Scottish Reformation Mitchell 366 PDF
Scottish Reformation Mitchell 366 PDF
Scottish Reformation Mitchell 366 PDF
SCOTTISH REFORMATION
BY T H E LATE
ALEXANDER F. M I T C H E L L , D.D., L L . D .
E M E R I T U S PROFESSOR OF CHURCH HISTORY
IN ST ANDREWS .UNIVERSITY
E D I T E D BY
D. H A Y F L E M I N G , LL.D.
W I L L I A M B L A C K W O O D A N D S O N S
M DCC CC
SCOTTISH REFORMATION
Its Epochs, Episodes, Leaders, and
Distinctive Characteristics
BY T H E LATE
ALEXANDER F. M I T C H E L L , D.D., L L . D .
E M E R I T U S PROFESSOR O F CHURCH HISTORY
IN ST ANDREWS . U N I V E R S I T Y
E D I T E D BY
D. H A Y F L E M I N G , LL.D.
W I L L I A M B L A C K W O O D A N D S O N S
M DCC CC
PAGE
C H A P T E R I.
T H E N A T U R E AND N E E D OF T H E REFORMATION . 1
C H A P T E R II.
PATRICK HAMILTON
19
C H A P T E R III.
C H A P T E R IV.
GEORGE WISHART 56
C H A P T E R V.
K N O X AS L E A D E R OF OUR R E F O R M A T I O N . . 79
C H A P T E R VI.
APPENDICES.
THE OLD SCOTTISH CONFESSION OF 1560
99 A. THE P/EDAGOGIUM, OR ST MARY'S COLLEGE, ST
ANDREWS . . . . . . 285
C H A P T E R VII. B. CITATIO PATRICII HAMILTON 289
THE BOOK OF COMMON ORDER C. CARDINAL BETOUN'S INCONTINENCE 292
123
D. CONDITIONS ON WHICH THE USE OF THE CHURCH
OF THE WHITE LADIES AT FRANKFORT WAS
C H A P T E R VIII.
GRANTED TO THE ENGLISH EXILES 294
THE FIRST BOOK OF DISCIPLINE E. THE THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL OPINIONS
144
SECT. I. THE GOVERNMENT OF THE CHURCH . 145 OF ALESIUS . . . . . 295
Π. THE DISCIPLINE OF THE CHURCH . !62 K. THE DREAM OR VISION OF ALESIUS CONCERNING
ΠΙ. THE PREROGATIVES AND DUTIES OF THE DECAPITATION OF ANNE BOLEYN . 297
ADDENDA 3°7
C H A P T E R IX.
INDEX 311
THE LAST DAYS OF JOHN KNOX
184
C H A P T E R X.
C H A P T E R XI.
ALESIUS .
239
OF
D.D., L L . D . , PROFESSOR O F E C C L E S I A S T I C A L H I S T O R Y I N
S T MARY'S C O L L E G E , S T A N D R E W S .
was recognised as one of the ablest and most here is a tablet on the east door of the old
learned exponents of the principles which they Cathedral,-hav1ng made a voyage round the
world m the Dolphin, in which also he ran the
it was published at Philadelphia in 1897, in a of I r e l a n d , " pp. 713-741: in the 'Catholic Pres¬
notice of which in the 'Presbyterian and Re¬ byterian,' March 1879, " Calvin and the Psalmody
formed Review ' the following statement occurs : of the Reformed Churches " : in the ' Scottish
" T h e book at once took its rank as the most Church,' November 1886, " S t Andrews in Cove¬
trustworthy and sympathetic account of the nanting Times " : in the ' Year - Book of the
Westminster Standards in existence, and rapidly Church of Scotland,' 1886, " Brief Sketch of the
ran out of print. The public is to be congratu¬ History of the Reformed Church of Scotland " :
lated that D r Mitchell has permitted himself to in ' St Giles' Lectures,' First Series, 1880-81,
be persuaded by the [Presbyterian] Board to " Pre - Reformation S c o t l a n d " ; and in Fourth
revise the text and allow a new edition to be Series, 1883-84, " The Primitive or Apostolic and
issued to meet the present demand. The revision Sub - Apostolic Church," being the first of the
does not much alter the text. A phrase is more lectures entitled, " T h e Churches of Christen-
felicitously turned here or rendered a shade more dorn." T o D r Schaff's Encyclopaedia he contrib¬
exact or emphatic there; a few additional refer¬ uted separate articles on " S t Columba," " T h e
ences are added in the notes ; and a few additional Culdees," " P a t r i c k H a m i l t o n , " " Iona," and
citations and remarks incorporated in them : that " The Keltic Church " ; and to the ' Presbyterian
is about a l l . But so good a book needed only and Reformed Review,' published at Philadelphia,
these little touches of betterment." he contributed a review of Dr Hume Brown's
The Professor also contributed to various 'John Knox.' Besides many Reports on various
journals and encyclopaedias many important matters presented to the General Assembly,
articles, chiefly on historical topics relating to he issued for special purposes a " Statement
Scotland, which, i f collected, would form a regarding the Eldership," and a " List of
volume of miscellaneous papers of great interest Acts of the Scottish Parliament, and of Acts,
and value. The most important of these are Overtures, and Resolutions of the General As¬
included in the subjoined l i s t : I n the ' B r i t i s h sembly of the Church of Scotland, adopted at
and Foreign Evangelical Review,' January 1872, various times for the Acknowledgment of the
" Our Scottish Reformation : Its Distinctive True Reformed Protestant Religion, the Main¬
Characteristics and Present-Day Lessons," pp. tenance of Sound Doctrine, and the Subscription
87-128; October 1875, " D r Merle D'Aubigné on of the Confessions of F a i t h of 1560 and 1647."
the Reformation in Scotland," pp. 736-760; W h e n at Geneva, on one of his visits to the
October 1876, " Killen's Ecclesiastical History Continent, he prepared for private circulation,
the Church, himself one of his most distinguished for Professor M i t c h e l l is thoroughly up to date w i t h
students, has drawn a picture of h i m as he ap- all his facts, and loses no opportunity of visiting
,peared about the latter of these dates, which is the great German authorities. . . . T o be re־
so true to the life that no excuse is needed for !,roved in class by the Professor is not to be
introducing i t here. He says : " St Andrews and desired : to be 'spoken t o ' i n his ante-room still
Professor Mitchell are inseparable. For forty- less so. Many men stand i n awe of h i m — I have
four years he has taught in the University : first always thought unnecessarily so."
the Hebrew Tongue; next the History of the The Professor continued to take a warm interest
Church of Christ. As a Professor, D r Mitchell in his students after they had left the Divinity
comes into contact w i t h a comparatively small H a l l , and had entered on the work of the ministry ;
number of students. The classes in St Mary's and when attending the General Assembly he
are diminutive—in some ways a source of much could generally tell how many of its members had
gratification to the writer and others — con¬ passed through one or other of his classes in St
sequently he is little known by most men here. Mary's College. W h e n he retired from the duties
Of course, all are familiar w i t h the Figure pacing of his Chair i n 1894, the occasion was regarded as
the town in the bright of the forenoon ; or, arm¬ affording a suitable opportunity of giving public
in-arm w i t h a youthful Professor, walking as far expression to the esteem i n which he was held by
as the Swilcan; or, at a Graduation Ceremony, his friends, and to their grateful appreciation of
scanning the audience, i f perhaps he may get a his services both to the Church and the Uni¬
glimpse of some old pupil among the crowd of in¬ versity ; and i n 1895, while the General Assembly
terested spectators. For many of his students have was i n session, he was presented, in name of a
risen high : and some of them have a weight of years large number of his former students and other
to bear. B u t all are not aware that in the Church friends, w i t h an illuminated address, a cheque for
History Class-Room English is spoken as she is 200 guineas, and his portrait by Sir , George Reid
nowhere else i n St Andrews. The beautifully —acknowledged to be one of the best that have
rounded and perfectly balanced sentences, and yet come from the studio of the President of the
the elegance of the language, w i l l hardly be ex¬ Royal Scottish Academy. The Right H o n . James
celled. T o make the study of Church History A. Campbell of Stracathro, M.P., w i t h whom he
what is called popular is one of the few im¬ had long had intimate relations, presided at the
possibilities of life, but there is no man living ceremony and made the presentation. The reply
who can invest the subject w i t h more interest; of the Professor, as containing many interesting
Christ beneath, Christ in the heart, Christ in the years ago in Australia, to which he had emigrated
ftome. I heartily thank you all for your great along w i t h his brother Johnstone.
^ndness and especially Principal Stewart and Probably few are aware that the Professor spent
M r Wenley, and one who once said I had been as many of his happiest days, and did much of his
a lather to him, and of whom I may truly say literary work, at Gowanpark, his country residence
tbat he has been as a son to me." near Brechin, which, w i t h its charm of seclusion
I n 1852 the Professor married the eldest and restfulness, no one who has visited i t can
daughter of the late M r Michael Johnstone of ever forget, and which his family came to regard
Archbank, near Moffat, who belonged to an influ¬ as their home almost as much as St Andrews.
ential yeoman family that has been connected There he found relaxation i n the interest which
w i t h Annandale for the last two hundred years. he took in the work of his little farm, which was
The late M r Peter Johnstone, brother of Mrs his own property, and as long as he had health he
Mitchell s father, who was a proprietor as well enjoyed a ramble among the neighbouring hills, or
as a large farmer, is still remembered as bavin* a walk, varied by an occasional drive, along the
done a great deal to promote the cause of educa* quiet country roads. H i s home in the country,
tion m the district where he resided ; and her however, was w i t h h i m no mere place of recréa¬
brother, the late M r James Johnstone, was t i o n , still less of idleness, and there, as elsewhere,
tenant of Bodsbeck farm, which is the scene of he never failed to find his chief source of pleasure
the E t t n c k Shepherd's well-known Covenanting in the prosecution of his favourite studies.
h
' ! ד ״u ״f.™™ ° f B o d s b e
^ • " H o w much W h e n the Professor retired from the duties of
Mrs Mitchell did to brighten the life and to m i n - his Chair he did not cease to take an interest in
|ster to the happiness of the Professor can be the affairs of the College, of which he was an
known only to those who have had the privilege ornament while he lived, and w i t h which, as was
of being admitted into the inner circle of their said in a notice of h i m at the time of his death,
friends, and there are not a few who have very his name w i l l always be associated—like those of
pleasant reminiscences of delightful intercourse Andrew Melville, Samuel Rutherford, and others
with1 them in their house at 56 South Street, where i n remote and troublous times, and that of Princi¬
the duty of entertaining strangers seemed never to pal Tulloch in our own more peaceful days. N o r
be forgotten. Their family of four sons and two did he cease to interest himself in the work of the
daughters all survive, w i t h the exception of the Church which he loved so well and had served so
eldest son, Robert Haldane, who died several faithfully. Perhaps i t was to show his love for
the journey to Edinburgh, in May 1898, to attend W h e n he returned to St Andrews, the burden
the General Assembly. He was unable, indeed, of his infirmities grew heavier, and as the spring
to be present there more than once or twice, and approached i t was manifest that he was nearing
when on one occasion he occupied the Moder¬ the end. H e was greatly affected by the tidings
ator's chair for a few minutes, a t h r i l l of respectful
of the tragic death of D r Boyd, who had paid
sympathy passed through the House. I n a letter
him a visit shortly before his departure for the
written a few days after his return home he says,
south. O n the Monday before he died he re¬
" I am very pleased to have been able to give
peated the words of the second paraphrase in a
even such limited attendance," adding, w i t h a
clear, strong voice, and quoted almost the last
touch of pathos, as i f anticipating that the visit
recorded words of St Paul, " I have fought a good
would be his last, " in the fiftieth year since M r
fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the
John Tulloch and Alex. F . Mitchell were first ,
faith. יOn Tuesday evening he desired some one
returned as members."
to sing to him, and as Miss Mitchell was unable
Soon afterwards he removed to his loved retreat to control her feelings'to do so, M r Smith, his
at Gowanpark, but his health did not improve amanuensis, who had come i n , was asked by him
and he was but seldom able to leave the house' to sing "Jesus, Lover of my Soul." W h e n this
Most of the letters he wrote at this time, some of was done he turned to Miss Mitchell, and said,
them in pencil, w i t h his head resting on the pillow " W h a t would you like ? " and they sang together
were evidently intended to be his parting words " Rock of Ages." W i t h uncomplaining patience
to those to whom they were addressed. I n one he had suffered much, but welcome rest came to
of these, written in the middle of September he him on the morning of Wednesday, 22nd March.
says, " F o r the first fortnight after I came here H a v i n g served his own generation by the w i l l of
I was able to go out of doors, and in my invalid God, he fell asleep amid the tender regrets of his
chair bask in the sun for an hour a-day. I am family, leaving behind him a memory that w i l l
still keeping my bed in the hope of being able always be held in honour, and an example of
to return without risk to St Andrews in the end laborious service, of deep piety, and of fervent
of the month ; " and then, alluding to a subject trust i n Christ.
his interest in which seems to have helped to I n compliance w i t h his own wish, his remains
keep him alive, he says, " I have got five of were conveyed to Brechin, where they were laid
T H E SCOTTISH REFORMATION.
C H A P T E R I.
of our First Book of Discipline concerning the and in the writings of their own best men. The 1
1
necessity and advantages of education. harsh measures to which men themselves so vul¬
Not only had the life powers of the medieval nerable had recourse to maintain their position,
church been exhausted and decay set i n , but the relentless cruelties they perpetrated on men
ןcorruption, positive and gross corruption, had of unblemished character, amiable disposition,
reached an alarming height. There were the in¬ deep-seated conviction and thorough Christian
dolence and neglect of duty which wealth too earnestness, could not fail in the end to turn the
often brings in its train ; the covert secularising tide against them, and arouse feelings of indigna¬
of that wealth, just as in the old Celtic church, tion which on any favourable opportunity would
by various devices, to get i t into the hands of induce the nation to sweep them away.
unqualified men and minors; luxury, avarice, The corruptions i n the doctrine of the church
oppression, simony, shameless pluralities, and were hardly less notable than those in the lives
crass ignorance ; and above all that celibate sys- of its clergy. The sufficiency and supremacy of
tern, which nothing would persuade them honestly 1
Because of its permanent importance, I deem it best to insert
to abandon, though it had proved to be a yoke here a note from my Introduction to ' The Gude and Godlie
they could not bear, and was producing only too Hallalis/ p. lxiv : " \Ve do not need to call in Knox, or Lind¬
say, or the satirists, in evidence of this humbling fact. The tes¬
generally results humiliating and disastrous to timony of their own councils, of the Acts of Parliament, and of
themselves and to all who came under their in¬ some of their best men, as Principal Hay in his congratulatory ad¬
fluence. The proof of this does not rest merely dress to Cardinal Betoun, and Ninian Winzet in the sad appeals and
confessions inserted in his ' Tractates,' as well as that of impartial
or even mainly on the statements of Knox, modern historians like Tytler and Dr Joseph Robertson, is more
Alesius, and Spottiswood, nor on the représenta¬ than sufficient to establish it beyond contradiction. The testimony
of Conreus, who died when about to be raised to the purple, covers
tions of Lindsay and the Wedderburns. The
almost all that Alesius and Knox have averred : ' In multorum
fact, as both the late D r David L a i n g and D r sacerdotum aedibus scortum publicum . . . nec a sacrilego quorun-
Joseph Robertson have shown, and the late dam luxu tutus erat matronarum honos aut virginalis pudor.' More
notable still is the representation given in the ' Memoire ' addressed
Bishop Forbes has sorrowfully acknowledged, is
to the Pope by Queen Mary and the Dauphin, evidently at the in¬
confessed and deplored i n the canons of their stance of Mary of Guise, in which the spread of heresy is expressly
councils, in the Acts of the Scottish Parliament, attributed to the ignorance and immorality of the clergy. See
Appendix B, vol. ii., of Mr Hume Brown's recent biography of
1
[For these utterances see infra, chap. viii. sec. iv.] Knox."
the ministers of the church who wept in secret [So early as the 23rd of June 1559, Knox wrote to Mrs Anna
Lock : " Diverse channons of Sanct Andrewes have given notable
over the abominations that were done, who confessiouns, and have declared themselves manifest enemies to the
longed for the dawn of a better day, and, in pope, to the masse, and to all superstitioun " (Laing's Knox, vi. 26).
In all probability some of these canons were included among the
their parishes or cloisters or colleges, sought to
fourteen canons of St Andrews Priory who are mentioned as Protes¬
prepare the way for i t , and who succeeded in tants in January 1571-72, and of whom twelve were then parish
eran as well as Wycliffite—a subtle defender of H a m i l t o n was incorporated into the University
Roman doctrine ; and in dedicating to Archbishop 2
of St Andrews ; and on 3rd October 1524 he
Betoun his Commentary on St Matthew's Gospel, 1
See Appendix A.
he congratulated him on the success of his cruel [ ־The entry in the Register of the University occurs at the bottom
1
measures against Hamilton and the heretics. י• י״I«KC, and preceded and followed by entries of 1521, as if it
I S
1
*l״1ct and easily read, but in this of !523 the ink is very faint, and
[Dr Mitchell, no doubt, had the Commentary itself before him. ! ייsurface of the vellum has a rubbed appearance. It runs thus :
Those who have not access to it will find the dedication in the Ap¬
pendix to Constable's 'Major,' Scot. Hist. Soc, pp. 447, 448.] v.-״, r Γ'Γ " • ' " י 85 J
° ״ ״
"י ״ a n n D 0 m
J incorporalus erat i n i 1 V ״ x x i i
his martyrdom, and the final summons of Betoun [The Act as thus extended was ratified on the 12th of June 1535
(Ibid., ii. 342).]
day was brought out for public trial and con¬ These truths, which have been the source of life
demnation in the Abbey Church or cathedral of and strength to many, were to h i m the cause of
St Andrews. condemnation and death ; and on the last day
of February 1527-28, the same day the sentence
Γη an old manuscript 1,00k of forms used in ecclesiastical pro¬ was passed, i t was remorselessly executed before
cesses by the archbishops of St Andrews before the Reformation I
found and have been able to decipher the recorded copy of the sum¬
the gates of St Salvator's College. " Nobly," as
mens issued by Archbishop James Betoun against Hamilton after I have said elsewhere, " did the martyr confirm
his return from Germany. It is addressed specially to the Dean of the minds of the many godly youths he had
the Lothians, and refers only to the preaching of the reformer in
West Lothian, so that there can no longer be any doubt that his gathered round h i m , by his resolute bearing, his
compearance in St Andrews before the date appointed in the sum- gentleness and patience, his steadfast adherence
mous must be regarded as a resolute avowal of his determination to
to the truths he had taught, and his heroic endur-
defend his teaching at all hazards. The summons is inserted at
ength 1n Appendix li. [For an account of the manuscript Form,,- 1
Spottiswoode's History, i. 124, 125.
laie see Robertson's ' Concilia Scotiic,' vol. i. pp. exev, exevi ] 2
l'itscottie's History, 1778, p. 206,
preserved for us by his friend Alesius, himself a The older sources for the facts of Patrick Hamilton's career and
martyrdom are the references to them by his friend Alesius in two
sorrowing witness of the fearful tragedy. « He or three of his works, and especially in his ' Commentary on the
was rather roasted than burned," he tells us It First Book of Psalms,' under Psalm xxxvii. ; by Lambert in his
' Commentary on the Apocalypse' ; and by Gau in the latter part of
may be that his persecutors had not deliberately
his treatise on ' The Rieht Vay to the Kingdom of Heuine ' ; and
planned thus horribly to protract his sufferings- after those by Foxe, Knox, Calderwood, Pitscottie, and Spottis-
though such cruelty was not unknown in France woode in their histories. The only satisfactory formal biography of
him is that by Principal Lorimer entitled, ' Patrick Hamilton, the
either then or in much later times. They were as
first Preacher and Martyr of the Scottish Reformation.' His story
yet but novices at such revolting work, and all has also been told by Dr Merle D'Aubigné, in his own dramatic way ;
things seemed to conspire against them. The and still more recently it has been made the subject of a veritable
drama by the Rev. T. P. Johnston, minister of Carnbee.
execution had been hurried on before a sufficiency
of dry wood had been provided for the fire
t h e fury of the storm, which had prevented the
martyr's brother from crossing the F o r t h w i t h
troops to rescue him, was not yet spent. W i t h a
herce wind from the east sweeping up N o r t h
street, it would be a difficult matter in such a
spot to kindle the pile and keep it burning, or to
prevent the flames, when fierce, from being S O
1
i1533 » was entitled 'Alexandri Alesii Epistola
his c o u n t r y and all he held dear, rather than
contra decretum quoddam episcoporum in Scotia,
renounce the faith the martyr had taught h i m ,
quod prohibet legere Novi Testamenti libros lingua
or crouch before the lecherous tyrant who had
vcrnacula.' I t brought into bold relief, and set
destined him to a filthy dungeon and a lingering
high above all minor issues, what had been taught
death. But it admits of no doubt that he was
by Wycliffc in the fourteenth century, and main¬
the most notable of all the band of young Scottish
tained by the Lollards of Kyle in the fifteenth,
exiles who had to leave their native country be¬
and what had actually been urged as an additional
tween the martyrdom of Hamilton and that of
charge against Patrick H a m i l t o n . Save for this
Wishart, and who were honoured to do faithful
epistle of Alesius, and the controversy i t occa¬
service in the cause of the Reformation in Eng¬
sioned, we might not have known that even in
land and on the Continent. The story of Alesius,
ignorant Scotland the bishops had been so far
of the shameless cruelties which drove h i m from 1
left to themselves as to issue such a decree. I t
his native land, of the hardships he had to bear
1
in the earlier years of his exile, of the high place [Howard and Barlo, in writing from Edinburgh on the 13th of
May 1536, say, that to the Scots the reading of God's Word "in
he gained in the affections of Melanchthon and theyr vulgare tonge is lately prohybitede by open proclamation"
Beza, and the great work he was to do by his writ¬ (Lemon's State Papers, v. 48). Norfolk, writing to Crumwell
from Berwick on the 29th of March 1539, says : "Dayly commeth
ings and prelections for the Protestant churches
unto me some gentlemen and some Clerkes, wiche do flee owte of I
of Germany, is one of the most interesting in the Scotland as they saie for redyng of Scripture in Inglishe ; saying /
1
that, if they were taken, they sholde be put to execution" (Ibid. v. !
[It was probably in 1530 that he left Scotland.]
154)• In the Epistle to James V I . prefixed to the Bassandyne
Mearns, and had been reclaimed from his former at the king's command had exposed the hypocrisy
godless life by his neighbour, Erskine of D u n , but of the friars ; and George Wishart, who had
by some free speeches had incurred the resent¬ taught the Greek New Testament in Montrose ;
ment of the notorious Prior Hepburn. They were also Andrew Charters, John Lyne, and Thomas
burned at the Rood of Greenside, on the northern Cocklaw, John and Robert Richardson and Robert
side of the Calton H i l l . I n the same year, W i l - Logie, canons of the Augustinian Abbey of Cam-
lock, M'Alpine, and M ' D o w a l had to escape into buskenneth. Nearly all of these fugitives took
England. I n 1536, when the king and Betoun refuge in England. Cocklaw, Calderwood tells
were abroad, there was comparative peace. I n us, for marrying a wife had been mewed up within
1537 several were convicted at Ayr, and had their stone walls, but his brother came w i t h crowbars
1
goods forfeited, among whom was Walter Steward, and released h i m . H i s goods, as well as those
son of L o r d Ochiltree. I n 1538-39 many were ac¬ of his wife, were forfeited to the Crown. Large
cused and convicted in various burghs in which numbers of the wealthy burgesses, even after they
by that time reformed opinions were spreading, had consented to abjure their opinions, were
and many had to seek safety in flight. Among stripped of their possessions, among whom the
these last were Gavin Logie, principal regent burgesses of Dundee were conspicuous. " N o r
2
in St Leonard's College, who for a number of was the good town of Stirling far behind Dundee
years had been exercising a marked influence on in the same race of Christian glory. She had less
the students under him ; John Fyfe, who under wealth to resign, . . . but she brought to the
the designation of Joannes Faithus matriculated altar a larger offering of saintly b l o o d . " 1
On 1st
at Wittenberg in 1539, and under that of Joannes March 1538-39, no fewer than four of her citizens
Fidelis was incorporated into the University of were burned at one pile on the Castle H i l l of
Frankfort on the Oder, and appointed Professor Edinburgh. O n the same day w i t h them, and in
of Divinity there in 1547 ; George Buchanan, who the same place, perished one of the most sainted
1
and interesting of Scotland's martyrs—Thomas
[In the letter, dated 29th December 1537, granting his escheat to
his father, he is described as "ujnquhill Walter Stewart " (M'Crie's Forret, canon of the Augustinian Abbey of Inch-
Knox, 1855, p. 316). Calderwood places his recantation and acci¬ colm, and thereafter vicar of Dollar, who was
dental death in 1533 (History, Wodrow Society, i. 104).]
2
universally admired for his attractive character.
[Gavin Logie is usually spoken of as Principal of St Leonard's
(Laing's Knox, i. 36, n.).] 1
Lorimer's Scottish Reformation, i860, p. 51.
seemed to have thought they must make out to intelligence, high ability, unremitting energy, and
be a very monster of iniquity, and of whom the unbounded ambition, but also of considerable
other party seemed to have felt that the less they scholarly attainments. He did not belong, i t is
said the better ; and to a certain extent D'Aubigné's true, to the school of Pole and Contarini, who
estimate is correct, but i t requires to be supple¬ would have made concessions to the reformers
mented. The cardinalate was rather eagerly in regard to doctrine, nor to that of the disciples
sought by him and his friends on the ground of ,
of D A i l l y and Gerson, who were pressing for a
what he had already done, and was expected yet reformation w i t h i n the old church in regard to
to do, for pope and king, than voluntarily offered morals. H i s associations and sympathies were
by the pope. Two, i f not three, letters, extremely rather w i t h the laxer Italian and French humanist
urgent, were written regarding i t by the king to school, both in their virtues and vices, and he
the pope, to the King of France, and to Cardinal seems to be lightly referred to in their gossip as
Farnese, in the favour of all of whom he stood Me latinus Juvenalis. 1
He was a great stickler
1
high. The pope consented to bestow on him for the liberties of holy church, and for years
the cardinalate he so much coveted; but the refused to pay the tax imposed on him for the
office of legate a latere, without which the other support of the College of Justice. 2
I t was no
was rather an office of dignity than of power, doubt by his counsel that heretical processes from י
was not granted t i l l 1544,2 by which time neither the first were carried on under the canon law,
bishopric of Bourges-had so cruelly embroiled Scotland with Fng- and that that code and French consuetudinary
land and almost courted the disaster of Flodden, Betoun never ceased
ecclesiastical law were more completely natural- /
other during the life or after the death of James V. to sow the seeds (
of discord between the two realms, and so to court reverses to the ised in Scotland than they had been before. Most ־
Scottish arms, and destruction to the Scottish monasteries near the of his time from 1514 to 1524 was passed abroad
southern border. He shunned no risk, shrank from no cruelty to
—the later years in the diplomatic service of his
remove out of the way those who thwarted his schemes or favoured
the better policy which in the end was to carry the day. country ; and he had acquitted himself with much
1
Thciner's Vetera Monumenta Hibernorum et Sco'torum, 1864
pp. 608-612. 1
[There is such a reference to him in Theiner's Vetera Monu-
2
[lïetoun's Commission as Legate is dated 30th January 1543-44 menta, p. 608.]
