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Birth13 Jul 1667, Cambaston, Scotland
Death2 Feb 1740
GeneralProf of Divinity: Glasgow.
Notes for Rev Prof John Simson
From Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae, vol 7, p. 400

John Simpson, Prof of Divinity at Glasgow University, 1708-1740

JOHN SIMSON, born 13th July 1667, eldest son of Patrick S., min. of Renfrew ; educated at Univs. of
Edinburgh, M.A. (18th July 1692), and Glasgow; librarian to Univ. of Glasgow April 1696 ; went to Leyden, Holland, in 1696; licen. by Presb. of Paisley 13th July 1698 ; again went to Holland in Sept.
that year, as tutor to John, eldest son of Francis Montgomerie of Giffen, and studied divinity under John Marckius, author of the Medulla ; returned Aug. 1700 ; became assistant to his father; ord. to Troqueer
20th Sept. 1705; app. to this Chair 7th July, trans, and adm. 21st Sept. 1708; died 2nd Feb. 1740.

He was the first notable heretic within the Scottish Church, the first to strike a blow that woke her from the lethargy of centuries. From 1714 to 1717 he was libelled on charges of Arminianism, and from 1721 to 1729 his alleged Arian beliefs were challenged by the General Assembly. He was finally prohibited from all ecclesiastical function, 13th May 1729, though retaining the emoluments of his Chair and his title of Professor. His supposed heterodox views included a belief that the moon was inhabited, that happiness here and hereafter was the chief aim of the Gospel, that the heathen could be saved even without the
knowledge of Christ, God having declared Himself to man also by way of natural revelation, and that all baptized infants went immediately to glory at their death.

He marr. 31st Oct. 1710, Jean (died 27th Nov. 1782), daugh. of James Stirling, min. of The Barony, Glasgow, and niece of Principal John S., and had issue:
Patrick, born 16th March 1712, died 2nd Sept. 1716 ;
James, born 1st Dec. 1713, died 17th April 1716;
Margaret, born 9th Aug. 1715, died 3rd Nov. 1725 ;
Joanna, born 23rd March 1719, died 12th April 1731;
Anna, born 15th Aug. 1720 (marr. Matthew Morthland of Rindmuir), died llth March 1802;
Sarah, born 7th March 1722, died 15th Feb. 1723;
John, born 29th June 1723, died 18th Feb. 1730 ;
Elizabeth, born 12th Nov. 1724 ;
Patrick, born 16th May 1727, died 2nd Feb. 1733;
James, born 29th April 1729, died in London 26th May 1777 ;
Margaret, born 31st Jan. 1731, died 2nd Feb. 1733;
Sarah, born 4th July 1732 died 19th Aug. 1735;
Jean, born 5th July 1735 (marr. 1757, John Moore, M.D., author of Zeluco, and was mother of Lieut. - General Sir John M., hero of Corunna), died in London 25th March 1820.

Publications:
The Case (Glasgow, 1715); Continuations of the Case (Edinburgh, 1727-9). [Henderson’s Religious Controversies of Scotland, 4-19 ; An Enquiry into Mr Simson’s Sentiments by Principal James
Hadow (Edinburgh, 1730) ; Mathieson’s Scotland and the Union (1905), 224, et seq. ; Wodrow’s Anal., iii. 183, 207, iv. 54 ; Dict. Nat. Biog. ; Cunningham’s Church Hist. (1882), 246, 264-75 ; John Flint’s xamen
Doctrines D. Johannis Simson (1717); Williamson’s Remarks on Mr Simson’s Case (1727); Dundas’s State of the Processes (1728); Proceedings of the Committee of 1727 (Edinburgh, 1729); Reid’s Divinity
Professors, 204-40 [has a full Bibliography] ; Cat. Edin. Univ. Lib., iii., 647.]
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Of the above children, only those that lived to adulthood have been put on this database.
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DNB Main notes for Rev Prof John Simson
Simson, John (1668?–1740), Scottish theologian

