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Maurice Roberts

Maurice Jonathan Roberts (1938–) is an English Presbyterian minister and preacher whose influential career has spanned over five decades within the Free Church of Scotland and its successor, the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing). Born in 1938 in Chester, England, he was educated at Durham University, where he studied classics. After teaching Latin and Greek in secondary schools in Scotland, he pursued theological training at the Free Church College in Edinburgh. Ordained in 1974, he served as minister of Ayr Free Church from 1974 to 1994, then moved to Greyfriars Free Church in Inverness, where he remained until his retirement in 2010. Roberts married Sandra, and they have one daughter and three grandchildren. Roberts’s preaching career is distinguished by his commitment to Reformed theology and his role in the formation of the Free Church of Scotland (Continuing) in 2000, following a split over church discipline issues. He was a key figure in the Free Church Defence Association, leading to his suspension in 1999 for refusing to retract statements against the General Assembly’s perceived hypocrisy, a stance that precipitated the schism. Serving as Moderator of the General Assembly in 2007 and editor of The Banner of Truth magazine from 1988 to 2003, he authored numerous books, including The Thought of God, The Christian’s High Calling, and Finding Peace with God. From 2002 to 2012, he lectured in Greek and New Testament at the Free Church Seminary, leaving a legacy as a preacher dedicated to biblical fidelity and spiritual renewal.