(Lemon's State 1'apers, v. 443 ; Thorpe's Calendar, i. 46).] Robertson's Concilia Scotia.', vol. i. p. exxxvi, n.
able disposition, he had for their own selfish ends a certain age to hold even the highest offices in
been encouraged by his early guardians in sensual the church. I n this way they largely added to
pleasures, and never to the last freed himself from his revenues during the minority of his sons,
his evil habits. "Dissolute as a man, prodigal and buoyed h i m up w i t h the hope that when
as a king, and superstitious as a Catholic, he could these sons came to years, and were formally in¬
not but easily fall under the sway of superior vested w i t h their dignities, he would have wealthy
1
m i n d s , " who undertook to free h i m from the allies on whom he could thoroughly depend in
worries of business, to provide him w i t h money, his contests w i t h his nobles.
and to regard his failings w i t h indulgence, and But though James showed little indulgence to
on easy terms to absolve h i m from those grosser the reformers, and little favour for their doctrines,
excesses which could not fail at times to trouble he seems to the last to have had less real liking
his conscience. These things Betoun and his for the priests of the old faith. No bribery, no
clerical party endeavoured to d o ; and, lest he flattery, no solicitations could reconcile h i m per¬
should be tempted to follow the example of his manently to those who for their own selfish ends
uncle, and appropriate the property of the mon- dragged h i m into courses from which his own
astéries and other religious institutions, or set better impulses at times made h i m revolt. " H e
the church lands to feu, as he had threatened, incited Buchanan to lash the mendicant friars i n
they once and again presented lists to him ־of the vigorous verse of the ' Franciscanus.' He
those who were suspected of heresy, urging that encouraged by his presence the public performance
they should be prosecuted without delay, and of a play " which, by its exposure of the vices of
their goods, on conviction, be escheated to the the clergy, contributed greatly to weaken their in¬
Crown. They made large contributions from fluence. " H e enforced the object of that remark¬
their own revenues to aid him in the wars w i t h able drama by exhorting the bishops to reform
England, which obedience to their counsels had their lives, under a threat i f they neglected his
brought on h i m . They procured dispensations warning that he would deal w i t h them after the
from the papal court to enable his sons, though fashion of his uncle of England " or his cousin of
illegitimate and infants, to hold any ecclesiastical Denmark. " He repeated the exhortation in his
benefices inferior to bishoprics, and on reaching last Parliament, declaring that the negligence, the
1
D'Aubigné's Reformation in the Time of Calvin, vi. 132.
ignorance, the scandalous and disorderly lives of
the clergy, were the causes why church and the people to have and to read the Scriptures of
1
churchmen were scorned and despised." the O l d and New Testaments in the vulgar tongue,
So, notwithstanding all measures of repression, and despatched messengers to all the chief towns
the desire for a reformation quietly grew and to make public proclamation of the Act. The
spread throughout the nation, especially among little treatises of Alesius had thus done their
the smaller landed proprietors i n Angus and work, and he himself thought of returning and
Mearns, in Perthshire and Fife, in Kyle and Cun¬ completing what he had so well begun.
ningham, as also among the more intelligent The friends of the Reformation imagined that
burgesses in the various burghs, and, above all, the hour of their t r i u m p h was at hand. They did
among the elite of the younger inmates of the not know on what a treacherous prop they were
monasteries and of the alumni of the University. leaning, or what sore trials were yet in store for
When the poor monarch, as much sinned against them ere that t r i u m p h should be gained. They
2
as sinning, at last died of a broken heart, and the knew the regent to be weak and t i m i d ; they did
E a r l of Arran, who claimed the regency, looked not know h i m to be deceitful—so deceitful that,
âBout for trusty supporters to defend his claims w i t h i n six weeks after the last of the messengers
against the machinations of the cardinal and the were despatched w i t h the above-named proclama¬
queen dowager, he deemed i t politic to show not tion, immediately on the return from France of
a little countenance to the friends of the Reforma¬ his brother, the Abbot of Paisley, others were
tion and of the English alliance. W e are not secretly sent off to inform the holy father of his
warranted to assert that he meant to declare him¬ accession to the regency, to put himself and the
self a Protestant; but he chose as his chaplains kingdom under his protection, and to ask permis¬
preachers who showed themselves favourably in¬ sion to have under his control the income of the
clined to the new faith. He encouraged the benefices of the king's sons t i l l they should come
chief men among the Protestants to frequent his of age. 1
The love of money was w i t h h i m the
court, and he ventured to lay hands on the un¬ root of this evil ; as the fear of man was of others
scrupulous cardinal, who had striven to exclude which soon followed, and were fraught w i t h dire
him from the regency. He consented to pass calamities to the nation. A n d so he went from
through Parliament an Act expressly permitting 1
[His letter to the Pope is dated 10th May 1543 (Theiner's Mon-
1
Concilia Scotix, vol. i. pp. cxxxix, cxI. 2
[14th Dec. 1542.] unienta Ilihernorum et Scotorum, pp. 614, 615).]
bad to worse, t i l l in the dim light of the Francis¬ grct murmure that heretikis mair and mair risis
1
can chapel at Stirling, " that weak man, to whom and spredis w i t h i n this realme, sawand dampnable ;
people had been looking for the triumph of the opinionis incontrar the fayth and lawis of Haly
Reformation in Scotland, fondly fancying that he Kirk, actis and constitutionis of this realm " ; and :
was performing a secret action, knelt down before exhorted all prelates and ordinaries " t o inquir
the altar, humbly confessed his errors, trampled upon all sic maner of personis and proceid aganis
under foot the oaths which he had taken to his thame according to the lawis of H a l y K i r k " ;
own country and to England, renounced the evan¬ promising to be ready himself to do therein at all
1
gelical profession of Jesus Christ, submitted to the times what belonged to his office. This promise
pope, and received absolution of the cardinal." 2 he was soon obliged cruelly to fulfil.
h e s e t o u t i n
Even in June he had entered in the books of On the 20th January ־154344
the Privy Council an Act against Sacramentaries company of the cardinal, the L o r d Justice and
holding opinions on the effect and essence of the his deputy, w i t h a band of armed men and artil¬
Sacraments tending to the enervation of the faith lery, to Perth, where a great assize was held.
catholic, in which they were threatened w i t h Several were convicted of heresy, and their goods ^
"tinsale of lif, landis, and gudis." 3
He had not forfeited. Several were condemned to die. The *
dared to proclaim this openly, though perhaps his governor himself was inclined to spare their lives,
ally, Henry V I I I . , would not have blamed h i m but the cardinal and the nobles who were w i t h
greatly for doing so. But no sooner was he in him threatened to leave h i m i f he did this. So
league w i t h , and under the power of, the cardinal, on St Paul's day (25th January) ־154344> Robert j
than he showed in open Parliament " how thair is Lamb, James Hunter, W i l l i a m Anderson, and
James Ranaldson were hanged ; and the wife of
1
[On the 8th of September "he was enjoyned to passe to the this last, who had refused when i n labour to pray
Freres in Stirling, . . . and there received open pennance and a
J solempne othe, in the presence and hereing of all men that was to the V i r g i n Mary, was denied the consolation of
there, that he shulde never doo the same againe, but supporte and being suspended from the same beam w i t h her
! défende the professon and habit of mounkes, freres, and such other ;
husband, and put to death by drowning, after she
! and therupon, being absolved by the Cardinall and the Busshoppes,
herde masse and received the sacramente " (Hamilton Papers, ii.
had consigned to the care of a neighbour the
38)·] 1
Acts of Parliament, ii. 443. [This was on the 15th of December
2
D'Aubigné's Reformation in the Time of Calvin, vi. 206.
3 '543 1
Concilia Scotise, ii. 294.
infant she carried in her arms. Dundee was next came to them from abroad—and i n particular
visited, but it was found that the suspected citi¬ from his holiness, when almost all their other
zens—who in the previous autumn had sacked friends were growing cold,—it would be hard for
and destroyed the Grey Friars and the Dominican them to maintain the struggle against the English
monasteries—had taken the alarm and fled from king. The balance of parties at this critical
their homes. juncture was more nearly equal than is generally
The weak and inconstant man continued to be supposed. " A n active minority of the nobles and
regent in name, but from that hour he was domin¬ gentry saw i n the government of Beaton not only
! ated by the imperious cardinal almost as completely their own personal ruin, but the giving away of
1
as K i n g James had been. He wrote to the pope the country to a power more dangerous to its
that the cardinal's devotion to the holy see and liberties than England itself. . . . W i t h those
to the interests of his native country was so great who favoured England were naturally associated
that he deserved the praise, or at least no small those who desired a reformation of religion,—a
part of the praise, of preserving its liberty and body now so numerous i n the opinion of a papal
extinguishing heresy. 1
That last work, however, legate [ G r i m a n i ] who visited the country i n 1543,
was by no means so nearly accomplished as the that, but for the interposition of God, Scotland
regent in his letter to the pope had boasted. would soon be i n as bad a case as England
1
I n fact, within two months after we find the itself." These appeals for foreign help, and the
cardinal himself confessing in a letter to the hopes raised by them, intensified the struggle,
pope that he was still in the thick of the fight, and retarded for years the triumph of a really
and all but worn out—" vigiliis, laborious, atgue national party resolved to set the interests of
sumptibus " — not only in contending w i t h foes Scotland above those of France and Rome as
without, but also w i t h traitors w i t h i n , the camp. 2
well as of England.
The regent himself was obliged to confess, in a
1
Hume Brown's Knox, i. 64, 65. Grimani's opinion, as sent
subsequent letter, that they were then in a miser¬
from Stirling, is thus summarised by Father Stevenson : " The realm
able p l i g h t ; and that, unless material assistance is in such confusion, so divided, so full of heresy that, but for the
interposition of God, it will soon become as bad as England. The
1
[This letter is dated 20th May 1545 (Theiner's Monumenta ρ queen and the cardinal have spent all their money in the common
616).] cause ; and the clergy are unable to assist, for the fruits of their
2
Theiner's Monumenta, p. 617. [This letter is dated 6th July benefices have been seized by the Lutherans" (Mary Stuart, 1886,
1545·] p. S i ) .
Bishop Latimer, whose diocese comprehended pupil during the year he was in residence there,
Gloucester and Bristol, as well as Worcester; that we are indebted for our fullest description
but in the following year he fell into fresh trouble of his appearance and habits. He was, he tells
at Bristol—not, as was at one time supposed, by us, " a m a n of tall stature, polled-headed, and ,
denying the merits of the V i r g i n Mary, but by on the same a round French cap of the best ;
denying the merits of Christ Himself. For this judged to be of melancholy complexion by his
he was duly convented before Archbishop Cran- physiognomy ; black haired, long bearded, comely
mer, and, after conference w i t h him, was per¬ of personage, well spoken after his country of
suaded to recant and bear his faggot. Soon after Scotland, courteous, lowly, lovely, glad to teach,
the enactment of the bloody statute of the six desirous to learn, and was well travelled ; having
articles, he, like most of the Scottish refugees, on him for his habit or clothing never but a
left England and sought shelter among the re¬ mantle or frieze gown to the shoes, a black
formed churches on the Continent, especially Millian [i.e. Milan] fustian doublet, and plain
those of Zürich, Basle, and Strassburg, and black hosen, coarse new canvas for his shirts,
brought home with h i m , and ultimately trans¬ and white falling bands and cuffs at his hands,—
lated into English, the First Helvetic Confes- all the which apparel he gave to the poor, some
1
sion, composed and agreed on by the chief weekly, some monthly, some quarterly, as he
theologians of these churches. liked, saving his French cap, which he kept the
He returned to England about the close of whole year of my being w i t h h i m . . . . His
1542, and soon after entered into residence in charity had never end, night, noon, nor day, . . .
Corpus Christi or Benet College, Cambridge, infinitely studying how to do good unto all, and
1
w i t h the view of studying and teaching there. hurt to n o n e . "
I n one of the windows of the common-room i n Such, according to his pupil, was the evangelist
that college, above the arms of archbishops and who—in 1543 according to some, in 1544 accord¬
nobles, distinguished alumni of the college, stands ing to others—returned to his native land, and
the name of George Wishart, w i t h the martyr's for two years testified of the gospel of the grace
crown over i t ; and it is to Emery Tilney, his of God throughout Angus and Mearns, Ayrshire
1
and the Lothians, but whose favourite fields of
[His translation is reprinted in the Wodrow Miscellany, pp.
1
7-23-1 Cattley's Foxe, v. 626.
labour were to be central Angus and Mearns, beautiful white palfrey, finely caparisoned, held
the towns of Montrose and Dundee. A portrait by some persons who were well dressed, but un¬
of h i m , as well as one of his great opponent, has covered. Beyond them was the Cathedral of St
been preserved in the Roman Catholic College of Peter, the doors of which appeared to be open.
Blairs, and the expression of the face harmonises Below the picture were written the following
well w i t h the description his pupil gives of h i m .
lines :—
Another portrait, deemed by D r Laing not un¬ " I N PAPAM.
Omnipotens Deus hic faciat te uiuere paruo Maxwell's Old Dundee prior to the Reformation, 1891, pp. 92,
Tempore, nec stabilis sit tua conditio."] 395·
starting on the key-note that it was neither herb stances i n which they originated—in a plague-
nor plaster, but God's W o r d which healeth all, stricken town which had just before been occupied
" He maist comfortablie did intreat [i.e. treat o f ] by the soldiers of the cardinal and the regent,
the dignitie and utilitie of Goddis W o o r d ; the and might well dread a similar visitation for its
punishment that cumis for the contempt of the determined adherence to the new evangelist.
same ; the promptitude of Goddis mercy to such
as trewlye turne to H i m ; yea, the great happynes " Thocht pest or sword wald vs preuene,
Befoir our hour, to slay vs clene,
of thame whome God tackis from this miserie Thay can nocht pluk ane lytill hair
evin in H i s awin gentill visitatioun, which the Furth of our heid, nor do vs deir.
1
malice of man cane neyther eak nor paire." By
Quhen fra this warld to Christ we wend,
this sermon, Knox tells us, he so raised up the
Our wratchit schort lyfe man haif end
hearts of all who heard h i m , that they regarded Changeit fra paine, and miserie,
not death, but judged those more happy that T o lestand gloir Eternallie.
should depart than those that should remain be¬
E n d sail our dayis schort, and vaine,
hind, considering that they knew not whether they
And sin, quhilk we culd nocht refraine,
should have such a comforter w i t h them at all Endit salbe our pilgremage,
times. And bracht hame to our heritage." 1
priest, bribed by the cardinal, stood waiting— conspiracy to apprehend or assassinate Cardinal
w i t h his whinger drawn in his hand under his Betoun, and as employed to carry letters between
gown — at the foot of the steps by which the the conspirators and the English court. There 1
preacher was descending from the top of the port. were other Wisharts in Scotland. Yea, as D r
Wishart, most sharp of eye and swift of judg¬ Laing has shown, another George Wishart in
ment, at once noticed h i m , and, as he came near, Dundee, who was a zealous friend of the English
said, " M y freind, what wald ye do ? " and at alliance—not only after the conspirators got pos¬
the same moment seized the hand in which he session of St Andrews castle, but from the earlier
held the dagger, and took i t from h i m . The date when the monasteries in Dundee were de¬
priest fell down at his feet and confessed the 2
stroyed and sacked. There was probably another
whole t r u t h . Immediately the rumour spread about St Andrews who, while the martyr was yet
that a priest had attempted to assassinate their a boy, was called in to attest a charter by the
favourite preacher, the sick outside burst open notorious friar Campbell in 1526. I w i l l not
the gate, crying, " Deliver the tratour to us, or venture to affirm that, w i t h all his gentleness,
ellis we w i l l tack him by forse." But the
preacher put his arms around his would-be assas¬ those ministering in Dundee in 1550 (' Old Dundee prior to the Re¬
formation,' 1891, p. 87, n.) The James Wichtand who was reader
sin, exclaiming, " Whosoevir trubles h i m shall at Inchture and Kinnaird in 1574 (Wodrow Miscellany, p. 353) is
truble me, for he has hurte me in nothing, bot said to have held a chaplaincy in Dundee before the Reformation.
Rut Dr Laing holds that there was a Sir John Wighton, a chaplain
. . . hes lattin us understand what we may in Dundee, who obtained the vicarage pensionary in the parish
feare in tymes to come " ; and so, says Knox, he church of Ballumby in 1538, and who appears to have been incar¬
saved the life of h i m that sought his. 1 cerated in St Andrews Castle in the cardinal's absence in 1543
(Laing's Knox, vi. 670).
1
Lemon's State Papers, v. 377.
1
Laing's Knox, i. 130, 131. The name of this priest is given as Laing's Knox, i. 536. [Maxwell gives a detailed account of
Sir John Wightone, or Weighton, by Knox, Calderwood, and this other George Wishart in his ' Old Dundee prior to the Reforma¬
Spottiswoode. Maxwell cannot find a priest of this name among tion,' 1S91, pp. 91-95.]
be spoken of as " t h e Scottish Geneva." The ished. A nearly complete copy of the edition of
New Testament of Tyndale's translation had been 1567 •has, however, been preserved, and now at
introduced both there and in Montrose as early last reprinted. 1
as 1526 ; and by this time the subsequent editions The translation of the First Helvetic Confession,
had been largely imported, and since 1543 might which W i s h a r t made, was no doubt meant as the
1
be openly read. John Wedderburn was then in Confession of the churches he formed, though
his native city, and I suppose by that date had it may only have been extant then in manuscript,
published, in its most rudimentary form, his and not published t i l l 1548. That fragment of
' Psalms and Spiritual Songs,' largely translated the Communion Office which was used by Knox
from the German. John Scott, the printer, was in the administration of the Lord's Supper at
also there, and under suspicion of the authorities Berwick in 1550, and perhaps had been used by
in Edinburgh. O f the psalms and hymns, one, him at St Andrews in 1547—and which was re¬
as I have already mentioned, bears unmistakable cently brought to light again by D r Lorimer from
reference to the pest then infesting the town of among the MSS. in D r Williams' library in
Dundee; another was sung by Wishart that even¬ 2
L o n d o n — w a s almost certainly derived from
ing on which he was apprehended in East Wishart, for part of i t is translated from the Office
L o t h i a n ; a third is certainly referred to in the of the Church of Z ü r i c h , w i t h which he could not
' Complaynt of Scotland,' which, being published fail to have become acquainted during his resi¬
as early as 1549, is a guarantee for the earlier dence there, and part from other German Offices,
2
existence of the h y m n . This rudimentary col¬ which were more likely to have fallen in his way
lection of 'Psalms and Spiritual Songs' was the (who had been a traveller on the Continent) than
book of praise in family and social gatherings of in Knox's. I t may even have been used by Wish-
the reformed until the 'Genevan Psalter' came
3
ately, and that the first part of the following entry may refer to it :
into use. The earliest editions of i t have per- "The catéchisme in two paries ; the first in Scotch poetry, having
a kalender before it. The second part in Latin and Scotis prose,
1
Wedderburn and Wishart seem also to have been acquainted entituled Catechismus ecclesiae Geneuensis. . . . Edinburgh :
with Coverdale's Bible of 1535. Imprinted by John Ross for Henrie Charteris, 1574" (Dickson
2
See my Introduction to 'The Gude and Godlie Ballatis,' 1807 and Edmond's Annals of Scottish Printing, 1890, p. 334)·
p. xxxviii, n. יי 1
[Reprinted under the editorial care of Dr Mitchell in 1897 for
3
No doubt the initial Catechism was in use also. It has been the Scottish Text Society.]
conjectured that the Catechism may even have been printed separ- 2
Lorimer's Knox and the Church of England, 1875, pp. 290-292.
a passionate force sometimes mistakenly attributed The deed was foully dune."
1
to a vindictive temper." According to Calder-
1
wood, he received his first "taste of the truthe " Calderwood's History, i. 155, 156, 160; Laing's Knox, i. 95,
96, 105. [Calderwood says that Williams was born " beside Elstone-
from the preaching of his fellow - countryman, funic, in East Lothiane."]
Thomas Guilliame or Williams, a black friar, 2
Larimer's Scottish Reformation, pp. 155, 156.
who in 1543 became one of the chaplains of the D hough these lines are continually attributed to Lindsay, I do
not remember to have ever seen them in any edition of his works,
1
D'Aubigné's Reformation in the Time of Calvin, vi. 17. or quoted as his by any earlier writer than Wodrow.]
spread a knowledge of Gospel truth even among representative of the French king. The occu¬
those who could not read. A very graphic account pants of the castle—those who had come to it for
is given in his History of the sermons, catechis- shelter, as well as those who were really guilty of
ings, and disputations he held w i t h the popish the murder—were deprived of liberty, and dealt
champions, by means of which the new doctrines with as criminals of the worst class. For nineteen
2
gained a hold on the minds of the citizens of St m o n t h s our reformer had to work as a chained
Andrews which they never wholly lost. But slave on board the French galleys, generally at
times of trial were to come ere the cause should Rouen or Dieppe, though sometimes a cruise was
finally triumph in that city, or in his native land ; taken to more distant waters. Once, at least, he
and the earnest preacher, whose mouth God had was brought w i t h i n sight of the towers of the city
opened in that old parish church, was to be taught where he had begun his m i n i s t r y ; and then he
by sad experience how hard i t is to leave all and solemnly affirmed that he believed God would
simply follow Christ, ere he was to be privileged once more allow h i m to proclaim His word there.
to see the full fruit of his labours. Even then he maintained unshaken faith in God,
and at times indulged in sallies of pleasantry
Those who had presumed to take into their
against his popish custodiers ; but he would have
hands " t h e sword of G o d " as they called i t , and
been more than human i f the iron had not entered
to mete out to the tyrant cardinal the punishment
into his soul, and i f traces of the sternness thence
which human justice was too weak to award, were
arising had not long been visible in his character.
made to feel that they who take the sword must
Early in 154g he was, by English influence, re-
expect to suffer from the sword. They had been
1
able to withstand the power of the regent and [Knox says that the castle was rendered "upone Setterday, the
I:>st of Jiilij" (Laing's Knox, i. 205) ; Bishop Lesley says "the xxix
the attacks of his unskilful captains ; but help of Julij " (Lesley's History, 1830, p. 195). In 1547, the last of July
and skill at last came to the aid of these from Γ0Π not on Saturday but on Sabbath.]
Laing's Knox, vi. 104.
leased from his captivity in the French galleys, and Northern Council, the idolatry of the mass ; and
1
from his exile. He proceeded first to London, in the spring of 1551 he removed his head¬
and thereafter to Berwick, w i t h the approval of quarters to that more central and influential
the English Privy Council. There he was as town, extending his labours at times, no doubt,
near to his persecuted fellow-countrymen as it into Yorkshire, as well as into Northumberland
was safe for him to go, and there many of them and Cumberland.
might resort to h i m ; and in fact so many did His fame as an eloquent preacher, and able and
so, that the president of the English Northern ready defender of the doctrines of the Reforma¬
Council became anxious for his transference tion, spread southwards ; and at the close of 1551, ]
farther south. There also, through the ap¬ or early i n 1552, he was appointed one of the royal
pointment of the Privy Council, a wide field of chaplains of Edward V I . I n the autumn of 1552
usefulness was opened to him among the English. he was summoned to the south, and preached
Into this he entered w i t h his whole soul, preach¬ w i t h great power and faithfulness before the king
ing the Gospel w i t h great boldness and success and his court. He persistently advocated, along
not only to the garrison and citizens of Berwick, w i t h the other royal chaplains, those thorough¬
but also in the surrounding districts ; and proving going Protestant doctrines which, in the north,
himself a true successor of those early Scottish he had previously held and taught and carried
missionaries who had originally won over to the out in practice. I n conjunction w i t h the other
Christian faith the heathen Saxons of Northum- five royal chaplains, he was called to give his opin¬
bria. A t Newcastle, in 1550, he discussed, before ion of the Articles then proposed to be adopted
Tonstal, Bishop of Durham, his doctors, and the as the creed of the English Church, and of the
1
revised Communion Office then prepared to take
[The negotiations for the release of the captives seem to have
dragged their weary length along very slowly. So early as the 29th the place of that of 1549. His objections to the
of March 1548, Huntly wrote thus to Somerset : "The governor act of kneeling i n receiving the elements in the
has agreed to exchange the men in the castle of St Andrews with
Lord's Supper helped to procure the insertion of /
Scots prisoners conform to your desire, and has sent me commission
therein, as I shall show you at my coming to London: or if you that rubric which high-churchmen term "the black
send your mind to my Lord Warden, I shall appoint with him. rubric." H e refused both an English bishopric
The governor; has written to the king of France to send the men
taken in St Andrews to Rouen, to be ready for the exchange" and a London rectory, and continued to labour
(Bain's Calendar, 1543-67, p. 104).] on, faithfully and devotedly, as a preacher unat-
1
[After making two requests by messengers, Knox wrote to Cecil
Knox, who does not seem to have been one
from Dieppe on the 10th of April 1559, and on the 22nd sent from
>n circulation during the three-quarters of a century that tM the same town a duplicate of that letter with a postscript added
was the household Bible of England it t 7u V e S
'' '° n
(Laing's Knox, ii. 15-22, vi. 15-21).]
2
[The Provincial Council is said to have closed on the 10th of
April (Robertson's Concilia Scotiœ, ii. 151, 176 ; Lesley's History, p.
271) ; but Knox says that it sat until he arrived in Scotland (Laing's
Knox, i. 291) ; and that the date of his arrival was the 2nd of May
; [Mary Tudor died on the t h of Novemie, , « 1
I 7 8
(Ibid., i. 318, vi. 21) ; and an anonymous writer alleges that the
! ־rouble, at Frankfort, Petheram's reprint, pp. c j , c x c i , council broke up when assured that Knox had come (Wodrow Mis-
1
question.
T h e h n d L a t i V e r s i n S a r e r i n t e d i n a r a I :
n , ^ , ? ״ ° P P ^ columns 1
" Libros, qui ab infantia usque ecclesiae semper habiti sunt
η Dunlop s 'Collection of Confessions ' ii. 13.98.]
canonici" (Latin version, Dunlop, ii. 70).
they " d o promise unto him satisfactioun fra the jected. The second chapter treats of the creation
mouth of God, that is, fra His Haly Scriptures, and fall of our first parents, while the t h i r d treats
or else reformation of that quhilk he sal prove of the effects of the fall in language no less ex¬
to be amisse." 1 plicit than that of the other Protestant Confes¬
sions, Lutheran and Reformed ; and as it not only
In the opening chapter the unity and attri¬
clearly embodies the teaching of our reformers on
butes of God, and the t r i n i t y of persons in the
2
this subject, but gives a brief summary of their
Godhead, are briefly but definitely treated of.
1
views regarding the application of the Gospel
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 1 , ; Laing's Knox, ii. φ
7 1 8 A
similar protestation is made in the Preface to the First i L k of remedy, i t may be as well I should quote i t at
D1sc.pl.ne (Dunlop's Confessions, ii. ! 8 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 5) 1 8 4 length. I t is as follows: " B e quhilk trans-
The sources from which this chapter was taken can still be gressioun, commonlie called original sinne, mes
pretty clearly traced. I place in parallel columns its statements and
thcee of the two Confessions from which it was probably taken • _ the image of God utterlie defaced in man, and he
Weconfesseandacknawledge " J e confesse qu'il y a u n s e u l and his posteritie of nature become enimies to
ane only God to whom only we Dieu auquel il L u s faut tenif 2
God, slaves to Sathan, and servandis unto sin.
must cleave, whom onelie we must pour le servir, adorer, et y 2ί
serve, whom onehe we must wor- notre fiance et refuge "Leon I n samekle that deith everlasting hes had and sail
^put״o״:trust.
:tr homoneliewem״st fession s u b s c r i b e d have power and dominioun over all that have
l n A c a d J n G e n e v a <
1
Who .s e email, infinit, un- " I beleve and confesse mv This also comes from a Genevan source :—
measurable, »compréhensible, Lorde God eternal, infin te uJ " We condemne the damnable " Idcirco detestor omnes haer-
omnipotent, invisible: ane in measurable, incompreh^' and pestilent heresies of Arius, eses huic principio contrarias
•bstance, and z.t distinct in and invisible, one in substance Marcion, Eutyches, Nestorius, puta Marcionis, Manetis, Nes-
thre personnes, the Father, the and three in persone Father' and sik uthers."—Old Scottish torii, Eutychetis, et similium."—
Sone a n d t h e _ _ ״Sonne, and HolyGhoste'Ccon
H 0 1 i e G o s t Confession, as above, ii. 31. Genevan Confession.
Ο IdScott:,sh ConfSession, in Dun- fession of E n g l L Congrega^on' Extraneum ab omni benedictione Dei, Satanae mancipium, sub
lop s Confesses, 1,. ״, ״. a t , g j ^ «
G e n e v a > i ״ L a i n g s
peccati jugo captivum, horribili denique exitio destinatum et jam
169 ; Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 3. implicitum.—Calvin,
familiarity on the part of some of the framers of the Confession with Sonne," and who i n time come unto H i m . Many
a somewhat unusual rendering of one of the most explicit Messianic individual expressions occurring in these chapters
prophecies of Isaiah, but also as showing that they had perceived
can be clearly traced to one or other of Calvin's
the true significance of an expression which last century gave rise to
no httle discussion and misconception. So far as I can remember Confessions, or to the earliest edition of his
h.s remarkable expression does not appear in any other of the
1
I rotestant Confessions of that age. Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 32 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 100.
2
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 60, 61 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 108.
member in which a similar, though shorter, history which may be regarded as the Confession of
of the preparation for the coming Redeemer is F a i t h , not only of the ministers but also of the
1
The following are a few spec!mens of close verbal coincidence
members of the church of the foreigners in Lon¬
between the Scottish Confession
and the first edition of Calvin's
don. Knox was brought into contact w i t h them
Institutes :—
both i n London and in Frankfort, agreed w i t h
1· " I t behooved that the Filii Dei sumus quod naturalis
Sonne of God sulci descend unto Dei Filius sibi corpus ex corpore them generally i n opinion, and largely adopted
us, and tak himself a hodie of nostro, carnem ex carne nostra their forms and arrangements in matters of wor¬
our bodie, flesh of our flesh, and ossa ex ossiLms nostris composuit
bone of our bones, and so he- ut idem nobiscum esset.
ship and discipline.
2
come the Mediator betwixt God A group of chapters treats of the nature and
and man, giving power to so
work of the H o l y Spirit, the cause of good works,
many as beleeve in Him to be
the sonnes of God." —Dunlop, the works which are reputed good, the perfection
·''· 33. 34·
uther, to wit, of the God-head,
2. "Quhatsaever wee have
Ut quod in Adamo penlidimus suld triumph and purchesse to us
tynt in Adam is restored unto us Christus restitueret.
life, libertie, and perpetuall vie-
agayne."—Dunlop, ii. 34.
tory."—Dunlop, ii. 35, 36.
3· " It behooved farther the Praeterea sic nostra referebat, 4. " That Hee being the Judicis scilicet sententia dam-
Messias and Redemer to be very verum esse Deum et hominem
cleane, innocent Lambe of God, natus pro nocente et malefico ut
God and very man, because He qui Redemptor noster futurus
was damned in the presence of apud summi judicis tribunal ejus
was to underlie the punischment esset. . . . Prodiit ergo verus
an earthlie judge, that we suld damnatione absolveremur.
due for our transgressiouns, and homo, Dominus noster, Adae
be absolved befoir the tribunal
to present himselfe in the pre¬ personam induit . . . ut Patri
seat of our God."—Dunlop, ii.
sence of His Father's judgment se obedientem pro eo exhiberet
37, 38·
as in our persone to suffer for our ut carnem nostram in satisfac-
transgression and inobedience, tionem justo Dei judicio statueret 5· "Suffered . . . the cruell Crucifixus in cruce quae Dei
be death to overcome him that ac sisteret, ut in eâdem carne death of the Crosse, quhilk was lege maledicta fuerat.
was author of death. I50t be¬ peccati poenam accursed be the sentence of God."
persolveret. —Dunlop, ii. 38.
cause the onely Godhead culd Quum denique mortem nec solus
not suffer death, neither zit culd Dens sentire, nec solus homo 6. " Suffered for a season the Divini judicii horrorem et
the onlie manhead overcome the superare posset, humanitatem wrath of His Father quhilk sin- severitatem sensisse . . . luens
samin, He joyned both togither cum divinitate sociavit ut alterius ners had deserved. Bot zit we poenas non suae . . . sed nos-
in one persone that the imbecil- imbecillitatem morti in poenam avow that He remained the only trae iniquitati. Neque tamen
Htie of the ane suld suffer and persolveret, alterius virtute ad- wel-beloved and blessed Sonne intelligendum est patrem il Ii
be subject to death quhilk we versus mortem in victoriam lue- of His Father, even in the mid- unquam iratum fuisse. Quomodo
had deserved : and the infinit taretur. dest of His anguish and tor- enim dilecto filio, in quo illi com-
and invincible power of the ent."—Dunlop, ii. 38. placitum est, irasceretur.
1 2
Alasco's Works, ii. 296, 298. Chapters xii.-xv.
of the L a w of God, and the imperfection of man. altogether passive therein until, being quickened
Those who have overlooked the explicit state¬ and renewed by the Holy Spirit, he is thereby
ment in the third chapter concerning the enabled to answer this call, and to embrace the
depravity of man have generally overlooked or Grace offered and conveyed in i t . " 1
The last of
failed to perceive the full significance of the this group of chapters contains the fullest and
emphatic statements in the twelfth chapter most direct exposition the Confession embodies
regarding our entire dependence for spiritual of the views of its framers in the article of Jus¬
renovation, and all good, on the H o l y Spirit. tification. I t is as follows : " I t behovis us to
The words are : " O f nature we are so dead, so apprehend Christ Jesus w i t h His justice and
blind, and so perverse, that nether can we feill satisfaction, quha is the end and accomplishment
when we ar pricked, see the licht when i t shines, of the L a w , be quhome we ar set at this liberty
nor assent to the w i l l of God when i t is reveiled,' that the curse and malediction of God fall not
unies the Spirit of the L o r d Jesus quicken that upon us, albeit we fulfill not the same in al
quhilk is dead, remove the darknesse from our pointes. For God the Father, beholding us in
myndes, and bowe our stubburne hearts to the the body of His Sonne Christ Jesus, acceptis our
obedience of His blessed w i l l ; " * and again, " As imperfite obedience as it were perfite, and covers
we willingly spoyle ourselves of all honour and our warks, quhilk ar defyled w i t h mony spots,
gloir of our awin creation and redemption, so do w i t h the justice of His Sonne." 2
T o the same
2
we also of our regeneration and sanctification."
