George Wishart -1513-1546
Reviewed by Admin on Jul 3
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George Wishart was born in Scotland and he died as a martyr at 33 years old. He was a teacher of New Testament Greek at Montrose. He was exceptional in his eloquence and manner of communication.
Being the time of the reformation, he adopted the Reformed view of Scripture, denied the errors of the Catholic Church, and was then charged with heresy. He went to England and then to the Continent where he was introduced to the Helvetic Confession, and he became the first one to translate it into English. He returned to England and spent some time teaching at Cambridge around 1542. Afterwards, he returned to Scotland. He fasted every fourth day, ate only twice a day, and lived in humble lodgings, even though his family was well connected and had sufficient means to support him. He was a sacrificial saint who ministered greatly to those suffering with the plague that swept through Scotland at that time. He married the daughter of John Knox.
The Catholic church was dominant in Scotlandand his preaching against the papacy and the catholic doctrinal errors, aroused in the papists such a fury that he was threatened with death. Their tyranny was carried out with deadly aim. An attempt was even made on his life. When he was finally captured at Mirmiston, he was taken to St. Andrews, and burned at the stake.
The plague being now considerably abated, he determined to pay a visit to the town of Montrose. He received a letter directed to him from his intimate friend the laird of Kinnear, acquainting him that he had taken a sudden sickness, and requested him to come to him with all diligence. Upon this he immediately set out on his journey, attended by some honest friends in Montrose, who, out of affection, would accompany him part of the way. They had not travelled above a quarter of a mile, when all of a sudden he stopped, saying to the company, “I am forbidden by God to go this journey. Will some of you be pleased to ride to yonder place (point with his finger to a little hill), and see what you find, for I apprehend there is a plot against my life;” whereupon he returned to the town, and they, who went forward to the place, found about sixty horsemen ready to intercept him. By this the whole plot came to light; they found that the letter had been forged; and upon their telling Mr. Wishart what they had seen, he replied, “I know that I shall end my life by the hands of that wicked man (meaning the Cardinal), but it will not be after this manner.” (The Scots Worthies,” by John Howie, of Lochgoin. Edingburgh andLondon: Oliphant, Anderson, & Ferrier, 1870, page 22)
The two Sabbaths following he preached at Tranent; and in all his sermons, after leaving Montrose, he more or less hinted that his ministry was near an end. . . The next place he preached was Haddington, where his congregation was at first very large, but the following day very few attended him, which was though to be owing to the influence of the Earl of Bothwell, who, at the instigation of the Cardinal, had inhibited the people from attending. Not withstanding the anxiety and discouragement which he laboured under, he went immediately to the pulpit and sharply rebuking the people for their neglect of the Gospel he warned them, “That sore and fearful would be the plagues that should ensue; that fire and sword would waste them; that strangers should possess their houses, and chase them from their habitations.” This prediction was soon after verified, when the English took and possessed the town, and while the French and Scots besieged it in the year 1548. This was the last sermon which he preached; in it, as had for some time been usual with him, he spoke of his death as near at hand. He went to Ormiston, accompanied by the Lairds of Brunston and Ormiston, and Sir John Sandilands, the younger of Calder. John Knox was also desirous to have gone with him; but Wishart desired him to return, saying, “One is enough for a sacrifice at this time.”