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W.T.P. Wolston

Walter Thomas Prideaux Wolston (September 6, 1840 – March 17, 1917) was an English preacher, physician, and prolific writer whose 50-year ministry within the Plymouth Brethren movement blended medical practice with fervent Gospel proclamation. Born in Brixham, Devon, to a Christian family—likely influenced by his pious mother and a father who hosted preachers like Charles Stanley—Wolston grew up surrounded by faith but lived as a self-described “thorough-going young worldling,” immersed in pleasures like the Glee Band he joined. After leaving school, he trained in a lawyer’s office in Brixham until December 4, 1860, when he moved to London for legal studies. There, on his first Sunday, a fellow lodger took him to hear Richard Weaver, a rough ex-collier, at Surrey Theatre, convicting him of sin. The next Sunday, Charles Stanley’s sermon and a conversation with T.B. Miller led him to James 2:19, where he accepted Christ, instantly shifting his life’s course. Wolston’s preaching career began after his 1864 move to Edinburgh, where he studied medicine, became House Surgeon at the Old Infirmary, and built a large practice. Sensing a divine call to Scotland, he abandoned London’s prospects, preaching in rented halls and theaters alongside his medical work. From 1872, he edited God’s Glad Tidings (later The Gospel Messenger) for 45 years, writing evangelistic articles—some with his wife, known only by initials like “X”—and nine books, including Simon Peter: His Life and Letters and Night Scenes of Scripture. His ministry emphasized salvation, often ending discourses with Gospel appeals, influencing young men and students in Edinburgh. In 1909, he retired from medicine, traveling to Australia, New Zealand, and Norway, where a 1915 stroke left him paralyzed. He died at 76 in Weston-super-Mare, England, after two bedridden years, leaving a legacy of over 88,000 hymnbooks and countless souls touched by his dual calling as a “skilful and kindly Christian doctor” and preacher. Personal details like his wife’s name or children remain unrecorded, reflecting his focus on ministry over self.