The Scottish
Reformation came out of a covenant in which the barons, inspired
by John Knox, then abroad, bound themselves in 1557 to oppose
the Roman Catholic religion
and to promote the cause of the Reformation. When Reforma parliament,
on the 24th of August 1560, passed the
acts abolishing the papal jurisdiction and the mass in Scotland,
it was able, as Knox had been preparing for this crisis, to sanction
a new confession of faith for the Reformed church.
Other documents of the new system were quickly forthcoming. The
First Book of Discipline Discipline, set forth the whole of the
proposed religious and educational
constitution, and this book speaks of “ the order of Geneva
which is now in use in some of our churches.” This order,
afterwards with some modifications known as John Knox’s
Liturgy, and used in the church down to the reign of Charles I.,
is a complete directory of worship, with forms of all the services
to be held in the church.
The type of
religion found in these documents is that of Geneva, the unit
being the self-governing congregation, and the great aim of the
system the pure preaching of the Word. The congregation elect
the minister; in no other way can he enter on his functions; but
once elected and admitted he is recognized as a free organ of
the divine spirit, not subject in spiritual things to any earthly
authority but that of his fellow ministers; the word of God is
the supreme authority, and the spoken word of God the vital element
of every religious act. The word of God is to prevail in all matters,
in conduct as well as doctrine, and in the affairs of government
as well as in the church. The terrible power of excommunication
is claimed for the church; but the council of the realm also is
called to use the power given them by God to put down all religion
but the reformed, and to further the aims and carry out the sentences
of the church. It was a matter of course that saints’ days
and church festivals were abolished as having no warrant in Scripture;
Sunday alone remained, as the principal day of preaching. In towns
a week-day was to be set apart for the “ exercise or public
interpretation of Scripture", in which all qualified persons
in the neighbourhood were to take part, as if the whole country
were a school of the Bible.
The First
Book of Discipline does not set forth any complete scheme of church
government. Its arrangements are in part provisional. In addition
to the minister, who is its most definite figure and proved to
be the most permanent, it recognizes the superintendent, the lay
elder and the reader. Ten or twelve superintendents were to be
appointed, “a thing most expedient at this time.”
They were parish ministers and subject like their brethren to
church courts; their added function was to plant churches, and
place ministers, elders and deacons where required. This was also
the duty of “commissioners” who were superintendents
over smaller territories and for a shorter term. Whether the superintendents
were meant to be permanent in the church is not clear. The lay
elder was very much what he is still.
The reader
was to conduct service when no minister was available, reading
the Scriptures and the Common Prayer. When there was preaching,
it was accompanied by free prayer; the liturgy was not then called
for. Of church courts the assembly is taken for granted, having
existed from the first; the minor church courts are not yet defined,
though the elements of each of them are present. A noble scheme
of education was sketched for the whole country, but neither this
nor the provision made for ministers’ stipends was carried
out, the revenues of the old church, from which the expenses of
both were to be paid, being in the hands of the barons.
The system
naturally took time to get into working order. The old clergy,
bishops, abbots and priests were still on the ground, and were
slow to take service in the new church. In 1574 there were 289
ministers and 755 readers; in the district of the presbytery of
Auchterarder, which now has fifteen parishes, there were then
four ministers and sixteen readers. As the ranks of the clergy
slowly filled, questions arose which the Reformation had not settled,
and it was natural that the old system with which the country
was familiar should creep in again. Presbytery was never much
in favour with the crown, this was the case in other countries
as well as in Scotland, and when the crown, so weak at the Reformation,
gained strength, encroachments were made on the popular character
of the kirk; while the barons also had obvious reasons for not
wishing the kirk to be too strong.
The first
parliament of the Regent Murray (1567), while confirming the establishment
of the Reformed church as the only true church of Christ, settling
the Protestant succession, and doing something to secure the right
of stipend to ministers, reintroduced lay patronage, the superintendent
being charged to induct the patron’s nominee, an infringement
of the reformed system against which the church never ceased to
protest. In 1572 a kind of Episcopacy was set up in the interest
of the nobles, who in order to draw the income of the episcopal
sees had to arrange with men possessing a legal title to them.
These bishops did not make the episcopal office respected in the
country; but their appointment was not opposed by the church leaders.
They had no episcopal ordination, nor did they exercise any authority
over their brother ministers., Knox was called to preach the sermon
at the admission of one of them, John Douglas, to the archbishopric
of St Andrews, and while he denounced both patron and presentee
for the corrupt bargain they had made, he did not protest against
the office of bishop as contrary to the constitution of the church.
To this declaration,
however, the church soon came. Andrew Melville came to Scotland
at this time, and became the leader of the church in place of
Knox, who died in 5572. He brought with him from Geneva, where
he had been the colleague of Beza, a fervent hatred of ecclesiastical
tyranny and a clear grasp of the Presbyterian church system. The
Scottish church, hitherto without a definite constitution, soon
espoused under his able leadership a logical and thorough’
Presbyterianism, which was expressed in the Second Book of Discipline,
adopted by the assembly in 1577, and was never afterwards set
aside by the church when acting freely. The assembly of 1575 decided
that all ministers were Discipline bishops; that of 1578 abolished
the name of bishop as
denoting an office in the church, and that of 1580 in spite of
a royal remonstrance abolished Episcopacy, a decree to which all
the bishops except five submitted.
The Second
Book of Discipline recognizes four kinds of office in the church,
and no one can lawfully be placed in any of them except by being
called to it by the members. Pastor, bishop and minister are all
titles of the same office, that of those who preach the word and
administer the sacraments, each to a particular congregation.
The doctor is a teacher in school or university; he is an elder
and assists in the work of government. Elders are rulers; their
function also is spiritual, though practical and disciplinary.
The fourth office is that of the deacons, who have to do with
matters of property and are not members of church courts. Neither
superintendent nor reader now appears; all the functions of bishops
and superintendents are vested in the elderships, or church courts,
and it is urged that the parts which still remain in Scotland
of the old system should be cleared away and the sole jurisdiction
of the kirk, as then constituted, recognized. The assembly is
to have the right to fix its own time of meeting, and its decision
in matters ecclesiastical is not to be subject to any review.
