M'Cheyne was a preacher, a pastor, a poet, and wrote many
letters. He was also a man of deep
piety and a man of prayer. M'Cheyne died exactly two months before the
Disruption of 1843. This being so, his name was subsequently held in high honour by all the various branches of
Scottish Presbyterianism, though he himself held a strong opinion against the
Erastianism which led to the Disruption. Bonar records, "And when, on 7 March of the following year (i.e. 1843), the cause of the Church was finally to be pleaded at the bar of the House of Commons, I find him writing: 'Eventful night this in the British Parliament! Once more King Jesus stands at an earthly tribunal, and they know Him not!'" —
Memoir (1892), p. 147). Although widely believed to have been engaged to be married to Jessie Thain at the time of his death (and once, some ten years earlier, to Margaret Maxwell), largely owing to Smellie's popular biography, recent scholarship has disproved both of these claims. Perhaps no minister in the Church of Scotland is better remembered for the saintliness of his character, the anxious devotion which influenced the whole of his short ministry, and the success which everywhere accompanied his efforts as a preacher of the Gospel. He was a diligent Bible student and a good classical scholar. He learned to read Greek when he was but a boy, and he could carry on a conversation in Hebrew. He had fine poetical, artistic, and musical gifts. He trained his congregation in psalmody, and his hymns are the property of all the Churches. Not long after his death, his friend
Andrew Alexander Bonar edited his biography which was published with some of his manuscripts as ''The Memoir and Remains of the Rev. Robert Murray M'Cheyne''. The book went into many editions. It has had a lasting influence on
Evangelical Christianity worldwide. M'Cheyne designed a widely used system for reading through the Bible in one year. The plan entails reading the
New Testament and the
Psalms through twice a year, and the
Old Testament through once. This program was included (in a slightly modified form) in
For the Love of God by
D. A. Carson and is recommended by several Bible publishers, such as the
English Standard Version and the
New English Translation. The former McCheyne Memorial Church in
Dundee is named after him. ==Typography==