John Guthrie (Bishop of Moray)
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- For other men with this name, see John Guthrie
Senior posting | |
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See | Diocese of Moray |
Title | Bishop of Moray |
Period in office | 1623–1638 |
Consecration | October, 1623 |
Predecessor | Alexander Douglas |
Successor | Vacant (1638-1662); next bishop was Murdoch MacKenzie |
Religious career | |
Previous post | Minister of Kinnell, Arbirlot, Perth, then St Giles |
Personal | |
Date of birth | 1580s |
Place of birth | Scotland |
Date of death | August 28, 1649 |
Place of death | Guthrie, Angus |
John Guthrie (d. 1649) was a Scottish prelate active in the first half of the 17th century. The son of the goldsmith Patrick Guthrie and Margaret née Rait, in 1597 he completed an MA at the University of St Andrews, becoming a Reader at the church of Arbroath in the same year. Two years later, on August 27, 1599, he became minister of Kinnell parish church in Angus (Presbytery of Arbroath). In the following years he was translated to various different churches. In 1603, he became minister of Arbirlot parish, Angus. In 1617, he became minister in the city of Perth, before, on June 15, 1621, becoming minister of the parish of St Giles in Edinburgh.
Guthrie used his appointments as a platform for involvement in the national church. As minister of Arbirlot, he was one of the commissioners of the Presbytery of Arbroath at the Glasgow assembly of 1610. Later in that year, he got elected as clerk of the synod of St Andrews. He was a member and commissioner of the Perth assembly in 1618. In this period he established himself as an ardent supporter of the crown and its episcopalian policies. It was this that brought him the prestigious and important charge of St Giles in 1621. It was no surprise that, only two years later, he rose to episcopal rank, obtaining crown nomination to the vacant diocese of Moray on July 21, 1623. He was provided to the see on August 16 of the same year, and received consecration in October.
As Bishop of Moray, Guthrie remained a staunch royalist, an active anti-Catholic and keen promoter of ecclesiastical discipline. He took a large role in the coronation of King Charles I of Scotland in 1633. Bishop Guthrie supported the King's plans to bring the Scottish church in line with the Church of England, authorising all ministers in Moray to obtain and use the new Scottish Book of Common Prayer. Bishop Guthrie was, however, out of touch with general religious sentiment in Scotland, and the Glasgow assembly of Scottish churchmen deposed him from his bishopric on December 11, 1638. Guthrie refused to accept this deposition and refused to recognise the legality of the National Covenant. He preached against it into the Spring of 1639, and on July 11, 1639, he was excommunicated by the Scottish church. He attempted to hold out in Spynie Palace. On July 16, 1640, Major-General Robert Monro of Foulis captured the palace. Guthrie was sent to Edinburgh and imprisoned in the city's Tolbooth.
He was later released, and retired to his estate, purchased in 1636, at Guthrie, Angus. John died at Guthrie on August 28, 1649, and was buried in the aisle of the local parish church. He had married one Nicolas née Wood, by whom he had three sons (John, Patrick and Andrew) and three daughters (Bethia, Nicolas, and Lucretia). His oldest son John (d. 1643) followed his father into the ministry, while his youngest son Andrew fought as a royalist during the English Civil War, being captured at the Battle of Philiphaugh (1645) and exectuted soon after.
[edit] References
- Keith, Robert, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops: Down to the Year 1688, (London, 1924)
- Pearce, A. S. Wayne, "Guthrie, John (d. 1649)", in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 3 May 2007
- Watt, D.E.R., Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638, 2nd Draft, (St Andrews, 1969)
Religious titles | ||
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Preceded by Alexander Douglas II |
Bishop of Moray 1623–1638 |
Succeeded by Vacant next succeeded by Murdoch MacKenzie |
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