Kirk-sessions and presbyteries are not named, but the principles
are clearly laid down on which these institutions were to rest.
By committing
herself to this system the Church of Scotland established between
herself and the Church of England a division which
became more and more apparent and was the main cause of much of
her subsequent sufferings. It is no doubt strange that she should
have endured so much
not for any great Christian principle, but for a question of church
government. On the other hand, Presbyterianism stood in Scottish
history for freedom, and for the rights of the middle and lower
classes against the crown and the aristocracy; and it might not
have been held with such tenacity or proved so incapable of compromise
but for the opposition and persecution of the three Stuart kings.
The history of the Scottish church for a century after the date
of the Book of Discipline is that of a religious struggle between
the people and the crown.
For some years
after its inception Presbyterianism carried all before it. The
presbyteries came quickly into existence; that of Edinburgh dates
from 1580. In that year it was found that there were 924 parishes
in Scotland, but not nearly all supplied with ministers; it was
proposed that there should be 5o presbyteries (in 1910 there were
84) and 400 ministers. A great part of the country, especially
in the north and west, had not yet been reached by the Reformation.
At this time began the long series of attempts made by James VI.
in the direction of curbing Presbyterian liberty and of the restoration
of Episcopacy. In 1584 were passed the acts called the Black Acts,
which made it treason to speak ill of the bishops, declared the
king to be supreme in all causes and over all persons, thus subverting
the jurisdiction of the church, and made all conventions illegal
except those sanctioned by the king. The bishops were to do what
had hitherto been done by the assembly and presbyteries, and no
attacks were to be made at religious meetings on the king or council.
Other acts followed by which the episcopate was strengthened,
though the act of 1587 annexing the temporalities of the bishops
to the crown, while fatal to the old episcopate, made the prospects
of the new more doubtful. In 1588 a change took place. A Roman
Catholic rising threw James into the arms of the kirk; in 1592
the acts of 1584 were abrogated, the Second Book of Discipline
legalized and Presbytery established. The church was at the time
very powerful, the people generally sympathiaing with her system,
and her assemblies being attended by many of the nobles and the
foremost men., Discipline was strict; the temper of the church
was in accordance with the Old rather than the New Testament.
Another sudden
change took place a few years later, James falling out of humour
with the church on the question of the restoration of the Roman
Catholic lords and angered by the free criticism of some of the
ministers. Basilicon Doron, published in 1599, shows a determination
to make the church episcopal. With this end assemblies, from which
Melville was excluded, and which were otherwise tampered with
and terrorized, were got to agree that a number of ministers should
sit in parliament, and to surrender the assembly’s right
of meeting. On his accession to the throne of England in 1603
James entered on a new set of attempts to assimilate the Scottish
church to that of England. Melville was brought to London, imprisoned
and sent abroad; other ministers who had acted or spoken too freely
were banished. The powers of the bishops were increased, and their
brethren brought in various ways under subjection to them, and
in 1609 two courts of high commission were set up by the royal
authority with plenary powers to enforce conformity to the new
arrangements. In 1610 three ministers were called to
London to be consecrated as bishops, as if there had till now
been no bishops in Scotland; these on their return consecrated
ten others. In 1612 the act of 1592 which established Presbytery
was rescinded, and Episcopacy became the legal church system of
Scotland.
In all this
it was the position and rights of the clergy that were assailed;
and James showed kindness to the church in seeking to secure that
stipends should be paid and that new
churches should be provided where required.
The people
had been less interfered with; the change of
church government involved no change in the conduct of worship.
But the articles passed by the packed assembly of Perth in I618
touched on the religious habits and postures of the people, and
in this it soon appeared that a crisis had been reached. These
famous articles were: (I) That the communion should be received
kneeling; (2) That it might be administered in private; (3) That
baptism might be in the home; (4) That children of eight should
be taken to the bishop for examination and his blessing; (5) That
Christmas, Good Friday, Easter and Whitsunday should be observed.
These articles
were opposed in parliament and were strongly resented throughout
the country. When Charles became king in 1625 he at once let it
be known that the Articles of Perth were not to be abrogated,
and that no meeting of the assembly was to be allowed. During
the first years of his reign he was occupied in other directions;
but when he came to Scotland in 1633 to be crowned, Laud came
with him, and though like his father he showed himself kind to
the clergy in matters of stipend, and adopted measures which caused
many schools to be built, he also showed that in the matter of
worship the policy of forcing Scotland into uniformity with England
was to be carried through with a high hand. A book of canons and
constitutions of the church which appeared in 1636, instead of
being a digest of acts of assembly, was English in its ideas,
dealt with matters of church furniture, exalted the bishops ,and
ignored the kirk-session and elders. The liturgy was ordered to
be used, which had not yet appeared, but which proved to be a
version, with somewhat higher doctrine, of the Anglican Common
Prayer. The introduction of this service book in St Giles’s
Church, Edinburgh, on the 16th of July 1637, occasioned the tumult
of which Jenny Geddes will always figure as the heroine.
The sentiment
was echoed throughout all of Scotland. National Petitions against
the service book and the book of covenant. canons poured in from
every quarter; the tables or committee
formed to forward the petition rapidly became a powerful government
at the head of a national movement, the action of the crown was
temporizing, and on the 28th of February the National Covenant
was signed in the famous scene in Greyfriars church and churchyard.
This document consisted of three parts: (I) A covenant signed
by King James and his household in 1580, to uphold Presbyterianism
and to defend the state against Romanism; (2) A recital of all
the acts of parliament passed in the reigns of James and Charles
in pursuance of the same objects; and (3) The covenant of nobles,
barons, gentlemen, burgesses, ministers and commons to continue
in the reformed religion, to defend it and resist all contrary
errors and corruptions.
