Background
Balmer was born at Ormiston Mains, in the parish of Eckford, Roxburghshire on 22 November 1787.
Balmer was born at Ormiston Mains, in the parish of Eckford, Roxburghshire on 22 November 1787.
University of Edinburgh.
He evinced considerable abilities and a disposition towards the Christian ministry. He entered the University of Edinburgh in 1802, and in 1806 the Theological Hall at Selkirk, under Doctor Lawson, a professor of divinity in the United Secession Church. In 1812 he received license as a preacher from the Presbytery of Edinburgh, and in 1814 was ordained minister in Berwick-upon-Tweed, where he remained till his death.
In 1834 he became a professor of pastoral theology at the Secession church, and later a professor of systematic theology.
In 1840 he received a Doctor of Divinity from the University of Glasgow. Balmer had great influence in the denomination to which he belonged.
At a meeting held in Edinburgh in 1843, to commemorate the bicentennial of the Westminster Assembly, he delivered a speech in favour of Christian union, which attracted the attention of Thomas Chalmers and others, and led to important measures being taken by John Henderson of Park for promoting that cause. Balmer did not publish much during his life but two volumes of Lectures and Discourses were posthumously published in 1845.
He died 1 July 1844.