These statements, however they may be viewed 1
Westminster Confession, chap. x.
2
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 58, There is hardly one of these ex¬
by others, seem to me no less explicit than those
pressions that may not be found in Calvin's Institutes :—
of the later Confession, which have been some¬
It behoves us to apprehend Confiteor nos justificari per
times contrasted w i t h them. " T h i s effectual Christ Jesus with His justice and fidem quâtenus per earn appre-
call is of God's free and special Grace alone, not satisfaction. hendimus Jesum Christum.
We are set at this liberty Omni execratione quae nobis
from anything at all foreseen in man, who is that the curse and malediction incumbebat eximeremur dum in
1
of the law fall not upon us. eum traduceret. Fides, in Christi
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 46. ״Sunt autem dona Spiritus
Sancti, per quem regeneramur, e diaboli potestate et vinculis damnatione absolutionem, bene-
exphcamur, m filios Dei gratuite adopta«,«,, ad omne opus bonum dictionem in maledictione, ap-
;
sanctificamur."—Calvin. prehendit.
2
God the Father, beholding Ubi nos in filii sui com-
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 47. us in the body of His Son Christ munionem semel recepit, opera
heads of i t , appointed for the instruction of her may be taken for granted that they knew their
youth the Catechism in which this doctrine of own meaning, and that of their Swiss brethren ; 2
submit to the godly discipline He has prescribed. of G o d . ' " They further assert that wherever
The notes by which i t may be discerned whether the three notes given above are found and con¬
any branch of the professing church is indeed tinue for any time (be the number never so few
part of the true K i r k of Christ are stated nega¬ above two or three), there without all doubt is the
tively—not to be " antiquitie, title usurpit, lineal true K i r k of Christ, who according to His promise
descente, place appointed, nor multitude of men is in the midst of t h e m ; and in this they are
approving," as Roman Catholics were wont to borne out not only by Calvin but by Luther,
allege ; and positively to be " the trew preaching who boldly affirmed : " Were I the only man on
of the W ö r d e of God," " t h e right administra¬ earth that held by the W o r d , / alone would be
tion of the Sacraments," and "ecclesiastical the church, and I would be justified in pronounc¬
discipline uprightlie ministred as Goddis W ö r d e ing of all the rest of the world that i t was not
prescribes." 2
"These articles," as Principal the church."
The only other parts of the Confession I deem
1
Stähelin's Johannes Calvin, ii. 88.
1
2
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 66-68 ; Laing's Knox, ii. no. Lee's Lectures on the History of the Church of Scotland,
i. 124, 125.
Calvin in regard to election and predestination" (Grub's History Printed in Peterkin's Records of the Kirk, pp. 155-160.
2
11. 306).] Generally so designated, but really as old as the days of Paul
and Augustine.
,
a g r e e d t h a t t h e 0 r d e r o f
Geneua (whiche nuns, at Frankfort, consisted chiefly of the
-ΊηΐΓΪ
them) shulde akeΤ""
place יas an Order moste ״ ״4 eoff
11 E
° godly and fardeste n S H S h e a n d S m e t h e r e
company of French-speaking exiles which had
° ^ M a i S t e r
»P0k ״־u n t o , T L „ K n X been originally gathered at Strassburg by Farel,
1156 3 t 0 m i n i s t 6 r t h e
ο do îh t 'י ׳ " ' י י יי ״״״«״־nion, refused tended for several years by Calvin, and then
to do ether the one or the other, affirming* that for manie con
Î1: d ; 0
rî r
ns
t ° ^ *^«״
n o n s e n t e that the s a m e
gregatioun, and takis part with the saidis Lordis in setting fordwart as the correct date of this letter, and says that it is by some over¬
the commone caus, to the gloir of God and commone Weill of our sight that M'Crie in the later editions of his 'Life of Knox has
realme " (Spalding Miscellany, iv. 120). dated it th July 1557 (Ibid., iv. 140).]
7
2
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 421 ; Laing's Knox, iv. 182; vi. 297.
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 603. 4
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 425 ; Laing's Knox, iv. 185 ; vi. 298·
century, was not that the former disapproved of Assembly, as I read their deliverance, rather
or curtailed free prayer while the latter advocated deny that the prayers of the readers were of
and encouraged i t , but that the former retained the particular character charged than affirm they
in their Book of Common Order a variety of were the identical prayers contained in Knox's
forms, not only as models, but also as aids to the Book. 2
This being the case, we are not guilty of 'any for the introduction of either bishop or superin¬
anachronism in attributing substantially presby¬ tendent as an essential and ordinary office-bearer
terian opinions to our reformer, even i f we have in the church on the pretext that, even i f he ·
to grant that the particular church court first were so, he could be of little use in the single
1
known as the greater eldership or presbytery, English congregation at Geneva. " Wee are
and now exclusively enjoying the title of près- not ignorant," i t is said, " t h a t the Scriptures
bytery, existed at that time only in a rudimentary make mention of a fourth kind of ministers left
form. to the church of Christ, which also are verie
The Book of Common Order of 1556 is the profitable where time and place doth permit ;
earliest authentic document casting light on the but for lack of opportunity in this our dispersion
opinions of our reformers respecting the govern¬ and exile we cannot well have the use thereof,
ment and discipline of the church. The intro¬ and would to God i t were not neglected where
ductory part of the book treats at length of better occasion serveth. These ministers are
the permanent office-bearers of the church, the called teachers or doctors, whose office is to
manner of their election, the duties of their instruct and teach the faithfull i n sounde doc¬
respective offices, and the assemblies they were trine, providing w i t h all diligence that the puritie
to hold in common for government and dis¬ of the Gospel be not corrupt either through
2
cipline. The enumeration of the office-bearers ignorance or evill opinions." Now, can it be
and the description of their duties is quite in supposed that Knox would have said all this of
harmony w i t h what the Books of Discipline the doctor and not a word of the superintendent,
subsequently laid down. The office - bearers if he had deemed both to be of like permanence
recognised are the minister, the elder, the and necessity in the church of Christ ; or that
deacon, and the doctor; and the duties as¬ he would have devoted several pages to explain
signed to each are such as have generally been the duties of the office-bearers, and their assem-
allotted to these functionaries in the presbyterian 1
The appointment of such an official as chief minister of the
churches. The terms in which the last - named English congregation of Frankfort had, however, been urged by
of them is referred to are specially deserving of Knox's opponents there, but was refused by his party (Discourse
of Troubles at Frankfort, pp. xiv, xlvii, cxvii, cxxxv-cxxxviii, cxlvi,
notice. They effectually close a loophole, that
cxlvii).
might otherwise have been imagined to be left, 2
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 409, 410; Laing's Knox, iv. 177.
blies for the interpretation of the Scriptures and specting the ministers and office-bearers of the
the administration of discipline, and not have church. Even the ordinary ministers of the
uttered one word about the bishop, had he be¬ church must all be well qualified to preach the
lieved that that official was the chief or even gospel of salvation, as many of the common people
1
an essential minister of the church ? Can it be were unable to read, and could only be saturated
supposed likely that he would have been so w i t h its teaching by the living voice of the
silent, even i f there had been no bishop, as preacher who, by sermons and catechising on the
confessedly there was no doctor, among the Lord's day, and in the towns also by the sermon
English in Geneva; or possible that he could during the week, was to his utmost to carry home
have been so w i t h Miles Coverdale, a regularly1 the t r u t h to their hearts. Our reformers judged i t
consecrated bishop attending on his ministra¬ necessary " that His Gospell be truely and openly
tions and acting as an elder in his congregation, preached i n every church and assembly of this
2
unless he had regarded (and wished i t to be realme " ; that no one " unable to édifie the
known that he regarded) the simple presbyter church by wholesome doctrine" should be pro¬
as jure divino on a level w i t h the diocesan moted to or retained in ecclesiastic administra¬
3
bishop, to say nothing of the fact that his tion ; and held that the sacraments cannot be
party at Frankfort had refused to have a bishop " r i g h t l i e ministred by h i m in whose mouth God
4
Protestantism by his translation of the Scriptures did not suffice Even in St Andrews, with all its equipment of schools and
to blot out from the minds of Elizabeth and her ministers the colleges, the common people are represented in 1547 as welcoming
remembrance of his connection with Knox and Goodman. He was Knox's offer of a public disputation, because though they could not
welcomed at the consecration of Archbishop Parker, though he all read his papers they could understand what he addressed to
came in his black gown, for they could not well do that without them vivâ voce (Laing's Knox, i. 189).
2
him ; but all Grindaus efforts failed to secure for him a Welsh Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 518 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 185.
3
bishopric, or even to get him left unmolested in the parochial Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 526 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 191.
4
benefice he conferred on him. Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 530; Laing's Knox, ii. 194·
15 2
The First Book of Discipline. Readers. 153
1
worse. Men of best knowledge of God's W o r d Readers, or exhorters, were to be provided for
and cleanest life were to be nominated annually those churches which could not presently be sup¬
2
for election as elders and deacons. The former plied w i t h ministers. These readers were to be
were to assist the minister in all affairs of the men judged most apt distinctly to read the com¬
kirk, to hold meetings w i t h him for judging mon prayers and the Scriptures, but they were
of causes, admonishing evil livers, yea, to take to be encouraged and urged so to exercise their
heed to the life, manners, diligence, and study of gifts that they might grow in knowledge and
3
the ministers, as well as of the flock. The utterance, and in time might come to be entrusted
deacons were to assist in judgment, but chiefly w i t h the power of preaching the W o r d , adminis¬
to collect and distribute what was provided for tering the sacraments, and discharging all the
the poor. They might also, as in the French functions of the ordinary pastor. 1
Special pro¬
Church, be admitted to read the Scriptures and vision was made for the spiritual improvement
common prayers in the congregation i f required of these readers or exhorters in those weekly
4
and qualified to do so. Besides ministers, meetings for the interpretation of Scripture which,
elders, and deacons, generally recognised in the originally introduced among the exiles at Frank¬
reformed churches as holding offices of divine fort and Geneva, were after their return set up by
institution, and being of " t h e m i n i s t r y " or con¬ them in England under the name of prophesying,
sistory of the church, certain other functionaries and i n Scotland under the name of the exercise. 2
witches, for which they have been so severely accomplished what was proposed. I n less than
blamed, were not originated by them, and were three generations the Genevese [and' Lowland
countenanced quite as much by their opponents, Scots] were entirely remoulded. T o frivolity
and by no one more than by the pope and and licentiousness succeeded that somewhat
his entourage, as well as by James V I . , the austere strictness of morals which in earlier
great patron of the bishops, and for long were days distinguished the disciples of the re- !
clamoured for by the people. former[s]. History tells of only two [three] j
To us, living in the light and glorying in the men who have been able permanently to im- \
toleration of the nineteenth century, some of press their stamp on an entire people—Lycurgus j
these disciplinary provisions may seem harsh, and Calvin [and Knox], whose characters in fact \
several of the details frivolous, others inquisi¬ have much in c o m m o n . " 1
The Athenians made
torial ; and the very principle of such a close merry over the black broth of the Spartans ;
identification of the ecclesiastical and civil, as but Sparta conquered Athens. H o w many ac¬
that all offences against morality and church cusations and witticisms have been launched
discipline were to be also dealt w i t h and pun¬ against the Calvinistic spirit, and yet Calvinistic
ished by the state, more than questionable. countries led the way in Christian activity and
But to men living in the sixteenth century and civil freedom, and to them even those who
just emerging out of the ignorance and licence abuse them are largely indebted for their
which the old church had tolerated, and long¬ blessings.
ing to be moulded into a community really
holy and self-denying and quickened to a higher
III. The Prerogatives and Duties of Church
life — enthused w i t h a longing to reach loftier
Members.
heights in i t — t h e iron discipline of Calvin and
Knox was welcome as requiring only what they The thorough agreement of our reformers' ideas
felt to be their duty and their true interest. respecting the nature of the church with those of
W e may extend to the disciple what the his¬ the apostles and primitive Christians comes out
torian of French Protestantism has said of the even more emphatically in the statements they
master, and so far varying the words of Haag make i n the First Book of Discipline and the
affirm : " The institutions of Calvin [and Knox] 1
La France protestant, deuxième édition, iii. 530.
of the k i r k . " The exercise or practice here joyn themselves w i t h the session and company
authorised by the apostle, i t is next affirmed, is of interpreters. . . . For no man may be permitted
a thing most necessary for the kirk of God this as best pleaseth him to live within the kirk of God,
day i n Scotland, " for thereby, as said is, shall but every man must be constrained by fraternall
the kirk have judgement and knowledge of the admonition and correction to bestow his labours,
graces, gifts, and utterances of every man within when of the kirk he is required, to the edification
1
their bodie, the simple and such as have somewhat of others." Such was the remarkable provision
profited shall be encouraged daily to studie and made by our reformers, that every adult member
to proceed in knowledge, and the whole kirk of the church should enjoy such means of grace
shall be edified ; for this exercise must be patent to as were fitted to promote his growth in Christian
such as list to hear and learne, and every man shall knowledge as well as in spiritual life, and should
have liberty to titter and declare his minde and know¬ have reasonable opportunity of using for the glory
ledge to the comfort and consolation of the Kirk." 1 of God and the good of his brethren the gifts
Then after appointing some prudent regulations w i t h which the Spirit of God had furnished h i m .
to prevent this liberty of prophesying from en¬ I t may be questioned whether some such institu¬
croaching on the province of the regular ministry tion is not as much needed in the present day, i f
of the church, or degenerating into a school for the members of the church are to be preserved
the encouragement of rash speculation instead of from the temptations to doubt w i t h which they
ministering to the comfort and godly edifying of are surrounded, and i f they are to be encouraged
the brethren, directions are given that the minis¬ to supplement the labours of their ministers and
ters of the landward parishes adjacent to every elders i n winning back those who have been
important town, together w i t h the readers w i t h i n seduced into the paths of error or sin; and
six miles, should assist those that prophesy within whether its influence, i f it were only set about
the towns, that they themselves may learn or w i t h earnestness, would be less powerful to pre¬
others may learn from them. " A n d moreover," serve and reclaim than it was in those earlier
it is again repeated, " m e n in whom is supposed times.
to be any gifts which might édifie the church i f Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 590, 591 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 244, 245.
they were well imployed must be charged . . . to
1
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 587-589 ; Laing's Knox, ii. 242, 243.
rural representatives. Such charges of oppres¬ tions is known to be true to the life ; and con¬
sion could never have been so publicly made tributed greatly to the overthrow of the merciless
against them had they not been notoriously true. oppressors who, until the very eve of the triumph
And i f further evidence were needed, it may be of the Reformation, could not be persuaded either
found in abundance in the poems of Sir David to abolish or abate their dues. 1
he had a stroke of paralysis or of apoplexy, which their treachery and discrediting their proposals.
for a time laid him aside altogether from work, Threatenings were uttered against his life i f he
and permanently enfeebled his constitution. As persisted in his course ; protection seems to have
in the case of Wycliffe in the fourteenth century, ן been refused h i m by the party against the violence
his opponents exulted over his misfortune, and of their lawless followers ; and one evening (as
circulated maliciously exaggerated accounts of had often happened to Calvin in his years of
his condition, on which probably their more conflict) a musket-ball was fired in at the window
malicious and notoriously fictitious accounts of of his house, and lodged i n the roof of the apart¬
his last illness were founded. But this first ment in which he was sitting. Again and again
seizure was not so severe as to put a final arrest faithful citizens, an attached kirk-session, and
on his activities. Before many weeks were over John Craig, then his colleague in the ministry,
he had so far recovered as to be able, in part entreated him to remove for a time to some place
at least, to resume his labours. He was able in ! where his life would be safe from violence, and
a measure to continue them through the anxious whence he could return to his loving and beloved
and unquiet months of the succeeding winter flock as soon as the prevailing faction should be
and spring — bearing faithful testimony to the ( put down, or should vacate the city. But he
principles, religious and political, which he had heard them all unmoved, until at last they were
long professed ; standing up resolutely in defence constrained to tell h i m plainly that i f he was
of the authority of the young prince, when many, attacked they had made up their minds to peril
who had formerly sworn allegiance to h i m , led their lives in his defence, and i f they were com¬
by the intriguing laird of Lethington and the pelled to shed blood in the contest i t must lie
" fause " house of Hamilton, went over to the ( on his head. Thus " sore against his w i l l , " as 1
party of his popish mother. He exposed their one of the earliest historians of his declining years
sophistries, and fearlessly rebuked their defection, tells us, and " almost thrust out by the authority
even after they had gained for the time the k
2
of the church c o u r t , " as another of them has i t ,
supremacy in Edinburgh. Others might truckle he, on the 5th May 1571, took farewell of Edin¬
to them or quail before them, but that palsied burgh for a time, and crossing the F i r t h of Forth
old man, w i t h all his former plainness and much 1
Bannatyne's Memoriales, Ban. Club, p. 118.
of his former fire, persevered in denouncing 2
See Laing's Knox, vi. 651.
hundred armed men, yet the report of his un¬ popery, and that hatred of its cruelty and
t i r i n g zeal and unswerving fidelity would still tyranny, which distinguished them to the last.
contribute greatly to animate and cheer the James Melville, whose plastic nature and
adherents of the young prince and of the new gentle spirit retained through life the impres¬
regent in all parts of the land. sions then made, supplements in his Diary the
As I have hinted, there were some in the notices i n Bannatyne's Memorials, and, in a
city to whom such discourses could not fail to passage which has been often quoted, gives a
be distasteful—some who refused to attend on very fresh and vivid sketch of the old reformer.
his ministry, and were perhaps so stung by " B o t of all the benefites I haid that y e i r " —
what was reported of his sharp but not unde¬ the first year he was a student in St Andrews,
served reproofs that they were compelled to and had " drunk of St Leonard's well " — " the
throw off the mask they had hitherto worn, greatest," he tells us, "was the coming of that
and soon after openly to apostatise from the maist notable profet and apostle of our nation,
faith which for several years they had professed Mr Jhone Knox, to St Androis ; wha be the
and taught. But the effect on many of the faction of the Quein occupeing the castell and
young men in attendance on the university, or town of Edinbruche was compellit to remove
acting as regents in its colleges, was salutary thairfra w i t h a number of the best, and chusit
and enduring ; and perhaps i t was not with¬ to com to St Androis. I hard h i m teatche ther
out special intention that, when the door was the prophecie of Daniel that simmer and the
shut against him in Edinburgh and the ears of wintar following. I haid my pen and my litle
the men in power there were closed against his book, and tuk away sic things as I could com¬
counsels, he betook himself to what was still prehend. I n the opening upe of his text he
the principal university in the realm, and made was modérât the space of an halff houre ; bot
his last appeals to the rising hopes of the when he enterit to application he maid me sa
church and country there. Such discourses as to grew and tremble that I could nocht haid a
he then delivered, coming from one they had pen to wryt. I hard h i m oftymes utter these
already learned to venerate, could not fail to thretenings [against the faction then] in the
form or foster in their ingenuous minds that hicht of their pryde, quhilk the eis [i.e., eyes]
fidelity to the reformed faith, that jealousy of of monie saw cleirlie brought to pass within
and refute their former co-religionists. Some of " He haid then in hand," Melville tells us, " Mr
the masters of the O l d College also, as Bannatyne Patrik Constant's [or Adamson's ] Catéchisme 1
has recorded, hated the plain-speaking reformer, of Calvin, converted in L a t i n heroic vers, quhilk
though " be outward gesture and befoir his face w i t h the author was mikle estimed o f " ; and 2
thei wald seime and apeir to favore and love deservedly so, for Adamson was an accomplished
1
h i m above the rest." The Hamiltons especially scholar, was using his scholarship for the church's
seem to have given h i m considerable occasion to good, was eulogised by Lawson, Knox's colleague
complain of their bitter and unguarded criticisms, and successor, and had not yet developed that
and one of them, stung by his denunciations, spirit of subserviency to the powers that be which
challenged h i m to defend his doctrine in the afterwards proved his ruin.
schools of the university. This he at first The printer had also the honour of publishing
refused, maintaining that the pulpit was not to in St Andrews the last work which engaged the
be controlled by the university schools, nor the thoughts of the reformer. This was his ' Answer
church put into subjection to the academy. to a letter of a Jesuit named Tyrie.' I t had been
St Andrews at that time was the rendezvous of drawn up some years before, but was now care¬
others of the adherents of the young prince, who fully revised and enlarged, and exhibited his
did not feel themselves safe under the faction matured views respecting several of the most
then i n possession of the castle and city of notable subjects of controversy between the
Edinburgh. One of these, M r John Durie of reformed and unreformed churches. Possibly i t
L e i t h , was " f o r stoutness and zeall in the guid 1
[In the rather scurrilous Legend of the Bischop of St Androis,
cause mikle renouned and talked of." H e was an it is said :—
" Ane baxters sone, ane beggar borne,
enthusiastic leader of the volunteers of his day. That twyse his surnaime hes mensworne ;
" The gown was na sooner af and the Byble out To be called Constene he thocht shame,
He tuke up Constantine to name.
of hand fra the kirk, when on ged the corslet,
2
Thinking that poore professione vaine,
and fangit was the hagbot, and to the fields." He changed his surname ower agane ;
Now Doctor Adamsone at last,
Another was Robert Leckprevick, the famous Whairthrow he ower to Paris past."
—Dalyell's Scotish Poems, 1801, ii. 30g, 310.
printer, who brought his types and printing-press
w i t h h i m , and so did notable service to the cause. He inherited both names from his ancestors, who were called
Constantine or Adamson (M'Crie's Melville, 1856, p. 461).]
2
1
Bannatyne's Memoriales, p. 256. 2
Melville's Diary, p. 32. Melville's Diary, p. 32.
Two months before this a convention at L e i t h to the giver, anathema to the receaver," who 1
had given its sanction to a sort of mongrel as rector and principal had already far more to
episcopacy, nominally to secure the tithes more do than such an aged man could hope to over-
completely to the church, but really to secure take. 2
I t was i n reference to the same appoint¬
the bulk of them by a more regular title to ment that Adamson, as yet uncorrupted by Court
certain covetous noblemen who sought in this influences, had a few days before in a sermon
way to reimburse themselves for their services from the same pulpit given utterance to his
1
in the cause of the Reformation. Chief among famous distinction of three kinds of bishops, my
these noblemen was the E a r l of Morton, then ,
lord bishop, my lord s bishop, and the Lord's
one of the chief supporters of the young prince, bishop, the first of whom had been in time of
and soon after regent of the kingdom. Having popery, the second was now brought in merely
secured a presentation to the Archbishopric of to enable my lord to draw the kirk rents, and the
St Andrews for M r John Douglas before men¬ t h i r d was the evangelical pastor as he should be
tioned, he came over to the city, had h i m elected in times of thorough reformation. 3
2
that pulpit in blads, and fly out of i t . " further notice of his work is by Melville, who
Soon after his return to Edinburgh he found simply informs us that after " i n s t i t u t i n g in his
himself quite unable to preach in the large roum, be the ordinär calling of the kirk and con¬
church which he had formerly occupied, and a gregation, M r James Lawsone, a man of singular
smaller one was fitted up for him i n the western
1
[Dr Cameron Lees says that the Tolbooth, in which Knox
1
preached for some little time and where he delivered his last
These honest men earnestly implored their pastor to return also sermon, was "the portion of St Giles which had been cut off the
to Edinburgh, if he could do so without serious injury to his western part of the nave, and was used for meetings of the Council"
health.
a
(St Giles', 1889, p. 157).]
Melville's Diary, p. 33. 2
M'Crie's Knox, 1855, p. 269.
century think i t fair to supplement the legends On the 10th of November, the day after he
of their predecessors in the sixteenth. According inducted Lawson as his colleague, he was seized
to them Luther was the child of a demon, not w i t h a violent cough and began to breathe w i t h
figuratively but literally ; Calvin was eaten up of difficulty. Many, who desired ardently, if i t were
worms, like Herod who slew the children of possible, to detain h i m a little longer here, advised
Bethlehem and was smitten by the judgment of 1
Walsingham's abuse of Wycliffe. [Thomae Walsingham, His-
God, because (though apparently in this they con¬ toria Anglicana, ii. 119, 120; and Ypodigma Neustriae a Thoma
found him w i t h a later Herod) he affected divine Walsingham, p. 340 ; Rolls series. Translations will be found in
Vaughan's John de Wycliffe, 1853, pp. 468, 469; and in Lechler's
honours. T o mention such slanders, as the
Wycliffe, Relig. Tract Soc, p. 423.]
sceptical Bayle has said w i t h special reference 2
[For the substance of Archibald Hamilton's account, see
to the case of Knox, is all that is needed to refute M'Crie's Knox, 1855, p. 405. Bannatyne's account is in both
editions of his work (Journal of Transactions, 1806, and Memoriales
them. They are the product of malignity so
of Transactions, 1836). It is likewise in Laing's Knox, vi. 634-645 ;
evident that i t defeats itself. I know but one and there (pp. 649-660) is also given a translation of Smeton's (or
parallel to them in our literature, and i t has the Lawson's) account. The accounts of Bannatyne and Smeton do
not always agree as to the exact day on which certain events
excuse that it has come down to us from the happened. ]
lives. On the 13th, being obliged by the increase and by many members of his congregation. A l l
of his malady to leave off his ordinary course of of these he " solidly exhorted " and comforted.
reading in the Scriptures (for every day he had On the 20th or 21st he gave orders that his coffin
been wont to read some chapters of the O l d and should be prepared. On the 22nd he sent for
New Testaments, especially some of the Psalms the ministers, elders, and deacons of the church,
and Gospels), he directed his wife and servant to that he might give them his last counsels and
read to him each day the 17th chapter of St John's
1 take final farewell of them. I n the brief but
ןGospel, one or other of the chapters of St Paul's
solemn address which he delivered to them he
Epistle to the Ephesians, and the 53rd chapter
called God to witness, whom he served in the
of Isaiah. On the 14th he rose early, apparently
Gospel of His Son, that he had taught nothing
supposing i t had been the Lord's day, and being
but the pure and solid doctrine of the Gospel
asked why he did so when he was so i l l , he re¬
of the Son of God, and had never indulged his
plied that he had been meditating all night on
own private passions, or spoken from any hatred
the resurrection of the L o r d (the subject which
of the persons of those against whom he had
would have fallen to be treated next i n . order by
denounced the heavy judgments of God. He
h i m in his ministry), and that he was now pre¬
exhorted them to persevere in the t r u t h of the
pared to ascend the pulpit to communicate to
Gospel and i n their allegiance to their young
his brethren the consolation he had enjoyed i n
sovereign, and dismissed them w i t h his solemn
his own soul. Next day, though very sick, he
s blessing. T o Lawson and Lindsay, whom he
prevailed on Durie, already mentioned, and an¬
other friend, Steward by name, to remain to 1
[Morton was elected regent on the 24th of November 1572, the
dinner w i t h h i m , ordered a hogshead of wine i n day on which Knox died (Acts of Parliament, iii. 78 ; Bannatyne's
his cellar to be pierced for them, and desired Memoriales, p. 280). Bannatyne places Morton's visit on the 19th ;
Smeton leaves the day uncertain.]
representation of i t was dishonourable to his life for an immortal and blessed life through Jesus
opponents. During these hours he uttered fre¬ Christ."
quent sighs and groans, so that those who stood This persuasion of his speedy and happy
by could not doubt that he was contending w i t h departure was soon to be justified by the event.
some grievous temptation. W h e n he awoke they After evening prayers D r Preston, his physician,
asked him what was the cause of his distress. asked h i m whether he had heard them, when he
He answered that in the course of his life he had replied, " I would to God that ye and all men
had many contests w i t h his spiritual adversary. heard them as I have heard them, and I praise
Often he had been tempted to despair of God's God for that heavenly sound." Shortly after
mercy because of the greatness of his sins, often the signs of immediate dissolution appeared, his
ί also tempted by the allurements of the world to friends gathered round his bed, and his faithful
forget his calling to endure hardness as a good servant addressed him : " Now, sir, the time that
soldier of Christ Jesus. But now the cunning you have long called to God for, to w i t an end
! adversary had assailed him in another form, and of your battle, is come. And seeing all natural
endeavoured to persuade h i m that he had merited power now fails, remember those comfortable
heaven itself and a blessed immortality by the promises, which often times ye have shown to
faithful discharge of the duties of his high office. us, of our Saviour Jesus Christ. And that we
\ " But blessed be God," exclaimed the dying re¬ may understand and know that ye hear us, make
former, " who hath brought seasonably to my us some sign." A n d so he lifted up one of his
mind those passages of Scripture by which I was hands, and incontinent thereafter rendered up
enabled to quench the fiery dart, ' W h a t hast his spirit apparently without pain or movement,
thou, that thou hast not received ? ' יB y the grace so that he seemed rather to fall asleep than
of God I am what I am,' and ' N o t I , but the to die.
grace of God i n me ' . . . wherefore I give thanks Such was the account of his last illness and
to my God by Jesus Christ who has been pleased death transmitted by those who attended on him
to grant me the victory. A n d I am firmly per¬ and witnessed i t , a death worthy of his noble life,
suaded that . . . in a short time, without any and fully justifying the brief comment of Smeton,
great bodily pain, and without any distress of " Surely, whatever opprobrious things profane
mind, I shall exchange this mortal and miserable men may utter, God hath in him given us an
example of the right way as well of dying as of benefits he has been honoured to confer on them,
l i v i n g . " I t is true, as his heartless traducer takes this attack on his fair fame w i l l have been over¬
care to remind us, no dirge was chanted over his ruled for good.
remains, no mass of requiem was celebrated for \ But his real monument w i l l never be one
his soul. He and his countrymen had long ceased graven by art or man's device. I t is one more
to believe in the worth of such priestly cere¬ noble, more lasting far. I t is to be found in
monies, or to imagine that their eternal state • the life God enabled him to live, and the work
could be affected by them, or by aught save God honoured h i m to do. I t is to be seen in
Christ's finished work and their own faith and the plans he devised, in the institutions he
repentance while God's day of grace was pro¬ founded, in the people he moulded anew, when
longed to them here. The brief eulogy pro¬ the old church had confessedly failed in its
nounced over his grave by the stern and reserved mission. And while the Scottish nation con¬
1
regent was a truer and more impressive testimony ז tinues tc* retain these institutions, and to bear
to his worth than the most gorgeous celebration this impress, i t w i l l continue the grandest, as i t
of Romish rites which he could but have shared is the most telling, monument to the memory of
w i t h a Borgia or a Betoun. The stern simplicity ^ its noble-hearted and single-minded reformer.
of his grave, which, like his master Calvin's, was
t i l l lately preserved in the memory of men with¬
out stone or bronze to mark i t out, tells a tale
very different from that his traducer hints at ;
and i f his bitter taunts shall lead the reformer's
countrymen now to erect a material monument ^
to him in some measure corresponding to the
1
[Morton's testimony to Knox, as recorded by Melville, was :
"That he nather fearit nor flattent anie fleche" (Diary, p. 60).