The Covenant
was no doubt an act of revolt against legal authority, and can
only be justified on the ground that the crown had for many years
acted oppressively and illegally in its attempt to coerce Scotland
into a religious system alien to the country, and that the subjects
were entitled to free themselves from tyranny. The crown was unable
either to check the popular movement or to come to any compromise
with it, and the Glasgow assembly of 1638, the first free assembly
that had met for thirty years, proceeded to make the church what
the Covenant required. A clean sweep was made of the legislation
of the preceding period; the five articles of Perth, the service
book and book of canons and the court of high commission were
all condemned. The bishops were tried not for being bishops but
on exaggerated charges of false doctrine and loose living; and
all were deposed from the ministry. Many ministers were also deposed
on the charge of Arminianism. It wasby an assembly that the second
reformation was effected; but the assembly contained the most
influential of the nobility and gentry, and was carried on the
crest of a great national movement. The Covenant was accepted
by parliament in 1639.
The succeeding
decennium is the culminating period of Scottish Presbyterianisin,
when, having successfully resisted the crown, it not only was
supreme in Scotland but exercised a decisive influence over England.
The causes which brought about this state of affairs are to be
sought to a large extent in the civil history of England. Presbytery
was rapidly growing in that country, and the English parliament
sought the alliance of the assembly, while the Independents, though
in the event Presbytery was as little to their liking as Episcopacy,
joined in the wish to get rid of the episcopal system. In its
period of triumph the Presbyterianism of Scotland displayed its
character. After the injustice and persecution it had suffered
it could scarcely prove moderate or tolerant; it showed a vehement
determination to carry out the truth it had vindicated with such
enthusiasm, to the full extent and wherever possible. The Covenant,
at first a standard of freedom, was immediately converted into
a test and made the instrument of oppression and persecution.
All policy was to be determined by the Covenant; the king and
every official was to be obliged to take it. The mind of the nation
being so preoccupied with the Covenant, it naturally followed
that those who carried their fanaticism farthest were ready to
denounce and to unchurch those who showed any inclination to moderation
and political sanity, and that the beginnings of schism soon appeared
in the ranks of the Covenanters.
In 1643, when
the full legal establishment of Presbytery had just been consummated,
the assembly, asked by the English parliament to arrange a league
to be signed in both countries for the furtherance of reformed
religion, agreed, but asked that the league should be a religious
one.
The result was the Solemn League and Covenant.
The league
did not mention Presbyterianism; but the assembly had refused
to hear of any recognition of independency; if religion were thoroughly
reformed, they considered the result must be Presbyterianism in
England as in Scotland. In the Westminster Standards also, which
were the fruit of the Scottish desire for a religious uniformity,
Scotland did not obtain by any means all it desired in its church
documents. The Scottsh divines in the Westminster Assembly were
only five in number, while the assembly contained effective parties
of Erastians and Independents. The Confession of Faith contains
no approval of any system of church government, and when she adopted
it in 1647 the kirk gave up her old confession in which the principles
at least of true church order are laid down. In accepting in 1645
the Westminster Directory of Public Worship she tacitly gave up
her own liturgy which had been in use till recently, and committed
herself to a bald and uninviting order of worship, in which no
forms of prayer were allowed to be used. So much did Scotland
for the sake of uniformity accept from England. The metrical psalms
also, whichare still sung in Scottish churches, were adopted at
this time; they are based mainly on the version, which had been
approved by the Westminster Assembly, of Francis Rouse (1579—1659),
a member of the English House of Commons.
The engagement
made with Charles, then a prisoner in the Isle of Wight in 1647,
which promised him support on condition of his sanctioning the
Solemn League and Covenant and pledging himself to set up after
three years a church according to the Confession of Faith, was
protested against by the assembly; and from this came the famous
“Act of Classes” by which the Covenanters disqualified
for public office and even for military service all who had been
parties to the engagement. The rescinding of this act in 1651
led to a serious breach in the ranks of the Scottish clergy. The
Resolutioners, or supporters of the resolution to rescind that
act, were opposed by the Protesters, the rigid adherents to the
strictest interpretation of the Covenant. The period of the Commonwealth
was filled with the strife between these two parties, its bitterness
not lessened by the fact that the assembly dissolved in 1653 by
Cromwell’s soldiers was not allowed
to meet again in his protectorate. The Protesters, who were in
favour with the common people, are chargeable with having brought
into Scottish church life the observance of fastdays, and of the
long and excited Communion services which were kept up for two
and a half centuries and may still be witnessed in the Highlands.
If the mismanagement
of Scottish religious affairs under James and Charles I. is a
melancholy story, what took place under Charles II. is infinitely
sadder. A series of blunders were committed in the attempt to
compel Scotland to against submit to the religion the government
prescribed, and the failure of each measure was followed by more
inhuman severities. Detail is impossible here.
From the first
Charles showed himself determined to force Episcopalianism on
Scotland, and not too scrupulous in the choice of methods for
securing his ends. The attempt was nearly successful. In the greater
part of the country little change took place in the religious
services. The service book was not read nor kneeling at communion
required, and it made no immediate difference to the people that
the clergy should be under bishops. The inferior church courts
still sat, though not the assembly. At the Restoration it was
a question whether the bulk of the population was in favour of
Presbytery or of Episcopacy. But the matter was handled in such
a way in the west of Scotland that an extreme Covenanting spirit
arose, nourished on intolerable grievances, and that the nation
as a whole decided against the system which had been promoted
by such means.
The Rescissory
Act of 1661 swept away the legislation of the preceding twenty
years, and so disposed of the Presbyterian polity of the church.
Episcopacy was restored by a letter from the king on the 5th of
September 1661. James Sharp , Fairfoul, James Hamilton (1610—1674)
and Robert Leighton were the new bishops; Sharp and Leighton having
to be ordained as deacons, then as priests, before the consecration,
and the party travelling to Scotland in state, though Leighton
left them before crossing the border. An act requiring all ministers
appointed during the period when patronage was abolished to get
presentation from their patrons and institution from their bishops
was applied in the west of Scotland in such a way that 300 ministers
left their manses. Their places were filled with less competent
men whom the people did not wish to hear, and so conventicles
began to be held. The attempts to suppress these, the harsh measures
taken against those who attended them or connived at them, or
refused to give information against them, the military violence
and the judicial seventies, the confiscations, imprisonments,
tortures, expatriations, all make up a dreadful narrative. Indulgences
were tried, and were,successful in bringing back about 100 ministers
to their parishes and introducing a new cause of division among
the clergy.
