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The Booke of the Universall Kirk of Scotland Wherein the Headis and Conclusionis Devysit Be the Ministers and Commissionaris of the Particular Kirks Thereof, Are Specially Expressed and Contained

9781465656537
281 pages
Library of Alexandria
Overview
The printing of this, the earliest Record of the Reformed Church in Scotland, has now reached a period in the history of that Church, which renders it fitting that this impression should be accompanied with a more precise statement than has yet been given of its character and its fate. For many years past, Dr Lee, Principal Clerk of the General Assembly, made strenuous, but ineffectual, exertions, to recover for the Church, the original Record of the period extending from 1560 to 1616. That Record, which is known to historians by the title of the “Booke of the Universall Kirk,” had been surreptitiously purloined, and found its way into the hands of the Trustees of Sion College, in London; and although hopes were latterly entertained that their restoration to the Church might be effected, these hopes are now at an end. During the investigations which were instituted by a Committee of the House of Commons, on the subject of Church Patronage in Scotland, in the year 1834, three volumes of the Record were produced by the official custodier of them, for the consideration of that Committee. Their authenticity was established by the testimony of Dr Lee, and other competent judges; and the Committee having suspended its investigations, and made a report of the evidence which it had obtained, these Books were left in the keeping of the clerks, and perished in the great conflagration by which the Houses of Parliament were consumed, on the 16th of October 1834. Such is briefly the history of the valuable Record of which these pages contain many of the earlier Acts and proceedings in the Church of Scotland. It is natural to suppose, that, during the first century of its existence, the political and ecclesiastical revolutions which took place in Scotland subsequently to the year 1560, the Records of the Church could not escape unscathed amid the turmoils of conflicting factions in Church and State. It appears from the MS. Abbreviates still extant, that, betwixt the years 1580 and 1587, the earlier portions of the General Assembly’s Registers, filling five volumes, had passed into the hands of Adamson, Bishop of St Andrews, and had suffered mutilation (were “mankit”) by him, or, as has been alleged, by his Royal Master, King James VI., in order to destroy the proofs of submission by certain Prelates to the jurisdiction of the General Assembly. During a certain space, however, it is proved that they were not in possession of the Church or its Officers; and when, in the years 1586 and 1587, the custody of the Books was reclaimed by the Assembly, they were allowed by the King’s Commissioner to be exhibited to that Judicatory,—but with a proviso, that at the close of each sederunt, they were to be redelivered to the Lord Privy Seal. There is no satisfactory evidence known to us with respect to the custody of these Books during the space which elapsed till the year 1638, when they were again recovered by the Presbyterian Church—fully authenticated—and once more restored to the custody of the Clerk of Assembly as the legitimate custodier. The subsequent history of these volumes—the best, perhaps, that can now be given—is to be found in a “Statement” concerning them, drawn up by Dr John Lee, the present Clerk of the General Assembly, in 1828, and printed in 1829, with the view of effecting the recovery of these Registers from the Trustees of Sion College, who, as already stated, had obtained possession of them. Dr Lee having kindly communicated a copy of that “Statement,” we gladly avail ourselves of the opportunity of embodying it entire on this occasion.