To the Great council of Scotland now admitted to [the] regiment, by the
providence of God, and by the common consent of the Estates thereof,
your honours' humble servants and ministers of Christ Jesus within the
same wish grace, mercy, and peace from God the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with the perpetual increase of the Holy Spirit.
From your honours we received a charge, dated at
Edinburgh, 29th of April, in the year of God 1560, requiring and
commanding us, in the name of the Eternal God, as we will answer in his
presence, to commit to writing, and in a book to deliver unto your
wisdoms our judgments touching the reformation of religion, which
heretofore, in this realm (as in others), has been utterly corrupted.
Upon the receipt whereof, so many of us as were in this town did
convene, and in unity of mind do offer unto your wisdoms these
subsequent heads for common order and uniformity to be observed in this
realm, concerning doctrine, administration of sacraments, [election of
ministers, provision for their sustenance,] ecclesiastical discipline,
and policy of the kirk: most humbly requiring your honours that, as ye
look for participation with Christ Jesus, that neither ye admit
anything which God's plain word shall not approve, neither yet that ye
shall reject such ordinances as equity, justice, and God's word do
specify. For as we will not bind your wisdoms to our judgments, further
than we are able to prove the same by God's plain scriptures, so must
we most humbly crave of you, even as ye will answer in God's presence
(before whom both ye and we must appear to render account of all our
facts), that ye repudiate nothing, for pleasure nor affection of men,
which ye are not able to improve by God's written and revealed word.
Of Doctrine
Seeing that Christ Jesus is he whom God the Father has commanded only to be heard, and followed of his sheep, we urge it necessary that his evangel be truly and openly preached in every kirk and assembly of this realm; and that all doctrine repugning to the same be utterly suppressed as damnable to man's salvation.
The Explication of the First Head
Lest upon this our generality ungodly men take occasion to cavil, this we add for explication. By preaching of the evangel, we understand not only the scriptures of the New Testament, but also of the Old: to wit, the law, prophets, and histories, in which Christ Jesus is no less contained in figure, than we have him now expressed in verity. And, therefore, with the apostle, we affirm that, All scripture inspired of God is profitable to instruct, to reprove, and to exhort [2 Tim. 3:16]. In which books of Old and New Testaments we affirm that all things necessary for the instruction of the kirk, and to make the man of God perfect, are contained and sufficiently expressed.
By the contrary doctrine, we understand whatsoever
men, by laws, councils, or constitutions have imposed upon the
consciences of men, without the expressed commandment of God's word:
such as be vows of chastity, forswearing of marriage, binding of men
and women to several and disguised apparels, to the superstitious
observation of fasting days, difference of meat for conscience sake,
prayer for the dead; and keeping of holy days of certain saints
commanded by man, such as be all those that the Papists have invented,
as the feasts (as they term them) of apostles, martyrs, virgins, of
Christmas, Circumcision, Epiphany, Purification, and other fond feasts
of our lady. Which things, because in God's scriptures they neither
have commandment nor assurance, we judge them utterly to be abolished
from this realm; affirming further, that the obstinate maintainers and
teachers of such abominations ought not to escape the punishment of the
civil magistrate.
Of Sacraments
To Christ Jesus' holy evangel truly preached, it is of necessity that his holy sacraments are annexed, and truly ministered, as seals and visible confirmations of the spiritual promises contained in the word. And they are two, to wit, baptism, and the holy Supper of the Lord Jesus: which are then rightly ministered when, by a lawful minister, the people, before the administration of the same, are plainly instructed and put in mind of God's free grace and mercy offered unto the penitent in Christ Jesus; when God's promises are rehearsed, the end and use of the sacraments declared, and that in such a tongue as the people do understand; when further to them is nothing added, from them nothing diminished, and in their practice nothing changed besides the institution of the Lord Jesus, and practice of his holy apostles.
And albeit the Order of Geneva, which now is used in
some of our kirks, is sufficient to instruct the diligent reader how
that both these sacraments may be rightly ministered, yet for a
uniformity to be kept, we have thought good to add this as
superabundant.
In baptism, we acknowledge nothing to be used except
the element of water only (that the word and declaration of the
promises ought to precede, we have said before). Wherefore, whosoever
presumes in baptism to use oil, salt, wax, spittle, conjuration, or
crossing, accuses the perfect institution of Christ Jesus of
imperfection; for it was void of all such inventions devised by men.
And such as would presume to alter Christ's perfect ordinance you ought
severely to punish.
The Table of the Lord is then most rightly ministered
when it approaches most nigh to Christ's own action. But plain it is,
that at that Supper Christ Jesus sat with his disciples, and therefore
do we judge that sitting at a table is most convenient to that holy
action; that bread and wine ought to be there; that thanks ought to be
given; distribution of the same made; and commandment given that the
bread should be taken and eaten; and that all should likewise drink of
the cup of wine, with declaration what both the one and the other is,
we suppose no godly man will doubt. For as touching the damnable error
of the Papists, who can defraud the common people of the one part of
that holy sacrament: to wit, of the cup of the Lord's blood, we suppose
their error to be so manifest that it needs no confutation. Neither
yet intend we to confute anything in this our simple confession, but to
offer public disputation to all that list oppugn anything affirmed by
us.
That the minister break the bread, and distribute the
same to those that are next unto him, commanding the rest, every one
with reverence and sobriety, to break with others, we think it nighest
to Christ's action, and to the perfect practice [of the apostles], as
we read it in Saint Paul. During which action, we think it necessary
that some comfortable places of [the] scriptures be read, which may
bring in mind the death of Christ Jesus, and the benefit of the same.
For seeing that in that action we ought chiefly to remember the Lord's
death, we judge the scriptures making mention of the same most apt to
stir up our dull minds then, and at all times. Let the discretion of
the ministers appoint the places to be read as they think good. What
times we think most convenient for the administration of the one and of
the other of these sacraments, shall be declared in the policy of the
kirk.
Touching the Abolishing of Idolatry
As we require Christ Jesus to be truly preached, and his holy sacraments to be rightly ministered; so can we not cease to require idolatry, with all monuments and places of the same, as abbeys, monkeries, friaries, nunneries, chapels, chantries, cathedral kirks, canonries, colleges (other than presently are parish kirks or schools), to be utterly suppressed in all bounds and places of this realm (except only the palaces, mansions, and dwelling places adjacent thereto, with orchards and yards of the same): as also that idolatry may be removed from the presence of all persons, of what estate or condition that ever they be, within this realm.
For let your honours be assuredly persuaded, that
where idolatry is maintained or permitted (where it may be suppressed),
that there shall God's wrath reign, not only upon the blind and
obstinate idolater, but also upon the negligent sufferers [of the
same]; especially if God has armed their hands with power to suppress
such abomination.
By idolatry, we understand the Mass, invocation of
saints, adoration of images, and the keeping and retaining of the same;
and, finally, all honouring of God not contained in his holy word.
Concerning Ministers and Their Lawful Election
In a kirk reformed or tending to reformation, none ought [to] presume either to preach, either yet to minister the sacraments, till that orderly they are called to the same. Ordinary vocation consists in election, examination, and admission. And because that election of ministers in this cursed Papistry has altogether been abused, we think expedient to entreat it more largely.
It appertains to the people, and to every several
congregation, to elect their minister. And in case that they are found
negligent therein the space of forty days, the best reformed kirk-to
wit, the church of the superintendent with his council- may present
unto them a man whom they judge apt to feed the flock of Christ Jesus,
who must be examined as well in life and manners, as in doctrine and
knowledge.
And that this may be done with more exact diligence,
the persons that are to be examined must be commanded to compear [appear]
before men of soundest judgment, remaining in some principal town next
adjacent unto them as they that are in Fife, Angus, Mearns, or
Strathearn, to present themselves in Saint Andrews; those that are in
Lothian, Merse, or Teviotdale, to Edinburgh; and likewise those that
are in other countries must resort to the best reformed cities or
towns, that is, to the city of the superintendent. Where first in the
schools or, failing thereof, in open assembly, and before the
congregation, they must give declaration of their gifts, utterance, and
knowledge, by interpreting some place of scripture to be appointed by
the ministry. Which, being ended, the person that is presented, or that
offered himself to the administration of the kirk, must be examined by
the ministers and elders of the kirk, and that openly, and before all
that list to hear, in all the chief points that now lie in controversy
betwixt us and the Papists, Anabaptists, Arians, or other such enemies
to the Christian religion. In which, if he is found sound, able to
persuade by wholesome doctrine, and to convince the gainsayers, then he
must be directed to the kirk and congregation where he should serve,
that there, in open audience of his flock, in diverse public sermons,
he may give confession of his faith in the articles of justification, of
the office of Christ Jesus, of the number, effect, and use of the
sacraments; and, finally, of the whole religion which heretofore has
been corrupted by the Papists.
If his doctrine is found wholesome, and [he is] able
to instruct the simple, and if the kirk justly can reprehend nothing in
his life, doctrine, nor utterance, then we judge the kirk, which
before was destitute, unreasonable if they refuse him whom the kirk did
offer; and that they should be compelled, by the censure of the
council and kirk, to receive the person appointed and approved by the
judgment of the godly and learned, unless that the same kirk have
presented a man better or as well qualified to the examination, before
that this foresaid trial was taken of the person presented by the
council of the whole kirk. As, for example, the council of the kirk
presents to any kirk a man to be their minister, not knowing that they
are otherwise provided: in the meantime, the kirk is provided of
another, sufficient in their judgment for that charge, whom they
present to the learned ministers and next reformed kirk to be examined.
In this case the presentation of the people, to whom he should be
appointed pastor, must be preferred to the presentation of the council
or greater kirk; unless the person presented by the inferior kirk is
judged unable for the regiment by the learned. For altogether this is
to be avoided, that any man be violently intruded or thrust in upon any
congregation. But this liberty with all care must be reserved to every
several kirk, to have their votes and suffrages in election of their
ministers. But violent intrusion we call not, when the council of the
kirk, in the fear of God, and for the salvation of the people, offers
unto them a sufficient man to instruct them; whom they shall not be
forced to admit before just examination, as before is said.
What May Disable Any Person that He May Not be Admitted to the Ministry of the Kirk
It is to be observed that no person, noted with public infamy, or being unable to edify the kirk by wholesome doctrine, or being known [to be] of corrupt judgment, be either promoted to the regiment of the kirk, or yet received in ecclesiastical administration.
Explication
By public infamy we understand not the common sins and offences which any has committed in time of blindness, by fragility (if of the same, by a better and more sober conversation, he has declared himself verily penitent); but such capital crimes as the civil sword ought and may punish with death by the word of God. For besides that the apostle requires the life of ministers to be so irreprehensible that they have a good testimony from those that are without, we judge it a thing unseemly and dangerous, that he shall have public authority to preach to others the life everlasting, from whom the civil magistrate may take the life temporal for a crime publicly committed. And if any object, that the prince has pardoned his offence, and that he has publicly repented, and so is not only his life in assurance, but also that he may be received to the ministry of the kirk: we answer, that repentance does not take away the temporal punishment of the law, neither does the pardon of the prince remove his infamy before man.
That the life and conversation of the person
presented, or to be elected, may be the more clearly known, public
edicts must be directed to all parts of this realm, or at the least to
those parts where the person has been most conversant: as where he was
nourished in letters, or where he continued from the years of infancy,
and childhood was passed. Strait commandment would be given, that if
any capital crimes were committed by him, that they should be notified;
as, if he has committed willful murder, adultery, [were] a common
fornicator, if he were a thief, a drunkard, a fighter, brawler, or
contentious person. These edicts ought to be notified in the chief
cities, with the like charge and commandment, with declaration that
such as concealed his sins known did deceive and betray (so far as in
them lay) the kirk, which is the spouse of Jesus Christ, and did
communicate with the sins of that wicked man.
Admission [of Ministers]
The admission of ministers to their offices must consist in consent of the people and kirk whereto they shall be appointed, and in approbation of the learned ministers appointed for their examination.
We judge it expedient that the admission of ministers
be in open audience; that some especial minister make a sermon touching
the duty and office of ministers, touching their manners,
conversation, and life; as also touching the obedience which the kirk
owes to its ministers. Commandment should be given as well to the
minister as unto the people, both being present: to wit, that he with
all careful diligence attend upon the flock of Christ Jesus, over the
which he is appointed preacher; that he [will] walk in the presence of
God so sincerely that the graces of the Holy Spirit may be multiplied
unto him; and in the presence of men so soberly and uprightly that his
life may confirm, in the eyes of men, that which by tongue and word he
persuades unto others. The people would be exhorted to reverence and
honour their ministers chosen, as the servants and ambassadors of the
Lord Jesus, obeying the commandments which they pronounce from God's
mouth and book, even as they would obey God himself; for whosoever
hears Christ's ministers hears himself, and whosoever rejects them,
[and] despises their ministry and exhortation, rejects and despises
Christ Jesus.
Other ceremony than the public approbation of the
people, and declaration of the chief minister, that the person there
presented is appointed to serve that kirk, we cannot approve; for
albeit the apostles used the imposition of hands, yet seeing the
miracle is ceased, the using of the ceremony we judge is not necessary.
The minister, elected or presented, examined, and, as
said is, publicly admitted, must neither leave the flock at his
pleasure, to the which he has promised his fidelity and labours,
neither yet may the flock reject nor change him at their appetite,
unless they are able to convict him of such crimes as deserve
deposition; whereof we shall after speak. We mean not but that the
whole kirk, or the most part thereof, for just considerations, may
transfer a minister from one kirk to another; neither yet mean we that
men who now do serve, as it were of benevolence, may not be appointed
and elected to serve in other places. But once being solemnly elected
and admitted, we cannot approve that they should change at their own
pleasure.
We are not ignorant that the rarity of godly and
learned men shall seem to some a just reason why that so strait and
sharp examination should not be taken universally; for so it shall
appear that the most part of [the] kirks shall have no minister at all.
But let these men understand that the lack of able men shall not
excuse us before God if, by our consent, unable men be placed over the
flock of Christ Jesus; as also that, amongst the Gentiles, godly,
learned men were also rare as they are now amongst us, when the apostle
gave the same rule to try and examine ministers which we now follow.
And last, let them understand that it is alike to have no minister at
all, and to have an idol in the place of a true minister; yea and in
some cases, it is worse. For those that are utterly destitute of
ministers will be diligent to search for them; but those that have a
vain shadow do commonly, without further care, content themselves with
the same, and so they remain continually deceived, thinking that they
have a minister, when in very deed they have none. For we cannot judge
him a dispenser of God's mysteries that in no wise can break the bread
of life to the fainting and hungry souls; neither judge we that the
sacraments can be rightly ministered by him, in whose mouth God has put
no sermon of exhortation.
The chiefest remedy left to your honours and to us, in
all this rarity of true ministers, is fervent prayer unto God that it
will please his mercy to thrust out faithful workmen into this his
harvest; and next, that your honours, with consent of the kirk, are
bound by your authority to compel such men as have gifts and graces
able to edify the kirk of God, that they bestow them where greatest
necessity shall be known. For no man may be permitted to live idle, or
as himself list, but must be appointed to travail where your wisdoms
and the kirk shall think expedient.
We cannot prescribe unto your honours certain rule how
that ye shall distribute the ministers and learned men whom God has
already sent unto you. But hereof we are assured, that it greatly
hinders the progress of Christ's evangel within this poor realm that
some altogether abstract their labours from the kirk, and others remain
together in one place, the most part of them being idle. And therefore
of your honours we require, in God's name, that by your authority
which ye have of God, ye compel all men to whom God has given any
talent to persuade, by wholesome doctrine, to bestow the same, if they
are called by the kirk to the advancement of Christ's glory, and to the
comfort of his troubled flock; and that ye, with the consent of the
kirk, assign unto your chiefest workmen, not only towns to remain into,
but also provinces, that by their faithful labours kirks may be
erected, and order established, where none is now. And if on this
manner ye will use your power and authority, chiefly seeking God's
glory, and the comfort of your brethren, we doubt not but God shall
bless you and your enterprises.
For Readers
To the kirks where no ministers can be
had presently, must be appointed the most apt men that distinctly can
read the common prayers and the scriptures, to exercise both themselves
and the kirk, till they grow to greater perfection; and in process of
time he that is but a reader may attain to the further degree, and by
consent of the kirk and discreet ministers, may be permitted to
minister the sacraments; but not before that he is able somewhat to
persuade by wholesome doctrine, besides his reading, and is admitted to
the ministry, as before is said. Some we know that of long time have
professed Christ Jesus, whose honest conversation deserved praise of
all godly men, and whose knowledge also might greatly help the simple,
and yet they only content themselves with reading. These must be
animated, and by gentle admonition encouraged, by some exhortation to
comfort their brethren, and so they may be admitted to administration
of the sacraments. But such readers as neither have had exercise, nor
continuance in Christ's true religion, must abstain from ministration
of the sacraments till they give declaration and witnessing of their
honesty and further knowledge.
