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The arian schism in Ireland, 1830

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

J. M. Barkley*
Affiliation:
Presbyterian Colkge, Belfast

Extract

In Irish Presbyterianism Henry Cooke is commonly regarded as the champion of orthodoxy. Was it not he who drove the Arians out of the Synod of Ulster in 1830? The purpose of this paper is not to examine the theological issues involved, but rather to try to discover the real cause of the schism.

The Reverend J. Smethurst (Moreton Hampstead) visited the North of Ireland during the autumn of 1821. The traditional picture is that of Cooke routing the Unitarian Smethurst in Killyleagh (where Cooke was minister) and pursuing him from place to place in his zeal for orthodoxy. This, however, fails to take into account an important aspect of Smethurst’s campaign. He writes,

I feel persuaded that there is considerable inquiry on religious subjects amongst the Dissenters in the North of Ireland, and that liberal opinions are fast gaining ground amongst them... One of the greatest obstacles in the way of their doing so, is the view they have been accustomed to take of the Christian religion, as being a system upheld solely by its union with the secular power. If they could see it free from this connexion, they would view it in a far more favourable light, and the most formidable of their prejudices would be removed. Even amongst the Dissenters the natural tendency of the most remote connexion of this kind is too obvious to escape notice. The Presbyterian Church of Ireland has long been considered as a sort of demi-establishment. And though its connexion with the civil power is not so close as that of the Church of England, yet the union, as far as it goes, is no less injurious.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1972

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References

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page no 331 note 3 NW 21, 28 April 1825; BNL 22, 26 April 1825. Some of Cooke’s critics were in fact as orthodox as himself, for example, James Thompson, professor of mathematics (IDCE p 29), Samuel Edgar, professor of divinity of Secession Synod (Edgar to Hinks 14 May 1825, RBAI papers), and Samuel Hanna, professor of divinity of Synod of Ulster (IDCE p 33; BNL 10 June 1825).

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