As recorded by Calderwood : " Here lyeth a man who in his life
never feared the face of man ; who hath beene often threatned with
dag and dager, but yitt hath ended his dayes in peace and honour.
For he had God's providence watching over him in a speciall maner,
when his verie life was sought" (History, iii. 242).]
times in which the building was begun." The 2 balanced utterances of the Second Book. I
1
do not yield to many i n my admiration of the
Cunningham's Church History of Scotland, 1859, i. 444.
1
2
Ibid., i. 445· Hill Burton's History of Scotland, 1876, v. 203.
courage and calmness of Melville; but I could They, who had been obliged long to contend
no more think of placing h i m , scholarly and w i t h a corrupt and obstinate clergy which would
bold, yet calm, as he generally was, nor the grant no real reform i n doctrine, no substantial
Book attributed to h i m , more logical and un- concessions for the alleviation of practical griev¬
impassionately didactic though i t be, before the ances, boldly laid down the principle that
eager, impetuous, yet sagacious Knox, w i t h his " t o kings, princes, rulers, and magistrates . . .
wealth of rude eloquence and thrilling tender¬ chieflie and most principallie the conservation
ness, and his Book in which these qualities of * and purgation of the religioun apperteinis ; so
head and heart are so clearly mirrored, than I that not onlie they are appointed for civill
would think of placing Calvin, highly as I policie, but also for maintenance of the trew
honour him, before Luther, or his Catechism religioun, and for suppressing of idolâtrie and
before the Wittenberg hymn-books. superstitioun whatsoever. . . . And therefore wee
I do not believe that the principles of the ן confesse and avow that sik as resist the supreme
two Books are so widely different as they have power doing that thing quhilk appertains to his
sometimes been represented to be, or that the charge, do resist Goddis ordinance, and there-
grand ideas of Knox concerning the place of ^ fore cannot be guiltles." 1
Melville, who was
the laity in the church, the education of the called to contend w i t h a king bent on securing
young, and the support and kindly treatment autocratic power in the church as well as in the
of the aged poor, were meant to be rejected state, laid down, w i t h the utmost precision, the
or ignored by his great successor; but I do principle in chapter x., " A l t h o u g h kings and
think these matters fall considerably into the princes that be godlie, sumtymes be their awin
background. Some of the noblest conceptions ן authority whan the kirk is corruptit and all
of the earlier Book are narrowed, and the whole things out of ordor, place ministers and restore
system stiffened; and in the contests i n which the trew service of the L o r d efter the examples
the church had then to engage w i t h the young of sum godly kings of Juda and divers godly
monarch, i n vindication of her independence in empereurs and kings also in the light of the
her own province, positions were laid down which
were soon pressed to consequences from which 1
Confession of 1560, in Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 92, 93. [In
Knox and his associates would have shrunk. Laing's Knox, ii. 118, it is reformation η and purgation η instead of
conservation and purgation.]
New Testament; y i t quhair the ministrie of the over by the L o r d Jesus Christ as the representative
kirk is anes lawfullie constitute and they that of the Godhead on earth—it would be difficult
are placeit do thair office faithfullie, all godlie to refuse assent to what follows. Nothing can
princes and magistratis aucht to heir and obey be more perfect than the analysis by which the
thair voice, and reverence the majestie of the two ruling powers are separated from each other,
1
Son of God speiking be them " ; or, as i n and the ecclesiastical set above the secular." If 1
chapter i . , where i t is laid down, " As ministeris this is not quite borne out, one can hardly help
are subject to the judgement and punishment feeling that more care should have been taken
of the magistrat in externall things i f they offend, to mark out the limits of ecclesiastical authority,
so aucht the magistratis to submit themselfis to and to show that the power of ministers and
the discipline of the kirk gif they transgresse in elders was as distinctly limited by the laws of
2
matteris of conscience and r e l i g i o u n . " Christ as that of kings and magistrates ought to
H i l l Burton sarcastically remarks that " i f we ׳ be by the laws of the l a n d ; or, in other words,
grant that those who prepared i t were what they that ministers and elders may err in interpreting
called themselves—the Church of God, presided the laws of Christ, just as civil rulers may err
in interpreting the laws of the land. No doubt
1
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 788, 789. [The Second Book of ^
the limitation contended for is in words admitted,
Discipline has been frequently printed. It is in Calderwood's
History, Wodrow Society ed., iii. 529-555 ; Spottiswoode's History, " t h e magistrat neither aucht to preich, minister
1655, pp. 289-302; Spottiswoode Society ed., ii. 233-256; Booke the sacraments, nor execute the censuris of the
of the Universall Kirk, Bannatyne Club ed., ii. 488-512; Peterkin's
ed 6
kirk, nor y i t prescrive any rewll how i t sould be
-> PP• ־5375 3 ; Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 757-805. The quota¬
tions in the text are from Dunlop.] done; bot command the ministeris to observe
2
Ibid., ii. 764. Melville afterwards more pithily expressed the the rewll commandit i n the W o r d , and punish
same principle in his sovereign's presence : " Thair is twa kings
the transgressours be civill means. The min-
and twa kingdomes in Scotland. Thair is Chryst Jesus the King,
and His kingdome the kirk, whase subject King James the Saxt is, isteris exerce not the civill jurisdictioun, bot
and of whase kingdome nocht a king, nor a lord, nor a heid, bot teich the magistrat how i t sould be exercit
a member ! And they whome Chryst hes callit and commandit to I 2
according to the W o r d . " " I t is proper to
watch over His kirk, and governe His spirituall kingdome, hes
sufficient powar of Him and authoritie sa to do, bathe togidder and kings, princes, and magistrates to be callit lordis
severalie ; the quhilk na Christian king nor prince sould controll
1
and discharge, but fortifie and assist, utherwayes nocht fathfull Hill Burton's History of Scotland, v. 203.
2
subjects nor members of Chryst " (Melville's Diary, p. 370). Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 763.
and dominators over their subjectis, whom they right or wrong, as Papists teach that the magis¬
govern civilly ; bot i t is proper to Christ onlie to t r ä t e is to execute the decrees of their Popish
be callit L o r d and Master in the spirituall govern¬ councels w i t h blind obedience, and submit his
ment of the kirk, and all utheris that beiris office ! faith to them, because he is a layman and may
therein aucht not to usurp dominion therein, nor not dare to examine whether the church doth
be callit lordis, bot onlie ministeris, disciples, and erre or not, is clear. 1. Because, i f in hearing
servantis. For it is Christis proper office to the W o r d all should follow the example of the
command and rewll His kirk universall, and men of Berea, not relying on the testimony ot
every particular kirk, throw H i s Spirit and Paul or any preacher, [and] try whether that
1
W o r d , be the ministrie of m e n . " But i t is which concerneth their conscience and faith be
not made sufficiently prominent anywhere i n the agreeable to the Scriptures or no, and accordingly
Book that these men are only entitled to un¬ receive or reject; so in all things of discipline
reserved obedience when they truly speak Christ's the magistrate is to try by the W o r d whether
mind and truly follow His W o r d . Those who he ought to adde his sanction to these decrees
have made most of the Book have neither clearly which the church gives out for edification, and
perceived this nor have they realised the full whether he should draw the sword against such
meaning of the lucid and explicit statement made a one as a heretick and a perverter of souls. B u t
by Rutherfurd when he was contending against the former is true; the magistrate's practise i n
the Erastians and Independents of England. adding his civill sanction and in punishing here-
H a d they done so, I cannot but think that the ticks concerneth his conscience, knowing that he
bitter divisions among Scottish Presbyterians must do i t i n faith as he doth all his moral
would have been fewer, and that there would ! actions ; ergo, the magistrate must examine what
have been far less occasion for the reproach often
he practiseth in his office according to the W o r d ,
cast on them, that new presbyter is but old priest
and must not take i t upon the meer authority
w r i t large.
\ of the church, else his faith in these moral acts
" That the magistrate is not obliged," R ü t h e r - ! of his office should be resolved ultimate on the
furd affirms, " to execute the decrees of the church authority of the church, not on the W o r d of God,
without further examination, whether they be which, no doubt, is Popery, for so the warrant
1
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 762. ; of the magistrate's conscience should not be ' thus
saith the L o r d , ' but ' thus saith the church in their so many evils. " I dare confidently say," he
decrees.' 2. The magistrate and all men have a affirms, " that, i f comparisons be rightly made,
command to try all things, ergo, to t r y the decrees presbyterial government is the most limited and
of the church, and to retain what is good (1 Thes. ן the least arbitrary government of any other in
1
v. 21) ; to try the spirits even of the church in the w o r l d . " A n d , after entering into details to
their decrees (1 John i i i . 1). 3. W e behooved make good this affirmation i n regard to the papal
[in that case] to lay down this Popish ground that and prelatical forms of government, he proceeds
. . . the church cannot erre in their decrees. . . . to maintain that Independents " m u s t needs be
Its against Scripture and reason that magistrates, supposed to exercise a much more unlimited or
and by the like reason all others, should obey the arbitrary power than the presbyterial churches
decrees of the church w i t h a blinde faith, without do," because they exempt individual congrega¬
inquiring in the warrants and grounds of their tions from all control and correction by superior
decrees, which is as good Popery as, Magistrates י courts, and because i t is " one of their three
and all men are to beleeve as the church be- grand principles which disclaimeth the binding
leeveth, w i t h an implicite faith, so ignorance shall of themselves for the future unto their present
be the mother of devotion. Whoever impute judgement and practice, and avoucheth the keep¬
2
this to us—who have suffered for nonconformity, ing of this reserve to alter and retract." Some
and upon this ground, that synods can erre, re¬ who think that, after all recent changes, they
fused the ceremonies—are to consult w i t h their more truly hold the opinions of Gillespie than
own conscience whether this be not to make us we do, have laid i t down very dogmatically that
appear disloyall and odious to magistracy in that even although the constitution of a national
which we never thought, far lesse [presumed] to church were in all other respects scriptural, yet
teache and professe i t to the w o r l d . " 1
if i t did not reserve this power to alter and
retract without let or hindrance, i t would still
Even more notable are the utterances of George
be at variance w i t h the tenets of the Covenanting
Gillespie, when vindicating against the Erastians
times; but you see here that Gillespie affirms
of the south that more free government of the
that that was a principle of the Independents, not
church by its own courts from which they feared
1
1
Rutherfurd's Divine Right of Church Government, 1646, pp. Aaron's Rod Blossoming, 1646, p. 177·
2
1 Ibid., pp. 180, 181.
596, 597· t John iii. 1 is a misprint in the original for I John iv. 1.]
fessions of the Reformed churches recognised as H a d the principles thus laid down been more
belonging to his office. On the contrary, he clearly kept in view by the framers of the Second
maintains that not only in extraordinary cases Book of Discipline, its influence for good on
when church government doth degenerate into Scottish Christianity would have been more un¬
tyranny, or those who manage it make defection mixed than i t has been. Had they been more
from the truth, " t h e Christian magistrate may consistently acted on by Rutherfurd and his
and ought to do diverse things in and for religion, associates, who consented to their formal inser¬
and interpose his authority diverse wayes so as tion in our later standards, many sad troubles
doth not properly belong to his cognisance, de¬ which then and afterwards befel the church, for
cision and administration ordinarily, and in a which they lived and laboured, would have been
2
reformed and well constituted c h u r c h " ; but altogether avoided, or more easily provided
1
[Dr Mitchell may have found such a claim elsewhere in Gil-
against; but as i t is, great misunderstandings
Iespie's^ works; but it is not distinctly made in that chapter of have certainly arisen. The two Books of Dis¬
'Aaron's Rod Blossoming ' from which the quotations in this para¬ cipline have been too much read apart, instead
graph are taken, although perhaps it may be held to be implied
in the words: " By which it appeareth that their [i.e., the Inde¬ Λ of being regarded as complementary each of the
pendents'] way will not suffer them to be so far moulded into an other; and while all that is liberal and pro¬
uniformity, or bounded within certain particular rules (I say not
with others, but even among themselves) as the Presbyterian way
gressive tends, I think, more and more to rally
will admit of" (Aaron's Rod Blossoming, p. 12,1).] round the one, I believe that much that is nar-
2
Aaron's Rod Blossoming, p. 182. 1
Aaron's Rod Blossoming, p. 183.
i
226. The Second Book of Discipline, Its Theory of the Church. 227
rower, but still earnest and resolutely Christian, actually inserted i n the Act of Parliament could
w i l l continue to draw its inspiration from the be so regarded, and i t has since been maintained
by M r Peterkin that the alleged notes of agreement
other.
, between the king and the church's commissioners
The Second Book of Discipline, as well as י
are not actually found in the manuscript copy of
the First, failed to commend itself to the ruling
. the History which is preserved in the Advocate's
powers, and to obtain a place in its full form on 1
J Library. The general theory of the church, how¬
the statute book. Those of its clauses relating
ever, which may be said to underlie the most
to the functions of the several church courts were
important statement of the Second Book of Dis¬
inserted almost word for word i n the Act of the
cipline, is not materially different from that which
Scottish Parliament of 1592, reckoned the charter
finds expression in the First. " The kirk of G o d , "
of the presbyterian church. I t was, however,
it is said, " i s sumtymes largelie takin for all I
several times ratified by the General Assembly,
j them that professe the Evangill of Jesus Christ, /
and was partially carried out by its authority from
i and so i t is a company and fellowship, not onely
the time of its ratification ; and to this extent
of the godly, but also of hypocrites professing
it, as well as the First Book of Discipline, appears
alwayis outwardly ane true religion. Uther tymes
to have been fully recognised. The question of
I i t is takin for the godlie and elect onlie, and sum-
its authority was very fully argued in the famous
Auchterarder case. The counsel for the presby¬ j tymes for them that exercise spiritual function \
tery and the minority of the judges did not 1
ן Peterkin's Booke of the Universall Kirk, 1
venture to argue, however, that as a whole the late Bishop Russell, after examining the four MS. copies of Spot-
tiswoode's History, came to the conclusion that the one in the
Second Book of Discipline had received the sane-
Advocates' Library is only the first and incompleted draft of the
tion of the state save in irregular times ; but they work, and that the one in Trinity College, Dublin, is the one
contended that the notes, contained in Spottis- which Spottiswoode himself prepared for the press. Bishop Russell
accordingly followed the Dublin MS. in his edition of the History
woode's History, of the clauses respecting which printed for the Spottiswoode Society, and that edition (as well as
the king and the commissioners of Parliament ! the old folio edition) contains the notes of agreement and disagree¬
had come to agreement w i t h the ministers, ment. Peterkin has printed the Second Book of Discipline, from
an attested copy publicly read on the 29th of September 1591 "in
should be accepted as determining the extent to
the elderschip of Haddingtoun," and "subscryvit be the brethren
which i t was law. I t was affirmed, however, by thairof." Of the ten subscribers, nine write minister after their
the majority of the judges that only the clauses names; the other simply signs, " M r L . Hay, Bass."]
\ amongis the congregation of them that professe onlie . . . quhilk the Scriptures gevis unto them, [
» the t r u t h . " 1
These last, ministers, doctors, as these quhilks import labour, travell and wark ; '
1
elders, and deacons, are taken to represent the and ar names of offices and service, and not of
church i n its wider sense, and must have a lawful : idlenes, dignitie, warldlie honour or preheminence,
calling from i t . This lawful calling is said to quhilk be Christ our Maister is expresslie reprovit
consist of two parts—viz., election and ordination. and forbidden. . . . A n d generallie thir twa
Election is defined to be the choosing out of a things aught they all to respect, the glorie of
person or persons most able for the office that is God, and edifieing of His kirk, in discharging
1
vacant, by the judgment of the eldership and their dewties in their callings."
consent of the congregation to which the person I t is generally supposed that i t is in this Second
or persons are appointed. Ordination is defined Book of Discipline that we have the first clear
as the separation and sanctifying of the person institution of that church court which we now
appointed of God and H i s kirk after he be well 1 call the presbytery, and i t admits of no dispute
tried and found qualified. The ceremonies of that i t was in the year 1581, after the final adop¬
ordination are declared to be fasting, earnest tion of the Book by the Assembly, that an attempt
prayer, and imposition of the hands of the elder¬ j was made, w i t h consent of the crown, regularly
ship. Then follow two of the most important to divide the country into presbyteries. These,
paragraphs in the Book, which come nearest to however, though marked out on paper in that
supplying that which I deem defective i n i t , a year, were in point of fact only gradually set up,
clear and distinct admission that human rulers and i n general they arose out of, and absorbed
in the church as well as in the state have but into themselves, the previously existing exercise,
limited powers. " A l l thir [i.e., those various ' which the First Book of Discipline had sane-
kinds of office-bearers], as they must be raisit up tioned and recommended to meet weekly for the
be God and be H i m made able for the wark study and interpretation of the Scriptures. The 2
quhairto they ar callit, so aught they [to] knaw introduction of what are called, but erroneously,
their message to be l i m i t i t w i t h i n God's W o r d , 3
lay elders to the place they have so long worthily
without the quhilk bounds they aught not to
1 2
passe. A l l thir sould tak these titils and names Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 769. Supra, pp. 170-173.
5
L" Some reproachfully and others ignorantly call them lay
1
Dunlop's Confessions, ii. 759, 760. elders. But the distinction of the clergie and laity is popish and
laying on of the hands of the companie of the remarkable if, w i t h M r Cook, we hold that what
1
eldership." the framers of the Second Book of Discipline
The only other alternative is that suggested really designed was one presbytery or eldership
by the late Procurator Cook, that in the Second governing a larger or smaller number of churches
Book of Discipline the functions of the two courts in common ; and that we owe the distribution of
were as yet undistributed ; and that when they the power between the two courts rather to the
came to be legally distributed by the Act of Act of Parliament than to the Second Book of
Parliament of 1592, those which the framers of Discipline. I agree w i t h Gillespie, however,
the Second Book assigned to the eldership were that in the circumstances of the church in a
in nearly its very words appropriated to the thoroughly Christianised country i t would have
presbytery, and a much more limited province been a matter to be regretted i f every congrega¬
assigned to the kirk-session—the court called by tion had not had its session or lesser presbytery,
the Puritans of the south by the name of the w i t h such definitely limited powers as by the Act
Lesser Presbytery. Perhaps i t may be regarded of Parliament, and by the later acts of the church,
as a rather curious confirmation of this theory of are entrusted to i t ; and I am not sure that we
Procurator Cook's, that what he supposes to have do not owe this arrangement to the episcopal
been first intended by the framers of the Book as rather than to the presbyterian party, and that
a common court is asserted by Gillespie, the it was a concession made by them as the only
ablest of their successors in the following century, presbytery they could well acknowledge, i f they
to have been really characteristic of the presby¬ were to leave any function for the bishop at all
tery of the primitive church. Whatever may be in this court. A t least the rough draft of the
thought of his argument in vindication of what clause of the subsequent Act of Parliament in
he calls the two presbyteries, the fact remains regard to the kirk-session appears first in the
that he explicitly admits there was but one in the conference held between the two parties, and is
2
primitive church ; and this w i l l be all the more then noted as having had the express approval of
1
1
the king and commissioners of Parliament, which
[In some editions of the Genevan version the word "elder¬
ship" is thus explained in the margin : "Under this name he con- 1
[It is not quite clear which conference Dr Mitchell is here
taineth the whole ministerie of the church which was at Ephesus."] referring to. In the conference held at Stirling in December 1578,
2
Assertion of the Government of the Church of Scotland, 1641, the Second Book of Discipline was discussed section by section.
pp. 128-130, 136-147. The results are preserved not only by Spottiswoode, as mentioned
was not at that time, nor t i l l considerably later, faith in Christ are to feel that they belong, and
secured to the clauses in the Act affirming the w i t h the members of which they are bound, as
powers of the larger presbytery. God gives them opportunity, to cultivate union
I have said elsewhere that in chapters xxv. and communion. " The catholic or universal
and xxvi. of the Westminster Confession of church, which is invisible, consists of the whole
Faith we have a doctrine affirmed as to the number of the elect that have been, are, or shall
church and the communion of saints which be gathered into one, under Christ the head
seems to me to be more thoroughly catholic thereof ; and is the spouse, the body, the ful¬
than that which is set forth i n the Articles of ness of H i m that filleth all in all. The visible
, the Irish Episcopal Church, of the teaching of church, which is also catholic or universal under
! which the compilers of our Confession have so the Gospel (not confined to one nation as before
i largely availed themselves. I n addition to one under the law), consists of all those throughout
\ invisible church to which all the true elect the world that profess the true religion, and of
of God are affirmed to belong, and particular their children, and is the kingdom of the L o r d
visible churches composed of professing Christ¬ Jesus Christ, the house and family of God, out
ians in particular nations (both of which are of which there is no ordinary possibility of
expressly owned in both formularies), the West¬ salvation. U n t o this catholic visible church
minster Confession recognises one visible church Christ hath given the ministry, oracles, and
to which all throughout the world who profess ordinances of God for the gathering and per¬
fecting of the saints in this life to the end of
above (p. 227 n. ), but also by Calderwood (iii. 433-442), neither of
whom, however, says that these results were then noted as having the w o r l d ; and doth by H i s own presence and
been expressly approved by the king. The heads agreed upon at Spirit, according to His promise, make them
the Holyrood conference on 17th February 1585-86 do not include
effectual thereunto. This catholic church hath
anything which can be regarded as the draft of the clause of the
Act of 1592 concerning the power and jurisdiction of " particulare been sometimes more, sometimes less, visible ;
kirkis" (Calderwood's History, iv. 491-494). The articles defining and particular churches which are members
the jurisdiction of provincial assemblies, presbyteries, and particular
kirks, agreed on by the king in conference with some of the brethren
thereof are more or less pure, according as the
sent to him by the General Assembly in May 1586, are transferred doctrine of the Gospel is taught and embraced,
almost verbatim to the Act of Parliament of 1592 (Booke of the ordinances administered, and public worship
Universal! Kirk, Bannatyne Club edit., ii. 665, 666; Calderwood's
History, iv. 567, 568; Acts of Parliament, iii. 541, 542).] performed more or less purely in them. . . . A l l
saints that are united to Jesus Christ their land, in the full extent of i t , may become the
head, by His Spirit and by faith, have fellow¬ kingdom of our L o r d and of His Christ."
ship w i t h H i m in H i s graces, sufferings, death, The sum of all this may be given in the
resurrection, and glory. And, being united to words of Henderson, i n the conclusion of his
one another in love, they have communion in treatise on ' T h e Government and Order of the
each other's gifts and graces, and are obliged Church of Scotland,' the only other treatise
to the performance of such duties, public and which has any right to be set alongside of
private, as do conduce to their mutual good." the Books of Discipline. " I n the authoritie of
I n other words, every true member of the these assemblies, parochial, presbyteriall, pro¬
church, be he hearer or office-bearer, holds his vinciall, and nationall, and in the subordination
place in the body for the good of all, and is of the lesser unto the greater, or of more par¬
bound to use his gifts and opportunities to ticular elderships to the larger and generali
promote, as far as he can, the spiritual and ן eldership, doth consist the externall order,
temporal good of all. A single sentence from | strength, and steadfastnesse of the Church of
the Westminster Directory for Church Govern¬ Scotland. . . . Here there is a superiority with¬
ment is all I need to give, in supplement of this out tyrannie, for no minister hath a papall or
statement of the Confession, to put you in full monarchicall jurisdiction over his own flock, far
possession of their authors' views and aspirations. lesse over other pastors and over all the con¬
" W h e n their number [i.e., the membership of a gregations of a large dioces. Here there is
congregation] is so great that they cannot con¬ paritie without confusion and disorder, for the
veniently meet i n one place, i t is expedient that pastors are in order before the elders, and the
they be divided according to the respective bounds I elders before the deacons; the church [i.e., each
of their dwellings into distinct and fixed congre- congregation] is subordinate to the presbyterie,
gâtions for the better administration of such the presbyterie to the synod, and the synod to
ordinances as belong unto them, and the dis¬ the nationall assembly. One pastor also hath
charge of mutual duties; wherein all, according f priority [of esteem] before another, for age, for
to their several places and callings, are to labour \ zeale, for gifts, for his good deservings of the
to promote whatever appertains to the power of church, each one honouring him whom God
godliness and credit of religion, that the whole hath honoured, and as he beareth the image of
Alesius, or Alane as he was still called, being opinions which at this period of his life he showed.
of good abilities, was early sent to the university, D'Aubigné says : " His keenest desire was to
and seems to have been one of the first set of break a lance w i t h Luther. . . . As he could not
students who entered St Leonard's College (the measure himself personally w i t h the man whom
college founded by Prior John Hepburn, w i t h the he named arch-heretic, Alesius had refuted his
consent of Archbishop Alexander Stuart) after its doctrine in a public discussion held at the uni¬
opening in 1512. His studies appear to have versity. The theologians of St Andrews had
been prosecuted there in the usual way, and i n 1
covered him w i t h applause. . . . Alesius, alive
1515 he became a determinant, or took the de¬ to these praises and a sincere catholic, thought
1
gree of B . A . ; and, probably after acting for a that i t would be an easy task for him to convince
few years as a regent in the college, he was young Hamilton of his errors. . . . Armed
drafted as a novice into the priory, and ultimately cap - a - pie, crammed w i t h scholastic learning,
became one of its canons. W h e n John Major and w i t h all the formulae ' quo modo sit, quo
came to St Andrews in 1523 as principal of the modo nonsit,' " he had various discussions w i t h
Psedagogium, he, like H a m i l t o n and some others him. " H a m i l t o n had before him nothing but
who ultimately shared the same opinions, studied the Gospel, and he replied to all the reasonings
theology under h i m , and made great progress, of his antagonist w i t h the clear, living, and
especially in the study of the schoolmen and the profound word of the Scriptures. . . . Alesius,
fathers of the Christian church. He was, like struck and embarrassed, was silenced, and felt
most of the young scholastics of his time, fond as i f ' the morning star were rising in his heart.
of disputation ; and i f he listened to those lectures I t was not merely his understanding that was
on the gospels which Major gave to the press convinced, the breath of a new life penetrated
some years after, he probably imbibed from his his soul." 2
He continued from time to time to
teacher that combative attitude towards the new visit the reformer while he lived, and to cherish
1
[In a list of names without a heading, he appears as " Alexr. 1
He himself at a later period ingenuously acknowledges that his
Allane na. Lau.," which shows that of the nations into which the arguments in great part were borrowed from the treatise of an
members of the university were then classified, he belonged to English bishop, namely Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, who at the
Lothian. In the list of determinants he appears as " Allexr. Alan." request of Henry V I I I . had replied to Luther's attack on that
Opposite his name and the names of his class-fellows is the word monarch.
" pauperes," which shows that they paid no fees.] 2
D'Aubigné's Reformation in the Time of Calvin, vi. 59, 60.
his memory after he had been so cruelly put to graphic i f rather coarse account of the revelries
death. of this young man and his gay associates, more
When the opinions and martyrdom of Hamil¬ in keeping w i t h what we should have expected
ton were the subject of conversation among the , from the sons of Tarquin in heathen Rome than
canons, several of the younger of whom were from the élite of the young ecclesiastics of a
attached to him, Alesius refused to condemn h i m . primatial Christian city, and under the eye of
1
H e was not yet by any means, as D r Lorimer an aged archbishop. The representation of
would have i t , a Lutheran ; he was not yet pre¬ Alesius is only the more credible because i t is
pared to separate himself from the old church ; the more restrained, and the one representation
but he saw and mourned over her corruptions, corroborates the other, and proves to what a low
and longed, and i n a quiet way laboured, for the ebb morality had sunk among the ministers of
removal of them, and also yearned for the the old church in Scotland before i t was swept
revival of a more earnest Christian spirit, and ן away. Not only did this bold bad man set at
more correct moral conduct among those over nought the laws of God and the canons of his
whom his influence extended. From that day church, and make a boast of doing so among his
no one could induce h i m to express approval of boon companions, but even when the archbishop
the proceedings which had been taken against sought to separate him from his unlawful con¬
H a m i l t o n , or to pronounce an unfavourable judg¬ nection, the prior collected his armed retainers,
ment on the articles for which he had been con¬ and would have fought w i t h h i m had not the
demned to death. E a r l of Rothes and the Abbot of Arbroath, the
This silence brought h i m under the suspicion primate's hopeful nephew, come between the two
of his more bigoted associates, and gave special ו bands and patched up a sort of truce between
offence to his superior, Prior Patrick Hepburn their leaders.
