Early life and ministry
He was born at 1 Rankeillor Street in south Edinburgh on 15 March 1821, the eldest of seven children of the Rev. George Milligan and his wife, Janet Fraser. His father, a licentiate of the Church of Scotland, was then engaged in teaching at Edinburgh, and from 1825 lived at 1 Rankeillor Street, in the South Side. Milligan was sent to the High School, where he was dux of his class. In 1832, when his father became minister of the Elie inBiblical scholar
In 1845, his health gave cause for anxiety, and he obtained a leave of absence for a year, which he spent in Germany, studying at Halle. He made the acquaintance, among others, of August Neander, in whom he found a kindred spirit. Promoted in 1850 to the more important parish of Kilconquhar, and in 1860 he was appointed first professor of biblical criticism in the university of Aberdeen. He worked hard, but his liberal politics and mild broad-church views were not congenial to many of his colleagues, and his amiability concealed from his students the real strength of his character. Nevertheless, his power and influence grew, and in 1870 he joined the company formed for the revision of the English New Testament. From that time onward he was a prolific writer. His style, prolix at first, became pure and graceful, and in such works as those on the resurrection and ascension of Jesus Christ and on the Revelation of St. John he took a foremost place among British theologians. In the church courts, too, his rise was steady. In 1872 he was sent, together with the Rev. J. Marshall Lang (now Principal Lang) as a representative from the general assembly of the Church of Scotland to the assembly of the Presbyterian church in the United States; in 1875 he was elected depute-clerk of the general assembly, and in 1886 he succeeded Principal John Tulloch as principal clerk.Church of Scotland leadership
Already in 1882, partly in recognition of his work as a New Testament reviser, he had been elevated to the Church of Scotland moderator's chair. His address on the occasion was notable for its declaration that, in any scheme for church reunion in Scotland, the Scottish episcopalians must be considered. While its enunciation of doctrine concerning the church called forth the warm approval of Canon Liddon, who wrote and thanked him for it. Although in his earlier days his humanitarian feelings, and his enthusiasm for liberty and progress, had allied him with those who were then called broad churchmen, Milligan did not have at any period of his career the slightest sympathy with the disregard for doctrine which has sometimes marked the members of that school. Ultimately he ranged himself with high churchmen, being, he declared, impelled to join them by increased study of the New Testament. His doctrine of the church he gathered for himself from the Epistle to the Ephesians, on which he had contributed an important article to the ninth edition of the '' Encyclopædia Britannica.'' His views on the importance of dogma and on the sacraments he learned, as he believed, from St. John, of whose writings he was a lifelong student and diligent expositor. This development of his opinions in no way limited his width of sympathy, nor did it interfere with the friendly intercourse, ecclesiastical as well as social, that he had been wont to hold with nonconformists with Wesleyans like Dr.Works
Milligan's literary productiveness began in 1855, when he contributed the first of a series of papers to Kitto's ''Journal of Sacred Literature.'' In 1857, he addressed a "Letter to the Duke of Argyll on the Education Question." ''The Decalogue and the Lord's Day'' (1866) was evoked by the controversy stirred in Scotland by a speech of Dr. Norman MacLeod's, as his ''Words of the New Testament'' (1873)—written in conjunction with Dr. Roberts—belonged to the literature of New Testament revision. In 1878, appeared a volume on the ''Higher Education of Women;'' and the next year he contributed to the ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' his important article on the ''Epistle to the Ephesians.'' ''The Resurrection of our Lord'' and his ''Commentary on St. John'' (in conjunction with Dr. Moulton) (1882), his ''Commentary on the Revelation'' (1883), his ''Discussions on the Apocalypse'' (1883), his ''Baird Lectures on the Revelation of St. John'' (1886), ''Elijah'' (1887), ''The Resurrection of the Dead'' (1890), ''The Ascension and Heavenly Priesthood of our Lord,'' and his presidential address on the ''Aims of the Scottish Church Society'' (1892), were all productions of his ripened powers. Besides these he contributed many articles to periodicals. His last article was a notice ''In Memoriam'' of Dr. Hort, which appeared in the ''Expository Times'' (1893).Family
In 1859 he married Annie Mary Moir, the daughter of David Macbeth Moir. They had several children. His daughter Agnes Milligan married Godfrey Carey. His son Oswald Milligan became a church historian. He left unfinished a work on the Epistle to the Hebrews, and forbade the publication of the parts he had written; some of his notes, however, have been used in a work on the same subject, since published by his eldest son, the Rev. George Milligan who went on to beArtistic Recognition
His portrait by George Reid PRSA is in King's College, Aberdeen.Fasti Ecclesiastae Scoticana vol.7 by Hew ScottReferences
Attribution: *External links
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Milligan, William 1821 births 1893 deaths Alumni of the University of St Andrews British biblical scholars Scottish Calvinist and Reformed theologians Scottish biblical scholars Moderators of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 19th-century Ministers of the Church of Scotland