Concerning the Provision for the Ministers, and for the Distribution of the Rents and Possessions Justly Appertaining to the Kirk
Seeing that of our Master Christ Jesus and his apostle Paul we have that the workman is worthy of his reward, and that the mouth of the labouring ox ought not to be muzzled [Luke 10:7; 1 Tim. 5:18], it is of necessity that honest provision be made for the ministers, which we require to be such that they have neither occasion of solicitude, neither yet of insolence and wantonness. And this provision must be made not only for their own sustenance during their lives, but also for their wives and children after them. For we judge it a thing most contrary to reason, godliness, and equity, that the widow and children of him, who in his life did faithfully serve the kirk of God, and for that cause did not carefully make provision for his family, should, after his death, be left comfortless of all provision.
It is difficult to appoint a several stipend to every
minister, by reason that the charges and necessity of all will not be
alike; for some will be continuers in one place, [and] some will be
compelled to travel, and oft to change dwelling place (if they shall
have charge of diverse kirks). Amongst these, some will be burdened
with wife and children, and one with more than another; and some
perchance will be single men. If equal stipends should be appointed to
all those that in charge are so unequal, either should the one suffer
penury, or else should the other have superfluity and too much.
To him that travels from place to place, whom we call
superintendents, who remain, as it were, a month or less in one place,
for the establishing of the kirk, and for the same purpose changing to
another place, further consideration must be had. And, therefore, to
such we think six chalders [of] bear [barley], nine chalders [of] meal, three chalders [of] oats for his horse, 500 marks [of] money, to be eiked [increased] and pared [decreased] at the discretion of the prince and council of the realm; to be paid to him yearly, in manner foresaid.
The children of the ministers must have the liberties
of the cities next adjacent where their fathers labour, freely granted.
They must have the privileges in schools, and bursaries in colleges:
that is, that they shall be sustained at learning, if they are found
apt thereto; and failing thereof, that they be put to some handicraft,
or exercised in some virtuous industry, whereby they may be profitable
members in a commonwealth.
And this in God's presence we witness, we require not
so much for ourselves, or for any that to us appertains, as that we do
for the increase of virtue and learning, and for the profit of the
posterity to come. It is not to be supposed that any man will dedicate
himself and [his] children so to God, and to serve his kirk, that he
looks for no worldly commodity. But this cankered nature, which we
bear, is provoked to follow virtue when it sees honour and profit
annexed to the same; as, contrarily, then is virtue of many despised,
when virtuous and godly men live without honour. And sorry would we be
that poverty should discourage men from study, and from following the
way of virtue, by the which they might edify the kirk and flock of
Christ Jesus.
We have spoken nothing of the stipend of readers,
because, if they can do nothing but read, they neither can be called
nor judged true ministers. And yet regard must be had to their labours;
but so that they may be spurred forward to virtue, and not by a
stipend appointed for their reading, to be retained still in that
estate. To a reader, therefore, that is lately entered, we think forty
marks, or more or less, as the parishioners and reader can agree,
sufficient: providing that he teach the children of the parish, which
he must do, besides the reading of the common prayers, and books of the
New and Old Testaments.
If from reading he begins to exhort, and explain the scriptures, then ought his stipend to be augmented; till finally he comes to the honour of a minister. But and if he is found unable after two years, then must he be removed from that office, and discharged of all stipend, that another may be proven as long. For this always is to be avoided, that none who is judged unable to come at any time to some reasonable knowledge, whereby he may edify the kirk, shall be perpetually nourished upon the charge of the kirk. Further, it must be avoided that no child or person within age, that is, within 21 years of age, be admitted to the office of a reader; but readers ought to be endued with gravity, wit, and discretion, lest by their lightness the prayers or scriptures read are of less price and estimation. It is to be noted that the readers are put in by the kirk, and admission of the superintendent.
[For] the other sort of readers, who have long
continued in godliness, and have some gift of exhortation, who are in
hope to attain to the degree of a minister, and teach the children, we
think an hundred marks, or more, at the discretion of the kirk, may be
appointed; so that differ ence, as is said, is betwixt them and the
ministers that openly preach the word, and minister the sacraments.
Rests yet two other sorts of people to be provided
for, of that which is called the patrimony of the kirk: to wit, the
poor, and teachers of the youth. Every several kirk must provide for
the poor within itself; for fearful and horrible it is, that the poor,
whom not only God the Father in his law, but Christ Jesus in his
evangel, and the Holy Spirit speaking by Saint Paul, has so earnestly
commended to our care, are universally so contemned and despised. We
are not patrons for stubborn and idle beggars who, running from place to
place, make a craft of their begging, whom the civil magistrate ought
to punish; but for the widow and fatherless, the aged, impotent, or
lame, who neither can nor may travail for their sustenance, we say that
God commands his people to be careful. And therefore, for such, as
also for persons of honesty fallen in[to] decay and penury, ought such
provision be made that [of] our abundance should their indigence be
relieved. How this most conveniently and most easily may be done in
every city, and other parts of this realm, God shall show you wisdom
and the means, so that your minds are godly thereto inclined. All must
not be suffered to beg that gladly so would do; neither yet must
beggars remain where they choose; but the stout and strong beggar must
be compelled to work, and every person that may not work must be
compelled to repair to the place where he or she was born (unless of
long continuance they have remained in one place), and there reasonable
provision must be made for their sustenance, as the church shall
appoint. The order nor sums, in our judgments, cannot be particularly
appointed, until such time as the poor of every city, town, or parish
are compelled to repair to the places where they were born, or of their
residences, where their names and number must be taken and put in [a]
roll; and then may the wisdom of the kirk appoint stipends accordingly.
Of the Superintendents
Because we have appointed a larger stipend to those that shall be superintendents than to the rest of the ministers, we have thought good to signify unto your honours such reasons as moved us to make difference betwixt preachers at this time; as also how many superintendents we think necessary, with their bounds, office, [the manner of their] election, and causes that may deserve deposition from that charge.
We consider that if the ministers whom God has endued
with his [singular] graces amongst us should be appointed to several
and certain places, there to make their continual residence, that then
the greatest part of this realm should be destitute of all doctrine;
which should not only be occasion of great murmur, but also should be
dangerous to the salvation of many. And therefore we have thought it a
thing most expedient for this time that, from the whole number of godly
and learned [men], now presently in this realm, be selected twelve or
ten (for in so many provinces have we divided the whole), to whom
charge and commandment shall be given to plant and erect churches, to
set order and appoint ministers (as the former order prescribes) to the
countries that shall be appointed to their care where none are now.
And by these means [your] love and common care over all the inhabitants
of this realm (to whom ye are equal debtors) shall evidently appear;
as also the simple and ignorant (who perchance have never heard Christ
Jesus truly preached) shall come to some knowledge by the which many
that now are dead in superstition and ignorance shall attain to some
feeling of godliness, by the which they may be provoked to search and
seek further knowledge of God, and his true religion and worshipping.
Where, by the contrary, if they shall be neglected, they shall not only
grudge, but also they shall seek the means whereby they may continue in
their blindness, or return to their accustomed idolatry. And therefore
we desire nothing more earnestly, than that Christ Jesus be
universally once preached throughout this realm; which shall not
suddenly be unless that, by you, men are appointed and compelled
faithfully to travail in such provinces as to them shall be assigned.
The Names of the Places of Residence,
and Several Dioceses of the Superintendents
Imprimis, the superintendent of Orkney: whose diocese shall be to the Isles of Orkney, Shetland, Caithness, and Strathnaver. His residence to be in the town of Kirkwall.
2. The superintendent of Ross: whose diocese shall
comprehend Ross, Sutherland, Moray, with the North Isles of the Skye,
and the Lewis, with their adjacents. His residence to be in [the]
Canonry of Ross.
3. The superintendent of Argyll: whose diocese shall
comprehend Argyll, [Kintyre,] Lorne, the South Isles, Arran [and] Bute,
with their adjacents, with Lochaber. His residence to be in [Argyll].
4. The superintendent of Aberdeen: whose diocese is
betwixt Dee and Spey, containing the sheriffdom of Aberdeen and Banff.
His residence to be in Old Aberdeen.
5. The superintendent of Brechin: whose diocese shall
be the whole sheriffdoms of Mearns and Angus, and the Brae of Mar to
Dee. His residence to be in Brechin.
6. The superintendent of Saint Andrews: whose diocese
shall comprehend the whole sheriffdom of Fife and Fotheringham, to
Stirling; and the whole sheriffdom of Perth. His resi dence to be in
Saint Andrews.
7. The superintendent of Edinburgh: whose diocese
shall comprehend the whole sheriffdoms of Lothian, and Stirling on the
south side of the Water of Forth; and thereto is added, by consent of
the whole church, Merse, Lauderdale, and Wedale. His residence to be in
[Edinburgh].
8. The superintendent of Jedburgh: whose
diocese shall comprehend Teviotdale, Tweeddale,
Liddesdale, with the Forest of Ettrick. His residence to be [in
Jedburgh].
9. The superintendent of Glasgow: whose
diocese shall comprehend Clydesdale, Renfrew,
Menteith, Lennox, Kyle, and Cunningham. His residence to be in Glasgow.
10. The superintendent of Dumfries: whose diocese
shall comprehend Galloway, Carrick, Nithsdale, Annandale, with the rest
of the dales in the West. His residence to be in Dumfries.
These men must not be suffered to live as your idle
bishops have done heretofore; neither must they remain where gladly
they would. But they must be preachers themselves, and such as may make
no long residence in any one place, till there are churches planted
and provided of ministers, or at the least of readers.
Charge must be given to them that they remain in no
one place above twenty or thirty days in their visitation, till they
have passed through their whole bounds. They must thrice every week, at
the least, preach; and when they return to their principal town and
residence, they must be likewise exercised in preaching and in
edification of the church there. And yet they must not be suffered to
continue there so long, as they may seem to neglect their other
churches; but after that they have remained in their chief town three or
four mouths at most, they shall be compelled (unless by sickness only
they are retained), to re-enter in visitation, in which they shall not
only preach, but also examine the life, diligence, and behaviour of the
ministers; as also the order of their churches, [and] the manners of
the people. They must further consider how the poor are provided; how
the youth are instructed. They must admonish where admonition needs;
dress such things as by good counsel they are able to appease; and,
finally, they must note such crimes as are heinous, that, by the
censure of the church, the same may be corrected.
If the superintendent is found negligent in any of
these chief points of his office, and especially if he is noted
negligent in preaching of the word, and in visitation of his churches,
or if he is convicted of any of those crimes which in the common
ministers are damned, he must be deposed, without respect of his person
or office.
Of the Election of Superintendents
In this present necessity, the nomination, examination, and admission of superintendents cannot be so strait as we require, and as afterwards it must be.
For this present, therefore, we think [it] sufficient
that either your honours, by yourselves, nominate so many as may serve
the fore-written
provinces; or that ye give commission to such men as
in whom ye suppose the fear of God [to be] to do the same; and that the
same men, being called in your presence, shall be by you, and by such
as your honours please [to] call unto you for consultation in that
case, appointed to their provinces. We think it expedient and
necessary, that as well the gentlemen, as burgesses of every diocese,
be made privy at the same time to the election of the superintendent,
as well to bring the church in some practice of her liberty, as to make
the pastor better favoured of the flock whom themselves have chosen. If
your honours cannot find for this present [time] so many able men as
the necessity requires, then, in our judgments, more profitable it is
that those provinces vaik [remain vacant] till God provides
better, than that men unable to edify and govern the church are
suddenly placed in that charge. For experience has taught us what
pestilence has been engendered in the church by men unable to discharge
their offices.
When, therefore, after three years, any superintendent
shall depart, or chance to be deposed, the chief town within that
province-to wit, the ministers, elders, and deacons, with the
magistrate and council of the same town-shall nominate and by public
edicts proclaim, as well to the superintendent, as to two or three
provinces next adjacent, two or three of the most learned and most
godly ministers within the whole realm, that from amongst them, one,
with public consent, may be elected and appointed to the office then
vaiking [vacant]. And this the chief town shall be bound to do
within the term of twenty days. Which being expired and no man
presented, then shall three of the next adjacent provinces, with
consent of their superintendents, ministers, and elders, enter in into
the right and privileges of the chief town, and shall present every one
of them one, or two if they list, to the chief town, to be examined as
the order requires. As also, it shall be lawful for all the churches
of the diocese to nominate within the same time such persons as they
think worthy to stand in election; which must be put in edict.
After the nominations are made, public edicts must be
sent, first warning all men that have any objection against the persons
nominated, or against any one of them, to be present in the chief town
at [the] day and place affixed, to object what they can against the
election of any one of them. Thirty days we think sufficient to be
assigned thereto; thirty days, we mean, after that the nomination is
made.
Which day of election being come, the whole ministers
of that province, with three or more of the superintendents next
adjacent, or that shall thereto be named, shall examine not only the
learning, but also the manners, prudence, and ability to govern the
church, of all those that are nominated; that he who shall be found
most worthy may be burdened with the charge. If the ministers of the
whole province should bring with them the votes of those that were
committed to their care, the election should be the more free; but
always, the votes of all those that convene must be required. The
examinations must be publicly made; those that stand in election must
publicly preach; and men must be charged in the name of God, to vote
according to conscience, and not after affection. If anything is
objected against any that stand in election, the superintendents and
ministers must consider whether the objection is made of conscience, or
of malice; and they must answer accordingly. Other ceremonies than
sharp examination, approbation of the ministers and superintendents,
with the public consent of the elders and people then present, we
cannot allow.
The superintendent being elected, and appointed to his
charge, must be subjected to the censure and correction of the
ministers and elders, not only of his chief town, but also of the whole
province over the which he is appointed overseer.
If his offences are known, and the ministers and
elders of his province are negligent in correcting him, then the next
one or two superintendents, with their ministers and elders, may
convene him, and the ministers and elders of his chief town (provided
that it is within his own province or chief town), and may accuse and
correct as well the superintendent in those things that are worthy of
correction, as the ministers and elders for their negligence and
ungodly tolerance of his offences.
Whatsoever crime deserves correction or deposition of
any other minister, deserves the same in the superintendent, without
exception of person.
After that the church is established, and three years
are passed, we require that no man be called to the office of a
superintendent who has not two years, at the least, given declaration
of his faithful labours in the ministry of some church.
No superintendent may be transferred at the pleasure
or request of any one province; no, not without the consent of the
whole council of the church, and that for grave causes and
consideration.
Of one thing, in the end, we must admonish your
honours: to wit, that, in appointing superintendents for this present
[time], ye disappoint not your chief towns, and where learning is
exercised, of such ministers as may profit more by residence in one
place, than by continual travel from place to place. For if ye so do,
the youth in those places shall lack the profound interpretation of the
scriptures; and so it shall be long before that your gardens send
forth many plants; where, by the contrary, if one or two towns are
continually exercised as they may, the commonwealth shall shortly taste
of their fruit, to the comfort of the godly.
For the Schools
Seeing that the office and duty of the godly magistrate is not only to purge the church of God from all superstition, and to set it at liberty from bondage of tyrants; but also to provide, to the uttermost of his power, how it may abide in the same purity to the posterity following; we cannot but freely communicate our judgments with your honours in this behalf.
The Necessity of Schools
Seeing that God has determined that his church here in earth shall be taught not by angels but by men; and seeing that men are born ignorant of all godliness; and seeing, also, God now ceases to illuminate men miraculously, suddenly changing them, as that he did his apostles and others in the primitive church: of necessity it is that your honours be most careful for the virtuous education and godly upbringing of the youth of this realm, if either ye now thirst unfeignedly [for] the advancement of Christ's glory, or yet desire the continuance of his benefits to the generation following. For as the youth must succeed to us, so we ought to be careful that they have the knowledge and erudition to profit and comfort that which ought to be most dear to us-to wit, the church and spouse of the Lord Jesus.
Of necessity therefore we judge it, that every several
church have a schoolmaster appointed, such a one as is able, at least,
to teach grammar and the Latin tongue, if the town is of any
reputation. If it is upland, where the people convene to doctrine but
once in the week, then must either the reader or the minister there
appointed, take care over the children and youth of the parish, to
instruct them in their first rudiments, and especially in the
catechism, as we have it now translated in the book of our common order,
called the Order of Geneva. And further, we think it expedient that in
every notable town, and especially in the town of the superintendent,
[there] be erected a college, in which the arts, at least logic and
rhetoric, together with the tongues, be read by sufficient masters, for
whom honest stipends must be appointed; as also provision for those
that are poor, and are not able by themselves, nor by their friends, to
be sustained at letters, especially such as come from landward.
The fruit and commodity hereof shall suddenly appear.
For, first, the youth and tender children shall be nourished and
brought up in virtue, in presence of their friends; by whose good
attendance many inconveniences may be avoided, in the which the youth
commonly fall, either by too much liberty, which they have in strange
and unknown places, while they cannot rule themselves; or else for lack
of good attendance, and of such necessities as their tender age
requires. Secondly, the exercise of the children in every church shall
be great instruction to the aged.
Last, the great schools, called universities, shall be
replenished with those that are apt to learning; for this must be
carefully provided, that no father, of what estate or condition that
ever he be, use his children at his own fantasy, especially in their
youth; but all must be compelled to bring up their children in learning
and virtue.
