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Andrew A. Bonar's biography of Robert Murray M'Cheyne, the young
yet pioneering Scottish minister who revolutionized Bible readings
at home and abroad, offers a meticulously detailed yet lively
telling of his life story. Born to a middle-class family in
Edinburgh in 1813, the young Robert demonstrated intellectual
ability at an early age. Upon attending the city's university, he
quickly became regarded as a remarkably gifted religious scholar.
His intuitive skills and theological knowledge exceeded all
expectations, and he became an assistant to John Bonar of the
famous Bonar family. Robert Murray M'Cheyne was appointed a
delegate of the Church of Scotland when it organized a visit to
Jerusalem and the Holy Land. By all accounts this journey was
spiritually fulfilling for the young minister, with the major
findings and progress of the voyage recorded in his work entitled
Narrative of a Visit to the Holy Land and Mission of Inquiry to the
Jews.
This superb collection of Samuel Rutherford's letters includes a
biographical account of his life, together with a copious
arrangement of notes and an appendix. As one of Scotland's foremost
theologians and authors in the 17th century, Samuel Rutherford was
a gifted and busy wordsmith. Throughout a career spanning decades,
he wrote a series of valued books on both religious topics and
Presbyterianism in the political sphere. A lively and engaged
thinker, Rutherford's life and thoughts offers a good portrayal of
the evolution in both church and state in his era. Although most
known for his ideas on constitutionalism and on military
principles, Samuel Rutherford in the day-to-day lived for ordinary
men and women believers who frequented his church in
Kirkcudbrightshire, Galloway. He would often pay visits to the
sick, correspond with their families, and offer emotional comfort
and reassurance in times of difficulty.
This superb collection of Samuel Rutherford's letters includes a
biographical account of his life, together with a copious
arrangement of notes and an appendix. As one of Scotland's foremost
theologians and authors in the 17th century, Samuel Rutherford was
a gifted and busy wordsmith. Throughout a career spanning decades,
he wrote a series of valued books on both religious topics and
Presbyterianism in the political sphere. A lively and engaged
thinker, Rutherford's life and thoughts offers a good portrayal of
the evolution in both church and state in his era. Although most
known for his ideas on constitutionalism and on military
principles, Samuel Rutherford in the day-to-day lived for ordinary
men and women believers who frequented his church in
Kirkcudbrightshire, Galloway. He would often pay visits to the
sick, correspond with their families, and offer emotional comfort
and reassurance in times of difficulty.
Andrew A. Bonar's biography of Robert Murray M'Cheyne, the young
yet pioneering Scottish minister who revolutionized Bible readings
at home and abroad, offers a meticulously detailed yet lively
telling of his life story. Born to a middle-class family in
Edinburgh in 1813, the young Robert demonstrated intellectual
ability at an early age. Upon attending the city's university, he
quickly became regarded as a remarkably gifted religious scholar.
His intuitive skills and theological knowledge exceeded all
expectations, and he became an assistant to John Bonar of the
famous Bonar family. Robert Murray M'Cheyne was appointed a
delegate of the Church of Scotland when it organized a visit to
Jerusalem and the Holy Land. By all accounts this journey was
spiritually fulfilling for the young minister, with the major
findings and progress of the voyage recorded in his work entitled
Narrative of a Visit to the Holy Land and Mission of Inquiry to the
Jews.
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