3 May 1832 A.D. Rev. Edward Irving (Church of Scotland) Barred from Pastorate—Had Turned to Pentecostalist Ravings, Babbelings and Other Madnesses; Defrocked in 1833
3 May 1832 A.D. Rev. Edward Irving (Church of Scotland) Barred
from Pastorate—Had Turned to Pentecostalist Ravings, Babbelings and Other
Madnesses; Defrocked in 1833
Editors. “Edward Irving.” Encyclopedia Britannica. N.d. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/294872/Edward-Irving. Accessed 1 May 2015.
Edward Irving, (born August 4, 1792, Annan, Dumfries [now in Dumfries and
Galloway], Scotland—died December 7, 1834, Glasgow, Strathclyde [now in City of Glasgow council
area]), Church of Scotland minister whose teachings became the basis of the religious movement known
as Irvingism, later called the Catholic
Apostolic Church.
After working as a mathematics teacher and studying theology part time,
Irving was called in 1822 to the Caledonian chapel in London as a preacher. His chapel congregation grew so rapidly
that in 1827 a new and larger church was built for him in Regent Square. His
popularity waned, however, because of his increasing stress on apocalypticism and eschatology, including
his prediction in 1825 that the Second Coming of Christ would occur in 1864.
From 1826 he was the centre of a “school of the prophets,” which published
the Morning Watch, or Quarterly Journal of Prophecy periodically from 1829 to 1833. In 1828 his Doctrine of the Incarnation Opened aroused opposition for its denigration of the human side
of Christ’s nature. After a similar work by him appeared in 1830, he was
charged in ecclesiastical courts with maintaining “the sinfulness of Christ’s
humanity.” Despite his protest that he had been misinterpreted, he was
excommunicated by the London presbytery, and in 1833 he was deposed from his
ministry by the Church of Scotland.
By then a convinced believer in such pentecostal phenomena as speaking in
tongues, Irving preached throughout Great Britain, returning to London to
assume a minor position in the evolving Catholic Apostolic Church. Formed
shortly after his death by several disciples and associates, the sect sought to
emphasize the unity of all Christians in a universal church and to prepare for
the Second Coming. The church flourished until the end of the 19th century,
though later members rejected the name “Irvingites” for their group. A close
friend of the English authors Thomas Carlyle, Charles
Lamb, and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Irving was honoured by burial in the Glasgow Cathedral crypt.
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