On the other
hand, the Covenanting spirit rose higher and higher among the
persecuted till the armed risings took place and the formal rebellion
of a handful of desperate men against the ruler of three kingdoms.
The story of Richard Cameron s one of the highest romantic heroism;
his name was perpetuated in that of the Cameronian body (‘
first-born of the Scottish sects “), which, as the Reformed
Presbyterian Church, kept up a separate existence till 1876, when
it united wit’h the Free Church, and in that of the Cameronian
regiment, originally formed from his followers after his death
and distinguished since in every part of the world. The proclamation
of toleration in 1685 was intended mainly for Roman Catholics
and excluded field preachers.
When William
landed in England in 1688, the scene changed in Scotland. The
soldiery was withdrawn from the west, and the people at once showed
their feelings by, the “rabbling”
or ejection of the curates who occupied the manses of the ousted
ministers, in which, however, no lives were lost. William would
have decided for Episcopacy in Scotland, as the great body of
the nobles and gentry adhered to it, but only on condition that
the Episcopalians agreed to support him and that they had the
people with them. Neither of these conditions was fulfilled.
On the 22nd
of July the Convention which declared the throne vacant and called
William and Mary to fill it, declared in its Claim of Right that
prelacy and the superiority of any office in the church above
ministers had been a great and insupportable grievance to Scotland.
Effect was given to this; and in April 1690 the act was passed
on which the establishment of the Church of Scotland rests, the
Westminster Confession being recognized, the laws in favour of
Episcopacy repealed, though the Rescissory Act remained on the
statute book, and the assembly appointed to meet. The Covenants
were not mentioned; at his coronation William had refused to be
a persecutor, and he desired that the church should embrace all
who were willing to be in it. The Revolution church contained
from the first men of different views. Its first assembly in 1690
received into the church the three remaining ministers of the
Cameronians, though their followers refused to come with them.
With regard to Episcopalian ministers, by whom the majority of
parishes were served, there was more difficulty. The Presbyterians
were not ready for union with them, and many of them were put
out of their livings, ostensibly by way of discipline. The king
and his representatives at the assembly pressed hard for their
reception, and in 1693 the “Act for settling the quiet and
peace of the Church” was passed, which provided for their
admission on taking the oaths of allegiance and assurance, subscribing
the Confession of Faith and acknowledging Presbyterian government.
This act fixed the formula of subscription to be signed by all
ministers.
From this
time forward the church, while jealously asserting her spiritual
independence, was on the side of the crown against the Jacobites,
and became more and more an orderly and useful ally of the state.
In 1697 the Barrier Act was passed, which provides that any act
which is to be binding on the church is to come before the assembly
as an overture and to be transmitted to presbyteries for their
approval. The difficulties which threatened to arise about the
union were skilfully avoided; the Act of Security provided that
the Confession of Faith and the Presbyterian government should
“continue without any alteration to the people of this land
in all succeeding ages,” and the first oath taken by Queen
Anne at her accession was to preserve it. The Act of Toleration
of 1712 allowed Episcopalian dissenters to use the English liturgy.
This had not hitherto been done, and the claim of the Episcopalians
for this liberty had been the occasion of a bitter controversy.
The same parliament restored lay patronage in Scotland, an act
against which the church always protested and which was the origin
of great troubles.
Presbytery,
being loyal to the house of Hanover, while Episcopacy was Jacobite,
was now in enjoyment of the royal favour and
was treated as a firm ally of the government. But while the church
as a whole was more peaceful, more
courtly, more inclined to the friendship of the world than at
any former time, it contained two well-marked
parties. The Moderate party, which maintained its ascendancy till
the beginning of the 19th century, sought to make the working
of the church in its different parts as systematic and regular
as possible, to make the assembly supreme, to enforce on presbyteries
respect for its decisions, and to render the judicial procedure
of the church as exact and formal as that of the civil courts.
The Popular
party, regarding the church less from the side of the government,
had less sympathy with the progressive movements of the age, and
desired greater strictness in discipline. The main subject of
dispute arose at first from the exercise of patronage. Presbyteries
in various parts of the country were still disposed to disregard
the presentations of lay patrons, and to settle the men desired
by the people; but legal decisions had shown that if they acted
in this way their nominee, while legally minister of the parish,
could not claim the stipend. To the risk of such sacrifices the
church, led by the Moderate party, refused to expose herself.
By the new policy inaugurated by Dr William Robertson (1721—1793),
which led to the second secession, the assembly compelled presbyteries
to give effect to presentations, and in a long series of
disputed settlements the “call,” though still held
essential to a settlement, was less and less regarded, until it
was declared that it was not necessary, and that the church courts
were bound to induct any qualified presentee. The substitution
of the word concurrence”
for “ call” about 1764 indicates the subsidiary and
ornamental light in which the assent of the parishioners was now
to be regarded. The church could have given more weight to the
wishes of the people; she professed to regard patronage as a grievance,
and the annual instructions of the assembly to the commission
(the committee representing the assembly till its next meeting)
enjoined that body to take advantage of any opportunity which
might arise for getting rid of the grievance of patronage, an
injunction which was not discontinued till 1784.
It is not
likely that any change in the law could have been obtained at
this period, and disregard of the law might have led to an exhausting
struggle with the state, as was actually the case at a later period.
Still it was in the power of the church to give more weight than
she did to the feelings of the people; and her working of the
patronage system drove large numbers from the Establishment. A
melancholy catalogue of forced settlements marks the annals of
the church from 1749 to 1780, and wherever an unpopular presentee
was settled the people quietly left the Establishment and erected
a meeting-house. In 1763 there was a great debate in the assembly
on the progress of schism, in which the Popular party laid the
whole blame at the
door of the Moderates, while the Moderates rejoined that patronage
and Moderatism had made the church the dignified and powerful
institution she had come to be.
In 1764 the
number of meeting-houses was 120, and in 1773 it had risen to
190. Nor was a conciliatory attitude taken up towards the seceders.
The ministers of the Relief desired to remain connected with the
Establishment, but were not suffered to do so. Those ministers
who resigned their parishes to accept calls to Relief congregations,
in places where forced settlements had taken place, and who might
have been and claimed to be recognized as still ministers of the
church, were deposedand forbidden to look for any ministerial
communion with the clergy of the Establishment. Such was the policy
of the Moderate ascendancy, or of Principal Robertson’s
administration, on this vital subject.
