he continued to
travel from his home at Cassel to all parts of Germany and back until
1674, his labour was in vain. " The only fruit," he says, " which I have
reaped by all my toils is that I see the miserable condition of
Christianity, and that I have no other comfort than the testimony of my
conscience."
His life was an incessant round of journeyings,
colloquies, correspondence, and publication. He died at Cassel, 26th
September 1680. His only child, a daughter, married to Henry Oldenburgh,
succeeded to an estate of her father's in the marshes of Kent, valued at
£60 a year.—Diet,
of Nat. Biog. |