William Cunningham (2 October 1805 – 14 December 1861) was a Scottish theologian and co-founder of the Free Church of Scotland.[1] He was Moderator of the Free Church in 1859.
He studied Divinity at the University of Edinburgh and was licensed by the Presbytery of the Church of Scotland in Duns in 1828 and was posted as assistant minister to the Middle Parish in Greenock.[3] He was ordained as minister of that church in October 1831, where he remained for three years. In January 1834 he was translated to the first charge of Trinity College Kirk in Edinburgh. This move (to one of Scotland's most prestigious churches) was mis-timed inasmuch that the fate of the church was already sealed by Act of Parliament as the church was to be demolished to make way for Waverley Station.
Cunningham became a major advocate of a new Free Church and wrote extensively on the subject. Princeton University gave him an honorary doctorate (Doctor of Divinity) in 1842 in relation to his writing.[2]
His transfer also coincided with the commencement of the period known in Scottish ecclesiastical history as the Ten Years' Conflict, and he left the Church of Scotland in the Disruption of 1843 to become one of the founders of the Free Church of Scotland, alongside Thomas Chalmers and Robert Smith Candlish.[4]
Towards the end of 1843 he visited America to make the case for the Free Church and he raised some money there, having already received the degree of D.D. from Princeton University.[5][4] Cunningham was appointed Professor of Theology at the New College, Edinburgh, before transferring to the chair of Church History in 1845, replacing Rev David Welsh.[6] He succeeded Thomas Chalmers as Principal in 1847, serving in that position until his death, and was appointed moderator of the Free Church General Assembly in 1859.[4]
Cunningham specialised in historical theology, and wrote a two volume work on the subject.[7][8] An open source audio narration of the book is available.[9] He also wrote The Reformers and the Theology of the Reformation. William Garden Blaikie suggested that he was the "ablest defender of Calvinism in his day" and that the "gentleness of his personal character was a striking contrast to his boldness and vehemency in controversy."[10] Cunningham has been described as a scholar and controversialist.[11] According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, "his ... sympathies combined with his evident desire to be rigidly impartial qualifying him to be an interesting delineator of the more stirring periods of church history, and a skilful disentangler of the knotty points in theological polemics."[4]
In later life Cunningham lived at 17 Salisbury Road in south Edinburgh.[12] He died in Edinburgh and is buried beneath a large sarcophagus-style grave in the Grange Cemetery alongside the north path.
Family
On 15 July 1834 he married Janet Denniston (1810 - 2 March 1888)daughter of John Denniston of Greenock and
Jean Fairrie, and had issue —
Janet, born 7 June 1835 (married George Carphin, banker, Dunkeld), died 23 January 1913
Helen, born 14 April 1837 (married Robert Mackenzie, Dundee), died 15 November 1865
William, born 15 September 1839, died 16 October 1843
Jane Fairrie, born 4 May 1841, died 29 December 1894
John Denniston, M.D., born 11 December 1842, died 20 August 1871
Charles Gordon, merchant, born 9 July 1845, died 12 December 1894
Andrew Blackadder, born 1 August 1846, died 14 September 1852
William Robertson, born 9 September 1848, died 13 June 1849
Archibald, merchant, born 26 December 1849, died 12 February 1892
Elizabeth, born 3 April 1851, died 6 September 1852