It had the
merit of success in so far as it completely established itself
in the church. The presbyteries ceased to disregard presentations,
and lay patronage came to be regarded as part of the order of
things. But the growth of dissent steadily continued and excited
alarm from time to time; and it may be questioned whether the
peace of the church was not purchased at too high a price. The
Moderate period is justly regarded as in some respects the most
brilliant in the history of the church. Her clergy included many
distinguished Scotsmen, among them Thomas Reid, George Campbell,
Adam Ferguson, John Home, Hugh Blair, William Robertson and John
Erskine. The labours of these men were not mainly in theology;
in religion the age was one not of’ advance but of rest;
they gained for the church a great and widespread respect and
influence.
Another salient
feature of the Moderate policy was the consolidation of discipline.
It is frequently asserted that discipline was lax at this period
and that ministers of scandalous lives were, allowed to continue
in their charges. It cannot, however, be shown that the leaders
of the church at this time sought to procure the miscarriage of
justice in dealing with such cases. That some offenders were acquitted
on technical grounds is true; it was insisted that in dealing
with the character and status of their members the church courts
should proceed in ,as formal and punctilious a manner as civil
tribunals, and should recognize the same laws of evidence; in
fact, that the same securities should exist in the church as in
the state for individual rights and liberties.
The religious
state of the Highlands, to which at the period of the Union the
Reformation had only very partially penetrated, occupied the attention
of the church during the whole of the 18th century. In 1725 the
gift called the “ royal bounty” was first granted,
a subsidy amounting at first , to £1000 per
annum, increased in George IV.’s reign to £2000; its
original object was to Religious assist the reclamation of the
Highlands from Roman Catholicism by means of catechists and teachers.
The Society
for Propagating Christian Knowledge, Highlands. incorporated in
1709, with a view partly to the
wants of the Highlands, worked in concert with the Church of Scotland,
setting up schools in remote and destitute localities, while the
church promoted various schemes for the dissemination of the Scriptures
in Gaelic and the encouragement of Gaelic students. In these labours
as well as in other directions the church was sadly hampered by
poverty. The need of an increase in the number of parishes was
urgently felt, and, though chapels began to be built about 1796,
they were provided only in wealthy places by local voluntary liberality;
for the supply of the necessities of poor outlying districts no
one as yet looked to any agency but the state. In every part of
the country many of the ministers were miserably poor; there were
many stipends, even of important parishes, not exceeding £40
a year; and it was not till after many debates in the assembly
and appeals to the government that an act was obtained in 1810
which made up the poorer livings to £150 a year by a grant
from the public exchequer. The churches and manses were frequently
of the most miserable description, if not falling to decay.
With the close
of the 18th century a great change passed over the spirit of the
church. The new activity which sprang
up everywhere after the French Revolution produced Haldanes. in
Scotland a revival of Evangelicalism.
Moderatism had cultivated the ministers too fast for the people,
and the church had become to a large extent more of a dignified
ruler than a spiritual mother. About this time the brothers Robert
and James Haldane devoted themselves to the work of promoting
Evangelical Christianity, James making missionary journeys throughout
Scotland and founding Sunday schools; and in 1798 the eccentric
preacher Rowland Hill visited Scotland at their request. In the
journals of these evangelists dark pictures are drawn of the religious
state of the country, though their censorious tone detracts greatly
from their value; but there is no doubt that the efforts of the
Haldanes brought about or coincided with a quickening of the religious
spirit of Scotland.
The assembly
of 1799 passed an act forbidding the admission to the pulpits
of laymen or of ministers of other churches, and issued a manifesto
on Sunday schools. These acts helped greatly, to discredit the
Moderate party, of whose spirit they were the outcome; and that
party further injured their standing in the country by attacking
Leslie, afterwards Sir John Leslie, on frivolous grounds, a phrase
he had used about Hume’s view of causation, when he applied
for the chair of mathematics in Edinburgh. In this dispute, which
made a great sensation in the country, the popular party successfully
defended Leslie, and thus obtained the sympathy of the enlightened
portion of the community. In 1810 the Christian Instructor began
to appear under the editorship of Dr Andrew Thomson, a churchman
of vigorous intellect and noble character. It was an ably written
review, in which the theology of the Haldanes asserted itself
in a somewhat dogmatic and confident tone against all unsoundness
and Moderatism, clearly proclaiming that the former things had
passed away. The question of pluralities began to be agitated
in 1813, and gave rise to a long struggle, in which Dr Thomas
Chalmers took a notable part, and which terminated in the regulation
that a university chair or principalship should not be held along
with a parish which was not close to the university seat.
The growth
of Evangelical sentiment in the church, along with the example
of the great missionary societies founded in the end of the 18th
and the beginning of the 19th century, led to the institution
of the various missionary schemes still carried on, and their
history forms the chief part of the history of the church for
a number of years. The education scheme, having for its object
the planting of schools in destitute Highland districts, came
into existence in 1824.
The foreign
mission committee was formed in 1825, at the instance of
Dr John Inglis (1763—1834), a leader of the Moderate party;
and Dr Alexander Duff went to India in 1829 as the first missionary
of the Church of Scotland. The church extension committee was
first appointed in 1828, and in 1834 it was made permanent. The
colonial scheme was inaugurated in 1836 and the Jewish mission
in 1838, Robert Murray McCheyne (1813— 1843) and Andrew
Alexander Bonar (1810—1892) setting out in the following
year as a deputation to inquire into the condition of the Jews
in Palestine and Turkey and on the continent of Europe. Of these
schemes that of church extension has most historical importance.
It was originally formed to collect information regarding the
spiritual wants of the country, and to apply to the government
to build the churches found to be necessary.
