Sharp was educated at the local grammar school and in 1637, graduated from
King's College, Aberdeen. The university and Banff in general were centres of Episcopalian support and one of the few areas to oppose the 1638 National Covenant, which removed bishops from the kirk. Sharp went to
Oxford, allegedly seeking a position in the Church of England, but returned to Scotland and by 1642, was a regent at the
University of St Andrews. In 1648, he became minister for the parish of
Crail, then a delegate to the kirk's
General Assembly in 1650. He accompanied the Scottish army in its
invasion of England and was captured at
Worcester in September 1651, before being released in 1652. The Protesters sent a delegation to argue their case before
Parliament in 1656; Sharp was selected to represent the Resolutioners and spent most of the next four years in London. By 1659, plans were being made by
George Monck to
restore Charles II to the thrones of England and Scotland. The Resolutioners wanted Charles to commit to a Presbyterian kirk; in May 1660, Sharp was sent to
Breda to ensure he did so, but was unsuccessful in getting a response. In January 1661, Sharp was appointed Royal Chaplain, and returned to St Andrews as Professor of Divinity. The March 1661
Rescissory Act returned the legal position in Scotland to that prevailing in 1633, removing the Covenanter reforms of 1638-1639. The restoration of bishops was confirmed by the Privy Council of Scotland on 6 September 1661. Sharp was appointed
Archbishop of St Andrews and
Primate of Scotland and consecrated at
Westminster Abbey in December 1661. The kirk was restored as the national church, independent sects banned and all office-holders were required to renounce the Covenant; about a third of the clergy refused, around 270 in total, and lost their positions as a result. Most occurred in the south-west of Scotland, an area particularly strong in its Covenanting sympathies; some took to preaching in the open fields, or
conventicles, which often attracted thousands of worshippers. After his appointment to the
Privy Council of Scotland in June 1663, Sharp assumed responsibility for these evictions, making him a target for Presbyterian radicals. At the same time, his lobbying to be made
Lord Chancellor brought him into conflict with Lauderdale and other political leaders. He took an active role in suppressing the Covenanter-backed
Pentland Rising in November 1666; he is reported as having condemned to death eleven prisoners who surrendered on a promise of mercy, telling them "You were pardoned as soldiers, but you are not acquitted as subjects". On 9 July 1668,
James Mitchell, a veteran of
Rullion Green, tried to assassinate Sharp in
Edinburgh. He was seated in his coach on the
Royal Mile near his house at Blackfriars Wynd waiting for Bishop
Andrew Honeyman to join him. Mitchell fired his pistol at Sharp but hit Honeyman instead. Mitchell was imprisoned on the
Bass Rock for this crime but was not executed until 1676. Soon after, the government issued the first in a series of 'indulgences', allowing the readmission of evicted clergy, even without subscribing to episcopacy. The kirk split once again, this time between moderates, led by
Robert Leighton, and 'hardline' Episcopalians under Sharp; over the next decade, policy alternated between persecution and reconciliation. s whilst en route from
Edinburgh to
St. Andrews. In 1678, Sharp's faction regained control and supported by the government, stepped up actions against non-conformists; 3,000 Lowland militia and 6,000 Highlanders, known as the "Highland Host", were billeted in the Covenanting shires, as a form of punishment. James Mitchell, who had been arrested in 1673, was executed in 1678, making him a Presbyterian folk hero; Sharp gave evidence at his trial and was accused of perjury. ==Death==