WISHART’S CONTRIBUTION TO SCOTLAND
Leonard Ravenhill once wrote, “spiritual expansion is expensive and at times excruciating”. This is true of both personal and corporate spiritual expansion. To grow as an individual, as a church, and as a nation requires a cost, and that cost can at times be excruciating to pay. The spiritual expansion of Scotland under the Reformation demanded both these elements; a high price and a painful transaction when paying it but it was these two elements alone that made the difference. Among those who paid this price was George Wishart, in many respects the forgotten forerunner of the Scottish Reformation.
As the historian, Wylie succinctly puts it “The main forces in Scotland…which weakened the Church of Rome,…were the reading of the Scriptures and the deaths of the martyrs”. The Reformation in Scotland began with the introduction of the Bible into the country in 1525 but it only gained momentum through the life and subsequent death of its first martyr Patrick Hamilton. He was the first to contribute to the spiritual expansion of his country in the era of the Reformation but he was not the last. Hamilton was martyred in February of 1528 and his death was like a lighted match being thrown into a can of gasoline; the fallout was enormous. One Scottish gentleman by the name of James Lindsay commented to the Archbishop of St. Andrews, James Beaton; “My Lord, if ye will burn any man, let him be burned in hollow cellars, for the smoke of Patrick Hamilton has infected as many as it did blow upon”