As the population
of Scotland had doubled since the Reformation, and its distribution
had been completely altered in many counties, while the number
of parish churches remained unchanged, and meeting-houses had
only been erected where seceding congregations required them,
the need for new churches was very great. The application to government
for aid, however, proved the occasion of a “Voluntary controversy,”
which raged with great fierceness for many years and has never
completely subsided. The union of the Burgher and the Antiburgher
bodies in1820 in the United Secession, both having previously
come to hold Voluntary principles, added to the influence of these
principles in the country, while the political excitement of the
period disposed men’s minds to such discussions.
The government
built forty-two churches in the Highlands, providing them with
a slender endowment; and these are still known as parliamentary
churches. Under Thomas Chalmers, however, the church extension
committee struck out a new line of action. That great philanthropist
had come to see that the church could only reach the masses of
the people effectively by greatly increasing the number of her
places of worship and abolishing or minimizing seat-rents in the
poorer districts. In his powerful defence of establishments against
the voluntaries in both Scotland and England, in which his ablest
assistants were those who afterwards became, along with him, the
leaders of the Free Church, he pleaded that an established church
to be effective must divide the country territorially into a large
number of small parishes, so that every corner of the land and
every person, of whatever class, shall actually enjoy the benefits
of the parochial machinery. This ” territorial principle
“ the church has steadily kept in view ever since.
The zealous
orthodoxy of the church found at this period several occasions
to assert itself. John McLeod Campbell minister of Row, was deposed
by the assembly of 1830 for teaching that assurance is of the
essence of faith and that Christ died for all men. He has since
been recognized as one of the profoundest Scottish theologians
of the 19th century, although his deposition was never removed.
The same assembly condemned the doctrine put forth by Edward Irving,
that Christ took upon Him the sinful nature of man and was not
impeccable, and Irving was deposed five years later by the presbytery
of Annan, when the outburst of supposed miraculous gifts in his
church in London had rendered him still more obnoxious to the
strict censures of the period. In 1841 Thomas Wright of Barthwick
(1785—1855) was deposed for a series of heretical opinions,
which he denied that he held, but which were said to be contained
in a series of devotional works of a somewhat mystical order hich
he had published. -
The influence
of dissent also acted along with the rapidly rising religious
fervour of the age in quickening in the church that sense of a
divine mission, and of the right and power to carry out that mission
without obstruction from any worldly authority,
which belongs to the essential consciousness of the Christian
church. An agitation against patronage, the ancient
root of evil, and the formation. of an anti-atronage society,
helped in the same direction.
The Ten Years’
Conflict, which began in. 1833 with the passing by the assembly
of the Veto and the Chapel Acts, is treated in the pages on the
Free Church of Scotland, and it is not necessary to dwell further
in this place on the consequences of those acts.
The assembly
of 1843, from which the exodus took place, proceeded to undo the
acts of the church during the preceding nine years. The Veto was
not repealed but ignored, as having never bad the force of law;
the Strathbogie ministers were recognized as if no sentence of
deposition had gone forth against them. The protest which the
moderator had read before leaving the assembly had been left on
the table; and an act of separation and deed of demission were
received from the ministers of the newly formed Free Church, who
were now declared to have severed their connexion with the Church
of Scotland. The assembly addressed a pastoral letter to the people
of the country, in which, while declining to “admit that
the course taken by the seceders was justified by irresistible
necessity,” they counselled peace and goodwill towards them,
and called for the loyal support of the remaining members of the
church.
Two acts at
once passed through the legislature in answer to the claims put
forward by the church. The Scottish Benefices Act of Lord Aberdeen,
1843, gave the people power to state objections personal to a
presentee, and bearing on his fitness for the particular charge
to which he was presented, and also authorized the presbytery
in dealing with the objections to look to the number and character
of the objectors. Sir James Graham’s Act, 1844, provided
for the erection of new parishes, and thus created the legal basis
for a scheme under which chapel ministers might become members
of church courts.
The Disruption
left the Church of Scotland in a sadly maimed condition. Of 1203
ministers 451 left her, and among these Develop- were many of
her foremost men. A third of her ment of membership is computed
to have gone with them. the church In Edinburgh many of her churches
were nearly
empty. The Gaelic-speaking population of the northern
counties completely deserted her. All her missionaries
left her but one. She had no gale of popular enthusiasm to carry
her forward, representing as she did not a newly arisen principle
but the opposition to a principle which she maintained to be dangerous
and exaggerated. For many years she had much obloquy to endure.
But she at once set herself to the task of filling up vacancies
and recruiting the missionary staff. A lay. association was formed,
which raised large sums of money for the missionary schemes, so
that their income was not allowed seriously to decline. The good
works of the church, indeed, were in a few years not only continued
but extended. All hope being lost that parliament would endow
the new churches built by the church extension scheme of Dr Chalmers,
it was felt that this also must be the work of voluntary liberality.
Under Dr James Robertson, professor of church history in Edinburgh,
one of the leading champions of the Moderate policy in the Ten
Years’ Conflict, the extension scheme was transformed into
the endowment scheme, and the church accepted it as her duty and
her task to provide the machinery of new parishes where they were
required. By 1854, 30 new parishes had been added at a cost of
£130,000, and from this time forward the work of endowment
proceeded still more rapidly. In 1843 the number of parishes had
been 924; in 1909 it was 1437. By the Poor Law Act of 1845 parishes
were enabled to remove the care of the poor from the minister
and the kirksession, in whom it was formerly vested, and to appoint
a parochial board with power to assess the ratepayers.
Those branches of the church extension scheme which dealt with
church building, and with the opening of new missions to meet
the wants of increasing populations, were taken up by a new department,
railed the Home Mission scheme. The home mission as the pioneer
in opening up new fields of labour, and the endowment scheme which
renders permanent the religious centres that the mission has founded,
are both traceable to Dr Chalmers.
Education
Act of 1872 severed the ancient tie connecting church and school
together, and created a school board having charge of the education
of each parish. At that date the Church of Scotland had 300 schools,
mostly in the Highlands. The church continued till lately to carry
on normal schools for the training of teachers in Edinburgh, Glasgow
and Aberdeen; but these, along with the normal schools of the
United Free Church, were recently made over to the state.
In 1874 patronage
was abolished. The working of Lord Aberdeen’s Act had given
rise to many unedifying scenes and to lengthy struggles over disputed
settlements, and it was
early felt that some change at least was necessary in the law.
