By 1779 the Relief was under attack from both
Burghers and Anti-burghers, and Hutchison took it upon himself to hold the Relief's corner in print, publishing
A Compendious View of the Religious System maintained by the Synod of Relief. This put at the heart of the system principles of independence of church from
patronage and civil
authority, toleration and friendly communion between all
Protestant persuasions, and rejection of conventions (in particular, submission to the
Solemn League of Covenant) that would, as Hutchison saw it, exclude Christ's apostles from membership of the church of the First Secession. The
Burgher Synod replied with a pamphlet denouncing the Relief as unprincipled in its fellowship and conducive to immorality, to which Hutchison responded with
A Few Animadversions on the Re-exhibition of Burgher-Testimony, and in 1780 he published
A Dissertation on the Nature and Genius of the Kingdom of Christ, asserting that the form of the church should be consistent with its first foundation as described in the
New Testament. Ministers of other persuasions circulated papers containing further charges against the Relief, to which Hutchison issued a refutation in 1781. He wrote in vehement terms (referring to “detestable lies” by “viperous bigots”). This probably increased the appeal and circulation of his tracts, and they ran to several editions. In 1788 he produced
Three Discourses on the Divine and Mediatorial Character of Jesus Christ, described by Dr Struthers, the historian of the Relief Church, as “truly masterly discourses, determined by that breadth of intellect, and that fervour of mind, which so remarkably distinguished their author”. In 1803, following his death, a volume containing sixteen of his sermons was printed and this continued to be reissued into the 1840s. ==Relief hymnbook==