The rich and potent may not be permitted to suffer
their children to spend their youth in vain idleness, as heretofore
they have done. But they must be exhorted, and by the censure of the
church compelled, to dedicate their sons, by good exercise, to the
profit of the church and to the commonwealth; and that they must do of
their own expenses, because they are able. The children of the poor
must be supported and sustained on the charge of the church, till trial
is taken whether the spirit of docility is found in them or not. If
they are found apt to letters and learning, then may they (we mean
neither the sons of the rich, nor yet the sons of the poor) not be
permitted to reject learning; but must be charged to continue their
study, so that the commonwealth may have some comfort by them. And for
this purpose must discreet, learned, and grave men be appointed to
visit all schools for the trial of their exercise, profit, and
continuance: to wit, the ministers and elders, with the best learned in
every town, shall every quarter take examination how the youth have
profited.
A certain time must be appointed to reading, and to
learning of the catechism; a certain time to the grammar, and to the
Latin tongue; a certain time to the arts, philosophy, and to the
tongues; and a certain [time] to that study in which they intend
chiefly to travail for the profit of the commonwealth. Which time being
expired, we mean in every course, the children must either proceed to
further knowledge, or else they must be sent to some handicraft, or to
some other profitable exercise; provided always, that first they have
the form of knowledge of Christian religion: to wit, the knowledge of
God's law and commandments; the use and office of the same; the chief
articles of our belief; the right form to pray unto God, the number
use, and effect of the sacraments; the true knowledge of Christ Jesus,
of his office and natures, and such other [points] as without the
knowledge whereof, neither deserves [any] man to be named Christian,
neither ought any to be admitted to the participation of the Lord's
Table. And therefore, these principles ought and must be learned in the
youth.
The Times Appointed to Every Course
Two years we think more than sufficient to learn to read perfectly, to answer to the catechism, and to have some entry in the first rudiments of grammar; to the full accomplishment whereof (we mean of the grammar) we think another three or four years, at most, sufficient. To the arts-to wit, logic and rhetoric-and to the Greek tongue, four years; and the rest, till the age of twenty-four years, to be spent in that study wherein the learner would profit the church or commonwealth, be it in the laws, or physics or divinity. Which time to twenty-four years being spent in the schools, the learner must be removed to serve the church or commonwealth, unless he is found a necessary reader in the same college or university. If God shall move your hearts to establish and execute this order, and put these things in practice, your whole realm (we doubt not), within few years, shall serve itself of true preachers, and of other officers necessary for your commonwealth.
The Erection of Universities
The grammar schools and of the tongues being erected as we have said, next we think it necessary there be three universities in this whole realm, established in the towns accustomed: the first in Saint Andrews, the second in Glasgow, and the third in Aberdeen.
And in the first university and principal, which is
Saint Andrews, there be three colleges. And in the first college, which
is the entry of the university, there be four classes or seiges: the
first, to the new supposts, shall be only dialectics; the next, only
mathematics; the third, of physics only; the fourth of medicine. And in
the second college, two classes or seiges: the first, in moral
philosophy; the second in the laws. And in the third college, two
classes or seiges: the first, in the tongues, to wit, Greek and Hebrew;
the second, in divinity.
Of Readers, and of the Degrees,
of Time, and Study
Item, In the first college, and in the first class, shall be a reader of dialectics, who shall accomplish his course thereof in one year. In the mathematics, which is the second class, shall be a reader who shall complete his course of arithmetic, geometry, cosmography, and astronomy, in one year. In the third class shall be a reader of natural philosophy, who shall complete his course in a year; and who, after these three years, by trial and examination, shall be found sufficiently instructed in these aforesaid sciences, shall be laureate and graduate in philosophy. In the fourth class shall be a reader of medicine, who shall complete his course in five years; after the study of the which time, being by examination found sufficient, they shall be graduate in medicine.
Item,In the second college, in the first
class, one reader only in the ethics, economics, and politics, who
shall complete his course in the space of one year. In the second class
shall be two readers in the municipal and Roman laws, who shall
complete their courses in four years; after the which time, being by
examination found sufficient, they shall be graduate in the laws.
Item,In the third college, in the first
class, a reader of the Hebrew, and another of the Greek tongue, who
shall complete the grammars thereof in half a year, and the remnant of
the year the reader of the Hebrew shall interpret a book of Moses, the
prophets, or the psalms; so that his course and class shall continue
one year. The reader of the Greek shall interpret some book of Plato,
together with some place of the New Testament. And in the second class
shall be two readers in divinity, the one in the New Testament, the
other in the Old, who shall complete their course in five years; after
which time, who shall be found by examination sufficient, shall be
graduate in divinity.
Item, We think expedient that none be
admitted unto the first college, and to be supposts of the university,
unless he have from the master of the school, and the minister of the
town where he was instructed in the tongues, a testimonial of his
learning, docility, age, and parentage; and likewise trial to be taken
by certain examiners, deputed by the rector and principals of the same,
and, if he is found sufficiently instructed in dialectics, he shall
incontinent [ immediately], that same year, be promoted to the class of mathematics.
Item, That none be admitted to the class of
the medicine but he that shall have his testimonial of his time well
spent in dialectics, mathematics, and physics, and his docility in the
last.
Item, that none be admitted unto the class
of the laws, but he that shall have sufficient testimonials of his time
well spent in dialectics, mathematics, physics, ethics, economics, and
politics, and of his docility in the last.
Item, that none be admitted unto the class
and seige of divines but he that shall have sufficient testimonials of
his time well spent in dialectics, mathematics, physics, ethics,
economics, moral philosophy, and the Hebrew tongue, and of his docility
in the moral philosophy and the Hebrew tongue. But neither shall such
as will apply them to hear the laws, be compelled to hear medicine;
neither such as apply them to hear divinity be compelled to hear either
medicine or yet the laws.
Item, in the second university, which is
Glasgow, shall be two colleges only. In the first shall be a class of
dialectics, another in mathematics, the third in physics, ordered in
all sorts as Saint Andrews.
Item, In the second college, four classes;
the first in moral philosophy, ethics, economics, and politics; the
second of the municipal and Roman laws; the third of the Hebrew tongue;
the fourth in divinity. Which shall be ordered in all sorts,
conforming to it we have written in the order of the university of
Saint Andrews.
The third university of Aberdeen shall be conformed to this university of Glasgow, in all sorts.
Item, We think needful, that there be chosen of the body of
the university to every college a man of learning, discretion, and
diligence, who shall receive the whole rents of the college, and
distribute the same according to the erection of the college; and shall
daily hearken the diet accounts; adjoining to him weekly one of the
readers or regents, above whom he shall [take] attendance upon their
diligence, as well in their reading as exercitation of the youth in the
matter taught; upon the policy and upholding of the place; and for
punishment of crimes, [he] shall hold a weekly convention with the
whole members of the college. He shall be accountable yearly to the
superintendent, rector, and rest of the principals convened, about the
first of November. His election shall be in this sort: There shall be
three of the most sufficient men of the university (not principals
already) nominated by the members of the college whose principal is
departed, sworn to follow their conscience, and publicly proponed
through the whole university. After the which time eight days, the
superintendent, by himself, or his special procurator, with the rector
and rest of the principals, as a chapter convened, shall confirm one of
the three they think most sufficient, being aforesworn to do the same
with single eye, but [without] respect to feud or favour.
Item, in every college, we think needful at the least one
steward, a cook, a gardener, [and] a porter, who shall be subject to
[the] discipline of the principal, as the rest.
Item, that every university have a beadle subject to serve at
all times throughout the whole university, as the rector and
principals shall command.
Item, that every university have a rector chosen from year to
year as shall follow. The principals, being convened with the whole
regents chapterly, shall be sworn that every man in his room shall
nominate such one as his conscience shall testify to be most sufficient
to bear such charge and dignity; and three of them that shall be
oftest nominated shall be put in edict publicly, fifteen days afore
Michaelmas. And then shall on Michaelmas evening convene the whole
principals, regents, and supposts that are graduate, or at the least
studied their time in ethics, economics, and politics, and no others
younger; and every nation, first protesting in God's presence to follow
the sincere ditement and of their consciences, shall nominate one of
the said three; and he that has most votes shall be confirmed by the
superintendent and principal, and his duty with an exhortation proponed
unto him: and this to be the 28 day of September; and thereafter oaths
to be taken, hinc inde, of his just and godly government, and
of the remnant's lawful submission and obedience. He shall be propined
to the university, at his entry, with a new garment, bearing Insignia Magistratus;
and be held monthly to visit every college, and with his presence
decore and examine the lections and exercitation thereof. His assessors
shall be a lawyer and a theologian, with whose advice he shall decide
all questions civil, betwixt the members of the university. If any
without the university pursue a member thereof, or be pursued by a
member of the same, he shall assist the provost and bailles in those
cases, or other judges competent, to see justice is ministered. And
likewise, if any of the university be criminally pursued, he shall
assist the judges competent, and see that justice be ministered.
Item, We think it expedient that in every college in every
university there be twenty-four bursars, divided equally in all the
classes and seiges, as is above expressed: that is, in Saint Andrews,
seventy-two bursars; in Glasgow, forty-eight bursars; in Aberdeen,
forty-eight; to be sustained only in meat upon the charges of the
college; and [to] be admitted at the examination of the ministry and
chapter of principals in the university, as well in docility of the
persons offered, as of the ability of their parents to sustain them
themselves, and not to burden the commonwealth with them.
Of Stipends and Expenses Necessary
Item, We think expedient that the universities be doted [endowed] with temporal lands, with rents and revenues of the bishoprics' temporality, and of the kirks collegiate, so far as their ordinary charges shall require; and therefore, that it would please your honours, by advice of your honours' council and vote of parliament, to do the same. And to the effect the same may be shortly expedited, we have recollected the sums we think necessary the same.
Imprimis, For the ordinary stipend of the
dialectician reader, the mathematician, physician, and moral
philosopher, we think sufficient one hundred pounds for every one of
them.
Item, For the stipend of every reader in medicine and laws, one hundred thirty-three pounds, 6s.8d.
Item, To every reader in Hebrew, Greek, and divinity two hundred pounds.
Item, To every principal of a college, two hundred pounds.
Item, To every steward, sixteen pounds of fee.
Item, To every gardener, to every cook, and porter, each, ten marks.
Item, To the board of every bursar, without the classes of theology and medicine, twenty pounds.
Item, [To every bursar] in the class of theology, which will be only twelve persons in Saint Andrews, twenty-four pounds.
Summa of yearly and ordinary
expenses in the university of
Saint Andrews, extends to 3796 lib.
Summa of yearly and ordinary
expenses of Glasgow, 2922 lib.
Aberdeen, asmuch, 2922 lib.
Summa of the ordinary
charges of the whole, 9640 lib.
Item, the beadle's stipend shall be of every entrant and
suppost of the university, two shillings; of every one graduate in
philosophy, three shillings; of every one graduate in medicine or laws,
four shillings; in theology, five shillings; all bursars being
excepted.
Item, We have thought good, for building and upholding of the
places, [that] a general collection be made; and that every earl's
son, at his entry to the university, shall give forty shillings, and
suchlike at every graduation, forty shillings. Item, Every lord's son suchlike at each time, thirty shillings; each freeholding baron's son, twenty shillings: every feuar [landholder] and substantious [well-to-do] gentleman's son, one mark. Item, Every substantious husband's and burgess' son, at each time, ten shillings. Item, Every one of the rest (excepting the bursars), five shillings at each time.
And that this be gathered in a common box, put in
keeping to the principal of the theologians, every principal having a
key thereof, to be counted each year once, with the relics [residue]
of the principals to be laid into the same, about the fifteenth day of
November, in presence of the superintendent, rector, and the whole
principals; and, at their whole consent, or at the least the most part
thereof, reserved and employed only upon the building and upholding of
the places, and repairing of the same, as ever necessity shall require.
And therefore, the rector, with his assistants, shall be held to visit
the places each year once, incontinent after he is promoted, upon the
last of October, or thereby.
Of the Privilege of the University
Seeing we desire that innocence shall defend us rather than privilege, we think that each person of the university should answer before the provost and bailies of each town where the universities are, of all crimes whereof they are accused, only that the rector be assessor to them in the said actions. In civil matters, if the question is betwixt members of the university on each side, making their residence and exercitation therein for the time; in that case, the party called shall not be held to answer, but only before the rector and his assessors heretofore expressed. In all other cases of civil pursuit, the general rule of the law to be observed, Actor sequatur forum rei, etc.
Item, that the rector and all inferior members of the university be exempted from all taxations, imposts [duties], charges of war, or any other charge that may onerate [burden]
or abstract him or them from the care of their office: such as tutory,
curatory, deaconry, or any suchlike, that are established, or
hereafter shall be established, in our commonwealth; to the effect,
that but trouble, that one may wait upon the upbringing of the youth in
learning, that the other bestow his time only in that most necessary
exercitation.
All other things touching the books to be read in each
class, and all such particular affairs, we refer to the discretion of
the masters, principals, and regents, with their well-advised councils:
not doubting but if God shall grant quietness, and if your wisdoms
grace to set forward letters in the sort prescribed, ye shall leave
wisdom and learning to your posterity, a treasure more to be esteemed
nor [than] any earthly treasure ye are able to provide for
them; which, without wisdom, are more able to be their ruin and
confusion, than help or comfort. And as this is most true, so we leave
it with the rest of the commodities to be weighed by your honours'
wisdom, and set forward by your authority to the most high advancement
of this commonwealth, committed to your charge.
Of the Rents and Patrimony of the Kirk
These two sorts of men, that is to say, the ministers and the poor, together with the schools, when order shall be taken thereabout, must be sustained upon the charges of the church. And therefore provision must be made, how and of whom such sums must be lifted. But before we enter in this head, we must crave of your honours, in the name of the eternal God, and of his Son Christ Jesus, that ye have respect to your poor brethren, the labourers and manurers of the ground; who by these cruel beasts, the Papists, have been so oppressed that their life to them has been dolorous and bitter. If ye will have God author and approver of your reformation, ye must not follow their footsteps; but ye must have compassion upon your brethren, appointing them to pay so reasonable teinds [tithes], that they may feel some benefit of Christ Jesus now preached unto them.
With the grief of our hearts we hear that some
gentlemen are now as cruel over their tenants as ever were the Papists,
requiring of them whatsoever before they paid to the church;so that
the Papistical tyranny shall only be changed into the tyranny of the
lord or of the laird. We dare not flatter your honours, neither yet is
it profitable for you that so we do. If you permit such cruelty to be
used, neither shall ye, who by your authority ought to gainstand such
oppression, neither [shall] they that use the same, escape God's heavy
and fearful judgments. The gentlemen, barons, earls, lords, and others,
must be content to live upon their just rents, and suffer the church
to be restored to her liberty, that, in her restitution, the poor, who
heretofore by the cruel Papists have been spoiled and oppressed, may
now receive some comfort and relaxation.
Neither do we judge it to proceed from justice that
one man shall possess the teinds of another; but we think it a thing
most reasonable, that every man have the use of his own teinds,
provided that he answer to the deacons and treasurers of the church of
that which justly shall be appointed unto him. We require deacons and
treasurers rather to receive the rents, nor the ministers themselves;
because that of the teinds must not only the ministers be sustained,
but also the poor and schools. And therefore we think it most expedient
that common treasurers, to wit, the deacons, be appointed from year to
year, to receive the whole rents appertaining to the church; and that
commandment be given, that no man be permitted either to receive either
yet to intromit with anything appertaining to the sustenance of the
persons foresaid, but such as by common consent of the church are
thereto appointed.
If any think this prejudicial to the tacks and assedations [holdings and leases]
of those that now possess the teinds, let them understand that an
unjust possession is no possession before God; for those of whom they
received their title and presupposed right, were and are thieves and
murderers, and had no power so to alienate the patrimony and common
good of the church. And yet we are not so extreme, but that we wish
just recompense to be made to such as have disbursed sums of money to
those unjust possessors (so that it has not been of late days in
prejudice of the church); but such as are found and known to be done of
plain collusion in no wise ought to be maintained of you. And for that
purpose, we think it most expedient that whosoever have assedation[lease]
of teinds or churches be openly warned to produce their assedation and
assurance, that cognition being taken, the just tacksman[lessee]
may have a just and reasonable recompense for the years that are to
run, the profit of the years passed being considered and deducted; and
the unjust and surmised may be served accordingly. So that the church,
in the end, may recover her liberty and freedom, and that only for
relief of the poor.
Your honours may easily understand that we speak not
now for ourselves, but in favour of the poor and the labourers
defrauded and oppressed by the priests, and by their confederate
pensioners. For while that the priest's pensioner's idle belly is
delicately fed, the poor, to whom a portion of that appertains, were
pined with hunger; and moreover the true labourers were compelled to pay
that which [they] ought not: for the labourer is neither debtor to the
dumb dog, called the bishop, neither yet unto his hired pensioner; but
is debtor only unto the church. And the church is only bound to
sustain and nourish of her charges the persons before mentioned: to
wit, the ministers of the word, the poor, and the teachers of the
youth.
