Authors — M
26 authors
Robert Murray McCheyne (1813–1843) was a Church of Scotland minister at St. Peter's, Dundee, whose brief life and fervent piety made him one of the most celebrated figures in Scottish church history. Andrew Bonar's Memoir and Remains of McCheyne, along with his letters and sermons, continue to move readers with their portrait of consecrated pastoral ministry.
James MacGregor (1829–1894) was a Free Church of Scotland minister who became Professor of Systematic Theology at New College, Edinburgh, before emigrating to serve the Presbyterian Church in New Zealand. He authored a handbook of Reformed systematic theology and contributed to major ecclesiastical controversies of his era.
J. Gresham Machen (1881–1937) was the most intellectually formidable defender of confessional Presbyterianism in the twentieth century, whose Christianity and Liberalism argued that theological liberalism was not a form of Christianity at all.
David M'Intyre (1859–1938) was a Scottish Free Church minister who succeeded Andrew Bonar at Finnieston and later became Principal of the Bible Training Institute in Glasgow. He is best remembered for The Hidden Life of Prayer (1891), a devotional classic on the practice of prayer that has remained in continuous print for over a century.
Donald Macleod (b. 1940) is a Free Church of Scotland minister and emeritus professor of systematic theology at the Free Church College in Edinburgh. He is one of the most respected contemporary Scottish Reformed theologians, known for clear and forthright writing on Christology, the atonement, and the person of the Holy Spirit.
Kenneth A. MacRae (1883–1964) was a Free Church of Scotland minister who served in Stornoway, Lewis, for many decades and was one of the most respected Highland ministers of his generation. His published diary and sermons, along with his principled stands on issues of church and state, have made him a significant figure in twentieth-century Scottish church history.
Thomas Manton (1620–1677) was a Puritan minister and member of the Westminster Assembly whose expository preaching and writing produced some of the most voluminous works in the Puritan tradition. His commentaries on James, Jude, and the 119th Psalm are especially valued for their thoroughness and practical application.
Hugh Martin (1822–1885) was a Scottish Free Church minister who served at Panbride and later devoted himself entirely to theological writing. His major works — The Atonement and The Prophet Jonah — are esteemed in Reformed circles for their profound treatment of substitutionary atonement and their deep spiritual insight.
Albert N. Martin is a Reformed Baptist pastor who served Trinity Baptist Church in Montville, New Jersey, for over forty years and is known for his expository preaching and his extensive lectures on preaching and pastoral ministry. His multi-volume work on preaching is widely used in Reformed Baptist ministerial training.
Samuel Miller (1769–1850) was a Presbyterian minister and founding professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church Government at Princeton Theological Seminary, where he taught from 1813 to 1849. A churchman of the Old School tradition, he authored numerous works on Presbyterian polity, church history, and practical theology.
Iain H. Murray is a Scottish minister and co-founder of the Banner of Truth Trust, which has republished Puritan and Reformed works since 1957. As a biographer of Spurgeon, Lloyd-Jones, Jonathan Edwards, and others, Murray has done more than almost anyone to recover the history and writings of the Reformed tradition for modern readers.
John Murray (1898–1975) was a Scottish-born Westminster Seminary theologian whose commentary on Romans and Redemption Accomplished and Applied are recognized as masterpieces of careful, rigorous Reformed exegesis and theology.