(the nephew of Prior John, who had founded The Christian lives and healthful influence of
St Leonard's College), a violent, coarse, immoral < the younger canons could not but be felt to be a
young noble, emulous of the debaucheries and standing rebuke by their superior, and doubtless
vices, as well as of the cultured hauteur, of the were one main cause why he bore them so deep
young French ecclesiastics of rank among whom a grudge and gave way to such savage outbursts
his youth had been passed. Knox has given a 1
Laing's Knox, i. 40, 41.
of temper i n his intercourse w i t h them. H e is opportunity soon occurred to him of paying back
said to have denounced them, and especially w i t h interest the insult which he imagined had
Alesius, to the aged primate, and probably w i t h been done to h i m .
the view of entrapping him into some unguarded I t so happened that the whole college of
expression of approval of the new opinions, he canons resolved, for many and grave reasons, to
got h i m appointed to preach the sermon at the lodge a complaint w i t h the king respecting the
opening of a synod of bishops and priests which harshness and cruelty of their superior. When
was held at St Andrews probably in the Lent of this came to Hepburn's ears, he rushed w i t h a
the year 152g. Alesius, while carefully avoiding band of armed attendants into the sacred chapter¬
everything which might give needless offence to house where the canons were assembled, and
his hearers, thought, to use his own words, that when admonished by Alesius, who probably pre¬
in such presence, and speaking in the L a t i n lan¬ sided in the meeting, not in the heat of passion
guage, he would not discharge his duty unless he to be guilty of any foolish prank, he ordered the
earnestly exhorted those set in authority over the speaker to be seized by his armed attendants,
churches to the practice of piety, the observance and drawing his sword would have run it through
of good morals, the study of Christian doctrine, him had not two of the canons forcibly dragged
and the pious teaching and governing of their h i m back and turned aside his weapon. The
churches. He confesses that he earnestly in¬ affrighted and timid canon cast himself at his
veighed against immoral priests, but he adds superior's feet and entreated him to spare his
that as he had said nothing in a disloyal spirit, life, but i n return only received a kick i n the
or more harshly than the facts warranted, and breast which nearly proved fatal to h i m . W h e n
had attacked no one by name, the sermon gave he had partially recovered from this, and was
no offence to good men. B u t his irate and being hurried off to prison, another dastardly
domineering prior imagined that the sermon was attack was made on h i m , but that was parried
specially aimed at h i m , and was intended to hold by the prior's own retainers, who saw that he
him up to the ridicule of the assembled prelates was beside himself w i t h rage and fury. After
and clergy. Having already defied the arch¬ this all the other canons were seized and im¬
bishop, Hepburn could not brook such a liberty prisoned, but on the remonstrance of certain
on the part of one of his own subordinates. A n noble friends they were ordered to be released
by the king, who was then i n St Andrews and further intercourse w i t h their fellow - men. I n
was informed of what had taken place. this or some other equally horrible place the
The king's order was speedily carried out in poor canon was confined for eighteen or twenty
regard to all save Alesius ; but he, notwith¬ days ; and when, after repeated remonstrances
standing all remonstrances of friends, was not on the part of the king and the magistrates of
only detained in custody, but was even thrust the city, the prior was obliged to produce his
into a more filthy dungeon, called by the suf¬ victim, he enjoined h i m strictly on no account
ferer, in one of his treatises, teterrimo specu subtus to utter one word about the shameful maltreat¬
1
terrant inter bufones et serpentes, and in another ment to which he had been subjected. Alesius,
a latrinâ, 2
or sink, to which I know nothing however, had suffered too horribly in this place
at all corresponding in St Andrews save the to let slip the opportunity so unexpectedly pre¬
underground chamber near the college hall, and 3 sented to him of telling the worst to the friendly
the roughly-hewn cavern still subsisting in the magistrates, and entreating them to save h i m
rock to the north of the house at the end of from all further risk of a repetition of this bar¬
Castle Street, going down by the southern en¬ barous cruelty. But the magistrates, though
trance by thirty or more somewhat irregular steps friendly, were easily persuaded that all was now
through the rock, and terminating in a small to go right. As soon, however, as they were
chamber of rounded or oval form, having ah got out of the way under this persuasion, the
opening in its roof originally little more than a prior upbraided the poor canon for having
foot i n diameter, but now considerably enlarged, divulged the whole disgusting truth which he
and to which on the other side a covered pas¬ had enjoined h i m to conceal, and ordered him
sage from the castle leads down. They might to be again placed in confinement, in which he
well abandon hope who entered there, and pos¬ was left to languish for nearly a year. But
sibly one at least of its uses was for literally this confinement was i n a less objectionable
immuring those who were never again to have place, and apparently w i t h i n the precincts of
the priory ; and when the prior was absent the
1
[See it so described in the passage quoted, supra, p. 240 n. ] canons occasionally had the prisoner brought
2
[He calls it a latrinâ in his ' Responsio ad Cochlei Calumnias,' out from his ward, and even permitted him, as
sign. A v. in former times, to take a leading part in the
3
[Now known as Bishop's Hall.]
services at the altar. On one occasion the then follows a parting scene only less affecting
prior, coming back unexpectedly, and seeing than that of St Paul from the disciples on the
what occurred in his absence, ordered Alesius seashore at Tyre, and proving that even yet
at once into confinement, threatening on the ן all good was not extinguished from the hearts
morrow to have h i m off to the old filthy place ; of those under the rule of this vicious prior,
where his life had been so nearly sacrificed J and encouraging the hope, which was after-
before, and where he was to be entrusted to י wards fully realised, that the best of them
the care of a more remorseless jailer. ' would ultimately find a more congenial home
As soon as their superior left them for the in a new and purified church. Only the
night the canons, satisfied that all hope of pre¬ apostle, though in a heathen land, could kneel
serving the life of their comrade in St Andrews down in open day on the seashore to pray w i t h
was at an end, and that i f he did not seek his friends, and they without challenge could
safety by instant flight horrible torments and accompany h i m to the ship which waited to re¬
certain death awaited h i m , gathered round him ceive him ; while these men, though living i n a
and urged him to escape. On his expressing professedly Christian land, had secretly to bring
a wish to consult w i t h other friends before taking out their friend from the place of confinement
1
a step so serious, they pressed h i m only the more and comfort h i m , and then send h i m away alone
urgently to flee and leave the country at once, into the thick darkness to pursue his weary
as he would certainly be pursued, and, i f over¬ journey under cover of night to that broad firth
taken, brought back for condign punishment. which bounds Fifeshire on the north, i f haply
The sequel I give in his own unvarnished state¬ he might find on its shores some boat to ferry
ment, which is to me more touching from its < h i m across, or on its bosom some friendly craft
very simplicity than the highly embellished to convey h i m without loss of time beyond
réchauffées of D'Aubigné : " E t s i maximo dolore the reach of his implacable persecutor. " Clam
afficiebar cum cogitarem mihi è patria, qua ^ igitur educunt me domo, instruunt et viatico.
nihil dulcius est bene institutis naturis, disce- I t a cum lachrymantes inter nos vale dixissemus,
dendum esse, tarnen, et nécessitât!, et tot bon- et illi suavissima commemoratione illustrium
1
orum virorum consiliis parendum d u x i . " And virorum et sanctorum qui similiter è patria
1
Responsio ad Cochlei Calumnias, sign. A vj. tyrannidi cesserunt, maesticiam meam non n i h i l
levassent, media j a m nocte in densissimis tene- fugitive. W h e n they returned without success to
bris solus iter ingredior." 1
Sadly he plodded their master, he is reported to have summoned
on his way through the darkness, oppressed before h i m a certain citizen of Dundee, whom he
w i t h forebodings, for he knew of no hospitable suspected to have aided in providing a ship for
1
retreat in other lands ; he had neither friend the canon. This merchant c i t i z e n took with
nor acquaintance among foreigners ; he could him another true-hearted favourer of the Refor¬
speak no language but his native tongue and mation, James Scrymgeour, provost of the town ;
L a t i n ; and he had some reason to fear that he and on the former denying that he had given
might be classed w i t h those vagabonds who had the assistance which he was accused of doing to
been driven out from various Continental states Alesius, and which probably he could deny w i t h
because of their fanatical opinions, and were a good conscience, his sons in St Andrews and
justly suspected even by Protestants in Ger¬ Dundee having been too prudent to involve h i m
many. But in the multitude of distracting in their little plot, the provost spoke out boldly
thoughts within h i m he encouraged himself in to the haughty prior, and said : W h y make a
the L o r d his God and in Christ his Saviour. work about this? I , myself, i f I had known that
Ere morning had well dawned his journey was Alexander was preparing to go away, would w i t h
completed, and he got safely on shipboard, the greatest pleasure have furnished him both
where, according to his own account, quidcvm w i t h a ship and w i t h provisions for his voyage,
homo germanus —that 2
is, according to some, a that he might be put i n safety beyond the reach
certain man a German ; according to others, a of your cruelty. Assuredly, had he been my
certain man a kinsman—received h i m very affec¬ brother I would long ago have rescued him from
tionately, and afterwards nursed h i m w i t h great 1
No doubt James Wedderburn, merchant at the West Kirk Style
kindness during the sea-sickness from which he of Dundee, who carried on a large trade with the Continent, and
suffered throughout the stormy vogage. was known to be friendly to those holding the reformed opinions.
One of his sons was then studying at St Andrews, and probably had
On the day following his escape, when the
been the means of communication between the canons and Dundee
vessel which sheltered him had already sailed, to secure beforehand a speedy departure for their fugitive friend.
there came horsemen to the shore, sent by the [For many interesting details concerning the sons of this Dundee
merchant, see Dr Mitchell's Wedderburns and their Work, 1867 ;
prior from St Andrews, to make search for the and also his edition of The Gude and Godlie Ballatis, 1897, pp.
1
Responsio ad Cochlei Calumnias, sign, A vj. 2
Ibid. xvii-xxxii, lxxxiii-civ.]
those perils and miseries in which you have towards his persecutors than another, or more
involved h i m . ready to yield to them in things indifferent or of
Thus Alexander Alesius was driven from his minor importance, i f only he could gain their
much-loved native land, destined never to return hearts for Christ and His cause in matters of
to i t more, or again to see the friends and rela¬ highest moment, i t was he.
tions to whom he was so warmly attached. " Could The ship in which Alesius sailed was bound
any one then have whispered i n the ear of the for France, probably for Dieppe or Rouen, w i t h
disconsolate exile that he was on the road to far which towns the trade of Scotland was carried
more extensive usefulness" and freedom; that he on, and where many Scottish merchants resided
would gain many friends in foreign lands, and or had factors ; but she had not gone far on her
would not only be spared to labour there for more way from port when a violent westerly gale carried
than thirty years, but would also be honoured to her across the German Ocean, drove her into the
be the first to plead by his writings for the free Sound, and made i t necessary to get her into the
circulation of the Scriptures in his native Scot¬ harbour at Malmö in Scania, in order to refit
land, and one of the first to help on Cranmer in her. There, as well as at the French ports
England, and Hermann von W i e d , the reforming named, there was a community of Scottish mer¬
Archbishop of Cologne, in Germany ; that he chants, probably by this time enjoying the minis¬
would be privileged to attend, as one of the Pro¬ trations of John Gaw or Gall, another St Andrews
testant representatives, many of the most import¬ alumnus,, early won over to the cause of the Refor¬
ant colloquies of the leaders of the old and the mation. The community of Malmö, a year or
new church on the Continent, to be the intimate two before, had given its adhesion to the same
friend of Luther and Melanchthon, to labour as a cause, and its leading ministers, as well as the
professor of theology in two German universities, Scottish chaplain, were, therefore, prepared to
and to live and die in the greatest honour and re¬ welcome and treat w i t h all kindness their exiled
spect among those w i t h whom he laboured,—"how co-religionist, as he himself, twenty-five years
1
incredible would i t all have seemed to h i m ! " Yet after, feelingly narrates. After being refitted
it was thus God meant i t , and thus He brought i t
1
to pass ; and i f there was one among the Scottish [In his Introduction (pp. xviii-xx) to Gau's ' Rieht Vay to the
Kingdom of Heuine,' Dr Mitchell says : " The treatise ' De
exiles of those times who was less embittered Apostolicis Traditionibus,' in which he [i.e., Alesius] has given an
at Malmö, the vessel proceeded on her voyage certain man of the highest learning and authority,
to France, where Alesius left, and plodding his and perceived how deeply he was grieved by the
way along the northern coast, visited Belgium, disturbed state of the church in Germany. I
where he would meet w i t h friendly Scots at began to exhort h i m to interpose his judgment in
Bruges, and probably also at Antwerp. certain matters of dispute, because I hoped that
H e then passed up the Rhine to Cologne, milder views might gain the ascendancy i f princes
where, as already suggested, he was favourably and people only had such monitors excelling in
received by the Archbishop, Hermann von W i e d , learning and authority. W h e n I had argued long
who afterwards became a friend of the Refor¬ in support of my opinion, heaving a sigh, but mak¬
mation, though at this time, like Alesius him¬ ing no formal reply to my arguments, he bade me
self, not yet decided altogether to break w i t h listen to an apologue : W h e n the lion, worn out
the old church. I t is no doubt to this visit he w i t h old age, could no longer obtain his prey by
refers in the following passage of the treatise ] hunting, he fell on the device of inviting the
from which I have repeatedly quoted: " W h e n beasts to visit h i m in his den. There came to h i m
lately at Cologne I conversed familiarly w i t h a a bear, a wolf, and a fox. The bear entered first,
and being affably received by the lion, and con¬
account of his visit, and of the manner in which he was received by
his countrymen and the reforming preachers of Malmö, is one of
ducted round the den, he was asked how he was
the rarest of his minor treatises, and is not to be found in any of pleased w i t h the^amenity of the place. Being no
our Scottish libraries, nor in the British Museum, nor even in the courtier, the bear answered bluntly that he could
library of the University of Leipsic, in which he was so long an
honoured professor. . . . Neither the name of Gau nor that of never stay i n such a filthy hole, among heaps of
any other of his countrymen then in the city is given by Alesius. decaying carcasses. The lion, enraged, chid the
Principal Lorimer has ingeniously conjectured that Gau bear for finding fault w i t h the amenity of the
may have come out to act as chaplain to his countrymen at Malmö.
And I am inclined to accept the conjecture to a modified extent. royal den, and tearing h i m up^cast away his
. . . At any rate, we find that before the close of 15 33 he was in carcass among the others. The wolf, who had
Denmark, and had got such an accurate knowledge of the Danish
! been standing by, seeing in what danger he was,
language that he had translated and published a treatise of consider¬
able length from Danish into his native Scotch." In the Appendix thought by artifice to soothe the haughty mind
to the same Introduction (p. xlv) Dr Mitchell explains that " modern of the lion. H e accordingly approached, was led
Danish scholars express doubts whether, in the early part of the 16th
century, any nation, save the German as represented by the Hans- round the den, and was asked whether the smell
eatic League, was organised as a distinct community at Malmö."] of the heap of carcasses was unpleasant to h i m .
The wolf replied, i n a carefully considered speech, on from Cologne to Wittenberg, and there for a
that he had never seen anything more pleasant. time to have resumed the study of theology, as
This artifice, however, was of no avail to the wolf. well as of Greek and Hebrew, under Melanchthon
The lion meted out the same treatment to him as and the other gifted teachers in that university.
to the bear, tearing h i m up for his impudent Luther he does not seem to have met for a time,
flattery. The fox, who had witnessed all this, or to have been acquainted w i t h his writings when
1
and how both the simplicity of the bear and the he published his first treatises. Melanchthon
flattery of the wolf had given equal offence to the cherished a special affection for Alesius and the
lion, was in great perplexity what to answer when Scottish exiles who soon after followed h i m to
it came to his turn. He went forward, however, Wittenberg, believing that they were the descend¬
and being interrogated as the others had been ants of those Scoti who had sent the early Chris¬
whether the smell of the den was disagreeable, he tian missionaries to Germany, and that it became
replied modestly that he could not express any him to repay to them the great kindness the
opinion on the point, as he was labouring under heathen Germans had received from their fore¬
2
a cold in the head." Alesius waited to hear from fathers in the distant past.
his host the moral or application of the apologue, I t was while he was thus occupied that Alesius
but this was not given by h i m . He preferred to heard of the cruel edict of the Scottish bishops,
leave i t to his own good sense, merely counselling and i t hardly admits of doubt that he submitted
him to be cautious of engaging in such discus¬ to Melanchthon, and got corrected by him, his
sions for the present. Ultimately, however, both little treatise against their decree, forbidding the
came to see that there is a time to speak as well New Testament Scriptures to be used by the laity
as a time to keep silence ; and i t is interesting to 1
[This sentence is interlined, and the word which seems to be
note that to the last both observed similar first is rather indistinct.]
2
moderation in their statements of doctrine, both In the preceding narrative I have availed myself of the details
which Alesius has given us of his labours and sufferings in his com¬
evinced the same desire, by conciliation to gain
mentaries and lesser treatises, and especially in two of the smallest
opponents, rather than to provoke them, notwith¬ of them, both published in 1533, the one bearing the title—"Alex-
standing all the hard usage they both met w i t h andri Alesii Epistola contra decretum quoddam Episcoporü in
Scotia, quod prohibet legere Noui Testamenti libros lingua ver-
from their secular and ecclesiastical superiors. nacula" ; the other " Alexandri Alesii Scotti Responsio ad Cochlei
Soon after this Alesius appears to have passed Calvmnias. "
to demand the right to do publicly what many choly that he—who had done so much to promote
had learned to do secretly—to study the W o r d the freer circulation and profounder study of the
of God, and especially the New Testament, in Greek original of the New Testament, and had
their native tongue. This right was authorised even ventured, under the patronage of Pope
by an Act of the Scottish Parliament passed i n Leo X . , to bring out a L a t i n version of the
1 1
5 4 3 » when Cardinal Betoun was i n disgrace, New Testament more true to the original than
and the Archbishop of Glasgow was left alone the Vulgate version, that those who knew only
to protest against i t . This Act was the first real L a t i n might understand more fully the meaning
victory of the reformed party in Scotland, and of the original—in his old age, when irritated by
it was mainly due to the able and temperate the course of events, and by his controversies
pleading of Alesius that this great boon, or indeed with Luther, consented to recommend this scur¬
I may say this indefeasible right of Christian lay¬ rilous pamphleteer to his friends in Scotland.
men, was granted. The same subject had been His own letter is not now extant, or, i f extant,
reverted to by him i n his more elaborate treatise, is not at present accessible ; but the answer sent
De authoritate Verbi Dei, which was published in to h i m by the Scottish king has been preserved,
1542 in L a t i n , and some time after was translated like his letter to Cochlaeus, among the MSS. in
2
into English. the British Museum. I t is sufficient to prove
One other episode in this controversy remains the fact that Erasmus did intervene, and com¬
still to be adverted to. This is the intervention mend to his Scottish friends a writer who repre¬
of the great humanist, Erasmus, — an incident sents Luther's translation of the New Testament,
in his history on which his biographers w i t h which more than any other book has made Ger¬
one consent have observed a judicious silence. many what i t is, as the " pabulum mortis, fomes
Nevertheless, the fact is as undoubted as melan- peccati, velamen malitiae, praetextus falsae liber-
1
[15th March 1542-43 (Acts of Parliament, ii. 415).] tatis, inobedientiae praesidium, disciplinae cor-
2
[The title is: "De Avthoritate Verbi Dei Liber Alexandri ruptio, morum depravatio, concordiae dissipatio
Alesij, contra Episcopum Lundensem. An. M . D . X L I I . " The preface
. . . vitiorum scaturigo . . . rebellionis in-
is dated: " Francfordiae ad Oderam. Calend. Maijs. an. Domini
M.D.XL." The colophon is : " Argentorati apvd Cratonem Mylivm cendium . . . charitatis peremptio . . . veri-
an. M . D . X L I I . mense Septembri." The translation, which is in tatis perduellio."
black-letter, bears no date, place, or printers name. For a copy
of its title, see infra, p. 268 n.] In 1535 Alesius, having received encourage-
ment from the agents of the English king then ously accepted the challenge ; but when the day
negotiating an alliance With the Protestant appointed for the discussion arrived, his opponent
princes of Germany, came over to England w i t h did not venture to meet h i m in open fight. He
1
a letter of recommendation from Melanchthon. preferred to plot against h i m i n secret, and to
H e was favourably received by Archbishop foment t u m u l t among the scholars, t i l l Alesius,
Cranmer, by Crumwell the Vicar-General, and finding that his life was i n danger, and that he
by the king himself, who appointed him king's could not count on the protection of the uni¬
scholar, and instructed Crumwell, as Chancellor versity authorities, deemed i t his duty to leave
of the University of Cambridge, to give h i m a Cambridge and return to L o n d o n . 1
place as a reader in divinity there. H e accord¬ For the next three years he remained there,
ingly went into residence in Queen's College, supporting himself chiefly by the practice of
the same college which shortly before had been medicine, which he studied under a London
the home of Erasmus while lecturing in the physician of note. He occasionally, however,
university on Greek, and towards the end of gave assistance to his reforming friends in the
the year he began a course of lectures on the varying fortunes of these unquiet times. He
Hebrew Psalter. He is supposed to have been did so notably i n a convocation or a meeting of
the first who delivered lectures in Cambridge on the superior clergy i n 1536 or 1537, being put 2
though he suffered somewhat severely during the hearing the news of the favourable change which
Schmalkaldic war and the seige of Leipsic. I t had taken place i n Scotland on the death of
was there that most of his theological treatises James V . and the accession of Arran to the
were elaborated and published. He was twice regency, he, like many other Scottish exiles, had
at least chosen Rector of the university—viz., in serious thoughts of returning home, and availing
1555 and in 1561. 1
I n 1542, as already stated, himself to the uttermost of this unexpected oppor¬
he published in L a t i n the arguments he had tunity which seemed to be opening for carrying
used in his disputation w i t h Stokesley, Bishop forward the work of the Reformation in the land
of London, on the authority of the W o r d of God, which was still dear to h i m . But before he had
and against the doctrine of the seven sacraments, fully made up his mind to follow this course,
both confirming his former arguments as to the he fortunately heard that the fickle regent had
rights of the Christian laity, and maintaining the already begun to change his policy, and that
supremacy of Scripture over tradition. He had though the privilege of freely reading the Scrip¬
previously published his inaugural dissertation in tures in the vernacular, for which he had so
the University of Frankfort, ' De restituendis earnestly contended, was legally secured, the
scholis,' in which he advocated at length the triumph of the Reformation was by no means
great need for university training for the ministers so near at hand as at first he had been led to
of the protestant churches, and gave a detailed suppose. Shortly after this, roused by the tid¬
account of his own opinions, which he affirmed ings of fresh persecutions which had reached h i m
were then in full accord w i t h those of the from Scotland, and especially by the account
Lutheran churches. I n 1543, probably before he of the cruel executions of the humble martyrs
was fully settled at Leipsic, i t is said that on of Perth by the cardinal and his party on St
Paul's day, 1543-44, Alesius on 23rd April wrote
1
On the former of which occasions he inscribed the following
paragraph in the matriculation book of the university: "Anno
to Melanchthon i n the following terms :—
M D L V , die 23 Aprilis, qui Divo Georgio sacer est, et quo existimo " Three days ago there were here several
me natum esse, supputatis retro L V annis, ego Alexander Alesius,
gente Scotus, Patriâ Edinburgensis, atavis consulibus, qui duobus
countrymen of mine, who declare that the
regibus, Jacobo Quinto, et Henrico Octavo, et quatuor electoribus, cardinal rules all things at his pleasure in
Johann! Friderico, Mauricio et Augusto, Ducibus Saxoniae, et Scotland, and governs the governor himself.
Joachimo Electori Brandeburgensi inservivi, invitus suscepi offi-
cium rectoris universitatis scholae in inclytâ urbe Lipsiâ." I n the town of St Johnston he hung up four
great freedom and faithfulness. Unless the persecuted as much as i f they had been them¬
church of Christ be reformed i t must perish selves the cause of a l l . " W i t h equal vigour he
from the earth, and those are its worst repels the cry of innovation raised against the
enemies, not its real friends, who oppose reformers and their teaching. Their work was
such indispensable r e f o r m . " 1
" Everywhere/' rather an honest attempt at restoration. W h a t
he says, " we see the church driven forward they sought, he said, " was just such a change
to such reform. Ask even those who are most as would take place i n the manners of an age
solicitous for its welfare, and they w i l l tell you if the gravity, modesty, and frugality of ancient
that the church can no longer be safe or free times were to take the place of levity, lewdness,
from troubles unless i t be strengthened by the luxury, and other vices. Such a change might
removal of abuses. I f this, then, is a measure be termed the introduction of what was novel,
of absolute necessity unless we would see the but in fact i t was only the reintroduction of
whole church go to ruin ; i f all men confess what was old and primitive. L e t us," he ex¬
that this should be done, i f facts themselves claims, " have innovation everywhere i f only we
call w i t h a loud voice that some care should can get the true for the false, seriousness for
be taken to relieve the labouring [bark of the] levity, and solid realities for empty dreams."
church, to purify her depraved doctrine, and " I t is no new doctrine we bring, but the most
to reform her whole administration, — why, I ancient, nay rather the eternal truth, for i t
demand, are those maligned and vilified who proclaims that Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
discover and point out the church's faults and came into the world to save sinners, and that
failings ? The proper remedies could not pos¬ we are saved by faith in H i m . O f H i m even
sibly have been applied t i l l the disease was Moses wrote, and to H i m give all the prophets
known ; and yet the men who point i t out, witness, that whosoever believeth i n H i m shall
warn of its virulence and danger, and wish to receive remission of sins. This is the old doc¬
alleviate or entirely remove i t , are hated and trine which runs through all the ages. Those
1
which are really new are the doctrines which
Lorimer's Scottish Reformation, i860, pp. 115, 116. [The
quotations from the Cohortatio which follow agree substantially have obscured or contaminated i t , brought in
with those given by Dr Lorimcr, but many of the variations in by those entrusted w i t h the care of the vine¬
the phraseology show that Dr Mitchell had the original as well
yard of the L o r d , and who, like the keepers
as Lorimer's translation before him when he wrote.]
of the vineyard in the Gospel parable, have His life, especially after the close of the Schmal-
maltreated and slain many of the Lord's kaldic war, seems to have passed tranquilly and
messengers." happily at the great Lutheran University of Leip-
This was the last service, so far as we know, sic. He was loved and honoured by his col¬
which Alesius was able to render to the cause leagues and by his prince, and, as I have already
of the Reformation in his native land, and i t did hinted, he was the bosom friend and unremitting
not fail in due time to produce abundant and correspondent of Melanchthon. As his services
lasting fruit. As Major before h i m , so Knox after had been called into requisition by the Preceptor
him, strenuously contended for union of Scots¬ Germanias at the colloquies of W o r m s and Re¬
men among themselves ; and after that, but only gensburg, so were they sought and got at the
after that, for a league w i t h England rather ^ colloquy of Saxon theologians for the preparation
than w i t h France. They laboured, and others of the Leipsic Interim in 1548, at that of Naum¬
entered into their labours, and, proceeding on the burg in 1554, at that of Nuremberg in 1555, and
same lines on which they had worked, at last that of Dresden in 1561. " I n all these"—the
brought the conflict to a triumphant issue. Tid¬ Leipsic professor, who on the occasion of the first
ings of their success filled Alesius w i t h j o y i n the centenary of his second rectorship pronounced
land of his exile. Even these, however, failed in an oration on h i m , affirms that—" he so conducted
his old age to tempt h i m back to the home of his himself that no one could charge him with want
youth, or the scene of those early struggles which of perseverance i n building up the truth, or of
were so deeply engraven on his memory and judiciousness i n examining the errors of others,
heart. And, so far as we know, he received no or of faithfulness and dexterity i n the counsels he
call to return from those who were then at the gave." M'Kenzie, who has inserted a sketch of
head of affairs in Scotland, though unquestionably his career in his ' Lives of Eminent Scotsmen,'
he was more deeply read in theology than any assures us that i n the conference of Naumburg
one of them, and though, as unquestionably, the he acquitted himself to the admiration of the
faculty of divinity was for several years but whole assembly, for which he is highly com¬
poorly supplied i n the universities of Scotland, mended by Camerarius i n his ' Life of Melanch-
and preachers of ability, culture, and learning t h o n ' ; and further, that i n the year 1555 the
were very rare in the land. disciples of Andrew Oslander having raised great
dissensions in the city of Nuremberg respecting letter of Alesius to Melanchthon, recently un¬
the doctrine of justification, Melanchthon made earthed, and inviting h i m and other friends in
1
choice of Alesius as the fittest person to appease Wittenberg to the wedding.
them by his wisdom and learning, and that his Alesius himself died on the 17th March 1565,
management answered Melanchthon's expecta¬ and was buried at Leipsic ; but no stone was
tions, though Alesius himself had previously taken raised, or, i f raised, now remains, to tell where
a side in the controversy. I n the Majoristic con¬ his ashes repose. I n all probability it was in
troversy, Alesius, like Melanchthon, so far sided his son's grave, in the church of St Paul,
w i t h Major as to maintain against the extreme in the city of Leipsic, that his ashes were laid
Lutherans the necessity of good works, not to to rest. The only monuments to his memory
justification, but to final salvation; and in 1560 reared at the time and still existing are those
he seems to have discussed this question i n one furnished by our own John Johnston — second
of his so-called dispntationes. master of St Mary's College, and colleague of
W i t h respect to his private life, we are told by Andrew Melville — in his L a t i n poems on the
Thomasius that he had by his English wife one Scottish martyrs and confessors, and entitled
son, whose name was Caspar, and who died while Îlept Χτβφανων, and by Beza in his ' Icones.'
still a youth, and had a monument erected by his Johnston, joining together Macchabaeus and A l -
father to his memory, bearing the simple inscrip¬ esius, says :—
tion, "Caspari. Filiolo. Alexander. Alesius. Doc¬ " Sors eadem exilii nobis, vitaeque laborumque,
tor. Lugens. Posuit." He had at least two E x quo nos Christi conciliavit amor.