Simson, John (1668?–1740), Scottish theologian, was the eldest son of Patrick Simson (1628–1715), minister of Renfrew, and sacred poet (JULIAN, Dictionary of Hymnology, 1892, p. 1058). A sister, Agnes, married John Simson, and was mother of Robert Simson [q.v.] and of Thomas Simson [q.v.] . John's birth about 1668 is inferred from his describing himself in 1727 as ‘near sixty’ (WODROW, Correspondence, iii. 305). He was educated at Edinburgh University where he graduated M.A. on 18 July 1692. A document of 21 April 1696 shows that he was then librarian at Glasgow College. On 13 July 1698 he was licensed by Paisley presbytery. He mentions (Case, 1715, p. 286) that he had received instruction and personal kindness from John Marck, professor of divinity at Leyden from 1689 to 1731. His brother Matthew (1673–1756), minister at Pencaitland, Haddingtonshire, was entered at Leyden as a divinity student on 20 Feb. 1699, and it is probable that Simson accompanied him, though he is not entered in the list of students. Never robust in health, he obtained no ministerial charge till 1705, when he was called to Troqueer, Kirkcudbrightshire on 21 June, and ordained there on 20 Sept. In 1708 he was promoted to be professor of divinity in Glasgow university, succeeding James Wodrow, father of the historian, Robert Wodrow [q.v.] . He lectured in Latin, using Marck's ‘Medulla’ as his main text-book.

Throughout the last century Simson's name was a byword as a disseminator of unsound doctrine; but he seems to have been perfectly sincere in expressing his loyalty to the standards of his church; he retracted expressions interpreted by others in an heretical sense, and was never convicted of heresy. He had adopted the maxim that reason is ‘fundamentum theologiæ,’ and his aim was to make orthodoxy intelligible. During twenty years the ranks of presbyterian clergy in the west of Scotland and north of Ireland were recruited from his pupils.

As early as 1710 Simson discussed his views at Moffat with James Webster (1659–1720), minister of the Tolbooth church, Edinburgh, ‘a man of great warmth, but a narrow spirit’ (CALAMY, Own Life, 1830, ii. 179). Subsequently he stated his position in correspondence with Robert Rowan (1660–1714), minister of Penningham, Wigtonshire, and with James Hog [q.v.] , editor of ‘The Marrow.’ Webster first publicly attacked Simson in August 1712. On 17 March 1714 he made formal charges in the Edinburgh presbytery. Through the synod of Lothian the matter reached the general assembly, and Webster, acting under the assembly's order, tabled his complaint before the Glasgow presbytery in the autumn. Simson gave in his replies on 29 March 1715, and the general assembly on 8 May referred the case to a committee of thirty ministers and six elders, on 13 May. At the head of the committee was William Carstares [q.v.] , who died before the end of the year. The ablest theologians upon it were James Hadow [q.v.] , and William Hamilton, D.D., professor of divinity at Edinburgh, and grandfather of Bishop Horsley. The gist of the accusation was that Simson had attributed too much to the light of nature, but there were miscellaneous charges, e.g. he held it probable that the moon was inhabited. At the assembly of 1716 the ‘marrow-men’ clamoured for his suspension, but the case was deferred till the next assembly, when Webster broke out (8 May 1717) with what Wodrow calls ‘a dreadful sally.’ At the next sitting he apologised. On 14 May 1717 the assembly found that Simson had ‘vented some opinions not necessary to be taught in divinity,’ and had employed expressions ‘used by adversaries in a bad and unsound sense;’ these were prohibited for the future, but no further censure was passed. The assembly was, in fact, between two fires. On the same day judgment was given against the ‘Auchterarder creed’ [see BOSTON, THOMAS, the elder]. Preaching at the outer church, Glasgow, on 19 May, Simson gave offence by allusions to his opponents ‘and even the magistrates.’

