Wylie was born on 9 August 1808 in
Kirriemuir to James Wylie and Margaret Forrest. His name-father, Rev James Aitken, was an Auld Licht
Anti-burgher minister in the
Secession Church. Wylie was educated at
Marischal College,
University of Aberdeen, where he studied for three years before transferring to
St Andrews University to study under Rev Dr
Thomas Chalmers. He followed his name-father's example, entering the Original Secession
Divinity Hall,
Edinburgh in 1827. He was ordained at the Secessionist Church in
Dollar, Clackmannanshire, in 1831. In 1846 he left Dollar to become sub-editor of the Edinburgh religious newspaper the
Witness, under
Hugh Miller. In 1852, after he had (with the majority of the
United Original Secession Church) joined the
Free Church of Scotland, Wylie edited their
Free Church Record, a role which he continued until 1860. He published his book
The Papacy: its History, Dogmas, Genius, and Prospects in 1851, winning a prize of a hundred guineas from the Evangelical Alliance. The Protestant Institute appointed him Lecturer on Popery in 1860. He continued in this role until his death in 1890, publishing in 1888 his work
The Papacy is the Antichrist. He died with his
History of the Scottish Nation taken forward to 1286.
Aberdeen University awarded him an honorary doctorate (LL.D.) in 1856. Wylie's classic work,
The History of Protestantism (1878), went out of print in the 1920s, although it was briefly reprinted in Northern Ireland in a two-volume reproduction in the late 20th century. It has received praise from a number of influential figures, including
Ian Paisley.
The History of Protestantism was also reprinted by Hartland Publications, Rapidan, Virginia, USA in 2002 in four volumes. . It has now been re-published, as a 3-volume hardback set, by Reformation Heritage Books. He died at 12 Archibald Place (next to the old
Edinburgh Royal Infirmary on 1 May 1890. He is buried with his wife, Euphemia Gray (1808–1845) and their children, in
East Preston Street Burial Ground. The grave lies in the eastern part of the south-east section. ==Publications==