Robert Pont

Robert Pont
Memorial at St Cuthbert's
Personal details
Born1524
Died8 May 1606
minister of Dunblane
In office
2 July 1562 – 1562
minister of Dunkeld
In office
1562 – 26 June 1563
commissioner for Inverness, Moray, and Banff (from 1568 non-Gaelic only from Elgin)
In office
26 June 1563 – 19 March 1574
Senator in College of Justice
In office
12 January 1572 – 22 May 1584
St Cuthbert's (Collegiate charge [junior])
In office
1574 – 29 December 1578
minister of St Cuthbert's
In office
29 December 1578 – after 17 October 1581
minister of St Andrews
In office
after 17 October 1581 – 1583
minister of St Cuthbert's
In office
1583 – 15 November 1602
Bishop/Commissioner of Caithness
In office
1587–1590
Commissioner of Orkney
In office
1590–1601
Moderator of the General Assembly (5 times)
In office
July 1570 – close
In office
August 1575 – close
In office
April 1581 – close
In office
October 1583 – close
In office
March 1596 – close
In office
April 1597 – close

Robert Pont (the abbreviated form of Kylpont or Kynpont) (1529–1606) was a Church of Scotland minister, judge and reformer. He was a church minister, commissioner and a Senator of the College of Justice.

His translation of the Helvetian Confession was ordered to be printed by the General Assembly. Pont's legal skill allowed him to be made Provost of Trinity College, and through the influence of Morton, but with the consent of the Assembly, he accepted a seat in the Court of Session in 1572. Working for the church he assisted in the preparation of the Second Book of Discipline. He protested so prominently against the Black Acts that he was compelled for a time to take refuge in England. On returning with Angus and other Protestant Lords, he resumed his ministerial duty at St. Cuthbert's. Among other writings, he prepared for the Assembly three sermons against sacrilege and also published a revised edition of the Psalms, and a Latin treatise on the "Union of the two Kingdoms," in 1604. He died in 1606.