Eight years later his orthodoxy on the point of our Lord's deity was impeached. He admitted changes in his treatment of the topic. Up to 1722 he had taken John Owen, D.D. [q.v.] , as his model; for two years (1723–4) he had specially controverted the semi-Arian teaching of Samuel Clarke (1675–1729) [q.v.] ; finding that this course had its dangers, he began in December 1725 to combat the opposite error of Sabellianism, and was in consequence accused of going over to Samuel Clarke. He defended his procedure by affirming his judgment that, in the then state of Scottish theology, there was danger of Sabellianism and Socinianism, none of Arianism. His own account is closely confirmed by the evidence of his students. On 16 Feb. 1726 Charles Coats, minister of Govan, brought the matter before the Glasgow presbytery, who drew up six queries, which Simson declined to answer. Delay was caused by the state of Simson's health. Wodrow thought him ‘in a dying condition,’ and that his disorder had affected his head, for he brought in ‘Clarke, the Fathers and the Council of Nice in all conversations.’ He was unable to attend the assembly of 1726. On 18 May 1727 the assembly suspended him till the next assembly, and appointed a committee of twenty-one ministers and ten elders to co-operate with the Glasgow presbytery in preparing the case. On 16 May 1728, after receiving Simson's explanations and withdrawals, the assembly found his sentiments to be ‘sound and orthodox,’ but his teaching had been ‘subversive,’ and his explanations tardy. He was suspended till another assembly should take off the sentence; meantime the matter was to be referred to the presbyteries. Charles Owen, D.D. [q.v.] , was present at this assembly. The action of Edinburgh University in conferring (8 Nov.) its diploma of D.D. upon four non-subscribers, including Owen, was viewed as a protest against the suspension of Simson.

By the next assembly all the presbyteries but three or four had reported for Simson's deposition. Besides the ‘marrow-men’ a strenuous advocate for this course was Allan Logan (d 1733), minister of Culross. Finally, the suspension from all ecclesiastical function was confirmed on 13 May 1729. Simson was to retain the emoluments of his chair, though it was ‘not fit or safe’ that he should teach divinity.

After suspension, Simson signed a student's testimonial as S.T.P. No provision was made for the duties of his chair, save that the principal, Neil Campbell, heard the discourses of bursars. Simson died on 2 Feb. 1740. His disposition is described as ‘frank and open,’ though Wodrow complains of his ‘shiftings and hedgings’ under ecclesiastical pressure. His wife was a niece of John Stirling (1662–1727), principal of Glasgow College. He had a son, born 1727, and a daughter, who married (1757) John Moore, M.D. [q.v.] , and was the mother of Sir John Moore, the hero of Coruña. He printed nothing except the papers connected with his trials (‘The Case,’ Glasgow, 1715, 8vo; and ‘Continuations,’ Edinburgh, 1727–9, 8vo). His correspondence with Rowan was printed by Webster, Edinburgh, 1715, 8vo, for presentation to the assembly.

Sources
Works cited above; Hew Scott's Fasti Eccles. Scoticanæ; Flint's Examen Doctrinæ D. Johannis Simson, 1717; Williamson's Remarks on Mr. Simson's Case, 1727; Dundas's State of the Processes, 1728; Truth's Triumph over Error, 1728; Proceedings of the Committee (1727), 1729; A Ballad by J[oh]n B[rys]s, 1729; Christian Moderator, 1827, pp. 226 sq.; Correspondence of Robert Wodrow (Wodrow Society), 1842–3; Acts of the General Assembly, 1843, pp. 500 sq., 591 sq.; Whiston's Memoirs, 1753, p. 279; Thomson's Hist. Secession Church, 1848, pp. 10 sq.; Innes's Munimenta Universitatis Glasg., 1854, i. 446, ii. 441 sq.; Catalogue of Edinburgh Graduates, 1858, p. 142; Reid's Hist. Presbyterian Church in Ireland (Killen), 1867, iii. 293; Hunt's Religious Thought in England, 1873, iii. 320; Album Studiosorum Acad. Lugduno-Batavæ, 1875.

A. G.

Original date of publication: 1897
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