September 1653 A.D. Death of Scots Covenanter, Rev. Hugh Binning
September
1653 A.D. Death of Scots
Covenanter, Rev. Hugh Binning
Wiki connects some dots.
Hugh Binning (1627–1653) was a Scottish philosopher and theologian. Binning was born in Scotland during the reign of Charles I, ordained in the (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland and
died during time of Cromwell and the Commonwealth of England.
A precocious child, Binning at age 13 was admitted to the
study of philosophy at the University of Glasgow. By
the age of 19, he was appointed regent and professor of philosophy at the
University of Glasgow. Three years later, he was called to be minister and
presided at a church in Govan, adjacent to the city of Glasgow; a post he held until his untimely death of consumption at the age of 26. He
was a follower of James Dalrymple. In
later life he was well known as an evangelical Christian.[1]
Contents
·
4 Works
·
6 Notes
Impact of the Commonwealth
Hugh Binning was born two years after Charles I ascended to the thrones of
England, Ireland, and Scotland. At the time, each was an independent country
sharing the same monarch. The Acts of Union 1707
integrated Scotland and England to form the Kingdom of Great Britain;
the Acts of Union 1800
integrated Ireland to form United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Ireland.
The period was dominated by both political and religious
strife between the three independent countries. The religious dispute centered
on whether religion was to be dictated by the monarch or was to be the choice
of the people; whether people have a direct relationship with God or they
needed to use an intermediary. The civil disputes centered on the extent of the
king's power, a question of the Divine right of kings;
specifically whether the King has right to raise taxes and armed forces without
the Consent of the governed. These
wars ultimately changed the relationship between king and subjects.
In 1638 the General Assembly of
the Church of Scotland voted to remove bishops and
the Book of Common Prayer
that had been introduced by Charles I to impose the Anglican model on the
Presbyterian Church of Scotland. Public riots occurred. The result was the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, an
interrelated series of conflicts that took place in the three countries sharing
the same monarch. The first of the conflicts was in 1639, the First of the Bishops' Wars, a single border skirmish between England and Scotland; also known as the
war the armys did not wanted to fight.
To maintain his English power base Charles I made secret
alliances with Catholic Ireland and Presbyterian Scotland to invade Anglican
England, promising that each country could establish their own separate state
religion. Once these secret entreaties became known to the English Long Parliament, the Congregationalist faction (of
which Oliver Cromwell was a primary
spokesman) took matters into their own hands and Parliament established an army
separate from the King. Then, Charles I was executed in January 1649, which led
to the rule of Cromwell and the establishment of the Commonwealth. The conflicts
concluded with the The English Restoration of
the monarchy with the return of Charles II, in 1660.
The Act of Classes was passed by the Parliament of Scotland in 23 January 1649; the act
banned Royalists (people supporting the monarchy) from holding political or military
office. In exile, Charles II signed the Treaty of Breda (1650)
with the Scottish Parliament; among other things, the treaty established
Presbyterianism as the national religion. Charles was crowned King of Scots at Scone in January 1651. By September 1651 Scotland was annexed by England, its
legislative institutions abolished, Presbyterianism dis-established, and
Charles was forced into exile in France.
The Scottish Parliament rescinded the Act of Classes in
1651, which produced a split within Scottish Society. The sides of the conflict
were called the Resolutioners (who supported the rescission of the act –
supported the monarchy and the Scottish House of Stewart) and the Protesters (who supported Cromwell and the Commonwealth); Binning sided with
the Resolutioners.
When Cromwell sent troops to Scotland, he was also
attempting to dis-establish Presbyterianism and the Church of Scotland,
Binning spoke against Cromwell's act. On Saturday 19 April 1651, Cromwell
entered Glasgow and the next day he heard a sermon by three ministers who
condemned Cromwell for invading Scotland. That evening, Cromwell summoned those
ministers and others, to a debate on the issue. At the debate, Rev Hugh Binning
is said to have out-debated Cromwell’s ministers so completely that he silenced
Cromwell’s ministers.[2]
Politics
Hugh Binning political views were based on his theology.
