Alexander Beith
Alexander Beith | |
---|---|
Church | Stirling Free |
Personal details | |
Born | 1799 |
Died | 1891 |
minister of Oban | |
In office 27 March 1822 – 9 November 1824[2] | |
minister of Hope Street Gaelic Chapel | |
In office 9 November 1824 – 29 November 1826[3] | |
minister of Kilbrandon and Kilchattan | |
In office 29 November 1826 – 24 September 1830[4] | |
minister of Glenelg | |
In office 24 September 1830 – 26 September 1839[5] | |
minister of Stirling East | |
In office 26 September 1839 – 18 May 1843[6] | |
minister of Stirling North Free | |
In office 1843 – 11 May 1891[1] | |
Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland | |
In office 20 May 1858 – close | |
Alexander Beith (1799–1891) was a Scottish divine and author who served as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland 1858/59.
Early life and education
[edit]He was born at Campbeltown, Argyllshire, on 13 January 1799. His parents were Gilbert Beith and Helen Elder. Beith's father was a land agent and farmer in the Kintyre district of Argyleshire, and was a man of wide reading, especially in theology and church history. After the usual course of education at Campbeltown, young Beith entered the Glasgow University, on 20 November 1811, with a view to the ministry of the church of Scotland.[7] He was a student of William M'Gill.[8] After some time spent as a tutor, he was licensed as a preacher, by the presbytery of Kintyre, on 7 February 1821. He delivered his first sermons — both in Gaelic and English — in Campbeltown the following Sabbath. But although he spent so many years in Gaelic-speaking parishes, Alexander Beith was not fluent in Gaelic in his young days. Campbeltown, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, was a town of two languages. Beith is said to have been helped by a servant girl as he sought to improve his Gaelic.[9]
In Oban
[edit]In March he was elected minister of the Chapel of Ease in Oban, where he rapidly became popular and successful. He laboured there until November 1824, when he was transferred to Hope Street Church, Glasgow.[10] Alexander Beith was married to Julia Robson, whom he had met in Oban when at the age of fifteen she became a communicant member of his congregation. Four years later she became his wife."[9]
In Glasgow
[edit]Staying there for two years, he ministered to a large congregation. In 1824 the fourth Gaelic Chapel in Glasgow, Hope Street, was constituted. It was established to meet the demands of people with Argyllshire Gaelic who felt that they were not being properly catered for. Those wanting a new chapel had stated in their petition, "the difference between the dialects of the West and North Highlands is so great that the natives of the one frequently do not understand at all the language spoken in the other." Alexander Beith became the first minister of Hope Street Gaelic Chapel, and although his ministry was a short one, no doubt his Argyll dialect was acceptable to this new congregation.[9]
The sitting accommodation (for 1500 persons) was soon found inadequate for the worshippers, amongst them many of the leading families in the City.[10]
In Argyll
[edit]In 1826 he removed to the parish of Kilbrandon in Argyllshire. He was presented, by the Earl of Breadalbane.[10] Beith was a prolific writer in the course of his long life. It is significant that his first two publications, on different aspects of the sacrament of Baptism, were in Gaelic. In 1824 he published Dearbhaidhean an aghaidh Teagasg nan Anabaisteach. In 1827 there followed Leabhar Cheistean mu Nadur a Bhaistidh, which was reprinted in 1840." Beith’s Gaelic reportedly does not flow quite as well as that of John Swanson of the Small Isles. Donald Maclean comments of Beith’s catechism on baptism, "The orthography is very faulty, and evidently, the proofs were never corrected, if indeed proof sheets were ever issued.""’[9]
In Glenelg
[edit]In 1830 Beith moved to the parish of Glenelg, Invernessshire. He was presented in 1830, by Lord Glenelg, and Drysdale comments that, special circumstances in each case made it manifest that he should accept the appointments, although he doesn't give his source.[11] When Beith was minister in Glenelg a tragedy struck the family when four of the children died in the course of six weeks. The oldest of the children who died, Matilda, when she knew she was dying, spoke to the others about her faith. The servants were then summoned and she addressed them as well. In the moving little book which Alexander Beith wrote about that sad period, Sorrowing yet Rejoicing,[12] he tells how the servants were then summoned. "One of them who, she knew, did not understand English, she addressed in Gaelic, solemnly warning and entreating her and all of them to go to Christ." This shows that the young members of the Beith family were as at home in Gaelic as they were in English.[9]
