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Iain Murray

Iain Murray (April 19, 1931 – N/A) is a Scottish preacher, author, and historian whose calling from God within Reformed evangelical circles has emphasized biblical preaching and the preservation of revivalist heritage for over six decades. Born in Lancashire, England, to John Murray, a British Army officer, and Lilian Mackenzie, he moved to Scotland as an infant after his father’s death in 1932, raised by his mother and stepfather in the Isle of Lewis. Converted at 17 in 1948 through a sermon by Donald MacFarlane, he graduated from King Alfred’s School in Wantage and studied Philosophy and History at the University of Durham, earning a B.A. in 1954, before training under D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones. Murray’s calling from God led to his ordination in the Presbyterian Church of Australia, serving as assistant to Lloyd-Jones at Westminster Chapel in London (1956–1959), followed by pastorates at Grove Chapel, Camberwell (1961–1969), and St. Giles Presbyterian Church in Sydney (1981–1984). Co-founding the Banner of Truth Trust in 1957 with Jack Cullum, he preached through writing and editing, producing works like The Forgotten Spurgeon (1966), Revival and Revivalism (1994), and biographies of Jonathan Edwards and Lloyd-Jones, amplifying Reformed theology globally. His sermons and lectures, often delivered at conferences, reflect a passion for historical revival and scriptural fidelity. Married to Jean Ann Walters in 1955, with whom he has five children, he continues to minister from Edinburgh, Scotland.