Binning was a Covenanter, a movement that began in Scotland at Greyfriars Kirkyard in
1638 with the National Covenant and continued with the 1643 Solemn League and Covenant –
in effect a treaty between the English Long Parliament and Scotland for the preservation of the reformed religion in exchange for
troops to confront the threat of Irish Catholic troops joining the Royalist army. Binning could also be described as a Resolutioners; both political positions were taken because of their religious
implications. However, he saw the evils of the politics of his day was not a
“fomenter of factions” writing “A Treatise of Christian Love” as a response.[3]
Theology
Because of the turmoil time in which Hugh Binning lived,
politics and religion were inexorably intertwined. Binning was a Calvinist and follower of John
Knox. As a profession, Binning was trained as a Philosopher,
and he believed that philosophy was the servant of theology. He thought that both Philosophy and Theology should be taught in
parallel. Binning’s writing, which are primarily a collection of his sermons,
“forms an important bridge between the 17th century, when philosophy in
Scotland was heavily dominated by Calvinism, and the 18th century when figures
such as Francis Hutcheson
re-asserted a greater degree of independence between the two and allied
philosophy with the developing human sciences.” [4]
Religiously, Hugh Binning was, what we would call today,
an Evangelical Calvinist. He spoke on the primacy of God’s love as the ground of salvation:
… our salvation is not the
business of Christ alone, but the whole Godhead is interested in it deeply, so
deeply that you cannot say who loves it most, or who likes it most. The Father
is the very fountain of it, his love is the spring of all.[5]
With regards to the extent of the ‘atonement’, Hugh
Binning, like many Scottish theologians of his day, was not a
‘hyper-Calvinist,’ since it was not until the Synod of Dort in 1619 that the Reformed tradition
come to accept limited atonement,
one of the primary tenants of the Five Points of Calvinism.
Binning did not hold that the offer of redemption applied only to the few that
are elect but said that “the ultimate
ground of faith is in the electing will of God.” In Scotland during the 1600s
the questions concerning atonement revolved around the terms in which the offer
was experssed.[6]
Binning believed that "forgiveness is based on
Christ's death, understood as a satisfaction and as a sacrifice: 'If he had
pardoned sin without any satisfaction what rich grace it had been! But truly,
to provide the Lamb and sacrifice himself, to find out the ransom, and to exact
it of his own Son, in our name, is a testimony of mercy and grace far beyond
that. But then, his justice is very conspicuous in this work.'"[6]:65
Works
All of the works of Hugh Binning were published
posthumously and were primairly collections of his sermons. Of his speaking
style, it was said: "There is originality without any affectation, a rich
imagination, without anything fanciful or extravert, the utmost simplicity,
without an thing mean or trifling." [7]
·
The Common Principles of the
Christian Religion, Clearly Proved, and Singularly Improved; or, A Practical
Catechism published by Patrick
Gillespie in 1660 [8] An analysis of the Westminster Confession of Faith.