In the First Charge in Stirling
[edit]In 1839 he was called to the first charge of Stirling. At the time Mr Beith came to Stirling there were only two Established Churches, the West and the East, and three ministers, the third minister preaching in both churches every Sabbath, and dispensing two Communions every year, while the first and second ministers had only one service each Sabbath, and one Communion. This arrangement, coupled with the unsatisfactory state of matters arising out of there being a general Session for the whole parish, was not to Mr Beith's liking, and he took steps for the erection of a third church, which culminated in the building of North Parish Church in 1842. In speaking, at a later period, on the state of matters above referred to, he said — " I might have taken my stipend, and been contented with this order of things, and gone on and on and on; but where would my conscience have been? If I was to obey conscience, I must prepare for the storm. I could then easily understand how other ministers were so ready to accept calls to go elsewhere; and I confess to you, what I never said in public before, that when proposals were made to me to be removed to Edinburgh, to one of the charges there, and made three times, the question of conscience at the time of the Disruption was not stronger with me than when I was called to decide whether I should go, and quit the state of things in Stirling, or stay and fight against it, and try, at least, to reform things. I stayed, and in a short time gathered about me many influential friends." North Church was erected in 1842 by Mr Beith and ten of his friends in Stirling, and he was again selected to enter an empty church, which, however, in a year was nearly filled, and then came the Disruption.[11]
In 1841 the Highlanders attending the Rev. Mr Beith's Gaelic services presented him with a plate, with Gaelic inscription, expressive of their gratitude for his voluntary services in preaching to them in their own language every alternate Sabbath, and in which he had not disappointed them for a single day since the commencement.[14] Before Beith's arrival the Gaelic community met with a school teacher Peter M'Dougal.[15]
When the agitation on the subject of spiritual independence was reaching a crisis in the church of Scotland, Beith was one of the seven ministers appointed in 1842 to preach at Strathbogie in spite of the prohibition of the civil courts.[7]
At the Disruption
[edit]Beith was one of the 474 ministers who in 1843 left the established church and formed the Free Church of Scotland. He was one of the body of over 400 who marched to Tanfield Hall, and his portrait is included in the historical Disruption picture. Now, however, his attention was directed to how matters would fare with his own congregation, and on his arrival from Edinburgh on the Saturday evening he found they had secured the Corn Exchange, where service was conducted for about a year when what was known as "the little church" was opened. Here Mr Beith ministered for eight years, the necessity, meanwhile, for a larger building becoming more and more pressing. He himself shrank from initiating the erection of a third church, but his congregation took the matter in hand, the result being the building of the Free North Church, which was opened on 27 February 1853, the collection taken that day amounting to £1360, and entirely freeing the congregation from debt.[11]
Wider church work
[edit]In 1847 Beith gave evidence on the question of sites before a committee of the House of Commons, some landowners having refused sites for the erection of buildings in connection with the Free Church. He took a prominent part in educational and other matters affecting the new religious denomination. The honorary degree of D.D. was conferred upon him in 1850 by Princeton University.[7]
