(1655–1718) was a college bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church in the early eighteenth century.
Born in 1655, he was the youngest son of Henry Christie of Craigton.
[1] He was educated at the University of Glasgow, which awarded him a Master of Arts degree on 13 July 1671.
[1] They had four sons: William, James, Alexander and George, and one daughter: Mary.
[1][3][4] On 29 August 1689, he came under a sentence of deprivation from the Privy Council for neither reading the Proclamation of the Estates, nor praying for William III and Mary II, but for the restoration of King James VII and "confusion to his enemies, etc.