John Forbes (minister of St Paul's, Glasgow) explained

Type:Minister
John Forbes
Church:St. John's, Glasgow
Birth Date:1800
Birth Place:Dunkeld, Scotland
Death Date:25 December 1874
Religion:Presbyterian
Alma Mater:Perth Academy and St Andrews University
Module:
Embed:yes
Term Start1:16 November 1826
Term End1:18 December 1828
Office2:minister of St Paul's Parish Church, Glasgow
Term Start2:18 December 1828
Term End2:19 May 1843
Office3:minister of St Paul's Free Church, Glasgow
Term Start3:1843
Term End3:25 December 1874
Nationality:Scottish

John Forbes (1800 – 25 December 1874) was a Presbyterian minister who served in St Paul's Church in Glasgow. After several years in the Church of Scotland, he left at the Disruption and joined the Free Church of Scotland.

Life

John Forbes was born in Dunkeld in 1800. In 1828 he was educated at Perth Academy and St Andrews University. After graduation he was for sometime employed as a mathematical tutor in Perth Academy. Forbes was licensed by the Presbytery of Perth on 27 April 1825. He was subsequently ordained to Hope Park Chapel (Newington), Edinburgh, on 16 November 1826. In this role Forbes succeeded Robert Gordon whom he had previously succeeded as mathematics master in Perth Academy. He later moved to Glasgow being presented by Magistrates and Council on 10 September, and translated, and admitted on 18 December 1828.

He was awarded a doctorate degree (D.D.) from the University of St Andrews, on 15 April 1837. He also received an LL.D. degree from Glasgow University, on 18 December 1840.

At the Disruption he joined the Free Church in 1843 and served as minister of St Paul's Free Church, from 1843–1874. He was a member of the Assembly of 1863, made a long speech on the Union question, and accepted a place on the Committee. Afterwards, when he and some of his brethren came to believe that union with the United Presbyterians could not be achieved but by the relinquishment of one of the fundamental principles of the Free Church, he felt that he had no alternative but to withdraw from the Committee. He died unmarried, on 25 December 1874.

Publications

References

Sources