Lewis was educated at the High School in Edinburgh then studied divinity at the University of Edinburgh. He was licensed to preach by the Church of Scotland in 1805 and in August 1806 he was ordained as minister of Sorn.[1]
In 1823 James, Earl of Lauderdale, acted as his patron and in 1824 he was translated to Colinton parish south-west of Edinburgh and remained there for the rest of his life. From 1850 onwards his young grandson Robert Louis Stevenson was a frequent visitor.[2]
His position as minister of Colinton was filled by Rev Dr William Lockhart of Denny.[3]
Family
On 26 April 1808, he married Henrietta Scott Smith (born 1787), the third daughter of the Rev. Dr George Smith (1748–1823), minister of Galston.[4] They were married at the manse in Galston.
Their thirteen children included the engineer James Balfour, the physician George William Balfour and Margaret Isabella Balfour. Margaret married the lighthouse engineer Thomas Stevenson and was the mother of the author Robert Louis Stevenson. Their daughter Henrietta Louisa Balfour (1822–1853), married R. H. Traquair, uncle of naturalist and palaeontologist Ramsay Traquair. Their sons Lewis Balfour (1817–1870) was a merchant in Calcutta, and Mackintosh Balfour (1825–1894) was a manager in the Bank of Bombay.[5]
The 1851 census records two grandchildren living at Colinton Manse, Lewis Balfour (born 1842, India, died 1873), and John Boyle (born 1841, India).[6]
He died at Colinton manse on 24 April 1860. He was predeceased by his wife Henrietta who also died at the manse on 13 March 1844.[7] Balfour is buried in an open vault on the north side of Colinton Parish Church, between James Gillespie and Admiral John Inglis.