The work was translated into Dutch in 1678 by James Koelman, a minister of
Sluys in Flanders.[9] (The Common
Principles of the Christian Religion, fulltext)
Quotations from the publication include:
On
the love of God
And what is love but the
very motion of the soul to God? And so till it have attained that, to be in
him, it can find no place of rest.[10]
On the free grace of the
Gospel
I am guilty, and can say
nothing against it, while I stand alone. But though I cannot satisfy, and have
not; yet there is one, Jesus Christ, who gave his life a ransom for many, and
whom God hath given as a propitiation for sins. He hath satisfied and paid the
debt in my name; go and apprehend the cautioner, since he hath undertaken it,
nay, he hath done it, and is absolved.[10]
On Learning
Be not ignorant as beasts,
that know no other things than to follow the drove; quæ pergunt, non quo eundum
est, sed quo itur; they follow not whither they ought to go, but whither
most go. You are men, and have reasonable souls within you; therefore I
beseech you, be not composed and fashioned according to custom and example,
that is, brutish, but according to some inward knowledge and reason. Retire
once from the multitude, and ask in earnest at God, What is the way? Him that
fears him he will teach the way that he should choose. The way to his blessed
end is very strait, very difficult; you must have a guide in it,—you must have
a lamp and a light in it,—else you cannot but go wrong.[10]
·
Sinner's Sanctuary, being
forty Sermons upon the eighth Chapter of the Epistle of the Romans, from the
First Verse down to the Eighteenth. a treatise
originally published in 1670 [9]:327
·
Fellowship with God, being
Twenty Eight Sermons on the First Epistle of John, Chap. 1st and Chap. 2nd,
Verses 1, 2, 3. a treatise originally published in 1671
by "A.S. who in the preferace to the reader, styles himself, his servant
in the gosple of our dearest Lord and Savior" [9]:328
·
Heart Humiliation or
Miscellany Sermons, preached upon some choice texts at several solemn
occasions. originally published in 1676 by the same A.S. that
published the treatice "Fellowship with God". The first of the
sermons was preached July 1650 [9]:328
An Useful Case of
Conscience, Learnedly and Accurately
Discussed and Resolved, Concerning Associations and Confederacies with
Idolaters, Infidels, Heretics, Malignants or any other Known Enemies of Truth
and Godliness. The treatise was used by the Covenanters and seems to have been originally published in Holland in 1693. There is
reference to the treatise at a "general meeting of Society people ... at
Edinburgh 28 May 1683." The treatise expressed the opinion that Scotland
should not support Charles I without some restraint placed on relatively
absolute royal power and without assurance the Presbyterian religion could be
maintained.[11] The documents seems to have been presented to the Society either by Hugh
Binning's son, John, or his widow, Barbara Gordon (who remarried about 1657 to
James Gordon; he was born in Ireland and became a minister at Paisley,
Renfrewshire, Scotland.) (An Useful Case of
Conscience, fulltext). In the treatise Binning writes:
Where
God hath given us liberty by the law of nature, or his word, no king can justly
tie us, and when God binds and obliges us by any of these, no king or
parliament can loose or untie us.[10]
·
A Treatise of Christian Love a sermon based on John 13:35, “By this shall all men know that ye are my
disciples, if ye have love one to another” and 1 Corinthians 13. Binning
explores the concept that as a believer in Christ, there is a need for
Christians to show by their love for one another.[12] (A Treatise of
Christian Love, fulltext) Binning argues:
But
Christ’s last words persuade this, that unity in affection is more essential
and fundamental. This is the badge he left to his disciples. If we cast away
this upon every different apprehension of mind, we disown our Master, and
disclaim his token and badge.[10]
On Charity
Charity “thinketh no evil.”
[1 Cor. 13:5] Charity is apt to take all things in the best sense. If a thing
may be subject to diverse acceptations, it can put the best construction on it.
It is so benign and good in its own nature that it is not inclinable to suspect
others. It desires to condemn no man, but would gladly, as far as reason and
conscience will permit, absolve every man. It is so far from desire of revenge,
that it is not provoked or troubled with an injury. For that were nothing else
but to wrong itself because others have wronged it already, and it is so far
from wronging others, that it will not willingly so much as think evil of them.
Yet if need require, charity can execute justice, and inflict chastisement, not
out of desire of another’s misery, but out of love and compassion to mankind.
Charitas non punit quia peccatum est, sed ne peccaretur, it looks more to
prevention of future sin, than to revenge of a bypast fault, and can do all
without any discomposure of spirit, as a physician cuts a vein without anger.
Quis enim cut medetur irascitur? “Who is angry at his own patient?”[10]
·
In 1735 a collections of
Binning’s works were published posthumously, originally edited by Rev. M.
