Scottish Presbyterianism Re-established
The Case of Stirling and Dunblane, 1687-1710
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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
ISBN: 9781474447393
Number of Pages: 280
Published: 15/11/2023
Width: 15.6 cm
Height: 23.4 cm
A local history of Presbyterianism as the new governance of the Church of Scotland
In 1690, the Church of Scotland rejected episcopal authority and settled as Presbyterian. The adjacent Presbyteries of Stirling and Dunblane covered an area that included both lowland and highland communities, speaking both English and Gaelic and supporting both the new government and the old – thus forming a fairly representative picture of the nation as a whole. This book will examine the ways in which the two Presbyteries operated administratively, theologically and geographically under the new regime. By surveying the complete indices of surviving church records from 1690 to 1710 at Presbytery and parish level, Andrew Muirhead will show how the two Presbyteries related to civil authorities, how they dealt with problematic discipline cases referred by the Kirk Sessions and their overall functioning as human, as well as religious, institution in seventeenth-century Scotland. The resulting study will advance our understanding of the profound impact that Presbyteries had on those involved with them in any capacity.
Key features
Compares the new Presbyterian regime and the Calvinist Episcopalianism it replaced;
Examines church records available in Stirling Archives (e.g. recruitment records and header texts of the week-to-week preaching of ministers), civil records (e.g. hearth tax, burgh and guildry records) as well as memoirs and diaries;
Provides statistical analysis of the recruitment and experiences of new ministers, their relationships with each other and heritors;
Forms the backdrop for the origins of the First Secession in Stirling 30–40 years later.
List of Tables; Acknowledgements; Detail from Ecclesiastical Map of Scotland, 1825Introduction: Post-Revolution Presbyterianism in Central ScotlandChapter 1 Scotland and its National Church in 1688Chapter 2 Ministering in the Presbyteries; Exiles and AntediluviansChapter 3 Ensuring the Continuity of MinistryChapter 4 The Courts of the Church and the Business of PresbyteryChapter 5 The Eldership and the HeritorsChapter 6 Celebrating the SacramentsChapter 7 Preaching the Word, Week by WeekChapter 8 The Survival of EpiscopacyChapter 9 Church Discipline and the LawChapter 10 Dunblane’s Highland ParishesChapter 11 The Church and the Union of ParliamentsConclusion: The New Ecclesiastical RegimeAppendix 1 Survival of Church Records, 1688–1710Appendix 2 Parish StatisticsAppendix 3 The Evidence from Alva Collections, 1687–1700Appendix 4 The Post-Revolution Careers of Local Episcopal MinistersAppendix 5 Distribution of Turnbull's Header TextsBibliography; Index