But now to return to the former head. The sums able to
sustain these forenamed persons, and to furnish all things
appertaining to the preservation of good order and policy within the
church, must be lifted off the teinds: to wit, the teind sheaf, teind
hay, teind hemp, teind lint[flax], teind fish, teind calf,
teind foal, teind lamb, teind wool, teind cheese, etc. And because that
we know that the tithes reasonably taken, as is before expressed, will
not suffice to discharge the former necessity, we think that all
things doted[endowed] to hospitality, all annual rents, both
in burgh and land, pertaining to priests, chantries, colleges,
chaplainries, and to friars of all orders, to the sisters of the
Sienine, and to all others of that order, and such others within this
realm, be received still to the use of the church or churches within
the towns or parishes where they were doted. Furthermore to the
upholding of the universities and sustenance of the superintendents,
the whole revenue of the temporality of the bishops', deans', and
archdeans' lands, and all rents of lands pertaining to the cathedral
churches whatsoever. And further, merchants and rich craftsmen in free
burghs, who have nothing to do with the manuring of the ground, must
make some provision in their cities, towns, or dwelling places, for to
support the need of the church.
To the ministers, and failing thereof the readers, must be restored their manses and their glebes [lands];
for else they cannot seize their flock at all times as their duty is.
If any glebe exceed six acres of land, the rest to remain in the
possessor's hands, while order is taken therein.
The receivers and collectors of these rents and duties
must be the deacons or treasurers appointed from year to year in every
church, and that by common consent and free election of the church.
The deacons may distribute no part of that which is collected, but by
commandment of the ministers and elders; and they may command nothing
to be delivered, but as the church before has determined; to wit, the
deacons shall of the first pay the sums, either quarterly, or from half
year to half year, to the ministers which the kirk has appointed. The
same they shall do to the schoolmasters, readers, and hospitals (if any
be), always receiving acquittances[receipts] for their discharge.
If any extraordinary sums lie[remain] to be
delivered, then must the ministers, elders, and deacons consult whether
the deliverance of those sums does stand with the common utility of
the church or not; and if they do universally agree and condescend
either upon the affirmative or the negative, then because they are in
credit and office for the year, they may do as best seems unto them.
But if there is controversy amongst themselves, the whole church must
be made privy; and after that the matter be exponed [explained], and the reasons heard, the judgment of the church with the minister's consent shall prevail.
The deacons shall be bound and compelled to make
accounts to the ministers and elders of that which they have received,
as oft as the policy shall appoint. And the elders, when they are
changed (which must be every year), must clear their accounts before
such auditors as the church shall appoint. And both the deacons and
elders being changed, shall deliver to them that shall be now elected,
all sums of money, corns, and other profits resting in their hands; the
tickets whereof must be delivered to the superintendents in their
visitation, and by them to the great council of the church, that as well
the abundance as the indigence of every church may be evidently known,
that a reasonable equality may be had throughout the whole realm. If
this order is precisely kept, corruption cannot suddenly enter. For the
free and yearly election of deacons and elders shall suffer none to
usurp a perpetual dominion over the church; the knowledge of the rental
shall suffice them to receive no more than whereof they shall be bound
to make accounts; the deliverance of the money to the new officers
shall not suffer private men [to] use in their private business that
which appertains to the public affairs of the church.
Of Ecclesiastical Discipline
As that no commonwealth can flourish or long endure without good laws, and sharp execution of the same, so neither can the church of God be brought to purity, neither yet be retained in the same, without the order of ecclesiastical discipline, which stands in reproving and correcting of those faults which the civil sword does either neglect, either may not punish. Blasphemy, adultery, murder, perjury, and other crimes capital, worthy of death, ought not properly to fall under censure of the church; because all such open transgressors of God's laws ought to be taken away by the civil sword. But drunkenness, excess (be it in apparel, or be it in eating and drinking), fornication, oppression of the poor by exactions, deceiving of them in buying or selling by wrong mete or measure, wanton words and licentious living tending to slander, do properly appertain to the church of God, to punish the same as God's word commands.
But because this accursed Papistry has brought in such
confusion in the world, that neither was virtue rightly praised,
neither vice severely punished; the church of God is compelled to draw
the sword, which of God she has received, against such open and
manifest offenders, cursing and excommunicating all such, as well those
whom the civil sword ought to punish as the others, from all
participation with her in prayers and sacraments, till open repentance
manifestly appears in them. As the order of excommunication and
proceeding to the same ought to be grave and slow, so, being once
pronounced against any person, of what estate and condition that ever
they be, it must be kept with all severity. For laws made and not kept
engenders contempt of virtue and brings in confusion and liberty to
sin. And therefore this order we think expedient to be observed before
and after excommunication.
First, if the offence is secret and known to few, and
rather stands in suspicion than in manifest probation, the offender
ought to be privately admonished to abstain from all appearance of
evil; which, if he promises to do, and to declare himself sober,
honest, and one that fears God, and fears to offend his brethren, then
may the secret admonition suffice for his correction. But if he either
contemns the admonition, or, after promise made, does show himself no
more circumspect than he was before, then must the minister admonish
him; to whom if he is found disobedient, they must proceed according to
the rule of Christ, as after shall be declared.
If the crime is public, and such as is heinous, as
fornication, drunkenness, fighting, common swearing, or execration,
then ought the offender to be called into the presence of the minister,
elders, and deacons, where his sin and offence ought to be declared
and aggredged [ stressed], so that his conscience may feel how
far he has offended God, and what slander he has raised in the church.
If signs of unfeigned repentance appear in him, and if he requires to
be admitted to public repentance, the ministry may appoint unto him a
day when the whole church convenes together, that in presence of all he
may testify the repentance which before them he professed: which, if
he accepts, and with reverence does, confessing his sin, and damning
the same, and earnestly desiring the congregation to pray to God with
him for mercy, and to accept him in their society, notwithstanding his
former offence, then the church may, and ought [to] receive him as a
penitent. For the church ought to be no more severe than God declares
himself to be, who witnesses that, In whatsoever hour a sinner
unfeignedly repents, and turns from his wicked way, that he will not
remember one of his iniquities [cf. Ezek. 18:21-22; 33:14-16]. And
therefore the church ought diligently to advert that it excommunicate
not those whom God absolves.
If the offender called before the ministry is found
stubborn, hard-hearted, or one in whom no sign of repentance appears,
then must he be dismissed with an exhortation to consider the dangerous
estate in which he stands; assuring him, if they find in him no other
token of amendment of life, that they will be compelled to seek a
further remedy. If he within a certain space shows his repentance to
the ministry, they must present him to the church as before is said.
But if he continues in his impenitence, then the
church must be admonished that such crimes are committed amongst them,
which by the ministry has been reprehended, and the person provoked to
repent; whereof, because no signs appear unto them, they could not but
signify unto the church the crimes, but not the person, requiring them
earnestly to call to God to move and touch the heart of the offender,
so that suddenly and earnestly he may repent.
If the person maligns, then the next day of public
assembly, the crime and the person must be both notified unto the
church, and their judgment must be required, if that such crimes ought
to be suffered unpunished amongst them. Request also would be made to
the most discreet and to the nearest friends of the offender to travail
with him to bring him to knowledge of himself, and of his dangerous
estate; with a commandment given to all men to call to God for the
conversion of the impenitent. If a solemn and a special prayer were made
and drawn for that purpose, the thing should be the more gravely done.
The third Sunday, the minister ought to require if the
impenitent has declared any signs of repentance to any of the
ministry; and if he has, then may the minister appoint him to be
examined by the whole ministry, either then instantly, or at another
day affixed to the consistory: and if repentance appears, as well of
the crime, as of his long contempt, then may he be presented to the
church, and make his confession, and to be accepted, as before is said.
But if no man signifies his repentance, then he ought to be
excommunicated; and by the mouth of the minister, consent of the
ministry, and commandment of the church, such a contemner must be
pronounced excommunicated from God, and from the society of his church.
After which sentence may no person (his wife and
family only excepted) have any kind of conversation with him, be it in
eating and drinking, buying or selling, yea, in saluting or talking
with him, except that it be at the commandment or licence of the
ministry for his conversion; that he, by such means confounded, seeing
himself abhorred of the faithful and godly, may have occasion to repent
and be so saved. The sentence of his excommunication must be published
universally throughout the realm, lest that any man should pretend
ignorance.
His children begotten or born after that sentence and
before his repentance, may not be admitted to baptism, till either they
are of age to require the same, or else that the mother, or some of
his especial friends, members of the church, offer and present the
child, abhorring and damning the iniquity and obstinate contempt of the
impenitent. If any think it severe that the child should be punished
for the iniquity of the father, let them understand that the sacraments
appertain only to the faithful and to their seed; but such as
stubbornly contemn all godly admonition, and obstinately remain in their
iniquity, cannot be accounted amongst the faithful.
The Order for Public Offenders
We have spoken nothing of those that commit horrible crimes, as murderers, man-slayers, and adulterers; for such (as we have said) the civil sword ought to punish to death. But in case they are permitted to live, then must the church, as before is said, draw the sword which of God she has received, holding them as accursed even in their [very] fact; the offender being first called, and order of the church used against him, in the same manner as the persons that for obstinate impenitence are publicly excommunicated; so that the obstinate impenitent, after the sentence of excommunication, and the murderer or adulterer, stand in one case as concerning the judgment of [the church]: that is, neither of both may be received in the fellowship of the church to prayers or sacraments (but to hearing of the word they may), till first they offer themselves to the ministry, humbly requiring the ministers and elders to pray to God for them, and also to be intercessors to the church, that they may be admitted to public repentance, and so to the fruition of the benefits of Christ Jesus, distributed to the members of his body.
If this request is humbly made, then may not the
ministers refuse to signify the same unto the church, the next day of
public preaching, the minister giving exhortation to the church to pray
to God to perform the work which he appears to have begun, working in
the heart of the offender unfeigned repentance of his grievous crime,
and the sense and feeling of his great mercy, by the operation of his
Holy Spirit. Thereafter a day ought publicly to be assigned unto him to
give open confession of his offence and contempt, and so to make a
public satisfaction to the church of God. Which day, the offender must
appear in presence of the whole church, and with his own mouth damn his
own impiety, publicly confessing the same; desiring God of his grace
and mercy, and his congregation, that it will please them to accept him
in their society, as before is said. The minister must examine him
diligently whether he finds a hatred and displeasure of his sin, as
well of his crime as of his contempt: which, if he confesses, he must
travail with him, to see what hope he has of God's mercy.
And if he finds him reasonably instructed in the
knowledge of Christ Jesus [and] in the virtue of his death, then may
the minister comfort him by God's infallible promises, and demand of
the church if they are content to receive that creature of God (whom
Satan before had drawn in his nets), in the society of their body,
seeing that he declares himself penitent. Which, if the church grants,
as they may not justly deny the same, then ought the minister in public
prayer to commend him to God, confess the sin of that offender, and of
the whole church desire mercy and grace for Christ Jesus' sake. Which
prayer being ended, the minister ought to exhort the church to receive
that penitent brother in their favour, as they require God to receive
themselves when they have offended; and in sign of their consent, the
elders and chief men of the church shall take the penitent by the hand,
and one or two in name of the whole shall kiss and embrace him with
all reverence and gravity, as a member of Christ Jesus.
Which being done, the minister shall exhort the
reconciled to take diligent heed in times coming that Satan trap him
not in such crimes, admonishing him that he will not cease to tempt and
try all means possible to bring him from that obedience which he has
given to God, and to the ordinance of his Son Christ Jesus. The
exhortation being ended, the minister ought to give public thanks unto
God for the conversion of that their brother, and for the benefits
which we receive by Jesus Christ, praying for the increase and
continuance of the same.
If the penitent, after that he has offered himself to
the ministry, or to the church, is found ignorant in the principal
points of our religion, and chiefly in the article of justification,
and of the office of Christ Jesus, then he ought to be exactly
instructed before he is received. For a mockery of God it is to receive
them in repentance who knows not wherein stands their remedy, when
they repent their sin.
Persons Subject to Discipline
To discipline must all estates within
this realm be subject if they offend, as well the rulers as they that
are ruled; yea, and the preachers themselves, as well as the poorest
within the church. And because the eye and mouth of the church ought to
be most single and irreprehensible, the life and conversation of the
ministers ought most diligently to be tried. Whereof we shall speak,
after that we have spoken of the election of elders and deacons, who
must assist the ministers in all public affairs of the church, etc.
The Eigth Head
Touching the Election of Elders and Deacons, etc.
Men of best knowledge in God's word, of cleanest life, men faithful, and of most honest conversation that can be found in the church, must be nominated to be in election; and the names of the same must be publicly read to the whole kirk by the minister, giving them advertisement that from amongst these must be chosen elders and deacons. If any of the nominated is noted with public infamy, he ought to be repelled; for it is not seemly that the servant of corruption shall have authority to judge in the church of God. If any man knows others of better qualities within the church than those that are nominated, let them be put in election, that the church may have the choice.
If churches are of smaller number than that seniors and deacons can be chosen from amongst them, then may they well be joined to the next adjacent church; for the plurality of churches, without ministers and order, shall rather hurt than edify.
The election of elders and deacons ought to be used
every year once (which we judge to be most convenient the first day of
August); lest that by long continuance of such officers, men presume
upon the liberty of the church. It hurts not that one man is retained
in office more years than one, so that he is appointed yearly, by
common and free election; provided always, that the deacons,
treasurers, be not compelled to receive the office again for the space
of three years.
How the votes and suffrages may be best received, so
that every man may give his vote freely, every several church may take
such order as best seems to them.
The elders being elected must be admonished of their
office, which is to assist the minister in all public affairs of the
church: to wit, in judging and discerning causes; in giving of
admonition to the licentious liver; in having respect to the manners
and conversation of all men within their charge; for by the gravity of
the seniors, the light and unbridled life of the licentious ought [to]
be corrected and bridled.
Yea, the seniors ought to take heed to the life, manners, diligence, and study of their ministers. If he is worthy of admonition, they must admonish him; of correction, they must correct him. And if he is worthy of deposition, they, with consent of the church and superintendent, may depose him, so that his crime so deserves. If a minister is light in conversation, by his elders and seniors he ought to be admonished. If he is negligent in study, or one that vakes [attends] not upon his charge and flock, or one that propones not fruitful doctrine, he deserves sharper admonition and correction. To the which, if he is found stubborn and disobedient, then may the seniors of one church complain to the ministry of the two next adjacent churches, where men of greater gravity are; to whose admonition, if he is found disobedient, he ought to be discharged from his ministry till his repentance appears, and a place is vacant for him.
If any minister is deprehended in any notable crime,
as whoredom, adultery, murder, man slaughter, perjury, teaching of
heresy, or any such as deserve death, or [that] may be a note of
perpetual infamy, he ought to be deposed for ever. By heresy, we mean
pernicious doctrine plainly taught, and obstinately defended, against
the foundation and principles of our faith. And such a crime we judge
to deserve perpetual deposition from the ministry; for most dangerous
we know it to be, to commit the flock to a man infected with the
pestilence of heresy.
Some crimes deserve deposition for a time, and while [until]
the person gives declaration of greater gravity and honesty: as if a
minister is deprehended drunk, in brawling or fighting, an open
slanderer, an infamer of his neighbour, factious and [a] sower of
discord, he may be commanded to cease from his ministry, till he
declare the signs of repentance; upon the which, the church shall abide
him the space of twenty days or further, as the church shall think
expedient, before that they proceed to a new election.
Every inferior church shall by one of their seniors
and one of their deacons, once in the year, notify unto the ministry of
the superintendent's church, the life, manners, study, and diligence
of their ministers, to the end that the discretion of some may correct
the lenity of others.
Not only may the life and manners of the ministers come under censure and judgment of the church, but also [the life and manners] of their wives, children, and family. Judgment must be taken, that he neither lives riotously, neither yet avariciously; yea, respect must be had how they spend the stipend appointed to their living. If a reasonable stipend is appointed, and they live avariciously, they must be admonished to live so as they receive; for as excess and superfluity is not tolerable in a minister, so is avarice and the careful solicitude of money and gear utterly to be damned in Christ's servants, and especially in those that are fed upon the charge of the church. We judge it unseemly and not tolerable that ministers shall be boarded in common ale-houses or taverns.
Neither yet must a minister be permitted to frequent and commonly haunt the court, unless it is for a time, when he is either sent by the church, either yet called for by the authority for his counsel and judgment. Neither yet must he be one of the council in civil affairs, be he never judged so apt for that purpose; but either must he cease from the ministry (which at his own pleasure he may not do), or else from bearing charge in civil affairs, unless it is to assist the parliament, if he is called.
The office of the deacons, as is before declared, is to receive the rents and gather the alms of the church, to keep and distribute the same, as by the ministry of the kirk shall be appointed. They may also assist in judgment with the ministers and elders, and may be admitted to read in the assembly if they are required, and are found able thereto.
The elders and deacons, with their wives and
households, must be under the same censure that is prescribed for the
ministers: for they must be careful over their office; and seeing that
they are judges to the manners of others, their own conversation ought
to be irreprehensible. They must be sober, humble, lovers and
entertainers of concord and peace; and, finally, they ought to be the
example of godliness to others. And if the contrary thereof appears,
they must be admonished by the minister, or by some of their brethren
of the ministry, if the fault is secret; and if it is open and known,
it must be rebuked before the ministry, and the same order kept against
the senior or deacon, that before is described against the minister.
