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Robert Traill

Robert Traill (1642–1716) was a Scottish preacher and Puritan whose ministry spanned a turbulent period of religious persecution and theological debate. Born in May 1642 in Elie, Fife, Scotland, he was the son of Robert Traill, a minister at Greyfriars Church in Edinburgh who signed the 1638 National Covenant. Educated at the University of Edinburgh, Traill excelled in literary and theological studies, feeling an early call to preach Christ. His close ties to Covenanters like John Welsh and James Guthrie, whom he attended at Guthrie’s execution in 1661, led to his denouncement as a “Pentland Rebel” after the 1666 uprising, forcing him to flee to Holland in 1667. There, he joined his exiled father and assisted in preparing Samuel Rutherford’s Examen Arminianismi for publication. Returning to England, he was ordained in 1670 by Presbyterian ministers in London and ministered at Cranbrook, Kent, and later a Scots church in London. Traill’s preaching career was marked by courage and evangelical fervor, despite imprisonment on the Bass Rock in 1677 for nonconformity. Released after promising compliance, he focused on practical godliness, delivering warm, instructive sermons that avoided intellectual elitism. His writings, including A Vindication of the Protestant Doctrine Concerning Justification (1692) and Sermons on the Throne of Grace (Hebrews 4:16), defended Calvinistic theology against Arminianism and legalism, gaining popularity among Scottish evangelicals like Thomas Boston. Traill died unmarried on May 16, 1716, in London at age 74, leaving a legacy as a preacher whose works—reprinted into the 21st century—reflect his steadfast faith amid persecution and his commitment to the spiritual welfare of ordinary believers. His influence endures through his collected writings, notably the Banner of Truth editions.