
Binning, Hugh
Description
The Sinner’s Sanctuary consists of a series of forty sermons on Romans 8:1–15. They were preached by Hugh Binning, minister in Govan, now part of Glasgow, on the south bank of the River Clyde in the west of Scotland. Walking readers through the apostle Paul’s argument, Binning carefully explains the safety and freedom saved sinners experience through life united to Christ and walking according to His Spirit. The results are particularly powerful and comforting for believers. These sermons are representative of Binning’s all-too-brief ministry from 1650 until his death in 1653 at the age of twenty-six. He was, by any measure, a remarkable minister.
Read a free preview of The Sinner's Sanctuary, including Dr. Sinclair Ferguson's introduction to Binning's preaching.
Contents
Hugh Binning, Preacher of The Sinner’s Sanctuary
Endorsements
“The quality of Hugh Binning’s godliness and the depth of his scholarly insight were so great that he made a profound impact on his century and far beyond. Binning is both stimulation for the mind and food for the soul.”
—Eric Alexander, minister (1977–1997) of St. George’s-Tron Church, Glasgow
“There is a striking freshness in the way that Hugh Binning presents truths commonly handled. The profound becomes plain and practical without losing a sense of wonder but rather increasing it. He reaches the conscience with gospel sweetness but loses none of the power of sharp conviction. His reasoning is strong and biblical yet winsome and compassionate. Any topic is dealt with in a thorough yet concise way with apt illustration.”
—Matthew Vogan, editor of The King in His Beauty: The Piety of Samuel Rutherford
About the Author
Hugh Binning (1627–1653) was a Scottish Covenanter who served as a professor at the University of Glasgow and a minister of Govan. Binning showed great promise as a student from a young age. He entered Glasgow University at the age of thirteen and finished his master’s degree and had become a professor of philosophy at the university by the time he was nineteen. Two years later he married Barbara Simpson, the daughter of a minister from Ireland, and the couple had a son, John. The call to the ministry was strong, though, and so he set out to learn theology. When he was twenty-two, he took up the pastorate at Govan, where he served until his death from consumption at the age of twenty-six. All his writings were collected posthumously.
David Searle was director of Rutherford House, a theological research and study center in Edinburgh, Scotland. Prior to that he pastored two Presbyterian churches in Scotland and one in Northern Ireland.
Sinclair B. Ferguson is currently the honorary evening preacher in St. Peter’s Free Church of Scotland, Dundee; vice-chairman of Ligonier Ministries; and Chancellor’s Professor of Systematic Theology at Reformed Theological Seminary.