Robert Rainy

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Robert Rainy.

Robert Rainy (1 January 1826 – 22 December 1906), was a Scottish Presbyterian divine; his father, Dr Harry Rainy, Professor of Forensic Medicine in the University of Glasgow, was the son of a Sutherland minister.

Biography

File:Robert Rainy's grave, Dean Cemetery.JPG
The huge monument at Robert Rainy's grave, Dean Cemetery

Born in Glasgow, Scotland, young Rainy was intended for his father's profession, but he was caught by the evangelical fervour of the Disruption movement, and after studying for the Free Church he became a minister, first in Aberdeenshire and then in Edinburgh, till in 1862 he was elected professor of Church history in the theological seminary, New College, a post he only resigned in 1900. In 1874 he was made principal of the college and was subsequently known as Principal Rainy. To this day, the dining Hall in New College is called the Rainy Hall.

He had come to the front as a champion of the liberal party in the Union controversy within the Free Church, and in combating Dean Stanley's Broad Church views in the interests of Scotch evangelicism; and about 1875 he became the undisputed leader of the Free Church. He guided it through the controversies as to Robertson Smith's heresies, as to the use of hymns and instrumental music, and as to the Declaratory Act, brought to a successful issue the union of the Free and United Presbyterian Churches, and threw the weight of the united church on the side of freedom of Biblical criticism.

He was the first moderator of the General Assembly of the United Free Church of Scotland, having previously been moderator of the Free General Assembly. Though not a great scholar he was eminent as an ecclesiastical statesman, and his influence was far-reaching. After the strain of the fight with the so-called "Wee Frees" in 1904-5 his health broke down.

I his final years he was living at 8 Rosebery Crescent in Edinburgh's West End.[1] However, and he went on a trip to Australia to recover his health, and sadly died in Melbourne on 22 December 1906.

His body was returned to Scotland and he is buried against the southern wall of Dean Cemetery in Edinburgh. His monument is nearly identical to that of the brewer John McEwan, slightly to the east of Rainy.

See Lives by Patrick Carnegie Simpson (1909) and R Mackintosh (1907).

Legacy

The main secular assembly space within New College is now called Rainy Hall. It is used as dining halls for the University of Edinburgh's student halls of residence at Mylne's Court and Patrick Geddes Hall.

References

  1. Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1905-6
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainLua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links