The agitation on the subject went on in the assembly from 1851
to 1869, when the assembly by a large majority condemned patronage
as restored by the Act of Queen Anne, and resolved to petition
parliament for its removal. The request was granted, and the right
of electing parish ministers was conferred by the Patronage Act
1874 on the congregation; thus a grievance of old standing, from
which all the ecclesiastical troubles of a century and a half
had sprung, was removed and the church placed on. a thoroughly
democratic basis. This act, combined with various efforts made
within the church for her improvement, secured for the Scottish
Establishment a large measure of popular favour, and in the last
half of the i9th century she grew rapidly both in numbers and
in Improveinfluence. This revival was largely due on the one meats
in hand to the improvement of her worship which began with the
efforts of Dr Robert Lee (1804—1868), minister worship.
of Old Greyfriars, Edinburgh, and professor of Biblical criticism
in Edinburgh university. By introducing into his church a printed
book of prayers and also an organ, Dr Lee stirred up vehement
controversies in the church courts, which resulted in the recognition.
of the liberty of congregations to improve their worship. The
Church Service Society, having for its object the study of ancient
and modern liturgies, with a view to the preparation of forms
of prayer for public worship, was founded in 1865; it has published
eight editions of its “ Book of Common Order,” which,
though at first regarded with suspicion, has been largely used
by the clergy.
Church music
has been cultivated and improved in a marked degree; and hymns
have been introduced to supplement the psalms and paraphrases;
in 1898 a committee appointed by the Church of Scotland, the Free
Church, the United Presbyterian Church and the Presbyterian Church
in Ireland issued The Church Hymnary, which is authorized for
use in all these churches alike. Architecture has restored many
of the larger churches from their disfigurement by partition walls
and galleries, though much still remains to be done in this way,
and has erected new churches of a style favourable to devotion.
The cathedral churches of St Giles, Edinburgh, and of Brechin
and Dunblane, the abbey church of Paisley and the Church of the
Holy Trinity, St Andrews, have been restored; and the abbey of
Iona, handed over to the Church of Scotland by the duke of Argyll,
is now once more fitted up for worship.
The fervour
of the church found a channel in the operations of a “ Committee
on Christian Life and Work,” appointed in 1869 with the
aim of exercising some supervision of the work of the church throughout
the country, the stimulating evangelistic efforts and organizing
the Christian labours of lay agents. This committee publishes
a Life and magazine of “ Life and Work,” which has
a circulation or of
over 100,000 and has organized young men’s gilds in connexion
with congregations and revived the ancient order of deaconesses.
It was to reinforce this element of the church’s activity,
as well as
to strengthen her generally, that James Baird (1802—1876)
in 1873 made the munificent gift of £500,000. This fund
is administered by a trust which is not under the control of the
church, and the revenue is used mainly in aid of church building
and endowment throughout the country.
The church
has greatly increased of late years in width of view and liberality
of sentiment, and shelters various tendencies of thought. A volume
of Scotch Sermons, published in 1880 by ministers holding liberal
views, brought out the fact that the church would not wfflingly
be led into prosecutions for heresy. After this, however, there
was a revival on the part of some of the clergy of High Church
and orthodox sentiment.
The Scottish
Church Society was founded in 1892 with Dr John Macleod of Govan
as president, “to defend
and advance catholic doctrine as set forth in the ancient creeds
and embodied in the standards of the Church of Scotland.”
In 1897, however, Alexander Robinson of Kilmun was deposed by
the presbytery of Dunoon acting under the orders of the Assembly
on account of the views contained in his book The Saviour in the
Newer Light, in which the results of modern criticism of the Gospels
were set forth with some ability. The National Church Union, of
which Professor A. Menzies was president, was formed after this
event by ministers and elders who feared that the cause of free
theological inquiry was in peril in the church. This body at once
raised the question of the relaxation of subscription, which was
in a few years seriously taken up by the church, and the National
Church Union, feeling that in this, as well as in the growth of
liberal opinion in the church its object had been attained, discontinued
its operations. The Scottish Church Society still carries on its
work.
The question
of subscription has been more or less before the church for many
years. The formula adopted by the assembly of 1751I had still
to be signed by ministers, and was felt to be much too strict.
After debates extending over many years, the assembly of 1889
fell back on the words of the act of parliament 1693, passed to
enable the Episcopalian clergy to join the establishment, in which
the candidate declared the Confession of Faith to be the confession
of his faith, owned the doctrine therein contained to be the true
doctrine and promised faithfully to adhere to it. This was accompanied
by a Declaratory Act in which the church expressed its desire
to enlarge rather than curtail the liberty hitherto enjoyed. Ten
years later the assembly was again debating the question of subscription.
A committee appointed in 1899 to inquire into the powers of the
church in the matter reported that the power of the church was
merely administrative, it was in her power as cases arose to prosecute
or to refrain from prosecuting, but that she had no power to modify
the confession in any way. Here the matter might have remained,
but that the approach to parliament of the United and the Free
Churches after the decision of the House of Lords in 1904 offered
an opportunity for asking parliament to remove a grievance the
church herself had no power to deal with. The Scottish Churches
Bill of 1905 afforded relief to all the Presbyterian churches.
It did not do what the Church of Scotland asked, viz, allow the
words of the act of 1690 to be used as the formula; but it removed
that of 1693 and left it to the church to frame a new formula
for her ministers and professors, an undertaking to which she
is seriously addressing herself.
The agitation
for disestablishment sprang up afresh after the passing of the
Church Patronage Act (Scotland); each assembly
of the Free Church passed a resolution in favour of it, and the
United Free Church continued
this testimony.
In 1890 Mr
Gladstone declared for disestablishment,
and under his government of 1892 a Disestablishment Bill was introduced
in the House of Commons by Sir Charles Cameron, in two successive
sessions, 1893—1894. After the defeat of the Liberal government
in 1895, the church was for ten years relieved from this anxiety,
nor had the attack been renewed up to 1911. A counter-movement
was represented by a bill introduced into parliament in 1886 in
order to declare the spiritual independence of the Church of Scotland,
in the hope that the way might be opened to a reunion of the Presbyterian
bodies. The act of 1905 has altered the circumstances of the churches
in this regard. During the agitation the church was much occupied
with the question of her own defence, and after it died down,
various schemes were entertained for the improvement of her position
without and within. She more than once expressed her willingness
to confer with the daughter Presbyterian churches, with a view
to their sharing with her the benefits of her position.
