John Finlayson (disciple)
John Finlayson or Finleyson was a lawyer, author and disciple of Richard Brothers.
Life
Finlayson was born in Scotland in 1770 the son of a tenant farmer at Benyhole farm near Abdie in Fife. He was apprenticed as a "writer" by Mr James Stark the Procurator for Fife, based in Cupar. Finlayson himself became procurator for Fife in 1793 and continued to practice in Cupar.He became familiar with the writings of the Richard Brothers who had begun a millennium cult in Britain based on the belief that a second Israel would be created and a new Messiah appear. The Brother's pamphlets predicted a precise day for this: 19 September 1797. On exactly this day, Finlayson closed his office and passed all his legal responsibilities to a Mr John Christie of Cupar.
Finlayson relocated to Edinburgh where he printed a couple of pamphlets before moving to London. In London he was 'in considerable practice as a house agent.' Brothers led him to change the spelling of his name, by telling him his ancestors had some 'fine leys' of land granted them for deeds of valour. Brothers, who died in Finlayson's house at Marylebone, made it his dying charge to his friend that he should write against a rival genius, Bartholomew Prescot of Liverpool. This Finlayson did, describing Prescot's 'System of the Universe,' very correctly, as a 'misapprehended mistaken elaborate performance, or book.'
Finlayson was much discredited by his book on Isaac Newton in which he claimed Newton to be wrong in most of his theories.
Publications
He printed a variety of pamphlets, reiterating Brothers's views, and developing his own peculiar notions of astronomy, for which he claimed a divine origin. The heavenly bodies were created, he thinks, partly 'to amuse us in observing them.' The earth he decides to be a perfect sphere, 'not shaped like a garden turnip, as the Newtonians make it;' the sun is a created body 'very different from anything we can make here below;' the stars are 'oval-shaped immense masses of frozen water, with their largest ends foremost.'Finlayson printed:
- 'An Admonition to the People of all Countries in support of Richard Brothers,' 8vo.
- The same, 'Book Second,' containing 'The Restoration of the Hebrews to their own Land,' 8vo.
- 'An Essay,' &c. 8vo.
- 'An Essay on the First Resurrection, and on the Commencement of the Blessed Thousand Years,' 8vo.
- 'The Universe as it is. Discovery of the Ten Tribes of Israel and their Restoration to their own Land,' 1832, 8 vo.
- 'God's Creation of the Universe,' 1848, 8vo.
- 'The Seven Seals of the Revelations.'
- 'The Last Trumpet,' &c., 1849, 8vo.