In 1858 he was elected moderator of the general assembly of the free church, in succession to James Julius Wood. This Assembly was the first to deal with the famous Cardross case. Beith regularly conducted two lengthy services every Sabbath, together with a week-day lecture, taking, besides, a prominent part, not only in Presbyterial and general ecclesiastical matters, but in public affairs as well, but, in 1869, following upon a severe illness, he was appointed an assistant. In the eight years during which he was thus aided, no fewer than twenty-one young men were appointed to the task.[14]
Beith was a fluent speaker and able preacher; his theological position was broad and liberal. When the deposition of William Robertson Smith was first moved in the assembly, Beith proposed and carried a motion that the charges be withdrawn and the professor be restored to his chair at Aberdeen University. 'He held that critical study of the scriptures was not inconsistent with reverence for them and belief in their inspiration.[7]
Retiral
[edit]Beith retired from the active service of the church in Stirling in 1876 but continued to take part in the general work of the denomination. Towards the end of 1876 Dr Beith intimated his intention of retiring from the active duties of the pastorate, and on 26 April 1877, John Chalmers of Ladyloan Free Church, Arbroath, was inducted as colleague and successor. Dr Beith having removed to Edinburgh, attached himself to the Free St. George's congregation.[16]
Death and burial
[edit]He died at Edinburgh on 11 May 1891 in his ninety-third year. He is buried in Valley Cemetery attaching the Church of the Holy Rude in Stirling near the southern roundel where a very tall obelisk with inscriptions overshadows the statue of James Guthrie (Guthrie isn't buried there: his headless torso was buried in St Giles and his head was buried secretly at the Revolution after spending years on public display at the Netherbow in Edinburgh).[17][18]
Family
[edit]He married 21 February 1825, Julia Robson, who died 25 September 1866, aged 61, and had issue—
- Matilda Maule, born 31 December 1825
- Gilbert, M.P. for Inverness Burghs, 1892-5, merchant, Glasgow, born 21 July 1827
- Julia Ann Robson, born 17 March 1829 (married 1871, James Alexander, minister of St John's Free Church, Montrose)
- George, minister of Airdrie West Free Church
- Margaret Marion, born 1832, died 8 March 1902
- Robert Donald, W.S., born 16 October 1844, died 23 December 1913
- Isabella (married in 1868 James Rennie Caird, M.A., minister of Paisley Middle Free Church).[19]
By his wife Julia Robson (d. 25 Sept. 1866) he had fourteen children: six sons and eight daughters. His eldest son, Gilbert, was member of parliament for Glasgow Central, 1885, and for Inverness Burghs, 1892-5. Another son, John Alexander, was a justice of the peace and closely connected for many years with philanthropic and educational work in Manchester; he died in October 1896. Both brothers were partners in the well-known firm of Beith, Stevenson, & Co., East India merchants, Glasgow and Manchester.[7]
Artistic recognition
[edit]Beith was photographed in 1860 at the foot of the steps to New College with several other ex-Moderators of the Free Church.
A portrait of Dr. Beith, painted by Norman MacBeth, was presented to him by his congregation in Stirling and passed into the possession of his son Gilbert in Glasgow.[7]
Works
[edit]Dr. Beith was a voluminous writer. Besides many pamphlets on public questions, he published:[7]
- On the Baptist Controversy, in Gaelic (1823)
- A Catechism on Baptism, in Gaelic (1824)
- Sermon at Opening of Synod Glasgow, (1834)
- The Compulsion of the Gospel, a sermon (Edinburgh, 1837)
- Account of the Revivals of Religion in the Isle of Skye (1837)
- Sorrowing yet Rejoicing, a Narrative of successive Bereavements in a Minister's Family [anon.] (Edinburgh, 1839)[12]
- The Two Witnesses traced in History (Edinburgh, 1846)
- Letter to Patrick Arkley, Esq. (Edinburgh, 1846)
- Letters to the Author of the Eight Vials (Edinburgh, 1849)
- Biographical Sketch of the Rev. A. Stewart, Cromarty [in The Tree of Promise] (1854)
- Christ our Life, being a Series of Lectures on the first Six Chapters of John's Gospel 2 vols. (London, 1856-8)[12]
- Disruption Facts and Principles (Stirling, 1859)
- Scottish Reformers and Martyrs (London, 1860)
- The Scottish Church, in her Relations to other Churches at Home and Abroad (Edinburgh, 1869)
- To the Men of the North (Edinburgh, 1876)
- Account of the Parish (New Stat. Acc, xiv.)