Una salus amborum, unum et commune periclum ;
daughters. One named Christina, Thomasius tells
Pertulimus pariter praestite cuncta Deo.
us, was married to a German bearing the classical Dania te coluit Me Lipsia culta docentem.
name Marcus Scipio : she outlived her husband, Audiit, et sacros hausit ab ore sonus." 2
when rejected by both Scotland and England, and death ought to be in Edinburgh or St
was most eagerly embraced by the evangelical Andrews. " There, in reference to the cause he
church of Saxony, and continued to be warmly advocated, no inappropriate emblem " would be
cherished and esteemed by her to the day of his י " a father and his child reading the same
death." The man who was held in such high sacred volume ; and, for a motto, in remembrance
esteem by the reforming Archbishops of Cologne of his position at the moment, perhaps his own
and Canterbury; who was the bosom friend of memorable quotation of the Athenian, ' Strike,
1
Melanchthon ; who was highly thought of by but hear me.' "
Luther, and warmly eulogised by Beza and 1
I Anderson's Annals of the English Bible, 1845, ii. 485. For a
Johnston, was certainly not one whose memory j list of the published writings of Alesius see Appendix I .
his countrymen should willingly let die. He was
unquestionably the most cultured, probably also
the most liberal and conciliatory, of the Scottish
theologians of the sixteenth century. He was
the first to plead publicly before the authorities
of the nation for the right of every household
and every individual to have access to the W o r d
of God in the vernacular tongue, and to impress
on parents the sacred duty of sedulously inculcat¬
ing its teaching on their children, and therefore,
as Christopher Anderson has said, " t h e man who
struck the first note in giving a tone to that I
I
character," for which his native country has since
been known, and often since commended, as Bible-
loving Scotland. H a d his countrymen not so
long lost sight of him, perhaps some stone of
remembrance might have been found to his
memory in Germany ; but surely, though he was
so long an exile, the chief memorial of his birth
school for the faculty of arts the strip of land and buildings teinds of the church of Tannadice, in Forfarshire, and of the
thereon immediately to the west of St John's College—the wealthier church of Tyninghame, in East Lothian, to the old
frontage now covered by the western portion of the Library, foundation, and erecting it into a privileged college under the
the porch of St Mary's College, and the Principal's house. title of the Blessed Mary of the Assumption. In this college,
After the erection and endowment of St Salvator's College י medicine, law, and theology, as well as arts, were henceforth
by Bishop Kennedy, and of St Leonard's College by Prior to be taught, and the privilege was granted to it of conferring
Hepburn, the attendance on the Pädagogium, which was but degrees in all lawful faculties, and of conferring them on
slenderly endowed, seems to have fallen off, and the number those who had gained their knowledge elsewhere as well as
of its regents to have been curtailed. Archbishop Alexander ^ on those who had studied within the college—in fact, making
Stewart, the favourite pupil of Erasmus, and one of the most it almost a university within the University, and conceding
accomplished of our long line of chancellors, was the first to it more extensive powers than were conceded to many
who formed the purpose of enlarging and endowing Bishop universities. His first work was to replace the decaying
Wardlaw's foundation, but his life was prematurely brought buildings of the Pœdagogium by others more massive and
to a close on the fatal field of Flodden. His successor, commodious. That work was far from finished at the time
Andrew Forman, appears to have taken no interest in the of his death, and having been intermitted by his successor
work on which Stewart had set his heart. But James [the cardinal], was only completed by Archbishop Hamilton,
Betoun, who came next in succession, acted a nobler part. I who, with papal sanction, reconstituted the college and added
He brought with him from Glasgow John Major—the one to its endowments.
great schoolman of whom Scotland in the sixteenth century Early, however, in 1538, the first staff of teachers entered
u
could boast, who had upheld the reputation of his country in on their work as a college organised and equipped tit
the University of Paris as an able and successful teacher of ' militans Dei ecclesia indies abundet viris litterarum scientiâ
the philosophy and theology of the day. Major and Patrick j prœditis" and few institutions through a long and eventful
Hamilton—the one the representative of the old, the other of history have more illustriously fulfilled this object, though in
the new learning—were incorporated into the University of another sense than its founders meant, and handed on the
St Andrews on the same day (9th June 1523); and, for at torch of sacred learning from generation to generation.
least two years, the former presided over the Pœdagogium, Bannerman, who succeeded Major, had the honour of
and probably lectured both on philosophy and theology. In reorganising the old institution and starting it on its new
1525-26 he returned to Paris, partly that he might publish ! career. Archibald Hay, who came next, was the child of
there his commentaries on the Gospels, and partly that he • the Renaissance, and more in earnest about religion than
might act again as a teacher in that wider sphere ; but a few many of that school ; and, had his life been spared, and the
years later, on a vacancy occurring in the principality of St cardinal given heed to his counsels, the old Church might
Salvator's College, he returned to St Andrews, and continued \ have been able to make a better fight for privilege or for life
in that more lucrative charge till his death. in the struggle which ensued. John Douglas, his successor,
It was mainly in his last years, however, that James Betoun bridged the passage from the old to the new without any
set himself in right earnest to complete the work which violent break, probably taking part with Wynram in the
Archbishop Stewart had begun. At his solicitation Pope composition of Archbishop Hamilton's Catechism, as he did
Paul I I I . , on 12th February 1537, issued a bull annexing the afterwards in the preparation of the Reformed Confession of
instruere non erubescit, indeque simplices et illiteratos Ν proxime futuris, h o r â d e c i m â antemeridiana vel eo circa,
hujus regni Christi fidèles qui i n se et progenitoribus per ad respondendum nobis ex officio de et super suis per-
tanta temporis curricula, spatio viz. mille et trecentorum tinaciter dictis, affirmatis, predicatis, divulgatis, tentis et
annorum et ultra i n ecclesiâ Dei constantissime militaverunt, disputatis contra nostram orthodoxam fidem et sanctam
a vera nostra o r t h o d o x â fide et catholica ecclesia seducere, ecclesiam catholicam ; et propterea ad videndum et
et quantum i n eo est pervertere nititur et proponit, dicendo audiendum ipsum hereticum declarari, et p e n â c o n d i g n â
predicando et temerario ausu inter alia palam et publice a canonibus propterea lata et i m p e r a t â puniendum fore et
affirmando :— puniri debere ; superque a d h e r e n t i â et favoribus prestitis
Legibus, canonibus, patrum sanctionibus et decretis, peregrinis opinionibus et pravitatibus dicti M a r t i n i Lutheri,
humanis quoque constitutionibus non esse obtemperandum ; heretic! ab ecclesiâ damnati, et suorum sequacium ; ac aliis
Claves et censuras ecclesie contempnendas, nec sacramentis interrogandis similiter reddendis, et tanquam heretice pra-
ejusdem fidendum, Templa non esse frequentanda, nec vitatis fautorem et male de fide sentientem accusandum fore
ymagines adorandas, pro defunctorutn animabus non esse et accusari ac condempnari debere. Testimonia quoque et
exorandum ; nec d é c i m a s Deo et ecclesie solvendas ; pro probationes, si necesse fuerit, desuper recipi, j u r a r i , et
admitti ; ac in premissis omnibus et singulis summarie et
bonis operibus nullum fore salutis premium nec pro malis
de piano sine strepitu et figura judicii prout juris fuerit
cruciatum ; Nostras progenitores i n ecclesia Dei et ejusdem
procedendum fore et procedi debere ; V e l ad allegandum
sacramentis fidentes i n m a l â et iniquâ fide esse mortuos et
causam rationabilem quare premissa fieri non deberent ;
in inferno sepultos :—
Cum intimatione débita, ut moris est, intimamus eidem
Aliaque dictu et recitatu saltern inter Christianos et
quod sive dictis die et loco comparere curaverit sive non
fidèles horrenda et nephanda p r é d i c a t docet et affirmât in
comparuerit Nos nihilominus i n premissis omnibus et
Dei viventis claviumque ecclesie ac nostre fidei orthodoxe
singulis procedere volumus et intendimus justitiâ mediante ;
contemptum, regni et reipublice ejusdem damnum scan¬
Imprimis absentia seu c o n t u m a c i â i n aliquo non obstante ;
dalum et, digna D e i ultione, si premissis favere incipiat,
et ne periculum sit in mora, et ut interim hujus hereses i n
sperandam ruinam, animabusque perpetrantium gravissi-
hoc regno hucusque ab omni tali labe et hereticâ peste per
mum periculum nisi remedio succurratur oportuno : I n
tanta temporis spatia sano, et post Christi Salvatoris sus-
quibus omnibus et singulis idem Magister P. communi
•ceptam fidem inviolabiliter preservato, non oriantur nec per
voce et famâ ex publica et notoria ejusdem predicatione
Christi fidèles audiantur, vobis omnibus et singulis supra-
orta de heresi suspectus reputatur, habetur et divulgatur.
•dictis, modo et forma premissis precipimus et mandamus,
Consilio igitur desuper recepto ipsum citandum et de pre-
quatenus auctoritate nostra inhibentes omnibus et singulis
missis experiendum decrevimus : Quare vobis et vestrum Christi fidelibus cujuscunque dignitatis, status, gradus,
cuilibet nos precipimus et mandamus, quatenus citetis ordinis aut conditionis existant, ne dicto Magistro P. sie
legitime dictum Magistrum P. H . primo, secundo, tertio et ut premittitur, de heresi suspecto, favorem, assistentiam,
peremptorie etc. quod compareat personaliter coram [nobis] societatem, colloquium seu gratam audientiam praebeant ;
nostrisque consulibus Dnis Episcopis, Abbatibus, Prioribus, nec i n suis temerariis et insolentibus predicationibus dis-
sacrarum literarum Professoribus, et Religiosis, aliisque putationibus seu conventiclis publice vel occulte quovis
nobis pro tempore assistentibus, i n ecclesiâ nostra Metro- <quesito colore ypl ingenip conveniant seu presentiam exhi-
u
Gebrauch e i n g e r ä u m t war, welche nun auch zum Behuf so far as I know, disclosed what are his own opinions about
der E n g e l l ä n d e r i n Vorschlag gebracht, und am 14 Julii Christian doctrine ; and therefore his empty and scurrilous
ihnen wirklich angewiesen wurde. D o c h machte der Rath treatises miss their mark, and are justly held in derision by
gewisse Ordnungen, und suchte die Sache also einzurichten, learned men. . . . But I , renowned monarch, that you may
das allerlei Disputen, die etwa entstehen m ö g t e n , der W e g know that my alliance is w i t h the Church of Christ and not
verlaget wurde. Die vornehmsten waren diese : (a) dass with any other factions, do not refuse before you and other
die E n g e l l ä n d e r u n d Franzosen einerley Lehre und Cere- good men to give a simple and clear account of my faith as
I formerly wrote to you, for I believe the prophetical and
monien führen sollten ; Daher sollten jene (b) der Franzosen
apostolical Scriptures, and embrace the consensus of the
G l a u b e n s b e k ä n t n i s s , das diese N . B . dem R a t h überreichet
holy fathers whom the Church approves. I also reverence
hatten, unterschreiben, (c) Liessen sich die E n g e l l ä n d e r
the ecclesiastical authority, being one who, especially i n
gefallen, dass das V o l k bey dem gemeinen Gebet das
doubtful matters, w i l l obey and follow its decisions. Does
Amen nicht mehr laut sagen sollte, wie sonst i n der Kirche
Cochlaeus ask anything further? I myself will add, I
von Engelland üblich ist. (d) Dass die Prediger das weisse
approve of nothing seditious. W i t h my whole heart and
Chorhemde, nebst vielen andern in Engelland eingeführten
soul I abhor the ravings of the Anabaptists. N o new
Ceremonien abschaffen sollten, als welche den Einwohnern,
doctrine, unsupported by the testimony of the ancient
die solcher Dinge ungewohnt wären, einstossig seyn k ö n n t e n .
Church, is acceptable to me. Further still, as I do not
U n d was der gleichen U m s t ä n d e mehr waren, welche die
undertake the defence of Luther, so, on the other hand,
E n g e l l ä n d e r , um desto eher zum Stande zu kommen, frei¬
I do not approve of all the dreams of the monks which
w i l l i g eingiengen."—J. H i l d e b r a n d Withof, ' Vertheidigung
have been received, not only contrary to the decision of the
der. . . . Nachricht wie es m i t V. Pollane erstem Reform-
Scripture, but also to the authority of the ancient church.
irten Prediger zu Frankfurt-am-Mayn . . . zugegangen,'
Moreover, I cannot approve of the cruelty which is every¬
1753, folio.
where being practised against those who, following the
judgment of Scripture and of the fathers, reject or censure
any manifest abuse or error that in the course of time may
have crept into the Church. Such is my faith, Ο Cochlaeus,
use it i f you are pleased with it ; i f not, show me a better.
I f the unjust punishments inflicted on the truly pious afford j into one body. N o r do I doubt that good men on both
you pleasure, you are not only a miserable, but a con¬ I sides are so disposed that they would not only willingly
temptible wretch. I neither can nor w i l l ever knowingly ! proffer their opinions, but also yield their individual con¬
burden or pollute my conscience by approving of these . viciions i f they should hear more weighty reasons from the
parricides. I saw i n my own country the punishment of t other side. For i t is tyrannical, and specially unbecoming
one, born in a most honourable station, and innocent of in a theologian, to do that which the son reproves in the
any serious crime, Patrick [ H a m i l t o n ] . I saw burned at tyrant, his father, i n the tragedy. . H e wishes, the son says,
Cologne two men of pious and orthodox sentiments, and to speak but to hear nothing i n reply. A t present the good
most averse to the fanatical opinions of the Anabaptists. men who are most desirous to provide some remedy for
Nor can I express i n words how deeply I was grieved by ׳j public evils keep silence, and secretly bewail the fate of the
these mournful spectacles. A n d I did not grieve only over Church, not only alarmed by fear of those i n power, but
the fate of those who were punished, i n whom because, as י crushed by a sort of despair in this so great madness of
the poet says, ' grace shone through their very anguish,' slanderers, who have become so domineering that they
their singular bravery and constancy brought some allevia¬ would suffer no one but themselves to gain a hearing."
tion to my grief ; but much more d i d I grieve over the fate
of the Church, which is disordered in many ways, and
likely yet to be more so, by the practice of such cruelty.
Finally, there is no doubt that the State will, in God's
appointed time, have to suffer heaviest punishment for
its guilt in permitting such parricides ; yet I do not im¬ [APPENDIX F ( p . 267).
pugn the laws as to the punishment of heretics, i f only ).
there is due cognition of each case, and care is taken THE D R E A M OR V I S I O N OF ALESIUS CONCERNING
that those who are really innocent of perverting the true I T H E D E C A P I T A T I O N OF A N N E BOLEYN.
Christian faith may not be punished."
Then follows a paragraph of great importance in itself, I T A K E to witness Christ, who shall judge the quick and the
and of almost as much from the light it casts on its author's dead, that I am about to speak the truth. On the day upon
state of mind, and, perhaps, also on Melanchthon's, at that which the Queen was beheaded, at sunrise between two and
particular time :— ! three o'clock, there was revealed to me (whether I was
" I myself also desire moderation i n certain things on the asleep or awake I know not) the Queen's neck after her I
part of the Lutherans, and reasonableness. T o this they head had been cut off, and this so plainly that I could count \
may be recalled i f the matters in dispute are duly examined the nerves, the veins, and the arteries. \
into. I t is the duty of the bishops to do their utmost that ! Terrified by this dream, or vision, I immediately arose,
learned men of either side should lovingly confer together ! and, crossing the river Thames, I came to Lambeth (this is
on Christian doctrine, that some one certain form of doctrine, the name of the Archbishop of Canterbury's palace), and I
founded only upon the W o r d of God and the teaching of entered the garden i n which he was walking.
the primitive fathers, should be framed ; and i f this were , W h e n the archbishop saw me, he inquired why I had
done, the Church might easily be brought to coalesce again come so early, for the clock had not yet struck four. I
[APPENDIX G (p. 269). W h e n I heard what the bishop had to say, I immediately
caused my property to be sold, and I concealed myself in
THE DEPARTURE OF ALESIUS FROM ENGLAND. the house of a German sailor until the ship was ready, in
which I embarked, dressed as a soldier, along with other
A s soon as the k i n g [i.e., H e n r y V I I I . ] began to hate her German troops, that I m i g h t not be detected. W h e n I
[i.e., Anne Boleyn], laws hostile to the purer doctrine of the had escaped a company of searchers, I wrote to Crumwell
Gospel appeared. W h e n I could not bear these with a (although he had not behaved well towards me) and warned
good conscience, nor could my profession allow me to dis¬ him of the danger in which he stood at that time, and about
semble them (for I was filling the office of the ordinary certain other matters. For this I can vouch the testimony
reader in the celebrated University of Cambridge by the of John Ales, Gregory, and the Secretary, and Pachet him-
king's orders), I came to the Court, and asked for m y dis¬
missal by means of Crumwell. But he retained me for 1
[In Crumwell's accounts there are payments of £ζ to Alesius on
about three years w i t h empty hopes, until it was decreed each of the following dates : 4th January 1536-37, 28th March, 28th
and confirmed by law that married priests should be separ¬ May, and 24th October 1537 ; of 10 merks, on 19th February 1537-38 ;
and of £ζ, on 13th October 1538, to Ric. Morison, which he gave "by
ated from their wives and punished at the king's pleasure.
my lord's command" to Alesius (Letters and State Papers, Henry
But before this law was published, the Bishop of Canterbury V I I I . , vol. xiv. part ii. 328-338).]
self. But Christopher Mount said that Crumwell d i d not nuptiarum ultimus Augusti, circa quod tempus vos ad collo¬
dare to speak to me when I was going away and soliciting quium profectürum (sic) spero. Peto igitur reverenter et
my dismissal, nor could he venture to give me anything, amanter, ut una cum honestissima coniuge vestra, genero,
lest he should be accused to the king, but that he would filia ac nepte nuptias vestra praesentia ornare velitis. Ex-
send the sum that he owed me into Germany. 1 istimo autem magistrum Paulum, amanuensem vestrum, una
The next intelligence, however, which I heard of h i m was venturum, sed tarnen ut eum cum uxore invitetis meis verbis
that he had undergone capital punishment by order of the ad nuptias oro. Scitis autem summum sacerdotem et ponti-
k i n g ; to whom he had written, when in prison, saying that ficem nostrum filium Dei, qui primos parentes in paradyso
he was punished by the just judgment of God, because he copulavit, et non minore magnificentia quam sapientia et
had loved the k i n g more than God ; and that out of deference potencia suam ordinationem contra sophistica et tyrannidem
diaboli et multiplicem ingratitudinem nostram défendit, ut
to his sovereign he had caused many innocent persons to
totam actionem, ita etiam invitacionem hospitum et com¬
be put to death, not sparing your [i.e., Elizabeth's] most
munia officia sua presentia et primo miraculo compro-
holy mother, nor had he obeyed her directions in promoting
basse[t] ac monstrasse[t], quantum dilectetur (sic) istis con-
the doctrine of the Gospel.—(Foreign Calendar, Elizabeth,
gressibus. Nos autem parentes et amici, sponsi et sponsae,
i• 532-534)·]
una cum eis, pro hoc officio et molestia profectionis grati-
tudinem pollicemur per omnem occasionem.
E x pago Nockau postridie Laurentii 1557.
place, date, or printer's name. I n the British Museum 13. Ordinatio Ecclesiae in Regno Angliae. 1551. [This
Catal., Leipsic is given as the probable place of printing, is a translation of the ' F i r s t Liturgy of Edward V I . ' As a
and 1537 as the supposed date. Perhaps the date has been translation it is somewhat adversely criticised in the ' Litur¬
inferred from the opening sentence of the t r a c t : " A b o w t gical Services of Queen Elizabeth,' Parker Society, pp. xxiv-
V yere agone I wrote to the noble k i n g of Scottys the father xxvii. The full title is : " Ordinatio Ecclesiae, sev Ministerii
of my contry complanning of a certen proclamacyon wherin Ecclesiastici, in Florentissimo Regno Angliae, conscripta
the bisshops had forbidden the H o l y Scripture to be redd in sermone patrio, & in Latinam linguam bona fide conuersa,
the mother tong." I t is rather curious that in the L a t i n & ad consolationem ecclesiarum Christi, ubicunque locorum
version this sentence runs t h u s ; " A n t e biennium scrips! ac gentium, his tristissimis temporibus, édita, ab Alexandra
abill," is used instead of " unquencheable." I n Dunlop, berg on the 12th o f December 1533, to Spalatinus, request-
however, there is in addition, at the bottom of the page, in m g h i m to obtain payment of the moiety of the prebend
smaller t y p e : " R e v . 14. 10. The same shall drynke the (Corpus Reformatorum, i i . 690, 691).
wyne of the wrath of God, which is poured in the cuppe of Page 261. The disputatious Cochlaeus.—On the suggestion
hys wrath. A n d he shall be punyshed in fyre and brymstone of Melanchthon, an attack in verse was made on Cochlaeus
before the holy angells, and before the Lambe. A n d the for h.s injustice to Alesius ; but the timorous author so
smooke of theyr torment ascendeth up evermore, and they dreaded Cochlaeus that, instead of writing in his own name
have no rest daye nor nyght, whyche worshyppe the beast he personated Alesius (Corpus Reformatorum, iv. 1025, 1026)'
and hys ymage." Page 265. Erasmus and Cochlaeus.—Summaries o f the
letters which James V . wrote, on the 1st o f July 1534, to
Page 153. Readers or exhorters.—The name exhorter does
Erasmus, to Cochlaeus, and to the K i n g o f the Romans
not occur in the First Book of Discipline; but that "sort of are in the Letters and State Papers of H e n r y V I I I v o l '
readers" therein mentioned as having "some gift of exhorta¬ vu. p. 358.
t i o n " (Dunlop's Confessions, i l . 537; Laing's Knox, i i . 200)
soon came to be known as exhorters, and are so named in Page 267. Alesius as a physician.-" I determined with
various Acts of Assembly ; see, for example, the A c t of 1564 my self to serve the tyme and to change the preaching o f
quoted on p. 128. They are distinguished from readers in the crosse with the scyence of physic wherin I had a litle
the ' Register of Ministers, Exhorters, and Readers,' printed sight before, and thus I went unto a very w e l l - l e r n e d
for the Maitland Club ; but, as D a v i d Laing has pointed out, phisycian called Doctor Nicolas, which hath practised
the title of exhorter as indicating an advanced class seems phisyk in London thes many yeares with high prayse, whose
to have been soon and silently dropped. " O n comparing company I dyd use certen yeares, wherby I did both see
the list of the persons so styled in 1567 with that of 1574, and lern many things, even the principal poyntes concerning
we find some of them had become ministers, but the greater that science. I n so moch that at length certen of my frindes
number are entered simply as readers" ( W o d r o w Miscel¬ did move me to take in hand to practise, which thing I d i d
lany, p. 323). I trust not u n l u c k y l y " ( O f the Auctorite of the W o r d of God
agaynst the Bisshop o f London).
Page 233. Conference between the two parties.—Besides
the three conferences mentioned in the footnote, there was Page 268. Latimer and Cranmer.—For the opinion of
another held in the early summer of 1578. T h e results, as Alesius on Latimer and Cranmer, see D r Mitchell's West¬
minster Assembly, 1883, P- 14 n., and p. 23 n.
recorded in the Booke of the Universall K i r k (ii. 414, 415)
and in Caldervvood's History (iii. 412, 413), embrace nothing Page 268 n. Ales or ^ / « « « . - C h r i s t o p h e r Anderson may
about the kirk-session, beyond the perpetuity of the persons be excused for supposing that Ales was the real name o f
of the elders. Alesius ; but less can be said for those editors o f State
Papers and compilers of important Library Catalogues who
Page 259. Alesius at Wittenberg.—Through the influence
have helped to perpetuate the error long after it was pointed
of Luther and Melanchthon, the Elector of Saxony had con-
out by Principal Lorimer in his Patrick Hamilton.
INDEX.
CORRIGENDA.
Baillje, Principal, 138 fn. Church, the medieval, corruption Coverdale, Miles, 150.
Bain's Calendar quoted, 86 fn. Craig, John, 187. Douglas, John, , .
9 9 I 4 4
and decay of, 7 et seq.—the re¬ made Archbishop, ! ç S - h i s par!
Balnaves on Justification quoted, forming priests of, 12 et seq. Cranmer, Archbishop, 58 254
113 fn. Cistercian Nuns, or White Ladies, 266, 268 282, 297, 298, 299, 309! entage, 199 fn.-Principal of St
Bannatyne's Memoriales, 187 fn., at Frankfort, 125, 294. Craw or Crawar, Paul, 15. Mary s College, 287, 288.
189, 192 fn., 194 fn., 198 fn., Cochlaeus, 260 et seq., 295, 309. Croc, Le, 20 r. Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow
205 fn. et seq. Cocklaw, Thomas, 41. Crumwell, 37 f ., 266-268, 298¬
n
262, 264. '
Bayle, 80, 204. Colace, William, 192. 300. Dundee, , 60, 62-65, 7h 75,
4 t > s 4
Benedict X I I I . , 16. Cole, Thos., 125 fn. Cunningham, Principal, 231—his 7t>, 94. 158 fn. ' ׳ / b
Betoun, Archbishop James, 22, 24 Common Order, Book of, its origin, ,
Church History of Scotland' Dundrennan, Thomas, Abbot of
quoted, 214. 16 fn. '
et seq. 30 fn., 34, 42, 74, 245, 123 et seq.—its authority, 127—
246, 262, 286, 287. early practice in Scotland, 128 et Dunlop's 'Collection of Confes¬
Betoun, Cardinal, 11 fn., 36, 42 et D'Ailley, 18. sions' referred to, 102 fn. et
seq.—Knox and the English lit¬ passnn.
seq., 54 et seq., 57, 60, 68-74, 81, urgy, 130 et seq. — a guide or Dalgleish, Nicol, 192.
2
45> 264, 273, 274, 287 —his model only, 132 et seq.— testi¬ Dalrymple's 'Lesley' referred to, Durie, Mr John, r , 206. 9 4
Boleyn, Anne, 267 fn., 297. seq.— practice in other Reformed 19s fn. Edinburgh, 38, r , 89, , !58 f ״. ,
4 9 3
referred to, 13 fn., 117 fn., 118 Church government, 145, 147 et Time of Calvin' referred to, 7 4e S
fn., 128 fn., 198 fn., 218 fn., 227 seq.—on discipline, 163 et seq.— 26 fn., 33 fn., 2 et seq., 48 Edward V I . , 87, 88, 130, 131.
fn., 80 fn., 239, 241 fn., 243 Erasmus, 21, 2 , 26 , 309
4
fn., 233 fn. on Church members, 170. 4 4
Borthwick, Sir John, 38 fn. Conseus, 11 fn. fn., 250. Erskine of Dun, o, 56 et seq., 78
4
Bothwell, Earl of, 72. Davidson, John, 188, 192, 197. 94· י
Confession, First Helvetic, 58, 77 Ethie House, 57, 293.
Bradwardine, 17. —Later Helvetic, 103, 113, 147 Declaration, the Large (or King's)
Brown, Mr Hume, references to —Westminster, 107, n o , 118, 142, 143. 0
" Eugenius the Fourth," Pope, 17.
'John Knox' by, 11 fn., 55 fn., 122, 234—of English congrega¬ Discipline, the First Book of, its Exactions of pre - Reformation
124 fn. tion at Geneva, 107, 120 — of preparation, 99,144—the govern¬ Church, 9, 179 t q. e se
Bucer, 270. 1616, 117 fn., 118. ment of the Church, 145 et seq. Exercise, or Prophesying, ״ ״1 Q
i V
Buchanan, George, 17, 22, 40, 49, Confession of 1560, the Scottish, its —the discipline of the Church, 170 et seq., 229. ־
73· preparation, 99 et ^.—alleged 162 et ^.—discipline under Pre¬ Exhorters, 1 2, 153, 308.
5
Burton's ' History ' referred to, 2r5, omission of a chapter, 101— its lacy, 167—the prerogatives and
219. character, 102 et seq.—the su¬ duties of Church members, 169 Fachsius, Ludovicus, 271.
preme authority of the Scrip¬ et seq.—education of the young Farel, 125.
Caithness, Bishop of, 198. tures, 103 —the fall and the and university reform, 174 et Felix the Fifth, 17 fn.
Calderwood, 137, 142—his יAltare remedy, ib., 105 — the eternal seq. — care of the poor, 170 Ferne, 20, 307.
Damascenum ' referred to, 137 decree, 107—influence of John et seq. y
Fisher, Bishop, 2 . 4 3
et seq.—' History ' referred to, 33 Alasco, 109, 117—the effectual Discipline, the Second Book of, Forbes, Bishop, 10.
fn., et passim. call, no—justification, i n et compared with the First Book,' Fordun, 16.
Calumnies, Popish, 202 et seq. seq.— notes of the True Church, 214«/ seq.—the authority of théForman, Archbishop, 40 f n
Calvin, 17, 80, 88, 90, 105 fn., 106 114 seq.—the sacraments, 116 king, 217—the limits of ecclesi¬ Forrest, Henry, 35. '
fn., 107, 112, 115, 116, 124, 125, et seq. — compared with later astical authority, 219 et seq. Forret, Thomas, vicar of Dollar,
'47. 164<י63fn•. 168, 170, 187, confessions, 118 et seq., 122— influence of the Second Book Foster, John, 263 fn.
204, 215, 216, 270. its unmeasured language, 120 et not unmixed, 225—its authority, Foxes ׳Acts and Monuments,' see
Cambridge, 58, 266, 298. seq. 226— its theory of the Church,
Campbell, Friar, 29, 32. Cattley.
Constable's ' Major ' referred to. 227—institution of the presbv-
Campbell of Cessnock, 16. tery, 229 et seq. — the West¬ Frankfort on the Oder, o, 88
18 fn. 109, 12 , 126, 1 f ., 1 ־
4
Catechism, Hamilton's, 8 fn., 287 Cook, Dr George, of St Andrews, minster doctrine of the Church, 4 4 9 n S O j2 6
y
— Calvin's, 103, 112—Heidel¬ 234 et seq.—the ideal presbytery' 272 ,270. '
231. ' Frankfort, Troubles at,' 124 fn
berg, 103—Melanchthon's, 271. Cook, Dr, of Haddington, 23r. 237·
Cattley's יFoxe ' referred to, 33 Cook, Procurator, 232. 125. יי
'Diurnal of Occurrents' referred to
38 fn., 39 fn. ' Frith, 26.
Fyffe, John, 40, 269, 310.
Gerson, 18. Harrison, quotation from article et seq. — Knox's Liturgy, '12q Lock, Mrs, 13 fn., 130.
Gilby, Ant., 125 fn. on ' Freeman's Method of His¬ et seq.— the First Book of Disci- Logie, Gavin, 40.
Gillespie, George, 158 fn. — his tory ' by, 2 fn. phne, 144 et seq.—Iiis last davs, Logie, .Robert, 41.
' Aaron's Rod Blossoming ' Hay, Mr L . , Bass, 227 fn. 184 et ^.—leaves Edinburgh, Lollards, persecution in Scotland
187—preaching in St Andrews of, 15 et seq.
quoted, 222 et Λ^.—'Assertion Hay, Principal, 11 fn., 287.
of the Government ' referred to, Heidelberg Catechism, 103. 188 et seq. — James Melville's Lorimer, Principal, his 'Patrick
impression of Knox, 191 et seq Hamilton, the first Preacher
229 fn., 232. Henderson, Alexander, 142, 166 and Martyr of the Scottish Ref¬
Glasgow martyr, 15. —returns to Edinburgh, 200—
fn., 231—his 'Government and Popish calumnies, 202 et seq.— ormation,' referred to, 26, 33 fn.,
Gordon, Bishop of Galloway, 130. Order of the Church of Scotland ' his last illness and death, 20ς 3to—'Scottish Reformation ' re¬
Gourlay, Norman, burned for quoted, 140, 237. et seq., 216, 278. ferred to, 41 fn., 69, 75 fn., 81 fn.,
marrying, 39. Henry V I I I . , 49, 266 fn., 268, 298. K o x s
239, 244, 274 fn., 275, 276 fn.—
Grimani, 55. Hepburn, Bishop, 57. ״,' liturgy, see Common Knox and the Church of Eng¬
Grindal, Archbishop, 91, 150 fn., Hepburn, Prior John, 242, 244, Order, Book of. land' referred to, 77, 132 fn.—
160. 286. article in ' British and Foreign
Grosteste, 17. Hepburn, Prior Patrick, 36, 40, Laing, Dr David, ί ο , 22, 102 fn , Evangelical Review' by, referred
1
Grub's History,' 118 fn. 231—his ' Knox ' referred to, 13 to, 185.
46, 74- 244-247, 249, 250, 252, fn. et passim — his 'Lindsay's
' Gude and Godlie Ballads ' re¬ 253· Poetical Works ' referred to Luther, 6, 19, 21, 26, 28, 38, 67,
ferred to, 67, 74 fn., 76 fn. Honorius I I I . , 161. 83 fn. 80, 115, no, 163, 204, 216, 243'
Guise, Mary of, n fn., 46, 93, 94, Hooper, Bishop, 98. 254, 261, 265, 282, 295.
192. Lamb, Robert, 53.
Hunter, James, 53. Lambert, of Avignon, 26, 27—his Lyne, John, 41.
Haag, quotation from ' L a France Innes, Taylor, reference to 'John ' Commentary on the Apoca¬ M'Alpine, 40, 269, 310.