Leishman, D.D., a minister who was a later successor to Hugh in the parish of
Govan, which contained sermons not previously published. There has been several
editions of the Complete "Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning", one
of the latest (Classic Reprint) was published by Forgotten Books in 2012 [11]
Personal life
Hugh Binning was the son of John Binning and Margaret
M'Kell. Margaret was the daughter of Rev. Matthew M'Kell,[10] [note 1] who was a minister in the parish of Bothwell, Scotland, and sister of Hugh
M'Kell, a minister in Edinburgh. [10] [note 2] [13] Hugh Binning was born on the estate of his father in Dalvennan, Straiton,
in the shire of Ayr. The family owned other land in the parishes of Straiton
and Colmonell as well as Maybole in Carrick. [14]
In 1645, James Dalrymple, 1st Viscount of Stair, who was Hugh’s master (primary professor) in the study of philosophy,
announced he was retiring from the University of Glasgow. After a national
search for a replacement on the faculty, three men were selected to compete for
the position. Hugh was one of those selected, but was at a disadvantage because
of his extreme youth and because he was not of noble birth. However, he had
strong support from the existing faculty, who suggested that the candidates
speak extemporaneously on any topic of the candidate’s choice. After hearing
Hugh speak, the other candidates withdrew, making Hugh a regent and professor
of philosophy, while he was still 18 years old.[3]:203
On 7 Feb 1648 (at the age of 21) Hugh was appointed an
Advocate before the Court of Sessions (an attorney). In the same year he
married Barbara Simpson (sometimes called Mary), daughter of Rev. James Simpson
a minister in Ireland. Their son, John, was born in 1650.[11]
Hugh died around September 1653 and was buried in the
churchyard of Govan, where Patrick Gillespie, then principal of the University of Glasgow, ordered a monument inscribed
in Latin, roughly translated:
Here lies Mr. Hugh Binning,
a man distinguished for his piety and eloquence, learned in philology,
philosophy, and theology, a Prelate, faithful to the Gospel, and finally an
excellent preacher. In the middle of a series of events, he was taken at the
age of 26, in the year of our Lord 1653. Alive, he changed the society of his
own land because he walked with God. And if you wish to make other inquires,
the rest should keep silence, since neither you nor the marble can comprehend
it.[15]
Hugh’s widow, Barbara (sometimes called Mary), then
remarried James Gordon, an Anglican priest at Cumber in Ireland. Together they
had a daughter, Jean who married Daniel MacKenzie, who was on the winning side
of the Battle of Bothwell Bridge
serving as an ensign under Lieutenant-Colonel William Ramsay (who became the
third Earl of Dalhousie),
in the Earl of Mar’s Regiment of Foot.[16]
Hugh’s son, John Binning, married Hanna Keir, who was
born in Ireland. The Binning’s were Covenanters, a resistance movement that objected to the return of Charles II (who was
received into the Catholic Church on his deathbed). They were on the losing
side in the 1679 Battle of Bothwell Bridge.
Most of the rebels who were not executed were exiled to the Americas; about 30
Covenanters were exiled to the Carolinas on the Carolina Merchant in 1684.
After the battle, John and Hanna were separated. [17]
In the aftermath of the battle at Bothwell Bridge, Hugh’s
widow (now Barbara Gordon) tried to reclaim the family estate at Dalvennan by
saying that John and his wife owed his step father a considerable some of
money. The legal action was successful and Dalvennan became the possession of
John’s half sister Jean, and her husband Daniel MacKenzie.[14] In addition, Jean came into possession Hanna Keir's property in Ireland.
