- John Willison
John Willison, (1680–
3 May 1750 ) was an evangelical minister of theChurch of Scotland and a writer of Christian literature.His father was
laird of a small property nearStirling , where John Willison was born. He was inducted to the parish of as ministerBrechin in 1703. In 1718 he moved to a charge inDundee .His treatise on the
sanctification of the Lord's day was in response to the policies of James VI and the Episcopalian clergy. It provoked a reply from James Small, an Episcopalian, which was answered by Willison in his "Letter from a Parochial Bishop to a Prelatical Gentleman". After this, he wrote a devotional work: "A Sacramental Directory". Small replied to his earlier "Letter", upon which Willison published "An Apology for the Church of Scotland". He then moved on to political topics with "A Letter to an English Member of Parliament".After the ejection of
Ebenezer Erskine and his fellow-ministers for opposition topatronage , Willison attacked their exclusion in a sermon to theSynod ofAngus andMearns in 1733 (published as "The Church's Danger"). He tried to win them back and a majority was gained in the General Assembly of 1734 as a healing measure. As a result Willison was sent toLondon as part of a deputation to labour for the repeal of patronage, but they were only successful insofar as they gained some important concessions. Erskine and his colleagues were not satisfied and formed a separate presbytery in 1739 (seeUnited Presbyterian Church of Scotland forSeceders history).In 1737 he wrote one of his most famous and most reprinted works "The Afflicted Man's Companion", and also an explanation of the Shorter
Catechism called "An Example of Plain Catechising". Other catechetical pieces published by Willison at different times were "The Mother's Catechism" (a famous and much used young children's catechism) and "The Young Communicant's Catechism".In 1742 he published another much printed work, "The Balm of Gilead" which includes twenty-four discourses, twelve of them relating to
The Lord's Supper . In 1744 there followed his "Fair and Impartial Testimony" on the state of the Church of Scotland.During the Jacobite rebellion of 1745, having published in the same year "Popery Another Gospel", he was threatened by soldiers of the Highland army while conducting service in the church building and for a few weeks had to preach in private houses.
His last publication was "Sacramental Meditations and Advices" (1747).
Selected writings of Willison
* "Treatise Concerning the Sanctification of the Lord's-Day" (1712 or 1713)
* "A Letter from a Parochial Bishop to a Prelatical Gentleman in Scotland, concerning the Government of the Church"(1714)
* "A Sacramental Directory: or, a Treatise concerning the Sanctification of a Communion-Sabbath" (1716)
* "An apology for the Church of Scotland : against the accusations of prelatists and Jacobites, particularly the reflections of J.S. late incumbent at Forfar" (1719)
* "A letter to an English member of Parliament : from a gentleman in Scotland, concerning the slavish dependencies, which a great part of that nation is still kept under, by superiorities, wards, reliefs, and other remains of the feudal law, and by clanships and tithes" (1721)
* "The Church's danger, and the minister's duty declared, in a sermon preach'd at the opening of the Synod of Angus and Mearns" (1733)
* "The Afflicted Man's Companion" (1737)
* "An Example of plain Catechising upon the Assembly's Shorter Catechism" (1737)
* "The balm of Gilead, for healing a diseased land " (1742)
* "A fair and impartial testimony : essayed in name of a number of ministers, elders, and Christian people of the Church of Scotland, unto the laudable principles, wrestlings and attainments of that Church; and against the backslidings, corruptions, divisions, and prevailing evils, both of former and present times" (1744)
* "Sacramental meditations and advices for the use of communicants : in preparing their hearts, and exciting their affections, on sacramental occasions ; and a Christian directory, consisting of forty scripture directions, proper for all those intending heaven" (1747)Sources
* Biographical introduction to John Johnstone's reprint of "The Afflicted Man's Companion"
* [http://www.copac.ac.uk COPAC]External links
* [http://www.apuritansmind.com/Creeds/YoungCommunicantWillison.htm A Puritan's Mind] Etext of "The Young Communicant's Catechism"
* [http://www.ccel.org/ccel/willison/testimony.html Christian Classics Ethereal Library] Etext of "A Fair and Impartial Testimony"
* [http://www.electricscotland.com/history/other/willison_john.htm Electric Scotland] John Willison biography
* [http://www.the-highway.com/Sermon_library.html The Highway] Includes Etext of Willison's "Five Sacramental Sermons"
* [http://www.reformationpress.co.uk/books.html Reformation Press] Two booklets currently in print reprinting parts of Willison's writings under the titles "Directions for Christians" and "Meditations on the Lord's Supper"
* [http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~jbeggsoc/jbs-lecture09.html James Begg Society] Sample from "An Example of Plain Catechising"
* [http://www.revival-library.org/catalogues/world1/macfarlan/05.htm Revival Library] Letter from Willison about the Cambuslang Revival
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.