Protestant ' by, 168. lypse' referred to, 33 f
Knox' by, 209 fn. Lang, Mr Andrew, 71.
n
M'Crie, Dr, 23t—' Melville ' re¬
Hailes, Lord, 161. ferred to, 15 f !,.״-f . _ ' L i f e
9 n
Hamilton, Archibald, 192, 193, James V . , 23, 38, 39, 44, 46 et seq., Latimer Bishop, 58, 268, 299, 309. ot Knox referred to, 40 fn., 91
202, 203, 205. 192, 247-249, 263 fn., 273. Laud s Liturgy, 133. fn., 129 fn., 188 fn., 201, 205 fn.
Hamilton, James, 39. James V I . , 131, 143 fn., 166, 168. Lawsone, Mr James, 195, ! 2 281 fn.
0
2
Hamilton, James, Bishopof Argyle, Johnston, John, 281, 288. °3> 205, 207. M'Dowal, 40, 310.
20. Johnston, Rev. T . P., reference to Lay-elders, the term, 229. M'Kenzie's 'Lives of Eminent
Hamilton, John, Abbot of Paisley, ' Patrick Hamilton ' by, 33 fn. Leckprevick, Robert, printer, 194 Scotsmen,' 279.
Archbishop of St Andrews, 18, 195· Magdalene, Queen, 192 fn.
51, 82, 146, 188, 287—his Gate- Kennedy, Bishop, 9, 17, 286. Lee, Principal, 113 f , 231 — ' Maitland Miscellany,' 120 fn.
n>
chism, 8 fn., 287. Kennedy, Quintine, Abbot of quotation from ' Lectures on the Major, John, 17 et seq., 21, 22 34
Hamilton, John, apostate, 193. Crossraguel, 127, 203. History of the Church of Scot¬ 79, 242, 278, 280, 286, 287. י
Hamilton, Patrick, 17, 19 et seq. land' by, 115, 1 f .
Kincavel, 20. 9 9 n
Malmö, 255.
— birth and early years, 20 — Kirkcaldy of Grange, 208. Lees, Dr Cameron, reference to
'St Giles' by, 201 fn. Margaret, Queen, 181.
studies abroad, 21—returns to Kirk-session, or lesser eldership, Marsillier, 57.
Scotland and is received into Leipsic, 271, 272, 279, 281.
158, 232, 233, 308.
St Andrews University, 22 — Knox, 6, ί ο , 11 fn., 13 fn., 18, 33 Lemon's 'State Papers' referred Mary, Queen, 11 fn., 189.
to, 37 fn., 44 fns., 69 fn. Massacre of St Bartholomew, 184
preaches the reformed faith, 24 fn.—early life and education, 185, 201.
—summoned to appear before Lesley's 'History' referred to, 24
79— leader of the Reformation, fn., 39 fn., 85 fn., 129 fn., 192 Maxwell's O l d Dundee prior to
Archbishop Betoun, 25—escapes 80— settles in St Andrews, 82 — the Reformation' referred to,
to the Continent, 26—his final fn.—'De Origine' referred to
called to the ministry, 83 — a 28 fn. 63 fn., 68 fn., 69 fn.—'History
return to Scotland, 27—invited galley slave, 85—obtains release, of Old Dundee' referred to, 6;
to a friendly conference at St Leslie, Dr, of Fordoun, 60, 61 fn. 3
86—his work among the Eng¬ Lethington, Laird of, 101, 186. fn.
Andrews, 28 — seized and con¬
demned, 30 — his martyrdom,
lish, ib. et seq.—five years exile, Lindores, Laurence, Abbot of, 15. Mayn, Catherine de, 268.
88 et seq. — a visit to Scotland, Lindsay, Mr David, 198, 207. Melanchthon, 17, 22, 26, 36, 239,
31 et seq. — sources of informa- 2
54- 259, 261, 266, 270, 271, 279,
89—returns to Scotland, 93—at Lindsay, Sir David, 10, 11 fn., 81,
280, 282, 300, 309.
316 Index.
Index.
317
Melville, Andrew, 216 et sea., 281, seq. — Acts of 1525 and 1527 Sharp, Archbishop, 35.
288, 289. against reformed opinions, 23 Tilney, Emery, 58.
Shaxton, Bishop, 269, 310.
Melville, James, 191 et seq., 288. — Tyndale's New Testament Tonstal, Bishop of Durham, 86.
I our, M. de la, 19.
S1
^ t o n , Principal, 202, 203, 205,
Montrose, 24, 57, 60, 62, 71, 75, brought into Scotland, 24—the
78. oppressed and the oppressors, 34 Spalatinus, 309. Tudor, Elizabeth, 92, 93, 1 !c 3 I 1 0
Morison, Ric., 299 fn. et seq.—George Wishart, 56 et fn., 156 fn., 159, 300.
'Spalding Miscellany' referred to, Tudor, Mary, 88, 92 fn.
Morton, Earl of, 198, 199 fn., 207, seq.—Knox as leader of the Ref¬
ormation, jçetseq.—its triumph, 128 fn., 183 fn. Twopenny Faith, the, 8 fn.
212. ^pottiswoode, Archbishop, 133 Tyndale's translation of the New
97—the Confession of 1560, 99
Mount, Christopher, 300. et seq. — the Book of Common in.—his 'History' referred to, Testament introduced into Scot¬
Neander, 170. Order, 123 et seq. — the First w. γ fn.,33 fn., 34 fn.. 64 ft!., land, 24, 26.
Book of Discipline, 144 et seq.— 0» fn., 73,ιφ fn<> 2 1 8 f Tyninghame, 287.
227, 231.
Ogilvie, Lord James, 292. the last days of Knox, 184 et seq. Tyrie, the Jesuit, 195, 196, 203.
Ogilvie, Marion, 292, 293. Spottiswoode, John, superinten¬
— the Second Book of Discip¬ dent of Lothian, 99, ! f Tytler, 11 fn.
Order of Excommunication, 165, line, 214 et seq.—Alesius, 239 ICO•
4 4 n
Parker, Archbishop, consecration י95 Φ fn., 239, 242, 285 et seq. Weir, Professor, article on George
fn., 120 fn. —Major at, !8, 19, 22, 242, 286
of, 150 fn. Resby, James, 15. Wishart in 'North British Re¬
' Pasqvilli de Concilio Mantuano Richardson, John, 41. —Patrick Hamilton at, 19, 20,
22 et seq., 29 et seq., 307—Alesius view' referred to, 70.
Iudicium ' quoted, 61 fn.
Paul I I I . , 286.
Richardson, Robert, 41. at, 36, 242 et seq.— Wishart at, Westminster Confession of Faith.
Robertson, John, 288. 72. 73—Knox at, 82 et seq., qc See Confession.
Perth Martyrs, the, 53, 273. Robertson, Dr Joseph, 10, 11 fn. Westminster Directory for Church
Peterkin, references to ' Records _ et seq., 188 et seq.
—'Concilia Scotiae' referred to, St Bernard, 3. Government, 166 fn., 236.
of the Kirk ' by, 119 fn., 133 fn., 16 fn., 30 fn., 4s fn., 50 fn., 93 Westminster Directory for Wor¬
143 fn.—to ' Booke of the Uni- fn., 161 fn., 183 fn., 293. St Giles' Church, 133 f ., 201.
n s h i 2
' Psalms and Spiritual Songs,' 76. Sacraments, two, only, 116, 117, M
Winzet, Ninian, his Tractates'
3°7• et seq. referred to, i r fns., 203.
Ranaldson, James, 53. Saxony, Elector of, 271 fn. Sybothendorff, Damianus, 271 fn. Wishart, George, 36, 1 —early
4
Randolph, Thomas, 129. Scipio, Marcus, 280. Tannadice, 287. education, 56 —summoned for
Readers, 152, 153, 172, 308. Scott, John, printer, 76. Tauler, 3. heresy, 57—escapes to England,
Reformation, the, nature and need Scotus, Duns, 17. ii.—converted before Cranmer,
of, ι et seq.—decay of the medie¬ Scriptures, reading, in vernacular, Theiner's ' Vetera Monumenta 58 —returns and enters Corpus
Hibernorum et Scotorum ' re¬ Christi College, Cambridge, id.
val Church, 7 et seq.— the re¬ S> 37. 3 8
2 7 2,264,260< 59 ־5 2
' ferred יto, 44, fn., 45 fn., τ fn.,
forming priests, 12 et seq.—pre¬ 282,273—Genevanversion, 91,
5
—a pupil's description of him,
54 fns. 59 — returns to Scotland, ii.—
cursors of the Reformation, 14 231. Thorpe's 'Calendar' referred to,
et seq.—Patrick Hamilton, 19 et Scrymgeour, James, 253. preaches in Montrose and Dun¬
44 fns. dee, 62 et seq.—his labours in
T H E E A R L Y R E L I G I O N OF I S R A E L . As set forth by
Biblical Writers and Modern Critical Historians. Being the Baird
Lecture for 1888-89. By J A M E S R O B E R T S O N , D . D . , Professor of
• Oriental Languages in the University of Glasgow. Demy 8vo,
T H E APOSTOLIC M I N I S T R Y I N T H E SCOTTISH
C H U R C H . The Baird Lecture for 1897. By R O B E R T H E R B E R T
S T O R Y , D.D. (Edin.), F . S . A . Scot, Principal of the University
of Glasgow, Principal Clerk of the General Assembly, and Chap¬
lain to the Queen. Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d.
T H E E N D . Œroall ftectura.
R E C E N T ARCHAEOLOGY A N D T H E B I B L E . Bein״
the Croall Lecture for 1898. By T H O M A S N I C O L , D.D., Professor
of Divinity and Biblical Criticism in the University of Aberdeen ;
Author of 'Recent Explorations in Bible Lands.' Demy 8vo'
9s. net.
P R I N T E D B Y W I L L I A M B L A C K W O O D A N D SONS.
WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, E D I N B U R G H A N D LONDON.
1 john, P[62, 135]. 158, 160, 164, 167, athens, P[89, 108].
1541, P[97, 175, 176]. 174, 175, 179, 181]. attained, P[11, 12, 37,
1560, P[7, 15, 69, 73, alexander mitchell, 100, 112].
74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, P[9]. attainment, P[10, 17,
80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 87, altar, P[44, 50, 93, 149, 46].
88, 89, 99, 115, 132, 175, 180]. augustine, P[25, 83,
164, 180, 181, 182]. america, P[13, 14, 16]. 180].
1561, P[87, 160, 163]. anabaptist, P[171, augustinian, P[25, 30,
1562, P[87]. 172]. 34, 35, 44, 96, 182].
1564, P[84, 87, 88, 90, anderson, P[50, 143, australia, P[22].
177, 178]. 154, 158, 165, 178, authority, P[16, 25, 28,
1581, P[104, 138]. 179]. 30, 69, 72, 75, 81, 87,
1592, P[137, 140, 141]. andrew melville, P[4, 90, 94, 113, 117, 118,
1599, P[69]. 22, 122, 164, 168]. 132, 133, 134, 136,
1638, P[83, 84, 95]. angel, P[12, 15, 36, 45, 137, 139, 147, 152,
1644, P[14, 69, 84]. 52, 53, 55, 57, 61, 77, 160, 170, 171, 180].
1645, P[92]. 111, 116, 122, 123, baillie, P[93, 180].
1646, P[14, 135]. 144, 161, 165, 166, bannerman, P[167].
1647, P[15, 83]. 176, 178, 181]. baptism, P[41, 82, 86,
1649, P[14, 93]. anglican, P[82, 88, 101, 174].
1650, P[14]. 126]. baptist, P[171, 172].
1876, P[15, 131, 183]. anonymous, P[70]. baxter, P[21, 121].
666, P[141]. anselm, P[25, 32, 179]. beast, P[85, 152, 178].
aaron's rod blossoming, anti-christ, P[139]. begg, P[121, 155].
P[135, 136, 181]. apocalypse, P[40]. belief, P[30, 93].
abomination, P[30]. apostate, P[181]. believe, P[20, 25, 26,
academic, P[168]. apostles' creed, P[55, 30, 64, 66, 69, 72, 82,
acts of parliament, 86, 128]. 88, 96, 130, 132, 136,
P[29, 50, 82, 105, 127, apostolic, P[15, 122, 162, 171].
141, 156, 178, 179]. 151, 171, 176, 182, beza, P[42, 80, 164,
adam, P[75, 78, 84, 183]. 165, 180].
121, 123, 179]. apparel, P[53]. bible, P[28, 43, 62, 69,
adams, P[75, 121, 123, archaeology, P[183]. 70, 143, 154, 158, 165,
179]. archbishop laud, P[90]. 179, 180, 183].
adoption, P[69, 90, 92, archbishop of biblical criticism, P[20,
93, 113]. canterbury, P[172]. 183].
adultery, P[159]. arian, P[43, 89, 135]. biography, P[29, 40].
adversary, P[129, 157]. arius, P[34, 76, 144, bishop, P[14, 28, 29,
advocate, P[20, 36, 67, 163, 175, 176]. 31, 32, 33, 35, 36, 38,
95, 105, 137, 160, 165, arminian, P[83, 179]. 39, 41, 42, 43, 45, 46,
177]. arminianism, P[179]. 47, 48, 52, 53, 65, 66,
afflicted, P[56]. army, P[64, 161]. 67, 68, 69, 72, 73, 75,
africa, P[10]. assembly, P[11, 13, 14, 89, 90, 91, 94, 97, 98,
agenda, P[93]. 15, 19, 21, 23, 72, 80, 99, 101, 102, 104, 107,
agnostic, P[183]. 83, 87, 88, 90, 93, 94, 108, 118, 123, 137,
agnosticism, P[183]. 95, 99, 102, 103, 104, 140, 145, 146, 147,
alexander, P[1, 5, 8, 9, 106, 122, 131, 137, 148, 151, 152, 153,
20, 34, 42, 89, 143, 138, 141, 142, 163, 155, 156, 157, 158,
144, 145, 150, 151, 178, 180, 183]. 160, 161, 165, 166,
assumption, P[167].
167, 172, 173, 179, 145, 159, 177, 180, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28,
180, 181, 182]. 182]. 29, 30, 31, 37, 39, 43,
blessing, P[10, 26, 28, calvin's institutes, P[79, 44, 45, 50, 53, 55, 57,
70, 72, 91, 108, 113, 82, 106]. 61, 64, 66, 67, 68, 69,
127]. calvinist, P[75, 81, 82, 73, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81,
blood, P[17, 34, 37, 41, 83, 91, 94, 103, 108, 82, 84, 87, 91, 94, 98,
44, 45, 53, 60, 64, 84, 116]. 101, 105, 108, 110,
115, 116, 117, 118, calvinistic, P[75, 81, 82, 111, 113, 114, 115,
124, 158]. 83, 91, 94, 103, 108, 118, 122, 127, 129,
blood of christ, P[45]. 116]. 130, 133, 134, 136,
book of psalms, P[40, cameron, P[124, 181]. 137, 138, 139, 140,
158]. campbell, P[19, 20, 32, 141, 142, 143, 144,
brain, P[63]. 38, 40, 58, 180]. 145, 146, 147, 149,
brethren, P[60, 69, 71, canon, P[28, 29, 30, 35, 150, 151, 154, 156,
80, 101, 106, 107, 109, 44, 46, 75, 93, 104, 158, 160, 161, 162,
110, 122, 127, 137, 145, 146, 147, 148, 164, 165, 168, 169,
141]. 149, 150, 169]. 171, 172, 174, 175,
britain, P[13, 16, 31]. canonical, P[75, 93]. 176, 177, 178, 179,
british, P[15, 16, 54, canterbury, P[104, 165, 182].
59, 69, 116, 152, 156, 172, 173]. christ crucified, P[26].
175, 176, 177, 181, career, P[10, 20, 40, christ jesus, P[27, 39,
182]. 163, 167]. 77, 79, 91, 129].
broken, P[21, 49]. catechism, P[14, 28, christendom, P[16].
brown, P[15, 20, 29, 45, 62, 65, 75, 80, 132, christian, P[10, 13, 18,
51, 86, 177, 180]. 159, 167, 175, 177, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29,
bucer, P[87, 159, 177, 180, 181]. 37, 43, 44, 45, 55, 61,
180]. catholic, P[15, 17, 25, 67, 68, 69, 108, 110,
buchanan, P[32, 35, 44, 32, 48, 50, 54, 81, 83, 113, 114, 127, 133,
48, 60, 65, 180]. 141, 145, 159, 169, 136, 137, 139, 140,
burgess, P[44, 49]. 177]. 143, 144, 145, 146,
burns, P[13, 29, 61, catholic church, P[141]. 147, 149, 154, 156,
115, 150]. celibacy, P[158]. 160, 161, 168, 169,
business, P[16, 48]. celibate, P[29, 33]. 171, 172, 182].
by faith alone, P[39]. censure, P[33, 45, 103, christian ministry,
caesar, P[144]. 106, 112, 171]. P[10].
calderwood, P[40, 41, ceremonies, P[18, 28, christianity, P[18, 24,
44, 56, 58, 64, 83, 92, 70, 86, 88, 135, 138]. 25, 136].
93, 95, 123, 130, 133, ceremony, P[19]. church, P[1, 5, 7, 8, 9,
139, 141, 180]. chalmers, P[11]. 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15,
calling, P[91, 93, 109, charity, P[39, 53]. 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
124, 129, 138, 142]. charles i, P[83, 124]. 22, 23, 26, 27, 28, 29,
calvin, P[15, 32, 37, 38, charles ii, P[83]. 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35,
45, 48, 50, 55, 64, 68, children, P[28, 106, 38, 39, 41, 42, 43, 45,
69, 73, 75, 76, 77, 78, 111, 112, 120, 126, 46, 47, 48, 49, 53, 56,
79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 86, 141, 165, 170, 177, 58, 60, 61, 62, 64, 65,
87, 91, 94, 96, 97, 103, 180]. 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71,
105, 106, 108, 109, china, P[49, 88]. 72, 73, 75, 77, 78, 80,
116, 117, 121, 126, choir, P[35]. 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86,
130, 131, 132, 144, christ, P[1, 5, 10, 13, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92,
15, 16, 18, 19, 21, 22, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98,
99, 100, 101, 102, 103, classical, P[10, 11, 103, 134, 135, 136, 150,
104, 105, 106, 107, 161, 164]. 172, 173].
108, 109, 110, 111, clothing, P[53]. conservative, P[18].
113, 114, 116, 117, college, P[7, 8, 10, 11, conspiracy, P[58, 59].
119, 120, 121, 122, 12, 14, 19, 20, 21, 22, conspirator, P[58, 64,
123, 124, 125, 126, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 39, 65].
127, 130, 131, 132, 41, 44, 46, 47, 52, 53, constantine, P[121].
133, 134, 135, 136, 54, 96, 97, 99, 111, constantinople, P[20].
137, 138, 140, 141, 118, 119, 120, 121, constituted, P[103, 136,
142, 143, 145, 146, 122, 125, 137, 145, 167].
147, 149, 151, 152, 146, 147, 148, 157, constituted church,
154, 160, 161, 162, 158, 164, 166, 167, P[136].
164, 165, 167, 168, 168, 179, 180, 182]. constitution, P[50, 69,
170, 171, 172, 177, commandment, P[159]. 77, 101, 102, 117, 131,
180, 181, 182, 183]. commentaries, P[167]. 135, 139, 169].
church and state, P[45, commentary, P[33, 40, constitution of the
136]. 41, 55, 144, 158, 181]. church, P[102].
church discipline, communion, P[9, 62, constitutional, P[69,
P[101, 108]. 63, 67, 69, 90, 92, 109, 131].
church government, 141, 142, 175]. consummation, P[80].
P[103, 135, 136, 180, compromise, P[17, 97]. contending, P[24, 35,
182]. conception, P[77, 105, 51, 129, 134].
church history, P[1, 5, 132]. controversy, P[42, 64,
11, 14, 17, 19, 21, 131, confession, P[7, 13, 15, 69, 97, 105, 121, 122,
180]. 16, 29, 59, 62, 73, 74, 156, 159, 164, 179].
church of christ, P[19, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, conversion, P[13].
21, 98, 101, 105, 162, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, convert, P[60, 93, 121,
171]. 91, 92, 96, 97, 98, 99, 125, 139, 182].
church of england, 100, 103, 105, 106, converted, P[121, 182].
P[18, 62, 87, 90, 107]. 109, 110, 111, 112, conviction, P[16, 18,
church of god, P[81, 113, 114, 132, 133, 20, 25, 29, 48, 59, 68,
106, 133, 161]. 134, 138, 139, 141, 87, 96, 155].
church of scotland, P[9, 142, 167, 177, 178, coram deo, P[94, 177].
11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 180, 181, 182]. corinthians, P[109].
18, 34, 69, 81, 91, 93, confession of faith, corpus reformatorum,
94, 95, 96, 97, 102, P[13, 74, 78, 83, 86, P[174, 175, 178].
105, 116, 140, 142, 96, 141, 182]. corruption, P[18, 27,
143, 154, 177, 181]. confessions of faith, 29, 31, 41, 146, 161,
circumstance, P[21, 28, P[15]. 180].
75, 118, 120, 131, 140, confirmation, P[52, 82, counselling, P[153].
158]. 140]. counsellor, P[17, 159].
circumstances, P[21, conformity, P[86, 135]. courage, P[27, 33, 47,
28, 75, 118, 120, 131, congregation, P[17, 30, 48, 49, 55, 91, 95, 100,
140, 158]. 31, 55, 61, 65, 70, 72, 105, 110, 132, 150,
city of god, P[27]. 77, 84, 86, 87, 88, 91, 156, 157, 159, 161,
civil government, 98, 99, 100, 103, 106, 174].
P[106]. 109, 127, 128, 138, court, P[11, 16, 33, 36,
civil magistrate, P[74]. 142, 177]. 46, 48, 49, 53, 58, 67,
civil ruler, P[133]. conscience, P[25, 26, 68, 89, 98, 102, 103,
48, 82, 90, 114, 133, 104, 105, 107, 117,
120, 123, 135, 136, decree, P[10, 42, 43, 138, 139, 174, 175,
137, 138, 139, 140, 77, 134, 135, 153, 173, 176, 178].
152, 173]. 180]. doctrinal, P[103].
covenant, P[22, 41, 74, defection, P[117, 136]. doctrine, P[14, 15, 16,
131, 135]. depravity, P[79]. 18, 26, 29, 30, 31, 33,
covenanter, P[41]. despair, P[11, 116, 129, 37, 38, 39, 43, 46, 48,
covenanting, P[22, 131, 172]. 66, 67, 68, 71, 72, 73,
135]. despotism, P[45]. 75, 80, 82, 83, 85, 96,
covet, P[46, 123, 155]. devil, P[122, 178]. 99, 104, 121, 124, 127,
creation, P[76, 79]. devotion, P[28, 51, 89, 132, 136, 141, 145,
criminal, P[66]. 91, 120, 135]. 147, 153, 158, 160,
crucified, P[26]. dexter, P[163]. 161, 162, 164, 171,
culture, P[114, 146, dickson, P[62]. 172, 173, 174, 175,
163, 165]. disciple, P[33, 46, 61, 180].
cunningham, P[11, 21, 108, 134, 149, 163]. doctrine of justification,
31, 131, 139, 180]. discipline, P[7, 12, 29, P[164].
curriculum, P[10]. 61, 68, 73, 78, 81, 82, dogma, P[75, 135].
curse, P[78, 79]. 85, 87, 88, 91, 92, 93, dominican, P[30, 51,
damnation, P[78, 79, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 158].
84]. 101, 102, 103, 104, dominion, P[134, 159].
damned, P[78]. 105, 106, 107, 108, doubt, P[9, 17, 28, 33,
daniel, P[118, 119]. 109, 110, 111, 112, 35, 36, 38, 39, 42, 46,
dark ages, P[126]. 113, 114, 115, 125, 57, 60, 62, 67, 71, 77,
darkness, P[27, 79, 131, 132, 133, 134, 81, 84, 85, 87, 96, 109,
149, 150]. 135, 136, 137, 138, 110, 112, 113, 114,
dating, P[4]. 139, 140, 141, 142, 122, 123, 129, 133,
daughter, P[7, 10, 22, 143, 168, 178, 180, 134, 146, 150, 152,
34, 35, 47, 120, 164, 182]. 153, 154, 156, 164,
170, 174]. disease, P[57, 162]. 166, 171, 172].
david, P[9, 29, 35, 43, dispensation, P[48]. douglas, P[73, 96, 123,
45, 52, 60, 64, 65, 77, divine, P[10, 16, 21, 25, 167, 180].
84, 115, 118, 120, 122, 26, 27, 45, 46, 72, 80, drama, P[40, 48].
123, 125, 139, 170, 83, 89, 94, 97, 100, drunk, P[119].
176, 178, 180, 181, 101, 107, 124, 126, dunbar, P[180].
182]. 135, 159, 182]. dunlop, P[75, 76, 77,
deacon, P[97, 98, 100, divine right, P[135, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 84,
101, 107, 109, 127, 182]. 85, 91, 92, 98, 99, 100,
138, 142]. divine right of church 103, 105, 106, 109,
death, P[8, 16, 17, 21, government, P[135, 110, 111, 112, 113,
22, 23, 25, 31, 39, 41, 182]. 114, 132, 133, 134,
42, 43, 44, 46, 47, 50, divinity, P[10, 12, 19, 138, 139, 177, 178,
57, 77, 78, 97, 116, 20, 21, 44, 76, 139, 180].
124, 125, 126, 129, 157, 159, 163, 179, dunn, P[11, 12].
142, 146, 149, 160, 183]. durham, P[67, 182].
161, 164, 165, 167, division, P[69, 134, dutch, P[26, 69, 116].
170, 174, 179, 181]. 161]. duties of church, P[7,
debate, P[139, 158]. doctor, P[9, 10, 32, 33, 108, 180].
declaration, P[95, 180]. 34, 39, 55, 64, 67, 69, early date, P[88].
declension, P[107]. 72, 97, 98, 99, 121, easter, P[166].
forefather, P[107]. gentry, P[51, 55, 61, gospel, P[11, 18, 25,
foster, P[70, 92, 119, 65, 116]. 26, 33, 36, 37, 41, 45,
155, 180]. george gillespie, 53, 65, 66, 67, 76, 93,
foundation, P[12, 28, P[135]. 98, 99, 102, 127, 141,
63, 77, 125, 128, 167]. george wishart, P[6, 44, 145, 163, 164, 167,
foxe, P[40, 43, 53, 59, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 58, 173, 174].
60, 61, 158, 180]. 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, government, P[7, 51,
frame, P[73, 75, 77, 79, 182]. 69, 73, 88, 94, 95, 96,
81, 85, 92, 100, 136, german, P[13, 19, 26, 97, 98, 103, 105, 106,
140, 172]. 27, 37, 38, 39, 42, 43, 107, 109, 135, 136,
france, P[40, 45, 46, 57, 62, 65, 96, 131, 139, 140, 142, 143,
47, 49, 51, 52, 67, 88, 150, 151, 152, 153, 180, 181, 182].
89, 103, 108, 116, 124, 154, 157, 163, 164, government of the
128, 151, 152, 163, 165, 173, 174, 182]. church, P[7, 94, 95, 96,
168, 181]. germany, P[13, 27, 37, 97, 105, 109, 135,
franciscan, P[30, 48]. 39, 42, 43, 65, 131, 140].
free will, P[115]. 151, 152, 153, 157, grace, P[12, 24, 25, 26,
freedom, P[11, 38, 92, 165, 174, 182]. 37, 53, 72, 77, 79, 80,
108, 151, 162]. gesture, P[121]. 109, 110, 112, 113,
french, P[10, 26, 46, gift, P[12, 20, 65, 71, 116, 120, 128, 129,
47, 52, 53, 66, 67, 69, 77, 91, 93, 95, 97, 100, 130, 142, 156, 159,
70, 86, 87, 100, 108, 109, 110, 142, 153, 172].
124, 146, 151, 161, 178, 182]. grace alone, P[79].
168]. gill, P[103, 135, 137, grace of god, P[37, 53,
french protestant, P[70, 139, 140, 181]. 72, 80, 129].
108, 168]. gillespie, P[103, 135, graves, P[25].
fundamental, P[37]. 139, 140, 181]. greek, P[44, 52, 60,
funeral, P[57]. glasgow, P[8, 18, 20, 101, 111, 153, 156,
gardiner, P[177]. 31, 32, 33, 36, 63, 103, 157, 168].
gavin, P[44, 181]. 125, 155, 156, 167, greek new testament,
general assembly, P[11, 180, 181, 183]. P[44, 52].
13, 14, 15, 19, 21, 23, glory, P[44, 60, 91, growth in grace,
72, 80, 83, 87, 88, 90, 107, 108, 110, 122, P[109].
93, 94, 95, 102, 103, 139, 142]. guilt, P[47, 66, 98, 132,
104, 106, 122, 137, glory of god, P[60, 107, 147, 172].
141, 183]. 110]. haldane, P[12, 20, 21,
generation, P[9, 23, 79, gnostic, P[183]. 22].
104, 108, 111, 131, gnosticism, P[183]. happiness, P[22].
167, 168]. god the father, P[79]. harlot, P[84].
geneva, P[15, 16, 55, god's grace, P[24]. harris, P[25, 181].
62, 68, 69, 70, 74, 76, god's love, P[28]. hatred, P[119, 127].
77, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, god's mercy, P[129]. heart, P[20, 21, 22, 24,
90, 96, 98, 99, 100, god's word, P[42, 57, 26, 27, 28, 34, 37, 38,
103, 131, 139, 140, 74, 100, 106, 109, 41, 45, 49, 52, 55, 56,
168, 177, 180, 181, 138]. 57, 59, 64, 65, 66, 72,
182]. godhead, P[76, 78, 73, 75, 79, 91, 92, 99,
geneva bible, P[69]. 133]. 109, 113, 130, 132,
gentile, P[25]. good works, P[39, 78, 144, 145, 149, 150,
gentleness, P[39, 58, 164]. 151, 155, 163, 167,
76]. goodman, P[16, 99]. 171].
heathen, P[67, 146, holy, P[8, 10, 26, 27, hymn book, P[28].
149, 153]. 28, 31, 32, 36, 43, 46, hymn-book, P[132].
heaven, P[26, 33, 34, 49, 51, 52, 53, 64, 69, hypocrisy, P[44].
59, 128, 129, 173]. 72, 76, 78, 79, 82, 88, hypocrite, P[137].
heavenly, P[26, 129]. 91, 92, 101, 102, 107, hypocrites, P[137].
hebrew, P[10, 12, 13, 108, 126, 127, 139, icon, P[164].
19, 27, 153, 157, 168]. 141, 156, 171, 174, idol, P[67, 85, 99, 132,
heidelberg catechism, 175, 178]. 177].