Since 1908
the subject of the union of the churches has been much spoken
of. The quarter-centenary of the birth of Calvin occurring at
the time of the Church assemblies of 1909 brought the Church of
Scotland and the United Free Church assembly together for a memorial
service in St Giles’s; and a committee on union, consisting
of 105 representatives from each assembly, was appointed.
The Church
of Scotland has made few contributions of importance to the movement
of Biblical Criticism which has entered so deeply into the religious
life of Scotland, but she has had distinguished writers on theology.
Robert Lee (1804—1868), Scottish minister of Old Greyfriars
and professor of Biblical criticism in Edinburgh University, fought
a long battle for the liberty and the improvement of worship,
of which the churches generally now reap the advantage. He held
clear views as to the necessity of reform in the doctrine of the
church as well; but these he died without publishing. Norman Macleod,
minister of the Barony Parish, Glasgow, a man of great natural
eloquence and an ardent philanthropist, enjoyed the warm friendship
of Queen Victoria and was beloved by his nation. John Caird, professor
of divinity and then principal of Glasgow University, wrote An
Introduction to the Philosophy of Religion, exercised a deep influence
as a teacher on Scottish thought, and was the most distinguished
British preacher, of the intellectual order, of his day. John
Tulloch, principal of St Mary’s College, St Andrews, wrote
Theism, Leaders of the Reformation, Rational Theology and Christian
Philosophy in England in the 17th century, and many other works,
and was an effective champion of’ doctrinal liberty. He
was succeeded at St Andrews and as Liberal leader in the assembly
by John Cunningham (1819—1893), who wrote a very successful
History of the Church of Scotland. Robert Herbert Story (1835—1906),
principal after Caird of Glasgow University, stood by the side
of Lee and Tulloch in their assembly contendings and was an outspoken
defender of the National Church against her spoliators from without.
Of his works may be mentioned lives of his father Dr Story, of
Carstairs, and of Robert Lee. His life was written by his daughters.
Andrew K. H. Boyd (1825—1899), minister of St Andrews, was
widely known by the numerous volumes of essays, especially the”
Recreations of a Country Parson.” His “ Twenty-five
Years of St Andrews “ contains a good deal of information.
Robert Flint published The Philosophy of History in Europe, Historical
Philosophy in France; his volumes on Theism and Antitheistic Theories
have passed through many editions.
The Church
of Scotland in 1909 had 1437 parishes and 251 chapels and preaching
stations. The General Assembly consisted of 741 members. The professors
of divinity at the four Scottish universities
must be ministers of the church, but a proposal has been made
to throw the chairs open to ministers of any of the Presbyterian
bodies. The foreign mission employs fifty-two ordained and about
as many unordained, medical, industrial and other missionaries,
with a large number of native agents, in India, East Africa and
China. Jewish missions are kept up at five stations in the East,
and the colonial committee supplies ordinances to emigrants from
Scotland in many, of the dependencies of the empire. The small-livings
fund aims at bringing up to £200 a year all stipends which
fall short of that sum, of which there are nearly 400. About £4000
a year was still required in 1910 to carry out the object of this
scheme.
The parliamentary
return of 1888 showed the value of the 876 parishes to be £375,678
and the stipends paid to amount (exclusive of manses and glebes)
to £242,330. The value of augmentations obtained since that
date is more than balanced by the decline of prices, so that the
total revenue of the church from this source is about £220,000.
The unexhausted teinds, according to the return in 1907, amounted
to about £133,000. The exchequer pays to 190 poor parishes
and 42 Highland churches, from church property in the hands of
the crown, £17,040. From burgh and other local funds the
church derives a revenue of £23,501. The church has herself
added to her endowments, for the equipment of 453 new parishes,
£1,681,330, yielding over £54,000 a year. The entire
endowments of the church, including manses and glebes but not
church buildings, is about
£300,000.
In the absence
of a religious census it is not possible to deduce from statistics
supplied by the churches themselves any trustworthy conclusion
as to the percentage of the population adhering to each church.
The Communion rolls of the parish churches require to be kept
with care, as in vacancies they form the register of those entitled
to vote for the new minister. In the able statistical discussions
in the reports of the United Free Church it is pointed out that
in the figures furnished by the churches the numbers of members
and the numbers of deaths are not in the same proportion as the
population of the country and the general death-rate, and the
conclusion is drawn that the number of members is in each case
too great. The Free Church in 1909 had 150 congregations and 77
ministers; its members and adherents are stated to number 60,000,
and its income, apart from investments, is £22,542. The
membership of the larger churches is that of corfimunicants only;
in the Highlands especially the adherents of these churches who
do not communicate form a large proportion of those connected
with the church.
The Scottish
Episcopal Church in 1909 numbered 388 charges with 52,029 communicants.
Its charges are numerous in proportion to its membership, having
an average of 134 members, while the Church of Scotland averages
497 and the United Free Church 313 members for each congregation.
The adherents of each of these churches outnumber their communicants
in a ratio which is variously estimated. The Roman Catholic hierarchy
was restored in Scotland in 1878. There are six dioceses (two
archbishops, one of Edinburgh and St Andrews and the other of
Glasgpw; and four suffragans, Aberdeen, Argyll and the Isles,
Dunkeld and Galloway), with, in 1909, 550 priests; 398 churches,
chapels and stations; and a Roman Catholic population estimated
at about 519,000.
The original
Secession Church has 5 presbyteries and 26 congregations; and
the remnant of the Reformed Presbyterian Church which did not
join the Free Church in 1876, 2 presbyteries and 11 congregations.
The Congregational and Evangelical Union (formed by the amalgamation
of the Congregational and Evangelical Churches in 1896), has 183
churches; and the remnant of the Evangelical Union, 7 churches.
The Baptist Union has 128 congregations and the Wesleyan Methodists
40 churches.
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