We think it not necessary that any public stipend
shall be appointed either to the elders, or yet to the deacons, because
their travail continues but for one year; and also because that they
are not so occupied with the affairs of the church, but that reasonably
they may attend upon their domestical business.
The Ninth Head
Concerning the Policy of the Church
Policy we call an exercise of the church in such things as may bring the rude and ignorant to knowledge, or else inflame the learned to greater fervency, or to retain the church in good order. And thereof there are two sorts: the one utterly necessary, as that the word be truly preached, the sacraments rightly ministered, common prayers publicly made; that the children and rude persons be instructed in the chief points of religion, and that offences be corrected and punished. These things, we say, are so necessary, that without the same there is no face of a visible kirk. The other is profitable, but not of mere necessity: as, that psalms should be sung; that certain places of the scriptures should be read when there is no sermon; [and] that this day or that day, few or many in the week, the church should assemble. Of these and such others we cannot see how a certain order can be established. For in some churches the psalms may be conveniently sung; in others, perchance, they cannot. Some churches may convene every day; some thrice or twice in the week; some perchance but once. In these, and such like, must every particular church, by their own consent, appoint their own policy.
In great towns, we think expedient that every day there be either sermon, or else common prayers, with some exercise of reading the scriptures. What day the public sermon is, we can neither require or greatly approve that the common prayers be publicly used, lest that we shall either foster the people in superstition, who come to the prayers as they come to the Mass; or else give them occasion to think that those are no prayers which are made before and after sermon.
In every notable town, we require that one day,
besides the Sunday, be appointed to the sermon and prayers; which,
during the time of sermon, must be kept free from all exercise of
labour, as well of the master as of the servants. In smaller towns, as
we have said, the common consent of the church must put order. But the
Sunday must straitly be kept, both before and after noon, in all towns.
Before noon, the word must be preached and sacraments ministered, as
also marriage solemnized, if occasion offer. After noon, must the young
children be publicly examined in their catechism in audience of the
people, in doing whereof the minister must take great diligence, as well
to cause the people to understand the questions proponed, as the
answers, and the doctrine that may be collected thereof. The order and
how much is appointed for every Sunday, is already distincted in our
Book of Common Order; which catechism is the most perfect that ever yet
was used in the church. At afternoon also may baptism be ministered,
when occasion is offered of great travail before noon. It is also to be
observed that prayers be used at afternoon upon the Sunday, where
there is neither preaching nor catechism.
It appertains to the policy of the church to appoint the times when the sacraments shall be ministered. Baptism may be ministered whensoever the word is preached; but we think it more expedient that it be ministered upon the Sunday, or upon the day of prayers, only after the sermon; partly to remove this gross error by the which many deceived think that children are damned if they die without baptism; and partly to make the people assist the administration of that sacrament with greater reverence than they do. For we do see the people begin already to wax weary by reason of the frequent repetition of those promises.
Four times in the year we think sufficient to the
administration of the Lord's Table, which we desire to be distinct,
that the superstition of times may be avoided so far as may be. Your
honours are not ignorant how superstitiously the people run to that
action at Pasche, even as [if] the time gave virtue to the sacrament;
and how the rest of the whole year they are careless and negligent, as
that it appertains not unto them but at that time only. We think
therefore most expedient, that the first Sunday of March be appointed
for one [time]; the first Sunday of June for another; the first Sunday
of September for the third; and the first Sunday of December for the
fourth. We do not deny but that any several church, for reasonable
causes, may change the time, and may minister ofter; but we study to
suppress superstition. All ministers must be admonished to be more
careful to instruct the ignorant than ready to satisfy their appetites;
and more sharp in examination than indulgent, in admitting to that
great mystery such as are ignorant of the use and virtue of the same.
And therefore we think that the administration of the Table ought never
to be without that examination pass before, especially of those whose
knowledge is suspect. We think that none are apt to be admitted to that
mystery who cannot formally say the Lord's Prayer, the articles of the
belief, and declare the sum of the law.
Further, we think it a thing most expedient and necessary, that every church have a Bible in English, and that the people be commanded to convene to hear the plain reading or interpretation of the scripture, as the church shall appoint; that by frequent reading this gross ignorance, which in the cursed Papistry has overflowed all, may partly be removed. We think it most expedient that the scriptures be read in order: that is, that some one book of the Old and the New Testament be begun and orderly read to the end. And the same we judge of preaching, where the minister for [the] most part remains in one place. For this skipping and divagation [wandering] from place to place of the scripture, be it in reading, or be it in preaching, we judge not so profitable to edify the church, as the continual following of one text.
Every master of household must be commanded either to instruct, or else cause [to] be instructed, his children, servants, and family, in the principles of the Christian religion; without the knowledge whereof ought none to be admitted to the Table of the Lord Jesus. For such as are so dull and so ignorant, that they can neither try themselves, neither yet know the dignity and mystery of that action, cannot eat and drink of that Table worthily. And therefore of necessity we judge it, that every year at least, public examination be had by the ministers and elders of the knowledge of every person within the church: to wit, that every master and mistress of household come themselves, and their family (so many as are come to maturity), before the ministers and elders, to give confession of their faith, and to answer to such chief points of religion as the ministers shall demand. Such as are ignorant in the articles of their faith; understand not, nor cannot rehearse the commandments of God; know not how to pray, neither whereinto their righteousness consists, ought not to be admitted to the Lord's Table. And if they stubbornly continue, and suffer their children and servants to continue in wilful ignorance, the discipline of the church must proceed against them unto excommunication; and then the matter must be referred to the civil magistrate. For seeing that the just lives by his own faith, and that Christ Jesus justifies by knowledge of himself, we judge it insufferable that men shall be permitted to live and continue in ignorance as members of the church of God.
Moreover, men, women, and children would be exhorted to exercise themselves in the Psalms, that when the church convenes, and does sing, they may be the more able together with common heart and voice to praise God.
In private houses we think it expedient, that the most
grave and discreet person use the common prayers at morn and at night,
for the comfort and instruction of others. For seeing that we behold
and see the hand of God now presently striking us with divers plagues,
we think it a contempt of his judgments, or a provocation of his anger
more to be kindled against us, if we are not moved to repentance of our
former unthankfulness, and to earnest invocation of his name, whose
only power may (and great mercy will), if we unfeignedly convert unto
him, remove from us these terrible plagues which now for our iniquities
hang over our heads. Convert us, O Lord, and we shall be converted [cf. Jer. 17:14].
For Preaching, and Interpreting of Scriptures, etc.
To the end that the church of God may have a trial of men's knowledge, judgments, graces, and utterances; and also, that such as somewhat have profited in God's word may from time to time grow to more full perfection to serve the church, as necessity shall require: it is most expedient that in every town, where schools and repair of learned men are, that there be one certain day every week appointed [to] that exercise which Saint Paul calls prophesying. The order whereof is expressed by him in these words: Let two or three prophets speak; and let the rest judge. But if anything be revealed to him that sitteth by, let the former keep silence. [For] ye may, one by one, all prophesy, that all may learn, an d all may receive consolation. And the spirits (that is, the judgments) of the prophets, are subject to the prophets [1 Cor. 14:29-32]. Of which words of the apostle, it is evident that in Corinth, when the church did assemble for that purpose, some place of scripture was read; upon the which, first one gave his judgment to the instruction and consolation of the auditors; after whom did one other either confirm what the former had said, or did add what he had omitted, or did gently correct or explain more properly where the whole verity was not revealed to the former. And in case some things were hid from the one and from the other, liberty was given to the third to speak his judgment for edification of the church. Above the which number of three (as appears), they passed not, for avoiding of confusion.
These exercises, we say, are things most necessary for the church of God this day in Scotland. For thereby (as is said) shall the church have judgment and knowledge of the graces, and utterances of every man within their own body; the simple, and such as have somewhat profited, shall be encouraged daily to study and proceed in knowledge; the church shall be edified (for this exercise must be patent to such as list to hear and learn); and every man shall have liberty to utter and declare his mind and knowledge to the comfort and edification of the church.
But lest that of a profitable exercise might arise debate and strife, curious, peregrine [strange]
and unprofitable questions are to be avoided. All interpretations
disagreeing from the principles of our faith, repugning to charity, or
that stand in plain contradiction to any other manifest place of
scripture, are to be rejected. The interpreter in that exercise may not
take to himself the liberty of a public preacher, yea, although he is a
minister appointed; but he must bind himself to his text, that he
enter not by disgression in explaining common-places. He may use no
invective in that exercise, unless it is with sobriety in confuting
heresies. In exhortations or admonitions he must be short, that the
time may be spent in opening of the mind of the Holy Ghost in that
place, in following the file [course] and dependence of the
text, and in observing such notes as may instruct and edify the
auditure. For avoiding of contention, neither may the interpreter,
neither yet any of the assembly, move any question in open audience,
whereto himself is not content to give resolution without reasoning
with any other; but every man ought to speak his own judgment to the
edification of the church.
If any is noted with curiosity, or bringing in any strange doctrine, he must be admonished by the moderators, the ministers and elders, immediately after that the interpretation is ended. The whole members and number of them that are of the assembly ought to convene together, where examination should be had, how the persons that did interpret did handle and convey the matter; they themselves being removed till every man has given his censure; after the which, the persons being called, the faults (if any notable be found) are noted, and the person gently admon ished. In that last assembly all questions and doubts (if any arise) should be resolved without contention.
The ministers of the parish churches to landward,
adjacent to every chief town, and the readers, if they have any gift of
interpretation, within six miles must assist and concur to those that
prophesy within the towns; to the end that they themselves may either
learn, or else others may learn by them. And moreover, men in whom are
supposed any gifts to be which might edify the church if they were well
applied, must be charged by the ministers and elders to join
themselves with that session and company of interpreters, to the end
that the church may judge whether they are able to serve to God's glory,
and to the profit of the church in the vocation of ministers or not.
And if any are found disobedient, and not willing to communicate the
gifts and spiritual graces of God with their brethren, after sufficient
admonition, discipline must proceed against them; provided that the
civil magistrate concur with the judgment and election of the church.
For no man may be permitted to live as best pleases him within the
church of God; but every man must be constrained, by fraternal
admonition and correction, to bestow his labours, when of the church
they are required, to the edification of others.
What day in the week is most convenient for that
exercise, and what books of the scriptures shall be most profitable to
be read, we refer to the judgment of every particular church, we mean,
to the wisdom of the ministers and elders.
Of Marriage
Because that marriage, the blessed ordinance of God, in this cursed Papistry has partly been contemned, and partly has been so infirmed, that the persons conjoined could never be assured of continuance, if the bishops and prelates list to dissolve the same; we have thought good to show our judgments how such confusion in times coming may be best avoided.
And first, public inhibition must be made that no
persons under the power and obedience of others, such as sons and
daughters, [and] those that are under curators, neither men nor women,
contract marriage privily and without knowledge [of their parents,
tutors, or curators, under whose power they are for the time]: which if
they do, the censure and discipline of the church [ought] to proceed
against them. If the son or daughter, or others, have their heart
touched with desire of marriage, they are bound to give that honour to
the parents that they open unto them their affection, asking of them
counsel and assistance, how that motion, which they judge to be of God,
may be performed. If the father, friend, or master, gainstand their
request, and have no other cause than the common sort of men have (to
wit, lack of goods, or because they are not so high-born as they
require), yet must not the parties whose hearts are touched make any
covenant till further declaration is made unto the church of God. And,
therefore, after they have opened their minds to their parents, or such
others as have charge over them, they must declare it also to the
ministry, or to the civil magistrate, requiring them to travail with
their parents for their consent, which to do they are bound. And if
they, to wit, the magistrate or ministers, find no just cause why the
marriage required may not be fulfilled, then, after sufficient
admonition to the father, friend, master, or superior, that none of
them resist the work of God, the ministry or magistrate may enter in
the place of the parent, and by consenting to their just requests may
admit them to marriage. For the work of God ought not to be hindered by
the corrupt affections of worldly men. The work of God we call [it],
when two hearts (without filthiness before committed) are so joined,
that both require and are content to live together in that holy bond of
matrimony.
If any man commits fornication with the woman whom he
required in marriage, then do both lose this foresaid benefit, as well
of the church as of the magistrate; for neither of both ought to be
intercessors or advocates for filthy fornicators. But the father, or
nearest friend, whose daughter being a virgin is deflowered, has power
by the law of God to compel the man that did that injury to marry his
daughter. Or, if the father will not accept him by reason of his
offence, then may he require the dot [dowry] of his daughter;
which if the offender is not able to pay, then ought the civil
magistrate to punish his body by some other punishment.
And because that fornication, whoredom, and adultery, are sins most common to this realm, we require of your honours, in the name of the Eternal God, that severe punishment, according as God has commanded, be executed against such wicked offenders. For we doubt not but such enormous crimes, openly committed, provoke the wrath of God, as the apostle speaks, not only upon the offenders, but also upon such places as where, without punishment, they are committed.
But to return to our former purpose: marriage ought
not to be contracted amongst persons that have no election for lack of
understanding; and therefore we affirm, that bairns [children]
and infants cannot lawfully be married in their minor age, to wit, the
man within fourteen years of age, and the woman within twelve years,
at the least. Which if it chance any to have been, and have kept their
bodies always separate, we cannot judge them bound to adhere as man and
wife, by reason of that promise, which in God's presence was no promise
at all. But if in the years of judgment they have embraced the one the
other, then by reason of their last consent, they have ratified that
which others did promise for them in their youth.
In a reformed church, marriage ought not to be
secretly used, but in open face and public audience of the church. And
for avoiding of dangers, it is expedient that the banns be publicly
proclaimed three Sundays (unless the persons are [so] known, that no
suspicion of danger may arise, and then may the banns be shortened at
the discretion of the ministry). But in no wise can we admit marriage
to be used secretly, however honourable that the persons are. The
Sunday before sermon we think most convenient for marriage, and it to be
used no day else without the consent of the whole ministry.
Marriage once lawfully contracted, may not be dissolved at man's pleasure, as our master Christ Jesus does witness, unless adultery is committed; which, being sufficiently proven in presence of the civil magistrate, the innocent (if they so require) ought to be pronounced free, and the offender ought to suffer the death as God has commanded. If the civil sword foolishly spares the life of the offender, yet the church may not be negligent in their office, which is to excommunicate the wicked, and to repute them as dead members, and to pronounce the innocent party to be at freedom, be they never so honourable before the world. If the life is spared (as it ought not to be) to the offenders, and if the fruits of repentance of long time appear in them, and if they earnestly desire to be reconciled with the church, we judge that they may be received to participation of the sacraments, and of the other benefits of the church (for we would not that the church should hold those excommunicate whom God absolved, that is, the penitent).
If any demand, whether that the offender after reconciliation with the church, may not marry again: we answer, that if they cannot live continent, and if the necessity is such as that they fear further offence of God, we cannot forbid them to use the remedy ordained of God. If the party offended may be reconciled to the offender, then we judge that in nowise shall it be lawful to the offender to marry any other, except the party that before has been offended; and the solemnization of the latter marriage must be in the open face of the church like as the former, but without proclamation of banns.
This we do offer as the best counsel that God gives unto us in so doubtsome a case. But the most perfect reformation were, if your honours would give to God his honour and glory, that ye would prefer his express commandment to your own corrupt judgments, especially in punishing of those crimes which he commands to be punished with death. For so should ye declare yourselves God's true and obedient officers, and your commonwealth should be rid of innumerable troubles.
We mean not, that sins committed in our former
blindness (which are almost buried in oblivion) shall be called again
to examination and judgment. But we require that the law may now and
hereafter be so established and executed, that this ungodly impunity of
sin have no place within this realm. For in the fear of God we signify
unto your honours, that whosoever persuades unto you that ye may
pardon where God commands death, deceives your souls, and provokes you
to offend God's Majesty.
Of Burial
Burial in all ages has been held in estimation, to signify that the same body that was commit ted to the earth should not utterly perish, but should rise again. And the same we would have kept within this realm, provided that superstition, idolatry, and whatsoever has proceeded of a false opinion, and for advantage sake, may be avoided; as singing of Mass, placebo, and dirge, and all other prayers over or for the dead, are not only superfluous and vain, but also are idolatry, and do repugn to the plain scriptures of God. For plain it is, that everyone that dies departs either in the faith of Christ Jesus, or else departs in incredulity. Plain it is, that they that depart in the true faith of Christ Jesus, rest from their labours, and from death [do] go to life everlasting, as by our Master and by his apostle we are taught. But whosoever departs in unbelief or in incredulity, shall never see life, but the wrath of God abides upon him. And so, we say that prayers for the dead are not only superfluous and vain, but do expressly repugn to the manifest scriptures and verity thereof.
For avoiding all inconveniencies, we judge it best,
that neither singing nor reading be at the burial. For albeit things
sung and read may admonish some of the living to prepare themselves for
death, yet shall some superstitious and ignorant persons ever think
that the works, singing, or reading of the living do and may profit the
dead. And therefore, we think most expedient that the dead be conveyed
to the place of burial with some honest company of the church, without
either singing or reading; yea, without all land of ceremony heretofore
used, other than that the dead be committed to the grave, with such
gravity and sobriety, as those that are present may seem to fear the
judgments of God, and to hate sin, which is the cause of death.