By 1683, Jean was widowed. John Binning was branded a
traitor, was sentenced to death and forfeited his property to the Crown. John’s
wife (Hanna Keir) was branded as a traitor and forfeited her property in
Ireland. In 1685 Jean "donated" the Binning family's home at
Dalvennan and other properties, along with the Keir properties to Roderick
MacKenzie, who was a Scottish advocate of James II (James VII of Scotland),
and the baillie of Carrick. According to an act of the
Scottish Parliament, Roderick MacKenzie was also very effective in “suppressing
the rebellious, fanatical party in the western and other shires of this realm,
and putting the laws to vigorous execution against them”[18]
Since Bothwell Bridge, Hanna had been hiding from the
authorities. In 1685 Hanna was in Edinburgh where she was found during a sweep
for subversives and imprisoned in the Tolbooth of Edinburgh, a combination city hall and prison. Those arrested with
Hanna were exiled to North America, however she developed Dysentery and remained behind. By 1687, near death, Hanna petitioned the Privy Council of Scotland for
her release; she was exiled to her family in Ireland, where she died around
1692.[16]
In 1690 the Scottish Parliament rescinded John's fines
and forfeiture, but he was not able to recover his family’s estates, the courts
suggesting that John had relinquished his claim to Dalvennan in exchange for
forgiveness of debt, rather than forfeiture.[19]
There is little documentation about John after his wife's
death. John received a small income from royalties on his father Hugh’s works
after parliament extended copyrights on Hugh’s writings to him. However, the
income was not significant and John made several petitions to the Scottish
parliament for money, the last occurring in 1717. It is thought that John died
in Somerset county, in southwestern England. [20]
Notes
1.
Jump up ^ "Matthew M’Kell, was a minister in the
parish of Bothwell, near Glasgow.
“After having been, on different occasions brought before the Privy council,
and imprisoned, he was, on the 8th of January, 1674, upon his refusing to
engage not to preach, ordered to confine himself to the parish of Carluke, and security was required from him that
he would appear before the Council at their summons…. He died at Edinburgh, in
March 1681”. (Works of Hugh Binning: Kindle Locations 20469-20474)
2.
Jump up ^ Some authors suggest that Matthew M'Kell was
either the grandfather or uncle to Hugh M'Kail (sometimes Hugh M'Kell), which
would make Hugh M'Kail a brother-in-law to Hugh Binning. Spelling of names was
not as precise in those days, e.g. when describing Hugh Binning in the same
document, there are variations of the spelling of the Binning name. Hugh M’Kell
was arrested for being concerned in the insurrection at Pentland. Hugh M'Keil was imprisoned and tortured
(his foot was mangled to the point of compound fractures using the boot). In the end, M'Kell was executed in
Edinburgh on 22 December 1666 because he would not sign the Test Act – because his preaching would not conform
to the Anglican tradition. "The address of young M’Kail on the scaffold
concluded with these sublime expressions—“Farewell, father and mother, friends
and relations. Farewell the world, and all delights. Farewell meat and drink.
Farewell sun, moon and stars. Welcome God and Father! Welcome sweet Lord Jesus
the Mediator of the new covenant! Welcome blessed Spirit of grace, and God of
all consolation! Welcome glory! Welcome eternal life! Welcome death!” We are
told by Kirkton that “when Mr. M’Kail died, there was such a lamentation as was
never known in Scotland before, not one dry cheek upon all the street or in all
the numberless windows in the market place” It was discovered afterwards, that Alexander Burnet, then the
archbishop of Glasgow, had in his possession at the time, a letter from the
king, forbidding any more blood to be shed. But to the disgrace of his sacred
profession, and of his feelings as a man, “Burnet let the execution go on,
before he produced his letter, pretending there was no council day between”
(Binning, Hugh (2011-03-24). The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning (Kindle
Locations 20474-20487))
References
1.
Jump up ^ Andrew Pyle (editor), Dictionary
of Seventeenth Century British Philosophers (2000), article pp. 90-95.
2.
Jump up ^ Howie,
John. "The Life of Mr. Hugh Binning.".
Biographia Scoticana (Scots Worthies). Retrieved 11 Jan 2013.
3.
