BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 459
ability and fidelity of his pulpit ministrations, and beloved for the unwearied
diligence and affection with which he has devoted himself to the private and
domestic. exercises of his pastoral functions. By his parochial and congregational
visitations-by his stated catechetical and devotional meetings with the
young, and with the adults of his flock, as well as by his wise and zealous
attention to the interests of intellectual and moral education in his parish-he
showed himself ‘‘ a workman that needeth not to be ashamed.” Besides these
administrations, he took a leading interest in most of the moral and religious
benevolent institutions in Edinburgh, and gave much time and labour in the
promotion of the important objects embraced in the Four Great Schemes of
the Church of Scotland, as well as in the furtherance of many other institutions
of kindred design, of various Christian denominations, which aim, by missionary
enterprise, and Bible diffusion, at the universal dissemination of the gospel.
Mr. Grey was known as an elegant writer ; and it was not unusual to find
selections from his compositions in the books of Collections and Extracts for
English schools of his day. His diffidence, however, seldom permitted him to
gratify his friends by the publication of those discourses which delighted them
from the pulpit. The following is a list of his few occasional sermons, separately
published :-“A sermon preached in St. George’s Church, 16th March 1815,
in behalf of the Edinburgh Lunatic Asylum ”-“ The Diffusion of Christianity
dependent on the exertions of Christians,” a sermon preached in Lady
Glenorchy’s Chapel, 2d April 18 18, before the Edinburgh Missionary Society
-“The Vail of Moses done away in Christ,” a sermon preached in Lady
Glenorchy’s Chapel, 2d December 1819, at the baptism of Joseph Davis, a
converted Jew--“ Man’s Judgment at variance with God’s,” a sermon preached
in St. George’s Church, 5th February 1824, in behalf of the Edinburgh and
Leith Seamen’s Friend Society. His earliest and latest publications are on
the Two Sacraments of the Christian Church, Baptism and the Communion.
While at Stenton, in 1811, Mr. Grey published “A Catechism on Baptism:
in which are considered its Nature, its Subjects, and the Obligations resulting
from it ;” a small manual distinguished for the clearness and accuracy of the
theological statement, and the chasteness and precision of the language : it is
well adapted for popular instruction, and was long in general use and high
estimation. In 1832 he published a little volume on “The Duty and Desirableness
of Frequent Communion with Christ in the Sacrament of the Supper,
in three discourses,” preached in St. Mary’s, designed, more immediately, in
exposition and illustration of those views on the more frequent dispensation of
the Lord’s Supper generally entertained in his congregation ; but whose wishes,
from certain difficulties thrown in the way by the Presbytery of Edinburgh and
the General Assembly, have not been carried into effect. These latter sermons
are fine specimens of Mr. Grey’s ordinary pulpit eloquence, and have been much
esteemed for their various and characteristic merits.
It is not necessary, in these slight notices, to make more than momentary
reference to an incident in the history of Mr. Grey, which at one time bore