We are not ignorant that some require a sermon at the
burial, or else some places of scriptures to be read, to put the living
in mind that they are mortal, and that likewise they must die. But let
those men understand that the sermons which are daily made, serve for
that use; which if men despise, the preaching of the funeral sermons
shall rather nourish superstition and a false opinion (as before is
said), than that they shall bring such persons to any godly
consideration of their own estate.
Attour [Moreover], either shall the ministers for the most part be occupied in preaching funeral sermons, or else they shall have respect to persons, preaching at the burial of the rich and honourable, but keeping silence when the poor or despised departs; and this with safe conscience cannot the ministers do. For, seeing that before God there is no respect of persons, and that their ministry appertains to all alike, whatsoever they do to the rich, in respect of their ministry, the same they are bound to do to the poorest under their charge.
In respect of diverse inconveniencies, we think it
neither seemly that the church appointed to preaching and ministration
of the sacraments shall be made a place of burial; but that some other
secret and convenient place, lying in the most free air, be appointed
for that use; the which place ought to be well walled and fenced about,
and kept for that use only.
For Reparation of Churches
Lest that the word of God, and ministration of the sacraments, by unseemliness of the place come in contempt, it is of necessity that the churches and places where the people ought publicly to convene be with expedition repaired in doors, windows, thatch, and with such preparations within, as appertains as well to the majesty of the word of God as unto the ease and commodity of the people. And because we know the slothfulness of men in this behalf, and in all others which may not redound to their private commodity, strait charge and commandment must be given that within a certain day the reparations must be begun, and within another day, to be affixed by your honours, that they be finished. Penalties and sums of money must be enjoined, and without pardon taken from the contemners.
The reparation would be according to the possibility and number of the church. Every church must have doors, closed windows of glass, thatch or slate able to withhold rain, a bell to convocate the people together, a pulpit, a basin for baptism, and tables for the ministration of the Lord's Supper. In greater churches, and where the congregation is great in number, must reparation be made within the church for the quiet and commodious receiving of the people: the ex penses to be lifted partly of the people, and partly of the teinds [ tithes], at the consideration of the ministry.
For Punishment of Those that Profane the Sacraments and Do Contemn the Word of God, and Dare Presume to Minister Them, Not Being Thereto Lawfully Called
As Satan has never ceased from the beginning to draw mankind in one of two extremities: to wit, that men should be either so ravished with gazing upon the visible creatures that, forgetting the cause why they were ordained, they attributed unto them a virtue and power which God has not granted unto them; or else that men should so contemn and despise God's blessed ordinance and holy institutions, as [if] that neither in the right use of them were there any profit, neither yet in their profanation were there any danger; as this wise, we say, Satan has blinded the most part of mankind from the beginning; so doubt we not, but that he will strive to continue in his malice even to the end. Our eyes have seen, and presently do see the experience of the one and of the other.
What was the opinion of most part of men of the sacrament of Christ's body and blood, during the darkness of superstition, is not unknown; how it was gazed upon, kneeled unto, borne in procession, and finally worshipped and honoured as Christ Jesus himself. And so long as Satan might then retain man in that damnable idolatry, he was quiet, as one that possessed his kingdom of darkness peaceably. But since that it has pleased the mercies of God to reveal unto the unthankful world the light of his word, the right use and administration of his sacraments, he assays man upon the contrary part. For where (not long ago) men stood in such admiration of that idol in the Mass, that none durst presume to have said the Mass, but the foresworn shaven sort, the Beast's marked men; some dare now be so bold as, without all convocation, to minister (as they suppose), the true sacraments in open assemblies. And some idiots (yet more wickedly and more impudently) dare counterfeit in their houses that which the true ministers do in the open congregation; they presume (we say) to do it in houses without reverence, without word preached, and without minister, other than of companion to companion. This contempt proceeds, no doubt, from the malice and craft of that serpent who first deceived man, of purpose to deface the glory of Christ's evangel, and to bring his blessed sacraments in a perpetual contempt. And further, your honours may clearly see how proudly and stubbornly the most part despise the evangel of Christ Jesus offered unto you; whom unless that sharply and stoutly ye resist, we mean as well the manifest despiser as the profaner of the sacraments, ye shall find them pernicious enemies ere it be long. And therefore, in the name of the Eternal God, and of his Son Christ Jesus, we require of your honours that, without delay, strait laws be made against the one and the other.
We dare not prescribe unto you what penalties shall be required of such. But this we fear not to affirm, that the one and the other deserve death; for if he who does falsify the seal, subscription, or coin of a king is adjudged worthy of death; what shall we think of him who plainly does falsify the seals of Christ Jesus, Prince of the kings of the earth? If Darius pronounced that a balk [beam] should be taken from the house of that man, and he himself hanged upon it, that durst attempt to hinder the re-edification of the material temple, what shall we say of those that contemptuously blaspheme God, and manifestly hinder the [spiritual] temple of God (which is the souls and bodies of the elect) to be purged, by the true preaching of Christ Jesus, from the superstition and damnable idolatry in which they have been of long plunged and held captive? If ye (as God forbid) declare yourselves careless over the true religion, God will not suffer your negligence unpunished. And therefore, more earnestly we require, that strait laws may be made against the stubborn contemners of Christ Jesus, and against such as dare presume to minister his sacraments, not orderly called to that office, lest that while there are none found to gainstand impiety, the wrath of God is kindled against the whole.
The Papistical priests have neither power nor authority to minister the sacraments of Christ Jesus, because that in their mouth is not the sermon of exhortation. And, therefore, to them must strait inhibition be made, notwithstanding any usurpation which they have had in that behalf in the time of blindness. It is neither the clipping of their crowns, the crossing of their fingers, nor the blowing of the dumb dogs called the bishops, neither yet the laying on of their hands, that makes them true ministers of Christ Jesus. But the Spirit of God inwardly first moving the hearts to seek Christ's glory and the profit of his church, and thereafter the nomination of the people, the examination of the learned, and public admission (as before is said), make men lawful ministers of the word and sacraments. We speak of an ordinary vocation, where churches are reformed, or at least tend to reformation, and not of that which is extraordinary, when God by himself, and by his only power, raises up to the ministry such as best pleases his wisdom.
The Conclusion
Thus have we, in these few heads, offered unto your honours our judgments, according as we were commanded, touching the reformation of things which heretofore have altogether been abused in this cursed Papistry. We doubt not but some of our petitions shall appear strange unto you at the first sight. But if your wisdoms deeply consider that we must answer not only unto men, but also before the throne of the Eternal God, and of his Son Christ Jesus, for the counsel which we give in this so grave a matter, your honours shall easily consider, that more assured it is to us to fall in the displeasure of all men in earth, than to offend the Majesty of God, whose justice cannot suffer flatterers and deceitful counsellors unpunished.
That we require the church to be set at such liberty that she neither is compelled to feed idle bellies, neither yet to sustain the tyranny which heretofore by violence has been maintained, we know will offend many. But if we should keep silence hereof, we are most assured to offend the just and righteous God, who by the mouth of his apostle has pronounced this sentence: He that laboureth not, let him not eat [2 Thess. 3:10]. If we in this behalf, or in any other, require or ask any [other] thing than by God's expressed commandment, by equity and good conscience ye are bound to grant, let it be noted, and after repudiated; but if we require nothing which God requires not also, let your honours take heed how ye gainstand the charge of him whose hand and punishment ye cannot escape.
If blind affection rather leads you to have respect to the sustenance of those your carnal friends, who tyrannically have empired above the poor flock of Christ Jesus, than that the zeal of God's glory provokes and moves you to set his oppressed church at freedom and liberty, we fear your sharp and sudden punishments, and that the glory and honour of this enterprise be reserved unto others.
And yet shall this our judgment abide to the generations following for a monument and witness, how lovingly God called you and this realm to repentance, what counsellors God sent unto you, and how ye [have] used the same. If obediently ye hear God now calling, we doubt not but he shall hear you in your greatest necessity. But if, following your own corrupt judgments, ye contemn his voice and vocation, we are assured that your former iniquity, and present ingratitude, shall together crave just punishment from God, who cannot long delay to execute his most just judgments, when, after many offences and long blindness, grace and mercy offered are contemptuously refused.
God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, by the power of his Holy Spirit, so illuminate your hearts that ye may clearly see what is pleasing and acceptable in his presence; so bow the same to his obedience that ye may prefer his revealed will to your own affections; and so strengthen you by the spirit of fortitude that boldly ye may punish vice and maintain virtue within this realm, to the praise and glory of his Holy name, to the comfort and assurance of your own consciences, and to the consolation and good example of the posterities following. Amen. So be it.
By your honours'
Most humble Servants, etc.
From Edinburgh, the 20 of May 1560
The Second Book of Discipline 1578
Chapter 1
Of the Kirk and Policy Thereof in General, and Wherein it is Different from the Civil Policy
The kirk of God is sometimes largely taken for all them that profess the gospel of Jesus Christ, and so it is a company and fellowship, not only of the godly, but also of hypocrites professing always outwardly a true religion. Other times it is taken for the godly and elect only; and sometimes for them that exercise spiritual function among the congregation of them that profess the truth.
2. The kirk in this last sense has a certain power
granted by God, according to the which it uses a proper jurisdiction
and government, exercised to the comfort of the whole kirk. This power
ecclesiastical is an authority granted by God the Father, through the
Mediator Jesus Christ, unto his kirk gathered, and having the ground in
the word of God; to be put in execution by them unto whom the
spiritual government of the kirk by lawful calling is committed.
3. The policy of the kirk flowing from this power is
an order or form of spiritual government which is exercised by the
members appointed thereto by the word of God; and therefore is given
immediately to the office-bearers, by whom it is exercised to the weal
of the whole body. This power is diversely used: for sometimes it is
severally exercised, chiefly by the teachers, sometimes conjunctly by
mutual consent of them that bear the office and charge, after the form
of judgment. The former is commonly called potestas ordinis, and the other potestas jurisdictionis.
These two kinds of power have both one authority, one ground, one
final cause, but are different in the manner and form of execution, as
is evident by the speaking of our Master in Matt. 16 and 18.
4. This power and policy ecclesiastical is different
and distinct in its own nature from that power and policy which is
called the civil power and appertains to the civil government of the
commonwealth; albeit they are both of God, and tend to one end, if they
are rightly used: to wit, to advance the glory of God, and to have
godly and good subjects.
5. For this ecclesiastical power flows immediately
from God, and the Mediator Jesus Christ, and is spiritual, not having a
temporal head on earth, but only Christ, the only spiritual King and
Governor of his kirk.
6. It is a title falsely usurped by Antichrist to call
himself head of the kirk, and ought not to be attributed to angel nor
man, of what estate that ever he is, saving to Christ, the only Head
and Monarch of the kirk.
7. Therefore this power and policy of the kirk should
lean upon the word immediately as the only ground thereof, and should
be taken from the pure fountains of the scriptures, the kirk hearing
the voice of Christ, the only spiritual King, and being ruled by his
laws.
8. It is proper to kings, princes, and magistrates to
be called lords and dominators over their subjects, whom they govern
civilly, but it is proper to Christ only to be called Lord and Master
in thespiritual government of the kirk; and all others that bear office
therein ought not to usurp dominion therein, nor be called lords, but
only ministers, disciples, and servants. For it is Christ's proper
office to command and rule in his kirk universal, and every particular
kirk, through his Spirit and word, by the ministry of men.
9. Notwithstanding, as the ministers and others of the
ecclesiastical estate are subject to the civil magistrate, so ought
the person of the magistrate be subject to the kirk spiritually, and in
ecclesiastical government. And the exercise of both these
jurisdictions cannot stand in one person ordinarily. The civil power is
called the power of the sword, and the other the power of the keys.
10. The civil power should command the spiritual to
exercise and do their office according to the word of God. The
spiritual rulers should require the Christian magistrate to minister
justice and punish vice, and to maintain the liberty and quietness of
the kirk within their bounds.
11. The magistrate commands external things for
external peace and quietness amongst the subjects; the minister handles
external things only for conscience cause.
12. The magistrate handles external things only, and
actions done before men; but the spiritual ruler judges both inward
affections and external actions, in respect of conscience, by the word
of God.
13. The civil magistrate craves and gets obedience by
the sword and other external means, but the ministry by the spiritual
sword and spiritual means.
14. The magistrate neither ought to preach, minister
the sacraments, nor execute the censures of the kirk, nor yet prescribe
any rule how it should be done, but command the ministers to observe
the rule commanded in the word, and punish the transgressors by civil
means. The ministers exercise not the civil jurisdiction, but teach the
magistrate how it should be exercised according to the word.
15. The magistrate ought to assist, maintain, and
fortify the jurisdiction of the kirk. The ministers should assist their
princes in all things agreeable to the word, provided they neglect not
their own charge by involving themselves in civil affairs.
Finally, as ministers are subject to the judgment and
punishment of the magistrate in exter nal things, if they offend; so
ought the magistrates to submit themselves to the discipline of the
kirk, if they transgress in matters of conscience and religion.
Chapter 2
Of the Parts of the Policy of the Kirk, and Persons or Office-Bearers to Whom Administration is Committed
1. As in the civil policy the whole commonwealth consists in them that are governors or magistrates, and them that are governed, or subjects; so in the policy of the kirk some are appointed to be rulers (and the rest of the members thereof to be ruled), and obeyed according to the word of God and inspiration of his Spirit, always under one Head and Chief Governor, Jesus Christ.
2. Again, the whole policy of the kirk consists in
three things: viz., in doctrine, discipline, and distribution. With
doctrine is annexed the administration of the sacraments. And according
to the parts of this division arises a threefold sort of
office-bearers in the kirk: to wit, of ministers or preachers, elders
or governors, and deacons or distributors.
3. And all these may be called by one general word,
ministers of the kirk. For albeit the kirk of God is ruled and governed
by Jesus Christ, who is the only King, High Priest, and Head thereof,
yet he uses the ministry of men as a most necessary middis [means]
for this purpose. For so he has from time to time, before the law,
under the law, and in the time of the evangel, for our great comfort
raised up men endued with the gifts of the Spirit, for the spiritual
government of his kirk, exercising by them his own power, through his
Spirit and word, to the building of the same.
4. And to take away all occasion of tyranny, he will
that they should rule with mutual consent of brethren, and equality of
power, every one according to their functions.
5. In the New Testament and time of the evangel, he
has used the ministry of the apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors,
and doctors in the administration of the word; the eldership for good
order and administration of discipline; the deaconship to have the care
of the ecclesiastical goods.
6. Some of these ecclesiastical functions are
ordinary, and some extraordinary or temporary. There are three
extraordinary functions: the office of the apostle, of the evangelist,
and of the prophet, which are not perpetual, and now have ceased in the
kirk of God, except when he pleased extraordinarily for a time to stir
some of them up again. There are four ordinary functions or offices in
the kirk of God: the office of the pastor, minister or bishop; the
doctor; the presbyter or elder; and the deacon.
7. These offices are ordinary, and ought to continue
perpetually in the kirk, as necessary for the government and policy of
the same, and no more offices ought to be received or suffered in the
true kirk of God established according to his word.
8. Therefore all the ambitious titles invented in the
kingdom of Antichrist, and in his usurped hierarchy, which are not of
one of these four sorts, together with the offices depending thereupon,
in one word, ought to be rejected.
How the Persons that Bear Ecclesiastical Functions
are to be Admitted to Their Office
1. Vocation or calling is common to all that should bear office within the kirk, which is a lawful way by which qualified persons are promoted to any spiritual office within the kirk of God. Without this lawful calling it was never leesome [ lawful] to any person to meddle with any function ecclesiastical.
2. There are two sorts of calling: one extraordinary,
by God immediately, as were the prophets and apostles, which in kirks
established, and already well-reformed, has no place.
3. The other calling is ordinary, which, besides the
calling of God and inward testimony of a good conscience, has the
lawful approbation and outward judgment of men, according to God's word
and order established in his kirk. None ought to presume to enter in
any office ecclesiastical, without he have this testimony of a good
conscience before God, who only knows the hearts of men.
4. This ordinary and outward calling has two parts:
election and ordination. Election is the choosing out of a person or
persons most able to the office that vakes [becomes vacant],
by the judgment of the eldership and consent of the congregation to
whom the person or persons [shall] be appointed. The qualities, in
general, requisite in all them who should bear charge in the kirk,
consist in soundness of religion and godliness of life, according as
they are sufficiently set forth in the word.
5. In the order of election, it is to be eschewed that
any person be intruded in any of the offices of the kirk contrary to
the will of the congregation to whom they are appointed, or without the
voice of the eldership. None ought to be intruded or entered in the
places already planted, or in any room that vakes not [is not vacant],
for any worldly respect; and that which is called the benefice ought
to be nothing else than the stipend of the ministers that are lawfully
called and elected.
6. Ordination is the separation and sanctifying of the
person appointed of God and his kirk, after he is well-tried and found
qualified. The ceremonies of ordination are fasting, earnest prayer,
and imposition of hands of the eldership.
