Alexander Peden masked preacher of scotland

Alexander Peden: The Moonlighting Masked Outlaw Preacher

It’s not every day you hear about a preacher who moonlighted as a masked outlaw. But Alexander “Sandy” Peden wasn’t your average minister. Born in Ayrshire, Scotland, around 1626, Peden was destined to become a thorn in the side of the British government, a hero to the Scottish Covenanters, and a walking nightmare for anyone trying to silence him. His life story is one of faith, defiance, and just a hint of theatrical flair—perfect ingredients for a tale that’s equal parts inspiring and bizarre.

From Pulpit to Persecution

After attending Glasgow University, Peden took up a quiet life as a minister in New Luce in 1659. But peace and quiet don’t make legends, let alone interesting articles for Commonplace Fun Facts. Thankfully, for both reasons, Peden’s life took a sharp turn in 1662. When Charles II restored the monarchy, about 300 ministers—including Peden—were booted out of their churches. Rather than politely fading into obscurity, Peden grabbed his Bible, marched into the great outdoors, and started preaching in fields across Southern and Central Scotland.

The fields became his pulpit, and his sermons drew huge crowds. Understandably, defying the king didn’t exactly offer him job security, even if he had become a household name. Peden soon found himself on Scotland’s most-wanted list, a dubious honor that led him to adopt a rather unique disguise.

The Masked Preacher

Alexander Peden masked preacher
The mask that was used by Alexander “Sandy” Peden to escape from English forces

To avoid capture, Peden took to wearing a mask while traveling. Imagine it: a firebrand preacher, dodging government troops, all while rocking what was likely one of the earliest versions of a ski mask.

Even the mask wasn’t enough to keep him safe forever. By 1670, Peden decided that discretion was the better part of valor and fled to Ireland.

In Ireland, Peden continued his field-preaching ways, shaking up the Presbyterian establishment by condemning ministers who, in his view, weren’t doing enough to fight the good fight. He didn’t just preach to Irish Covenanters—he inspired them to organize into their own society meetings, keeping the spirit of the Solemn League and Covenant alive.

Prisoner on the Bass Rock

By 1673, Sandy Peden was back in Scotland, where he promptly got himself arrested. He spent the next four years imprisoned on Bass Rock, a desolate island in the Firth of Forth that served as a makeshift prison for Covenanters. Sharing the rocky outcrop with forty other detainees, Peden endured harsh conditions, but his spirit remained unbroken.

Read about Billy Sunday, the firebrand preacher who wielded a baseball bat.

When he finally gained his freedom in 1677, Peden wasted no time in stirring up more trouble—or, as he saw it, doing God’s work. He returned briefly to Ireland, where he criticized Presbyterian ministers yet again, this time for condemning the Covenanters’ recent uprising at the Battle of Bothwell Bridge. Clearly, Peden wasn’t interested in making friends in high places—or even moderately elevated ones.

The Praying Farmhand

In 1682, Peden went back to Ireland, this time under the guise of a humble farm worker. He took a job with a farmer named William Steel and his wife in Glenwherry, near Ballymena. By day, Peden labored in the fields and slept in the barn alongside the Steel’s young servant boy. But the boy soon noticed something unusual: this “farmhand” never actually slept. Instead, he spent the night praying by name for persecuted members of the Scottish Church.

When the Steels confronted him, Peden admitted he was a minister and unapologetically so. The Steels, recognizing they had more than just a farmhand on their hands, promptly relieved Peden of his duties and set him up to preach to the local community.

Peden stayed in Glenwherry until 1685, when he returned to Scotland for what would be his final chapter.

A Life of Defiance, Even in Death

alexander Peden masked preacher memorial
Alexander Peden Memorial inscription, Cumnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland

In 1686, Peden delivered his last sermon and passed away in January. But his story doesn’t end there. Forty days after his death, government troops exhumed his body, carted it two miles away, and reburied it out of spite. If their goal was to tarnish his legacy, they failed spectacularly. Instead, their actions only cemented Peden’s status as a symbol of resistance and faith.

The Legacy of Sandy Peden

Alexander Peden’s life reads like a script Hollywood forgot to greenlight. From field preacher to masked fugitive, from prison cell to barn loft, his unwavering dedication to his faith and his people made him a legend in his own time. Though his enemies tried to erase him—literally—they only succeeded in amplifying his story.

Peden reminds us that sometimes, the most powerful sermons aren’t delivered from behind a pulpit but from the fields, the prisons, and even the barns where courage and conviction refuse to be silenced.


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