- Sermon LII. (Free Church Pulpit, i.)
- A Highland Tour with Dr Candlish (1874)[20]
- Memoirs of Disruption Times (1877)[21]
- The Woman of Samaria (1880)[22]
References
[edit]- Citations
- ^ a b Drysdale 1898.
- ^ Scott 1923, p. 101.
- ^ Scott 1920, p. 416.
- ^ Scott 1923, p. 90.
- ^ Scott 1928, p. 150.
- ^ Scott 1923, p. 322-323.
- ^ a b c d e f g Johnstone 1901.
- ^ Smith 1849.
- ^ a b c d e Barron 2011.
- ^ a b c Drysdale 1898, p. 88.
- ^ a b c Drysdale 1898, p. 89.
- ^ a b c Beith 1845.
- ^ Hutchison 1904.
- ^ a b Drysdale 1898, p. 90.
- ^ Hutchison 1904, p. 168.
- ^ Drysdale 1898, p. 91.
- ^ Gordon 1890.
- ^ M'Crie 1846, p. 176.
- ^ Scott 1923, p. 322.
- ^ Beith 1874.
- ^ Beith 1877.
- ^ Scott 1923.
- Sources
- Barron, Hugh, ed. (2011). "Alexander Beith (1799-1891)". Transactions of the Gaelic Society of Inverness. 65: 259-260. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Beith, Alexander (1845). Sorrowing, yet rejoicing, or, Narrative of recent successive bereavements in a minister's family (6 ed.). New York: R. Carter.
- Beith, Alexander (1856). Christ our life, or, Expository discources on the Gospel by John . London: J. Nisbet.
- Beith, Alexander (1874). A Highland tour with Dr. Candlish (2 ed.). Edinburgh: A. and C. Black.
- Beith, Alexander (1877). Memories of disruption times : a chapter in autobiography, embracing the half-year preceding and the half-year following 18th May, 1843. London: Blackie.
- Cupples, George (1845). "Stirling". The new statistical account of Scotland. Edinburgh and London: W. Blackwood and Sons. p. 439, 390–453.
- Drysdale, William (1898). Old faces, old places, and old stories of Stirling. E. Mackay. pp. 87-91. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Gordon, Alexander (1890). . In Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney (eds.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 23. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 377–379. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Hutchison, Andrew Fleming (1904). History of the high school of Stirling, with notices of schools and education in the burgh generally; eight centuries of Scotish education. Stirling: E. Mackay. pp. 160-168.
- Johnstone, Thomas Boston (1901). "Beith, Alexander". In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Johnstone, Thomas Boston; Mitchell, Rosemary (reviewer) (2006). "McCrie, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/1968. ((subscription or UK public library membership required))
- M'Crie, Thomas (1846). Lifes of Alexander Henderson and James Guthrie. Edinburgh: Printed for the Assembly's Committee (T. Thomson ed.).
- Scott, Hew (1920). Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae; the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation. Vol. 3. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Scott, Hew (1923). Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae; the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation. Vol. 4. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Scott, Hew (1928). Fasti ecclesiae scoticanae; the succession of ministers in the Church of Scotland from the reformation. Vol. 7. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Smith, John (1849). Our Scottish clery: 52 sketches, including clergymen of all denominations (2nd series ed.). Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd. pp. 391-397. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Stewart, Alexander; Beith, Alexander (1864). Stewart, C. C. (ed.). The Tree of Promise; Or, the Mosaic Economy a Dispensation of the Covenant of Grace. By ... A. S., ... With a Biographical Notice [by Alexander Beith. Edited by C. C. S., i.e. C. C. Stewart.]. Edinburgh: William P. Kennedy.
- Wylie, James Aitken, ed. (1881). Disruption worthies : a memorial of 1843, with an historical sketch of the free church of Scotland from 1843 down to the present time. Edinburgh: T. C. Jack. pp. 455–469.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1901). "Beith, Alexander". Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co.