7. All these, as they must be raised up by God, and by
him made able for the work whereto they are called; so ought they to
know their message to be limited within God's word, without the bounds
of the which they ought not to pass. All these should take the titles
and names only (lest they be exalted and puffed up in themselves) which
the scriptures give unto them, as those which import labour, travail,
and work; and are names of offices and service, and not of idleness,
dignity, worldly honour or preeminence, which by Christ our Master is
expressly reproved and forbidden.
8. All these office-bearers should have their own
particular flocks amongst whom they exercise their charge. All should
make residence with them, and take the inspection and oversight of
them, every one in his vocation. And, generally, these two things ought
they all to respect: the glory of God and edifying of his kirk, in
discharging their duties in their calling.
Chapter 4
Of the Office-Bearers in Particular, and First of the Pastors or Ministers
1. Pastors, bishops, or ministers, are they who are appointed to particular congregations, which they rule by the word of God, and over the which they watch. In respect whereof, sometimes they are called pastors, because they feed their congregation; sometimes episcopi or bishops, because they watch over their flock; sometimes ministers, by reason of their service and office; and sometimes also presbyters or seniors, for the gravity in manners which they ought to have in taking care of the spiritual government, which ought to be most dear unto them.
2. They that are called unto the ministry, or that
offer themselves thereunto, ought not to be elected without[unless] one certain flock be assigned to them.
3. No one ought to ingyre[thrust] himself, or usurp this office, without lawful calling.
4. They who are once called by God, and duly elected
by man, after that they have once accepted the charge of the ministry,
may not leave their functions. The deserters should be ad monished;
and, in case of obstinacy, finally excommunicated.
5. No pastor may leave his flock without license of
the provincial or national assembly; which, if he does, after
admonition not obeyed, let the censures of the kirk strike upon him.
6. Unto the pastor appertains teaching of the word of
God, in season and out of season, publicly and privately, always
travailing to edify and discharge his conscience, as God's word
prescribes to him.
7. Unto the pastor only appertains the administration
of the sacraments, in like manner as the administration of the word;
for both are appointed by God as means to teach us, the one by the ear,
and the other by the eyes and other senses, that by both knowledge may
be transferred to the mind.
8. It appertains, by the same reason, to the pastor to
pray for the people, and namely for the flock committed to his charge;
and to bless them in the name of the Lord, who will not suffer the
blessings of his faithful servants to be frustrated.
9. He ought also to watch over the manners of his
flock, that the better he may apply the doctrine to them, in
reprehending the dissolute persons, and exhorting the godly to continue
in the fear of the Lord.
10. It appertains to the minister, after lawful
proceeding by the eldership, to pronounce the sentence of binding or
loosing upon any person, according to the power of the keys granted
unto the kirk.
11. It belongs to him likewise, after lawful
proceeding in the matter by the eldership, to solemnize marriage
betwixt them that are to be joined therein; and to pronounce the
blessing of the Lord upon them that enter in that holy bond in the fear
of God.
12. And generally, all public denunciations [ declarations]
that are to be made in the kirk before the congregation, concerning
the ecclesiastical affairs, belong to the office of a minister; for he
is a messenger and herald betwixt God and the people in all these
affairs.
Chapter 5
Of Doctors and Their Office, and of the Schools
1. One of the two ordinary and perpetual functions that travail in the word is the office of the doctor, who also may be called prophet, bishop, elder, catechiser: that is, teacher of the catechism and rudiments of religion.
2. His office is to open up the mind of the Spirit of
God in the scriptures simply, without such applications as the minister
uses, to the end that the faithful may be instructed, and sound
doctrine taught, and that the purity of the gospel be not corrupted
through ignorance or evil opinions.
3. He is different from the pastor, not only in name,
but in diversity of gifts. For the doctor is given the word of
knowledge, to open up, by simple teaching, the mysteries of faith; to
the pastor, the gift of wisdom, to apply the same, by exhortation to
the manners of the flock, as occasion craves.
4. Under the name and office of a doctor, we
comprehend also the order in schools, colleges, and universities, which
has been from time to time carefully maintained, as well among the
Jews and Christians, as among the profane nations.
5. The doctor being an elder, as is said, [he] should
assist the pastor in the government of the kirk, and concur with the
elders, his brethren, in all assemblies; by reason the interpretation
of the word (which is [the] only judge in ecclesiastical matters) is
committed to his charge.
6. But to preach to the people, to minister the
sacraments, and to celebrate marriages, pertains not to the doctor,
unless he is otherwise orderly called. Howbeit the pastor may teach in
the schools, as he who has also the gift of knowledge oftentimes meet
therefore, as the examples of Polycarp and others testify.
Chapter 6
Of Elders and Their Office
1. The word elder in the scripture sometimes is the name of age, sometimes of office. When it is the name of an office, sometimes it is taken largely, comprehending as well the pastors and doctors, as them who are called seniors or elders.
2. In this our division, we call those elders whom the
apostles call presidents or governors. Their office, as it is
ordinary, so it is perpetual, and always necessary in the kirk of God.
The eldership is a spiritual function, as is the ministry. Elders once
lawfully called to the office, and having gifts of God meet to exercise
the same, may not leave it again. Albeit such a number of elders may
be chosen in certain congregations, that one part of them may relieve
another for a reasonable space, as was among the Levites under the law
in serving of the temple. The number of elders in every congregation
cannot well be limited, but should be according to the bounds and
necessity of the people.
3. It is not necessary that all elders be also
teachers of the word, albeit chiefly they ought to be such, and so are
worthy of double honour. What manner of persons they ought to be, we
refer it to the express word of God, and, namely, the canons written by
the apostle Paul.
4. Their office is, as well severally as conjunctly,
to watch diligently upon the flock commit ted to their charge, both
publicly and privately, that no corruption of religion or manners enter
therein.
5. As the pastors and doctors should be diligent in
teaching and sowing the seed of the word, so the elders should be
careful in seeking the fruit of the same in the people.
6. It appertains to them to assist the pastor in examination of them that come to the Lord's table: item, in visiting the sick.
7. They should cause the acts of assemblies, as well
particular as provincial or general, to be put in execution carefully.
8. They should be diligent in admonishing all men of their duty, according to the rule of the evangel. Things that they cannot correct by private admonitions they should bring to the assembly of the eldership.
9. Their principal office is to hold assemblies with
the pastors and doctors (who are also of their number) for establishing
of good order, and execution of discipline. Unto the which assemblies
all persons are subject that remain within their bounds.
Chapter 7
Of the Elderships, and Assemblies, and Discipline
1. Elderships and assemblies are commonly constituted of pastors, doctors, and such as we commonly call elders, that labour not in the word and doctrine, of whom, and of whose several power has been spoken.
2. Assemblies are of four sorts. For, either are they
of particular kirks and congregations, one or more, or of a province,
or of a whole nation, or of all and diverse nations professing one
Jesus Christ.
3. All the ecclesiastical assemblies have power to
convene lawfully together for treating of things concerning the kirk,
and pertaining to their charge. They have power to appoint times and
places to that effect; and at one meeting to appoint the diet, time,
and place for another.
4. In all the assemblies a moderator should be chosen
(by the common consent of the whole brethren convened) who should
propose matters, gather the votes, and cause good order to be kept in
the assemblies. Diligence should be taken, chiefly by the moderator,
that only ecclesiastical things be handled in the assemblies, and that
there be no meddling with anything pertaining to the civil
jurisdiction.
5. Every assembly has power to send forth from them of
their own number, one or more visitors to see how all things are ruled
in the bounds of their jurisdiction. Visitation of more kirks is no
ordinary ecclesiastical office in the person of one man; neither may
the name of a bishop be attributed to the visitor only; neither is it
necessary to abide always in one man's person; but it is the part of
the eldership to send out qualified persons to visit pro re nata.
6. The final end of all assemblies is, first, to keep
the religion and doctrine in purity, without error and corruption;
next, to keep comeliness and order in the kirk.
7. For this order's case, they may make certain rules
and constitutions appertaining to the good behaviour of all the members
of the kirk in their vocation.
8. They have power also to abrogate and abolish all
statutes and ordinances concerning ecclesiastical matters that are
found noisome and unprofitable, and agree not with the time, or are
abused by the people.
9. They have power to execute ecclesiastical
discipline and punishment upon all transgressors and proud contemners
of the good order and policy of the kirk; and so the whole discipline
is in their hands.
10. The first kind and sort of assemblies, although
they are within particular congregations, yet they exercise the power,
authority, and jurisdiction of the kirk with mutual consent, and
therefore bear sometimes the name of the kirk. When we speak of the
elders of the particular congregations, we mean not that every
particular parish can, or may, have their own particular elderships,
especially to landward; but we think three or four, more or fewer,
particular kirks may have one eldership common to them all, to judge
their ecclesiastical causes. Albeit this is meet, that some of the
elders be chosen out of every particular congregation, to concur with
the rest of their brethren in the common assembly, and to take up the
delations of offences within their own kirks, and bring them to the
assembly. This we gather from the practice of the primitive kirk, where
elders, or colleges of seniors, were constituted in cities and famous
places.
11. The power of these particular elderships is to
give diligent labours in the bounds committed to their charge, that the
kirks be kept in good order; to inquire diligently of naughty and
unruly persons, and travail to bring them in the way again, either by
admonition, or threatening of God's judgments, or by correction.
12. It pertains to the eldership to take heed that the
word of God be purely preached within their bounds, the sacraments
rightly ministered, the discipline rightly maintained, and the
ecclesiastical goods uncorruptly distributed.
13. It belongs to this kind of assembly to cause the
ordinances made by the assemblies provincial, national, and general, to
be kept, and put in execution; to make constitutions which concern to; prevpon
in the kirk, for the decent order of these particular kirks where they
govern; providing they alter no rules made by the general or
provincial assemblies, and that they make the provincial assemblies
foreseen of these rules that they shall make, and abolish them that
tend to the hurt of the same.
14. It has power to excommunicate the obstinate.
15. The power of election of them who bear
ecclesiastical charges pertains to this kind of assembly, within their
own bounds, being well erected and constituted of many pastors and
elders of sufficient ability.
16. By the like reason their deposition also pertains
to this kind of assembly, as of them that teach erroneous and corrupt
doctrine; that are of scandalous life, and, after admonition, desist
not; that are given to schism or rebellion against the kirk, manifest
blasphemy, simony, corruption of bribes, falsehood, perjury, whoredom,
theft, drunkenness, fighting worthy of punishment by the law, usury,
dancing, infamy, and all others that deserve separation from the kirk.
These also who are found altogether insufficient to execute their
charge should be deposed; whereof other kirks would be advertised, that
they receive not the persons deposed.
17. Yet they ought not to be deposed who, through age,
sickness, or other accidents, become unmeet to do their office; in the
which case their honour should remain to them, their kirk should
maintain them; and others ought to be provided to do their office.
18. Provincial assemblies we call lawful conventions
of the pastors, doctors, and other elders of a province, gathered for
the common affairs of the kirks thereof; which also may be called the
conference of the kirk and brethren.
19. These assemblies are instituted for weighty
matters, to be treated by mutual consent and assistance of the brethren
within the provinces, as needs requires.
20. This assembly has power to handle, order, and
redress all things omitted, or done amiss, in the particular
assemblies. It has power to depose the office-bearers of that province
for good and just causes deserving deprivation. And, generally, these
assemblies have the whole power of the particular elderships whereof
they are collected.
21. The national assembly, which is general to us, is a
lawful convention of the whole kirks of the realm or nation where it
is used and gathered for the common affairs of the kirk; and may be
called the general eldership of the whole kirk within the realm. None
are subject to repair to this assembly to vote but ecclesiastical
persons, to such a number as shall be thought good by the same
assembly; not excluding other persons that will repair to the said
assembly to propose, hear, and reason.
22. This assembly is instituted, that all things
either omitted or done amiss in the provincial assemblies may be
redressed and handled; and things generally serving for the weal of the
whole body of the kirk within the realm may be foreseen, treated, and
set forth to God's glory.
23. It should take care that kirks be planted where
they are not planted. It should prescribe the rule how the other two
kinds of assemblies should proceed in all things.
24. This assembly should take heed that the spiritual
jurisdiction and the civil be not confounded to the hurt of the kirk;
that the patrimony of the kirk be not diminished nor abused; and,
generally, concerning all weighty affairs that concern the weal and
good order of the whole kirks of the realm, it ought to interpose
authority thereto.
25. There is, besides these, another more general kind
of assembly, which is of all nations and estates of persons within the
kirk, representing the universal kirk of Christ; which may be called
properly the general assembly, or general council of the whole kirk of
God. These assemblies were appointed and called together specially,
when any great schism or controversy in doctrine did arise in the kirk,
and were convoked at the command of godly emperors, being for the
time, for avoiding of schisms within the universal kirk of God; which,
because they appertain not to the particular estate of one realm, we
cease further to speak of them.
Chapter 8
Of the Deacons and Their Office, the Last Ordinary Function in the Kirk
1. The word diavkono" sometimes is largely taken comprehending all them that bear office in the ministry and spiritual function in the kirk. But now, as we speak, it is taken only for them unto whom the collection and distribution of the alms of the faithful and ecclesiastical goods do belong.
2. The office of the deacons so taken is an ordinary
and perpetual ecclesiastical function in the kirk of Christ. Of what
properties and duties he ought to be that is called to this function,
we remit it to the manifest scriptures. The deacon ought to be called
and elected as the rest of the spiritual officers, of the which
election was spoken before.
3. Their office and power is to receive and to
distribute the whole ecclesiastical goods unto them to whom they are
appointed. This they ought to do according to the judgment and
appointment of the presbyteries or elderships (of the which the deacons
are not), that the patrimony of the kirk and poor be not converted to
private men's uses, nor wrongfully distributed.
Chapter 9
Of the Patrimony of the Kirk, and the Distribution Thereof
1. By the patrimony of the kirk, we mean whatsoever thing has been at any time before, or shall be in times coming, given, or by consent or universal custom of countries professing the Christian religion, applied to the public use, and utility of the kirk; so that under the patrimony we comprehend all things given, or to be given, to the kirk and service of God, as lands, buildings, possessions, annual rents, and all suchlike wherewith the kirk is doted [endowed], either by donations, foundations, mortifications, or any other lawful titles, of kings, princes, or any persons inferior to them; together with the continual oblations of the faithful. We comprehend also all such things as by laws, or custom, or use of countries, have been applied to the use and utility of the kirk: of the which sort are teinds [tithes], manses, glebes [clerical lands], and such like, which, by common and municipal laws and universal custom, are possessed by the kirk.
2. To take any of this patrimony by unlawful means,
and convert it to the particular and profane use of any person, we hold
it a detestable sacrilege before God.
3. The ecclesiastical goods ought to be collected and
distributed by the deacons, as the word of God appoints, that they who
bear office in the kirk be provided for without care or solicitude. In
the apostolical kirk, the deacons were appointed to collect and
distribute whatsoever was collected of the faithful, to be distributed
unto the necessity of the saints, so that none lacked among the
faithful. These collections were not only of that which was collected
in manner of alms, as some suppose, but of other goods, movable and
unmovable, of lands and possessions, the price whereof was brought to
the feet of the apostles. This office continued in the deacons' hands,
who intromitted with the whole goods of the kirk ever, aye and while
the estate thereof was corrupted by Antichrist, as the ancient canons
bear witness.
4. The same canons make mention of a fourfold
distribution of the patrimony of the kirk, whereof one part was applied
to the pastor or bishop for his sustenance and hospitality; another to
the elders and deacons and all the clergy; the third to the poor, sick
persons, and strangers; the fourth to the uphold and other affairs of
the kirk, specially extraordinary. We add hereunto the schools and
schoolmasters also, who ought, and may be, well sustained of the same
goods, and are comprehended under the clergy. To whom we join also
clerks of assemblies, as well particular as general, syndics or
procurators of the kirk affairs, takers up of psalms, and suchlike
other ordinary officers of the kirk, so far as they are necessary.
Chapter 10
Of the Office of a Christian Magistrate in the Kirk
1. Although all the members of the kirk are held, everyone in his vocation, and, according thereto, to advance the kingdom of Jesus Christ so far as lies in their power; yet, chiefly, Christian princes, and other magistrates, are held to do the same. For they are called in the scriptures nourishers of the kirk, for so much as by them it is, or at least ought to be, maintained, fostered, upheld, and defended against all that would procure the hurt thereof.