^ Jump up to: a b Howie, John (1863) [1775]. A Clergyman of
the Church of Scotland, ed. Lives of the Scottish Covenanters; a Brief
Historical Account of the most Eminent Noblemen, Gentlemen, Ministers, and
Others… from the beginning of the 16th Century to the year 1688. Preface
and Notes by William M’Gavin,
Esq. W. R. M’Phun. p. 205.
4.
Jump up ^ "Hugh
Binning 1627-1653 - The International Society for Scottish Philosophy". Retrieved 11 Jan 2013.
5.
Jump up ^ Binning,
Hugh (2011) [1735]. The Rev. M. Leishman, D.D. Minister of the Parish of Govan,
ed. "Of The Unity Of The Godhead And The Trinity Of Persons, Lecture
XIII" The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning (Kindle Edition).
p. Kindle Location 3114.
6.
^ Jump up to: a b Macleod,
Donald (2000). "The Evangelical Quarterly" 72
(1). Paternoster Press. PO Box 300, Carlisle Cumbria CA 3-0QS-UK. p. 63.
7.
Jump up ^ The Religious Magazine; Or, Spirit of the Foreign
Theological Journals and Reviews. E Littell, Chestnut
Street, Philadelphia. Clark & Raser, Printers, 33 Carter’s Alley, Volume=4.
july 1829 to june 1830. p. 168.
8.
Jump up ^ Binning,
Hugh (2011) [1660]. The Common Principles of the Christian Religion, Clearly
Proved, and Singularly Improved; or, A Practical Catechism. originally
published by Patrick Gillespie.
Solus Christus. ISBN 098695904 Check
|isbn=
value (help).
9.
^ Jump up to: a b c d Johnston,
John C. (1887). Treasury of the Scottish Covenant. Andrew Elliott, 17
Princes Street, Edinburgh. p. 327.
10.
^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Binning,
Hugh (24 Mar 2011) [1743]. The Rev. M. Leishman, D.D., Minister of the Parish
of Govan, ed. "The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning". Kindle Edition.
p. Kindle Locations 2103–2104.
11.
^ Jump up to: a b c Binning,
Hugh (17 Aug 2012) [1743]. The Works of the Rev. Hugh Binning. Forgotten
Books. ASIN B00962L2WS.
12.
Jump up ^ Binning,
Hugh (1 May 2004) [1743]. Ref. Robert Woodwrow, Minister of Eastwood, ed. Treatise
of Christian Love. Puritan, Paperback Edition: Banner of Truth. ISBN 0851518702.
13.
Jump up ^ Howie,
John (1830). "Hugh M'Kail". The Scots Worthies,
Vol 1. Preface and notes by William M'Gavin (Google Books ed.). Glasgow,
Scotland: W.R. M'Pun, Trongage. pp. 309–319. Retrieved 21 Jan 2013.
14.
^ Jump up to: a b Jardine,
Mark. "Renwick’s Intercepted Letter of 1685: John Binning of Dalvennan, Mrs
Binning, Edinburgh and Eaglesham".
Jardine's Book of Martyrs. Retrieved 19 Jan 2013.
15.
Jump up ^ Binning, Hugh (2011-03-24). The Works of the Rev. Hugh
Binning (Kindle Locations 990-992). Kindle Edition.
17.
Jump up ^ Jardine,
Mark. "The Departed: The Covenanters Banished on the Carolina Merchant in 1684". Retrieved 17 Jan 2013.
18.
Jump up ^ "Ratification
in favour of Mr Roderick MacKenzie of Dalvennan".
Parliamentary Register, Charters: Ratifications. 16 Jun 1685. Retrieved 19 Jan 2013.
19.
Jump up ^ "Remit to
the committee for fines and forfeitures in favour of Mr Roderick MacKenzie,
advocate, anent the gift of forfeiture of the lands of Dalvennan".
Parliamentary Register, Prodedure: remit to committee. 22 July 1690. Retrieved 19 Jan 2013.
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