P[75, 181]. holy scripture, P[10, 69, idolatry, P[67, 85, 177].
hell, P[1, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 88, 101, 175]. ignorance, P[28, 29, 33,
10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, holy spirit, P[26, 78, 48, 59, 98, 108, 113,
16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 79]. 135].
22, 23, 24, 33, 54, 62, home, P[10, 22, 23, 26, image, P[26, 28, 39,
87, 114, 136, 140, 150, 34, 43, 47, 51, 53, 57, 76, 85, 142].
151, 152, 154, 162, 79, 87, 99, 118, 125, image of god, P[76].
166, 176, 178, 179]. 133, 149, 157, 158, immorality, P[29, 33,
henderson, P[94, 95, 159, 160, 163, 173]. 45, 125].
107, 142, 180, 181]. hope, P[11, 23, 25, 27, immortality, P[129].
henry, P[41, 45, 50, 38, 39, 48, 51, 65, 119, imprisonment, P[41, 42,
145, 157, 158, 173, 122, 123, 146, 148, 173].
174, 178, 180, 181]. 149, 152, 173, 174]. imputation, P[80].
heresies, P[76]. horsemen, P[150]. incarnation, P[77].
heresy, P[29, 33, 35, hort, P[4, 9, 20, 23, 25, independent, P[69, 80,
36, 48, 50, 51, 52, 57, 26, 38, 48, 50, 54, 55, 134, 135].
59, 182]. 57, 60, 64, 78, 88, 89, index, P[7, 179, 180,
heretic, P[31, 33, 38, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 99, 181, 182, 183].
39, 41, 43, 46, 47, 70, 100, 104, 112, 118, india, P[9].
80, 134, 145, 168, 169, 120, 127, 129, 143, indifferent, P[151].
172]. 147, 152, 157, 159, indulged, P[66, 127].
heretical, P[39, 43, 46]. 160, 161, 162, 175, indulgence, P[48, 89,
hero, P[24, 35, 39, 42, 178, 180]. 155].
49, 61, 77, 121, 122, house, P[11, 22, 23, 34, indulgences, P[155].
124, 126]. 37, 45, 52, 54, 56, 70, infinite, P[53].
high-church, P[67]. 105, 115, 117, 118, innes, P[117, 128,
historical, P[4, 13, 14, 120, 123, 124, 141, 181].
15, 16, 18, 75, 81]. 147, 148, 157, 165, innovation, P[25, 93,
history, P[1, 5, 8, 9, 11, 167, 170, 173, 180, 162].
12, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 182]. inquisition, P[43, 168].
21, 25, 36, 39, 41, 43, howie, P[83]. inspiration, P[137].
44, 54, 56, 64, 66, 70, humanist, P[46, 52, inspired apostles, P[25].
73, 77, 78, 81, 82, 83, 156]. institutes, P[77, 78, 79,
88, 91, 93, 94, 97, 108, hume, P[15, 29, 51, 86, 82, 106].
114, 116, 120, 123, 177, 180]. instrument, P[26, 90].
130, 131, 133, 137, humility, P[136]. intercession, P[18,
141, 156, 161, 167, hunt, P[50, 67, 152, 107].
178, 180, 181, 182]. 181]. interpretation, P[99,
holiday, P[80]. husband, P[50, 161, 100, 103, 109, 128,
holiness, P[51]. 164]. 138].
holland, P[69, 116]. hymn, P[28, 57, 62, invention, P[28].
132].
liberty, P[37, 45, 47, lutheran, P[33, 34, 41, 94, 95, 103, 113, 120,
51, 66, 79, 94, 95, 104, 51, 55, 76, 80, 82, 94, 129, 150, 158, 167,
109, 110, 114, 147]. 146, 159, 160, 161, 169, 172, 173, 176].
library, P[14, 62, 137, 163, 164, 172]. mediator, P[30, 78,
152, 154, 166, 167, lutheranism, P[41]. 176].
176, 177, 178]. lye, P[57, 95, 120, 121, medieval, P[18, 25, 27,
light, P[4, 22, 25, 28, 130, 180]. 28, 29, 114, 180].
37, 38, 41, 42, 44, 46, m'crie, P[31, 44, 71, melanchthon, P[7, 32,
50, 51, 54, 62, 85, 98, 74, 88, 118, 121, 124, 37, 42, 85, 143, 151,
108, 113, 125, 128, 126, 139, 155, 164, 153, 154, 157, 158,
132, 143, 149, 161, 181]. 159, 160, 163, 164,
164, 168, 172]. mackenzie, P[177]. 165, 172, 174, 175,
lining, P[117, 168]. magistracy, P[135]. 176, 178, 179, 180,
liturgies, P[89, 94, 101, magistrate, P[10, 72, 181].
175]. 74, 106, 132, 133, 134, melville, P[4, 22, 83,
liturgy, P[82, 85, 89, 135, 136, 148]. 119, 120, 121, 122,
90, 91, 92, 93, 175, majesty, P[26]. 123, 124, 125, 130,
181]. malignant, P[84]. 132, 133, 164, 168,
locke, P[89, 173]. man of sin, P[124]. 181, 182].
logic, P[7, 13, 37, 75, manly, P[75]. mercy, P[25, 57, 84,
83, 111, 132, 157, 160, manuscript, P[14, 39, 106, 122, 128, 129].
168, 171, 179]. 62, 137, 166]. mercy of god, P[128].
logical, P[7, 13, 37, 75, marriage, P[38, 47, 87, merit, P[1, 5, 20, 25,
83, 132, 160, 168, 171, 88, 164]. 31, 37, 53, 75, 114,
179]. martin, P[120, 168, 129, 131, 136, 154].
lollard, P[31, 42, 181]. 169, 174]. messiah, P[77].
lord jesus, P[25, 79, 82, martyr, P[24, 30, 31, metrical psalter, P[69].
111, 133, 141]. 32, 34, 35, 38, 39, 40, metrical version, P[84].
lord jesus christ, P[25, 41, 42, 43, 44, 50, 52, metrical version of the
133, 141]. 53, 55, 56, 58, 59, 60, psalms, P[84].
lord's day, P[99, 127]. 63, 87, 146, 158, 160, middle ages, P[32].
lord's supper, P[30, 62, 161, 164, 168, 181, miller, P[11].
66, 67, 71, 82, 87]. 182, 183]. milligan, P[20].
love, P[3, 17, 20, 22, martyrdom, P[24, 32, milton, P[6, 7, 14, 15,
23, 26, 28, 37, 47, 49, 34, 35, 39, 40, 41, 42, 28, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36,
53, 69, 78, 117, 121, 60, 146, 158, 161, 181, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42,
142, 151, 163, 174]. 183]. 43, 50, 55, 60, 117,
lust, P[13, 24, 37, 59, mass, P[28, 30, 35, 50, 118, 120, 121, 122,
149, 159, 166, 167, 67, 68, 89, 92, 93, 112, 125, 126, 145, 146,
173]. 113, 124, 130, 167, 161, 167, 168, 169,
luther, P[25, 27, 33, 34, 181]. 172, 177, 178, 179,
35, 37, 38, 41, 43, 51, massacre, P[124, 181]. 180, 181, 182].
55, 57, 64, 76, 80, 81, matthew, P[33]. mind, P[16, 17, 28, 30,
82, 85, 94, 105, 126, mature, P[4, 64, 83, 39, 40, 45, 48, 55, 56,
132, 145, 146, 151, 121, 167]. 59, 66, 67, 68, 73, 91,
153, 154, 156, 159, meaning, P[25, 47, 80, 99, 106, 109, 110, 117,
160, 161, 163, 164, 101, 134, 156]. 119, 122, 129, 130,
165, 168, 169, 171, means of grace, P[110]. 134, 152, 155, 160,
172, 178, 181]. media, P[11, 30, 36, 168, 172].
49, 58, 61, 68, 70, 78,
minister, P[10, 11, 12, mother, P[10, 30, 34, oppression, P[29, 64,
17, 18, 20, 21, 30, 31, 69, 115, 117, 135, 168, 113, 114, 161].
40, 54, 57, 58, 66, 73, 174, 175]. ordained, P[11, 84, 88,
74, 78, 83, 85, 86, 87, movement, P[25, 26, 90, 94, 95, 101].
88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 42, 129]. ordinance, P[89, 131,
94, 95, 98, 99, 100, murder, P[41, 59, 66, 132, 139, 141, 142].
101, 102, 103, 107, 116, 118, 124]. ordination, P[12, 83,
109, 110, 114, 127, music, P[35]. 138, 142, 174].
132, 133, 134, 137, mystery, P[28, 139]. organ, P[27, 61, 88, 96,
138, 139, 140, 141, mystery of iniquity, 105, 111, 152, 167].
142, 146, 151, 160, P[139]. original intent, P[37].
175, 178]. mystical, P[82]. original sin, P[76].
ministry, P[10, 11, 12, national synod, P[104]. orthodox, P[83, 169,
19, 59, 61, 65, 66, 71, nations, P[30, 49, 73, 172].
83, 94, 100, 102, 110, 77, 81, 113, 141, 145]. orthodox presbyterian,
117, 119, 127, 141, necessary, P[65, 76, P[83].
181, 183]. 82, 89, 99, 101, 110, owen, P[80].
minutes, P[14, 23, 86]. 111, 151, 158]. pain, P[3, 8, 11, 14, 54,
miracle, P[18]. nero, P[16, 47, 168, 57, 115, 128, 129].
miraculous, P[144, 174]. paisley, P[49, 181].
179]. netherlands, P[116]. papacy, P[45, 46].
misery, P[89, 106]. new testament, P[18, papist, P[54, 84, 104,
mission, P[9, 11, 12, 32, 36, 41, 43, 44, 49, 113, 114, 134].
13, 14, 20, 21, 26, 46, 52, 62, 75, 82, 127, parable, P[19, 163].
47, 55, 59, 67, 70, 73, 131, 133, 153, 156, paraphrase, P[23, 128,
74, 81, 92, 101, 107, 168, 182]. 168].
109, 123, 130, 137, nicene, P[25]. parent, P[71, 72, 76,
138, 140, 153, 155, nisbet, P[21]. 114, 123, 126, 127,
162, 177, 180]. nonconformity, P[135]. 128, 129, 143, 144,
missionary, P[12]. notorious, P[44, 47, 58, 148, 158, 165, 174].
mitchell, P[1, 4, 5, 6, 8, 107, 115, 117]. parliament, P[15, 29,
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, numbers, P[44, 56, 31, 32, 35, 47, 48, 49,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 116]. 50, 73, 74, 82, 83, 105,
21, 22, 23, 24, 33, 54, nye, P[35]. 127, 137, 139, 140,
62, 87, 114, 136, 140, oath, P[31, 45, 50, 52, 141, 156, 178, 179].
150, 151, 152, 154, 146, 170]. party, P[46, 48, 51, 64,
162, 166, 176, 178, obedience, P[30, 48, 68, 69, 88, 98, 99, 116,
179]. 74, 78, 79, 80, 134, 117, 128, 140, 156,
modern, P[18, 25, 29, 177]. 160].
71, 80, 82, 123, 125, occult, P[169]. passion, P[45, 56, 64,
152, 183]. office, P[16, 18, 30, 46, 127, 132, 147].
modesty, P[162]. 48, 50, 62, 65, 67, 86, pastor, P[11, 12, 16,
money, P[47, 48, 49, 89, 90, 97, 98, 99, 100, 84, 86, 97, 100, 123,
51, 170, 173, 178]. 101, 102, 120, 123, 124, 142, 143].
morality, P[28, 29, 33, 128, 129, 133, 134, pastoral, P[11, 12, 16].
45, 108, 125, 146]. 136, 138, 142, 155, patent, P[110].
morison, P[173, 182]. 173, 179]. patience, P[23, 28, 39].
moses, P[162]. old testament, P[12, patristic, P[83].
124, 168]. paul, P[23, 31, 45, 50,
83, 109, 127, 134, 144,
149, 160, 164, 167, popery, P[119, 123, preaching, P[28, 39, 55,
174, 175, 176, 180, 134, 135]. 56, 64, 70, 71, 72, 81,
182]. popish, P[31, 47, 60, 91, 93, 99, 100, 101,
peace, P[11, 17, 22, 37, 66, 70, 93, 97, 101, 118, 178, 181, 182].
44, 68, 69, 71, 72, 87, 102, 104, 117, 118, predestination, P[83].
88, 90, 113, 124, 129, 125, 126, 134, 135, prelacy, P[107].
130, 157]. 138, 180, 181]. prelate, P[32, 36, 50,
penance, P[55]. possession, P[35, 43, 60, 61, 90, 95, 147,
pentecost, P[26]. 44, 54, 56, 121, 142]. 155, 161].
perfection, P[78, 79, posterity, P[42, 112, presbyterial
80, 109]. 124]. government, P[135].
perish, P[26, 27, 44, power, P[17, 25, 26, presbyterian, P[9, 15,
128, 162]. 27, 28, 29, 36, 38, 40, 16, 18, 82, 83, 85, 97,
persecuted, P[31, 67, 46, 50, 51, 65, 66, 67, 98, 116, 122, 134, 136,
162]. 68, 69, 72, 76, 77, 78, 137, 139, 140].
persecution, P[52, 57, 84, 90, 100, 102, 103, presbyterian church,
68, 160, 181]. 105, 110, 114, 119, P[9, 16, 18, 82, 85, 98,
persecution in scotland, 121, 129, 132, 133, 137].
P[181]. 135, 136, 137, 138, presbyterian churches,
persecutor, P[40, 149, 140, 141, 142, 143, P[9, 16, 18, 82, 85,
151]. 154, 167, 172]. 98].
perseverance, P[163]. power of god, P[142]. presbyterian
philadelphia, P[15, 16]. power of godliness, government, P[97].
philosophy, P[34, 45, P[142]. presbyterian principles,
139, 167]. praise, P[51, 62, 72, P[122].
physic, P[3, 120, 127, 129, 145, 168]. presbyterianism, P[83].
129, 157, 178]. pray, P[21, 27, 31, 39, presbytery, P[11, 24,
pierce, P[127]. 50, 55, 87, 88, 89, 90, 98, 103, 104, 131, 138,
piety, P[10, 23, 34, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 100, 139, 140, 141, 142,
147]. 122, 128, 129, 138, 143, 180, 182].
pink, P[123]. 144, 149, 178]. president, P[19, 67].
plato, P[34]. prayer, P[21, 27, 55, pressly, P[29, 49, 74,
pleasure, P[12, 21, 22, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 88, 89, 91, 92, 103,
48, 72, 90, 150, 160, 93, 94, 95, 100, 128, 106, 139, 141].
172, 173]. 129, 138, 144]. priest, P[18, 28, 30, 31,
poetry, P[13, 62, 183]. preach, P[11, 17, 25, 32, 35, 43, 48, 58, 64,
politics, P[36]. 28, 35, 39, 40, 45, 49, 69, 81, 84, 91, 101,
polity, P[106, 131, 55, 56, 58, 64, 65, 66, 130, 134, 144, 147,
154]. 67, 68, 70, 71, 72, 81, 155, 158, 173, 180,
poor, P[7, 31, 49, 53, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 95, 182].
100, 111, 112, 113, 99, 100, 101, 102, 118, priesthood, P[30, 35].
114, 115, 121, 132, 123, 124, 134, 139, principles, P[9, 32, 69,
148, 163, 166, 180, 147, 152, 163, 178, 73, 97, 113, 117, 122,
182]. 181, 182]. 132, 135, 136].
pope, P[29, 30, 31, 32, preach the word, P[35]. printer, P[62, 69, 121,
33, 35, 36, 43, 45, 46, preacher, P[17, 40, 49, 156, 158, 174, 175,
49, 50, 51, 54, 81, 104, 55, 56, 58, 65, 66, 67, 181, 182].
108, 119, 123, 134, 68, 70, 71, 89, 90, 95, printing, P[28, 62, 121,
135, 156, 167, 180]. 99, 100, 101, 102, 134, 175].
pope paul, P[167]. 152, 163, 181].
prison, P[39, 41, 42, pulpit, P[9, 55, 56, 65, 105, 107, 108, 109,
67, 68, 147, 148, 173, 72, 121, 123, 124, 110, 111, 112, 113,
174, 179]. 127]. 115, 116, 118, 119,
professor, P[1, 4, 5, 8, punishment, P[43, 57, 121, 122, 123, 124,
9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 66, 90, 128, 133, 149, 125, 130, 132, 136,
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 159, 172, 173, 174]. 143, 144, 145, 150,
22, 37, 44, 59, 72, 139, purgatory, P[30, 31]. 151, 152, 154, 156,
151, 152, 159, 163, puritanism, P[69]. 157, 158, 159, 160,
168, 169, 179, 182, puritans, P[69, 83, 95, 161, 162, 163, 165,
183]. 104, 140]. 167, 168, 171, 174,
property, P[22, 48, 170, queen mary, P[29]. 175, 178, 180, 181,
173]. quotation, P[4, 80, 114, 182].
prophecies, P[77, 118]. 136, 162, 165, 179, reformation church,
prophecy, P[109]. 181, 182]. P[84, 104, 180].
prophet, P[21, 109, quote, P[4, 23, 64, 76, reformed, P[15, 16, 18,
118, 124, 162, 171]. 119, 128, 148, 152, 30, 34, 44, 61, 62, 65,
prophetic, P[171]. 154, 155, 178, 180, 69, 71, 72, 75, 76, 80,
prosperity, P[13, 116]. 181, 182]. 81, 88, 91, 94, 96, 97,
protestant, P[15, 42, rcus, P[164, 182]. 100, 101, 102, 103,
49, 54, 67, 70, 71, 72, reading, P[12, 42, 44, 105, 116, 119, 121,
76, 77, 87, 96, 99, 104, 92, 93, 101, 127, 160, 136, 150, 156, 158,
108, 116, 125, 150, 165, 182]. 162, 167, 180, 181,
157, 160, 168, 171, reading of scripture, 182].
181]. P[92]. reformed church, P[15,
protestant church, P[42, reason, P[12, 13, 16, 18, 30, 34, 61, 69, 71,
125, 160, 168]. 17, 39, 59, 70, 88, 90, 80, 94, 96, 97, 100,
protestantism, P[99, 95, 97, 100, 101, 102, 102, 103, 105, 116,
108, 116]. 110, 135, 136, 143, 121, 136, 180].
protestation, P[76, 145, 147, 150, 155, reformed church of
120]. 172]. scotland, P[15, 18, 34,
providence, P[130, rebellion, P[156]. 69, 96, 105, 116].
144]. redeemer, P[77, 78]. reformed churches,
psalm, P[15, 27, 40, 56, redemption, P[77, 79]. P[15, 18, 80, 94, 100,
62, 84, 88, 91, 92, 127, reference, P[40, 46, 57, 121, 136, 180].
157, 158, 175, 176, 60, 62, 63, 77, 123, reformed faith, P[69,
182, 183]. 126, 131, 165, 166, 119, 181].
psalmist, P[27]. 179, 180, 181, 182]. reformed worship, P[72,
psalmody, P[15]. reform, P[1, 2, 5, 6, 7, 181].
psalms, P[40, 62, 84, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 24, reformer, P[14, 25, 26,
127, 158, 182, 183]. 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 27, 34, 38, 39, 45, 46,
psalms and hymns, 31, 32, 33, 34, 37, 38, 47, 48, 52, 59, 66, 68,
P[62]. 39, 40, 42, 44, 45, 46, 70, 71, 72, 73, 75, 76,
psalter, P[62, 69, 157]. 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 81, 82, 84, 89, 91, 95,
public repentance, 54, 55, 58, 59, 60, 61, 96, 98, 99, 105, 108,
P[105, 106]. 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 110, 111, 112, 113,
public worship, P[69, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 116, 118, 119, 121,
88, 90, 91, 93, 141]. 74, 75, 76, 80, 81, 82, 122, 124, 125, 130,
publication, P[13, 42, 84, 85, 88, 89, 91, 94, 145, 162, 168].
176, 177]. 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, regeneration, P[79].
publishing, P[121]. 101, 102, 103, 104, reid, P[19, 122].
rejoice, P[13]. roberts, P[4, 8, 11, 21, scandal, P[25, 47, 48,
relaxation, P[17, 22, 29, 32, 39, 46, 70, 168, 61, 114].
114]. 170, 182, 183]. scandalous, P[47, 48,
religion, P[15, 28, 31, rock, P[23, 128, 144, 61].
38, 51, 55, 66, 74, 95, 148]. schaff, P[15, 16, 171].
102, 113, 121, 136, roman catholic, P[54, scholarly, P[8, 21, 46,
137, 141, 142, 151, 81]. 132].
161, 167, 183]. romanist, P[82, 122]. scholarship, P[121].
reminiscences, P[20, romanists, P[82]. school, P[10, 21, 34,
22]. romans, P[55, 178]. 38, 46, 69, 95, 99, 109,
remnant, P[47]. rome, P[45, 51, 54, 80, 110, 111, 112, 121,
remonstrance, P[104, 146]. 122, 139, 145, 167,
147, 148]. rouse, P[29, 160]. 168].
renaissance, P[167]. russia, P[159]. scientific, P[12, 26].
repent, P[105, 106, rutherford, P[22]. scot, P[1, 2, 5, 7, 9, 11,
122, 124, 130, 173]. sabbath, P[66, 109]. 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17,
repentance, P[105, 106, sacerdotal, P[18, 69]. 18, 19, 20, 24, 27, 29,
124, 130]. sacerdotalism, P[18, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36,
repented, P[122]. 69]. 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42,
resolution, P[15]. sacrament, P[30, 38, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49,
resolutions, P[15]. 50, 66, 81, 82, 84, 88, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55,
restoration, P[83, 105, 90, 93, 99, 100, 101, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61,
162]. 115, 122, 133, 139, 62, 64, 67, 68, 69, 70,
resurrection, P[21, 127, 158, 160, 169, 175, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77,
142]. 177, 180, 182]. 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83,
revelation, P[25]. sacrament of the lord's 84, 85, 87, 88, 90, 91,
review, P[15, 59, 73, supper, P[66, 82]. 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 100,
82, 93, 104, 116, 181]. sacramental, P[82]. 101, 102, 103, 104,
revolution, P[24, 25, sacraments, P[30, 38, 105, 108, 110, 113,
31, 73]. 50, 81, 82, 84, 88, 90, 114, 115, 116, 118,
reward, P[21, 34, 40, 99, 100, 101, 122, 133, 120, 121, 124, 125,
45, 155]. 139, 158, 160, 177, 126, 128, 130, 131,
rex, P[118, 170]. 180, 182]. 133, 134, 136, 137,
rich, P[16, 25, 26, 31, sacrifice, P[18, 39, 60, 139, 140, 142, 143,
44, 45, 47, 53, 54, 62, 149]. 146, 151, 152, 153,
68, 72, 83, 86, 112, salvation, P[76, 77, 99, 154, 155, 156, 158,
115, 118, 124, 171, 141, 164]. 159, 160, 161, 162,
182]. samuel, P[22]. 163, 164, 165, 167,
riches, P[16, 25]. samuel rutherford, 168, 169, 170, 174,
righteousness, P[26, 30, P[22]. 175, 176, 177, 179,
77]. sanctification, P[79]. 180, 181, 182, 183].
rites, P[38, 69, 82, 130, sanctified, P[18]. scotland, P[9, 11, 12,
137, 179]. sanction, P[36, 88, 94, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 27,
ritual, P[18, 25, 30, 61, 101, 106, 107, 123, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37,
62, 63, 79, 92, 94, 96, 134, 136, 167, 169]. 38, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45,
100, 101, 106, 109, satan, P[76]. 46, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54,
110, 114, 129, 133, saul, P[126, 147, 178, 56, 58, 59, 61, 62, 68,
134, 137, 142, 182]. 179]. 69, 70, 72, 81, 82, 84,
robert haldane, P[22]. saviour, P[21, 26, 40, 88, 90, 91, 93, 94, 95,
81, 129, 150]. 96, 97, 100, 101, 102,
103, 104, 105, 110, septuagint, P[168]. speak, P[20, 32, 38, 65,
113, 114, 116, 118, sermon, P[16, 17, 41, 82, 83, 86, 87, 92, 93,
124, 125, 126, 131, 56, 57, 58, 66, 72, 89, 109, 121, 134, 147,
133, 139, 140, 142, 90, 91, 92, 94, 95, 99, 150, 153, 172, 174].
143, 146, 151, 154, 118, 123, 124, 147, speech, P[44, 65, 71,
156, 158, 159, 160, 161, 175, 176]. 153].
161, 163, 164, 165, session, P[10, 19, 31, spirit, P[12, 17, 25, 26,
167, 177, 180, 181, 35, 43, 44, 54, 56, 58, 27, 28, 30, 37, 38, 56,
182, 183]. 76, 84, 103, 107, 110, 61, 62, 63, 68, 69, 75,
scotland's martyrs, 117, 121, 139, 140, 77, 78, 79, 80, 83, 85,
P[44]. 142, 178, 181, 182]. 87, 91, 92, 93, 94, 100,
scottish church, P[14, settled, P[65, 96, 101, 101, 106, 107, 108,
15, 17, 32, 47, 102, 160, 170]. 109, 110, 114, 116,
104, 105, 183]. seventh commandment, 119, 121, 128, 129,
scottish presbyterian, P[159]. 133, 134, 135, 137,
P[83, 134]. sex, P[176]. 141, 142, 146, 147,
scottish shadow, P[24, 60]. 161, 182].
presbyterianism, P[83]. shame, P[18, 29, 42, spirit of god, P[91, 92,
scottish reformation, 47, 60, 73, 83, 95, 106, 110].
P[1, 2, 5, 13, 14, 15, 121, 125, 148, 155]. spiritual, P[25, 30, 61,
24, 40, 44, 61, 64, 73, sharp, P[33, 41, 58, 62, 63, 79, 94, 100,
85, 143, 161, 162, 103, 119, 158, 182]. 101, 106, 109, 110,
181]. shepherd, P[22, 36]. 114, 129, 133, 134,
scriptural, P[26, 43, 61, sick, P[56, 58, 127, 137, 142, 182].
97, 135]. 150]. spiritual man, P[30].
scripture, P[10, 30, 42, sickness, P[150]. spiritual song, P[62,
43, 49, 68, 69, 76, 88, single, P[24, 72, 74, 98, 182].
92, 93, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 130, 142, 168]. spring, P[23, 28, 35,
101, 103, 109, 127, sinner, P[25, 162]. 67, 77, 117].
129, 134, 135, 138, sins, P[26, 34, 129, steven, P[51, 182].
139, 145, 151, 153, 162]. stevenson, P[51, 182].
154, 157, 160, 168, six day, P[90]. steward, P[44, 127,
171, 175, 182]. six days, P[90]. 182].
sda, P[23, 92, 144]. slave, P[66, 72, 76, stewart, P[22, 44, 167,
second book of 118, 143, 181]. 182].
discipline, P[7, 103, smith, P[11, 23]. stress, P[30, 129, 170].
131, 132, 133, 134, society of jesus, P[125]. strife, P[116].
135, 136, 137, 138, soldier, P[57, 129, stuart, P[51, 145, 182].
139, 140, 141, 142, 173]. student, P[4, 8, 10, 11,
143]. solemn, P[65, 66, 71, 12, 13, 19, 20, 21, 37,
second reformation, 92, 127]. 44, 119, 122, 145, 166,
P[14]. son of god, P[25, 127, 168].
secular, P[29, 30, 43, 133, 162]. studies, P[10, 22, 34,
133, 153]. soul, P[23, 26, 36, 39, 90, 93, 145, 158, 168,
sense, P[9, 13, 18, 31, 57, 66, 67, 71, 93, 106, 181].
91, 106, 111, 138, 144, 127, 128, 130, 133, study, P[10, 12, 13, 14,
153, 166, 167]. 134, 138, 145, 171]. 19, 21, 25, 53, 63, 96,
separated, P[133]. sovereign, P[34, 36, 47, 100, 109, 138, 145,
separation, P[11, 45, 127, 133, 174]. 147, 150, 153, 154,
138]. spanish, P[26, 116]. 156, 166, 168, 179].
vote, P[4, 11, 13, 21, witnesses, P[31, 69]. zeal, P[13, 36, 58, 61,
45, 47, 56, 57, 67, 69, witnessing, P[40, 69]. 71, 107, 119, 121, 122,
98, 114, 116]. women, P[26, 115]. 125, 142].
vow, P[39, 78, 83, word of god, P[26, 30, zealous, P[58, 61, 71].
132]. 31, 35, 39, 56, 60, 66, zurich, P[86, 171].
vulgate, P[84, 156]. 75, 83, 84, 91, 106, zwingli, P[82].
warfare, P[127]. 134, 136, 139, 155,
warne, P[93, 136, 173]. 156, 158, 160, 165,
warning, P[41, 48, 59, 172, 175, 178].
61, 93, 118, 173]. work, P[3, 4, 7, 9, 11,
wedding, P[7, 164, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19,
174]. 20, 21, 22, 30, 39, 40,
welch, P[171]. 42, 49, 51, 55, 57, 59,
wellbeing, P[105]. 61, 64, 65, 66, 67, 70,
westminster assembly, 72, 75, 77, 78, 80, 83,
P[14]. 85, 97, 103, 104, 115,
westminster confession, 116, 117, 121, 123,
P[13, 79, 83, 141, 182]. 124, 126, 130, 136,
westminster confession 137, 144, 150, 154,
of faith, P[13, 141, 158, 160, 161, 162,
182]. 163, 164, 167, 174,
westminster divine, 175, 176, 179, 181,
P[80, 107]. 183].
westminster divines, world, P[9, 24, 25, 69,
P[80, 107]. 77, 81, 114, 126, 129,
westminster standards, 135, 141, 162].
P[15]. worship, P[16, 18, 39,
white, P[7, 17, 53, 54, 68, 69, 72, 73, 85, 88,
86, 171, 180]. 90, 91, 93, 94, 141,
whore, P[43]. 181].
wife, P[32, 43, 44, 50, wrath, P[60, 78, 84,
115, 120, 127, 128, 178].
164]. wrath of god, P[60,
william roberts, P[21]. 178].
william smith, P[11]. wright, P[12].
williams, P[62, 64, wycliffe, P[25, 31, 32,
182]. 33, 117, 126, 183].
wine, P[30, 45, 84, young, P[7, 10, 11, 12,
127]. 18, 20, 21, 30, 33, 34,
wisdom, P[13, 112, 35, 37, 38, 41, 42, 45,
164]. 49, 52, 61, 63, 111,
wishart, P[6, 42, 44, 113, 117, 119, 121,
52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 123, 127, 132, 145,
58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 146, 166, 180].
64, 65, 182, 183]. youth, P[10, 11, 19, 21,
witch, P[108, 183]. 34, 37, 39, 52, 80, 111,
witness, P[11, 31, 32, 112, 122, 125, 146,
40, 69, 116, 122, 125, 163, 164, 168].
126, 127, 128, 129,
153, 162, 172, 173].