Aberdeen doctors

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Aberdeen doctors or Doctors of Aberdeen were six

Presbyterian Covenanters
.

History

When Patrick Forbes was consecrated Bishop of Aberdeen in 1618, he

prideful or as redolent of the Roman Catholic title Doctor of the Church. The early recipients of the Doctor of Divinity who stayed on to teach at the colleges became known as the "Aberdeen doctors".[1]

Lord Cupar, the Master of Forbes, and Sir Thomas Burnett, Laird of Leyes representing the nobility; and Alexander Henderson, David Dickson, and Andrew Cant
, the ministry. The doctors were prepared to adhere provided satisfactory answers were given to 14 written questions, termed "demands". The Covenanter ministers' "answers" were submitted the following day, prompting "replies" from the doctors and "second answers" from the Covenanters, who then left the town. The doctors issued further replies which they called "duplies", which went unanswered. All the texts were quickly printed and widely circulated and debated.

The doctors' obduracy contributed to the

First Bishops' War
of 1639 in which the Covenanters sought the submission of Aberdeen.

List

The six doctors who participated in the 1638 disputation were:[2]

  • William Leslie
    , Principal of King's College, leader after death of Bishop Forbes in 1635
  • John Forbes of Corse
    , theologian at King's College and son of Bishop Forbes
  • Alexander Scroggie, scholar of King's College, Minister in Old Aberdeen
  • Alexander Ross, Scholar of King's College, Minister in Aberdeen
  • Robert Baron, Professor of Divinity at Marischal, Minister in Aberdeen
  • James Sibbald, Professor of Natural Philosophy at Marischal, Minister in Aberdeen

As well as Bishop Patrick Forbes, two other notable Aberdeen divines were associated with the six doctors:[3]

References

Sources

Primary
  • The Answers of Some Brethren of the Ministerie to the Replies of the Ministers and Professours of Divinitie in Aberdene, Concerning the Late Covenant. Also, Duplies of the Ministers and Professors of Aberdene, to the second Answers of some reverend Brethren, Concerning the Late Covenant, R. Young: Edinburgh, 1638.
Secondary
  • Denlinger, Aaron Clay (2012). ""Men of Gallio's Naughty Faith?": The Aberdeen Doctors on Reformed and Lutheran Concord". Church History and Religious Culture. 92 (1): 57–83.
    ISSN 1871-241X
    .
  • Kerr, John (2014). Scottish Education. Cambridge University Press. pp. 132–3. .
  • Macmillan, Donald (1909). The Aberdeen doctors : a notable group of Scottish theologians of the first episcopal period, 1610–1638 and the bearing of their teaching on some questions of the present time. London: Hodder and Stoughton.

Citations

  1. ^ Macmillan 1909, pp.44–45
  2. ^ Macmillan 1909, pp.45–48
  3. ^ Macmillan 1909, pp.48–49