2. So it pertains to the office of a Christian
magistrate to assist and fortify the godly proceedings of the kirk in
all behalfs; and, namely, to see that the public estate and ministry
thereof be maintained and sustained as it appertains, according to
God's word;
3. To see that the kirk be not invaded, nor hurt by
false teachers and hirelings, nor the rooms thereof be occupied by dumb
dogs or idle bellies;
4. To assist and maintain the discipline of the kirk,
and punish them civilly that will not obey the censure of the same;
always without confounding the one jurisdiction with the other;
5. To see that sufficient provision is made for the
ministry, the schools, and the poor; and, if they have not sufficient
to await upon their charges, to supply their indigence with their own
rents if need require; to hold hand as well to the saving of their
persons from injury and open violence, as to their rents and
possessions, that they be not defrauded, robbed, nor spoiled thereof;
6. Not to suffer the patrimony of the kirk to be
applied to profane and unlawful uses, or to be devoured by idle
bellies, and such as have no lawful function in the kirk, to the hurt
of the ministry, schools, poor, and other godly uses whereupon the same
ought to be bestowed;
7. To make the laws and constitutions agreeable to
God's word, for advancement of the kirk, and policy thereof; without
usurping anything that pertains not to the civil sword, but belongs to
the offices that are merely ecclesiastical, as are the ministry of the
word and sacraments, using of ecclesiastical discipline and the
spiritual execution thereof, or any part of the power of the spiritual
keys, which our Master gave the apostles and their true successors.
And, although kings and princes that are godly, sometimes by their own
authority, when the kirk is corrupt, and all things out of order, place
ministers and restore the true service of the Lord, after the example
of some godly kings of Judah, and diverse godly emperors and kings also
in the light of the New Testament; yet where the ministry of the kirk
is once lawfully constituted, and they that are placed do their office
faithfully, all godly princes and magistrates ought to hear and obey
their voice, and reverence the Majesty of the Son of God speaking by
them.
Chapter 11
Of the Present Abuses Remaining in the Kirk Which We Desire to be Reformed
1. As it is the duty of the godly magistrate to maintain the present liberty which God of his mercy has granted to the preaching of his word, and the true administration of the sacraments within this realm; so it is to provide that all abuses which as yet remain in the kirk be removed, and utterly taken away.
2. Therefore, first, the admission of men to
papistical titles of benefices, such as serve not, nor have a function
in the reformed kirk of Christ (as abbots, commendators, priors,
prioresses, and other titles of abbeys, whose places are now, for the
most part, by the just judgment of God, demolished and purged of
idolatry) is plain abuse, and is not to receive the kingdom of Christ
among us, but rather to refuse it.
3. Suchlike that they that of old were called the
chapters and convents of abbeys, cathedral kirks, and the like places,
serve for nothing now, but to set fees and tacks [leases], if
anything is left of the kirk lands and teinds, in hurt and prejudice
thereof, as daily experience teaches; and therefore ought to be utterly
abrogated and abolished. Of the like nature are the deans,
archdeacons, chantors, sub-chantors, treasurers, chancellors, and others
having the like titles flowing from the Pope and canon law only, who
have no place in the reformed kirk.
4. The kirks also which are united together, and
joined by annexation to their benefices, ought to be separated and
divided, and given to qualified ministers, as God's word craves.
5. Neither ought such abusers of the kirk's patrimony
to have vote in parliament, nor sit in council under the name of the
kirk and kirkmen, to the hurt and prejudice of the liberty thereof, and
laws of the realm made in favour of the reformed kirk.
6. Much less is it lawful that any person among these
men should have five, six, ten, or twenty kirks, or more, all having
the charge of souls, and bruik [enjoy] the patrimony thereof,
either by admission of the prince, or of the kirk, in this light of the
evangel; for it is but mockery to crave reformation where suchlike
have place.
7. And albeit it was thought good, for avoiding of
greater inconveniences, that the old possessors of such benefices who
had embraced the true religion should enjoy by permission the two parts
[two-thirds] of the rents which they possessed of before,
during their lifetime; yet it is not tolerable to continue in the
[kirk] like abuse, and give these places and other benefices of new, to
men also unmeet, or rather, more unmeet, who are not minded to serve in
the kirk, but live an idle life, as others did who bruikit [enjoyed] them in the time of blindness.
8. And insofar as in the order taken at Leith, in the
year of our Lord 1571, it appears that such may be admitted, being
found qualified; either that pretended order is against all good order,
or else it must be understood not of them that are qualified in
worldly affairs, or to serve in court; but of such as are qualified to
teach God's word, having their lawful admission of the kirk.
9. As to bishops, if the name epivskopo" is
properly taken, they are all one with the ministers, as before was
declared. For, it is not a name of superiority and lordship, but of
office and watching. Yet, because in the corruption of the kirk this
name (as others) has been abused, and yet is likely to be; we cannot
allow the fashion of these new chosen bishops, neither of the chapters
that are electors of them to such offices as they are chosen to.
10. True bishops should addict themselves to one
particular flock, which sundry of them refuse; neither should they
usurp lordship over their brethren, and over the inheritance of Christ,
as these men do.
11. Pastors, insofar as they are pastors, have not the
office of visitation of many kirks joined to the pastorship, without[except] it be given to them. It is a corruption that bishops should have farther bounds to visit nor [than]
they may lawfully. No man ought to have the office of visitation, but
he that is lawfully chosen thereunto by the presbytery. The elderships,
being well established, have power to send out visitors, one or more,
with commission to visit the bounds within their eldership: and
suchlike, after account taken of them, either to continue them, or
remove them from time to time, to the which elderships they shall be
always subject.
12. The criminal jurisdiction in the person of a pastor is a corruption.
13. It agrees not with the word of God that bishops
should be pastors of pastors, pastors of many flocks, and yet without
one certain flock, and without ordinary teaching. It agrees not with
the scriptures that they should be exempt from the correction of their
brethren, and discipline of the particular eldership of the kirk where
they shall serve; neither that they usurp the office of visitation of
other kirks, nor any other function beside other ministers, but so far
as shall be committed to them by the kirk.
14. Wherefore, we desire the bishops that now are,
either to agree to that order that God's word requires in them, as the
general kirk will prescribe unto them, not passing those bounds either
in ecclesiastical or civil affairs, or else to be deposed from all
function in the kirk.
15. We deny not, in the meantime, but ministers may
and should assist their princes, when they are required, in all things
agreeable to the word, whether it is in council or parliament, or
otherwise; providing always they neither neglect their own charge, nor
through flattery of princes hurt the public estate of the kirk. But,
generally, we say no person, under whatsoever title of the kirk, and
specially the abused titles in Papistry, of prelates, convents, and
chapters, ought to attempt any act in the kirk's name, either in council
or parliament, or out of council, having no commission of the reformed
kirk within this realm.
16. And by act of parliament it is provided that the
Papistical kirk and jurisdiction should have no place within the same,
and no bishop nor other prelate in times coming should use any
jurisdiction following from his authority. And, again, that no other
ecclesiastical jurisdiction should be acknowledged within this realm,
but that which is, and shall be in the reformed kirk, and flowing
therefrom. So we esteem holding of chapters in papistical manner,
either in cathedral kirks, abbeys, colleges, or other conventual places,
usurping the name and authority of the kirk, to hurt the patrimony
thereof, or use any other act to the prejudice of the same, since the
year of our Lord 1560, to be abuse and corruption, contrary to the
liberty of the true kirk and laws of the realm; and therefore ought to
be annulled, reduced, and, in times coming, utterly discharged.
17. The dependencies also of the papistical
jurisdiction are to be abolished, of the which sort is the mingled
jurisdiction of the commissioners, insofar as they meddle with
ecclesiastical matters, and have no commission of the kirk thereto, but
were erected in [that] time of our sovereign's mother, when things
were out of order. It is an absurd thing that sundry of them, having no
function of the kirk, should be judges to ministers, and depose them
from their rooms. Therefore they either would be discharged to meddle
with ecclesiastical matters, or it would be limited to them in what
matters they might be judges, and not hurt the liberty of the kirk.
18. They also that before were of the ecclesiastical
estate of the Pope's kirk, or that are admitted of new to papistical
titles, and now are tolerated by the laws of the realm to possess the
two [third] parts of their ecclesiastical rents, ought not to
have any further liberty, but to intromit with the portion assigned and
granted to them for their lifetimes; and not under the abused titles
which they had, to dispose to others the kirk rents, set tacks [leases]
and fees thereof at their pleasure, to the great hurt of the kirk, and
the poor labourers that dwell upon the kirk lands, contrary to all
good conscience and order.
Chapter 12
Certain Special Heads of Reformation Which We Crave
1. Whatsoever has been spoken of the offices of the kirk, the several power of the office -bearers, their conjunct power also, and, last, of the patrimony of the kirk, we understand it to be the right reformation which God craves at our hands, that the kirk be ordered according thereto, as with that order which is most agreeable to the word. But because some things would be touched in particular, concerning the estate of the country, and that which we principally seek to be reformed in the same, we have collected them in these heads following:
2.First, seeing the whole country is divided into
provinces, and these provinces again are divided in parishes, as well
in landward as in towns; in every parish and reasonable congregation
there would be placed one or more pastors to feed the flock, and no
pastor or minister to be always burdened with the particular charge of
more kirks or flocks than one only.
3. And because it will be thought hard to find out
pastors or ministers to all the parish kirks of the realm, as well in
landward as in towns, we think by the advice of such as commission may
be given to, by the kirk and prince, parishes in landward or small
villages may be joined, two, or three, or more, in some places
together, and the principal and most commodious kirks to stand, and be
repaired sufficiently, and qualified ministers placed thereat; and the
other kirks which are not found necessary may be suffered to decay,
their kirk yards always being kept for burial places; and in some
places, where need requires, a parish, where the congregation is over
great for one kirk, may be divided into two or more.
4. Doctors would be appointed in universities,
colleges, and other places needful, and suffi ciently provided for; to
open up the meaning of the scriptures, and to have the charge of
schools, and teach the rudiments of religion.
5. As for elders, there would be some to be censurers
of the manners of the people, one or more in every congregation; but
not an assembly of elders in every particular kirk, but only in towns
and famous places, where resort of men of judgment and ability to that
effect may be had; where the elders of the particular kirks about may
convene together, and have a common eldership and assembly-place among
them, to treat of all things that concern the congregations of which
they have the common oversight.
6. And as there ought to be men appointed to unite and
divide the parishes, as necessity and commodity require; so would
there be appointed by the general kirk, with the assent of the prince,
such men as fear God and know the estate of the country, that were able
to nominate and design [mark out] the places where the
particular elderships should convene; taking consideration of the
dioceses as they were divided of old, and of the estate of the countries
and provinces of the realm.
7. Likewise concerning provincial and synodal
assemblies, consideration were easy to be taken, how many and in what
places they were to be held, and how often they should convene, ought
to be referred to the liberty of the general kirk and order to be
appointed therein.
8. The national assemblies of this country, called
commonly the general assemblies, ought always to be retained in their
own liberty, and have their own place; with power to the kirk to
appoint times and places convenient for the same; and all men,
magistrates as well as inferiors, to be subject to the judgment of the
same in ecclesiastical causes, without any reclamation or appellation
to any judge, civil or ecclesiastical, within the realm.
9. The liberty of the election of persons called to
the ecclesiastical functions, and observed without interruption so long
as the kirk was not corrupted by Antichrist, we desire to be restored
and retained within this realm; so that none be intruded upon any
congregation, either by the prince or any inferior person, without
lawful election and the assent of the people over whom the person is
placed, as the practice of the apostolical and primitive kirk and good
order crave.
10. And because this order, which God's word craves,
cannot stand with patronages and presentation to benefices used in the
Popish kirk, we desire all them that truly fear God earnestly to
consider, that for asmuch as the names of patronages and benefices,
together with the effect thereof, have flowed from the Pope and
corruption of the canon law only, insofar as any person was intruded or
placed over kirks having curam animarum [care of souls];
and for asmuch as that manner of proceeding has no ground in the word
of God, but is contrary to the same, and to the said liberty of
election, they ought not now to have place in this light of
reformation. And therefore, whosoever will embrace God's word, and
desire the kingdom of his Son Christ Jesus to be advanced, they will
also embrace and receive that policy and order which the word of God
and upright estate of this kirk crave; otherwise it is in vain that
they have professed the same.
11. Notwithstanding as concerning other patronages of benefices that have not curam animarum, as
they speak: such as chaplaincies, prebendaries founded upon temporal
lands, annuals, and suchlike, may be reserved unto the ancient patrons,
to dispose thereupon, when they vake [become vacant], to scholars and bursars, as they are required by act of parliament.
12. As for the kirk rents in general, we desire the
order to be admitted and maintained amongst us that may stand with the
sincerity of God's word and practice of the purity of the kirk of
Christ; to wit, that as was before spoken, the whole rent and patrimony
of the kirk, excepting the small patronages before mentioned, may be
divided into four portions: one thereof to be assigned to the pastor
for his entertainment and hospitality; another to the elders, deacons,
and other officers of the kirk, such as clerks of assemblies, takers up
of the psalms, beadles and keepers of the kirk, so far as is necessary;
joining therewith also the doctors of schools, to help the ancient
foundations where need requires; the third portion to be bestowed upon
the poor members of the faithful, and on hospitals; the fourth for
reparation of the kirks and other extraordinary charges as are
profitable for the kirk; and also for the common weal, if need require.
13. We desire, therefore, the ecclesiastical goods to be uplifted [collected]
and distributed faithfully to whom they appertain, and that by the
ministry of the deacons, to whose office properly the collection and
distribution thereof belong; that the poor may be answered of[assured]
their portion thereof, and they of the ministry live without care and
solicitude; as also the rest of the treasury of the kirk may be
reserved, and bestowed to their right uses. If these deacons are
elected with such qualities as God's word craves to be in them, there
is no fear that they shall abuse themselves in their office, as the
profane collectors did before.
14. Yet because this vocation appears to many to be
dangerous, let them be obliged, as they were of old, to a yearly
account to the pastors and eldership; and if the kirk and prince think
expedient, let cautionersbe obliged for their fidelity, that the kirk
rents in no way be dilapidated.
15. And to the effect this order may take place, it is
to be provided that all others intromitters with the kirk rents,
collectors general or special, whether it is by appointment of the
prince or otherwise, may be denuded of further intromission therewith;
and suffer the kirk rents in time coming to be wholly intromitted with
by the ministry of the deacons, and distributed to the use before
mentioned.
16. And also, to the effect that the ecclesiastical
rents may suffice to these uses for the which they are to be appointed,
we think it necessary to be desired, that all alienations, setting of
fees or tacks, of the rents of the kirk, as well lands as tiends, in
hurt and diminution of the old rentals, be reduced and annulled, and
the patrimony of the kirk restored to the former old liberty. And
likewise, that in times coming, the teinds be set to none but to the
labourers of the ground, or else not set at all, as was agreed upon, and
subscribed by the nobility before.
Chapter 13
The Utility that Shall Flow from this Reformation to all Estates
1. Seeing the end of this spiritual government and policy whereof we speak is that God may be glorified, the kingdom of Jesus Christ advanced, and all who are of his mystical body may live peaceably in conscience: therefore we dare boldly affirm that all those who have true respect to these ends, will, even for conscience cause, gladly agree and conform themselves to this order, and advance the same, so far as in them lies; that their consciences being set at rest, they may be replenished with spiritual gladness in giving full obedience to that which God's word and the testimony of their own consciences do crave, and in refusing all corruption contrary to the same.
2. Next we shall become an example and pattern of good
and godly order to other nations, countries, and kirks professing the
same religion with us; that as they have glorified God in our
continuing in the sincerity of the word hitherto, without any errors
(praise be to his Name), so they may have the like occasion in our
conversation, when as we conform ourselves to that discipline, policy,
and good order which the same word and purity of reformation crave at
our hands; otherwise that fearful sentence may be justly said to us, the servant knowing the will of his master, and not doing it, etc.
3. Moreover, if we have any pity or respect to the
poor members of Jesus Christ, who so greatly increase and multiply
amongst us, we shall not suffer them to be longer defrauded of that
part of the patrimony of the kirk which justly belongs unto them; and
by this order, if it is duly put to execution, the burden of them shall
be taken off us to our great comfort, the streets shall be cleansed of
the cryings and murmurings of them; as we shall no more be a scandal
to other nations, as we have hitherto been, for not taking order with
the poor amongst us, and causing the word which we profess to be evil
spoken of, giving occasion of slander to the enemies, and offending the
consciences of the simple and godly.
4. Besides this, it shall he a great ease and
commodity to the whole common people, in relieving them of the building
and upholding of their kirks, in building of bridges, and other like
public works; it shall be a relief to the labourers of the ground in
payment of their teinds; and, shortly, in all those things wherein they
have been hitherto rigorously handled by them that were falsely called
kirkmen, their tacksmen [lessees], factors [agents, bailiffs], chamberlains, and extortioners.
Finally, to the king's majesty and common weal of the
country this profit shall redound: that the other affairs of the kirk
being provided according to the distribution of which we have spoken,
the surplus being collected in the treasury of the kirk may be
profitably employed, and liberally bestowed, upon the extraordinary
support of the affairs of the prince and commonwealth, and specially of
that part which is appointed for the reparation of kirks.
So to conclude, all being willing to apply themselves to
this order, the people suffering themselves to be ruled according
thereto; the princes and magistrates not being exempt, and those that
are placed in the ecclesiastical estate rightly ruling and governing,
God shall be glorified, the kirk edified, and the bounds thereof
enlarged, Christ Jesus and his kingdom set up, Satan and his kingdom
subverted, and God shall dwell in the midst of us, to our comfort,
through Jesus Christ, who, together with the Father and the Holy Ghost,
abides blessed in all eternity. Amen.