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Urbanization and the Evangelical Pulpit in Nineteenth-Century Scotland1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
Urbanization was the child of the industrial revolution. Born in the previous century, urban life rapidly matured in the nineteenth. The growth of industrial centers such as Glasgow placed an unbearable strain on the existing parochial system as people who had been reared in rural ways were thrust into urban situations alien to rural interests. One observer described the movement of the population from country to town as “a flood which swept away all the old relations of urban and rural districts.” The result of this social upheaval was twofold: a widespread attitude of religious disinterest and the appearance of social vices on a large scale. To the staid but wary religious community, urbanization appeared to be the basis of irreligion and moral decadence.
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References
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37. Ibid.
38. In 1874, Johnston, James asked in a pamphlet, The Ecclesiastical and Religious Statistics of Scotland (Glasgow, 1874), p. 3Google Scholar: “Are the churches in Scotland mere conservative institutions existing for themselves and the salvation of individual souls, or do they exist for the salvation of society, and for the sweetening and sanctifying of all relations between man and man, as well as between man and God.” In 1885 D. M. Ross in an address to a Free Church congregation declared: “The mission of Christianity is not merely to save individuals but to regenerate society.” See “Christianity and Socialism,” Christiant and Social Life, New College Library Pamphlet Collection, p. 76. Ross's sentiments were echoed by the British and Foreign Evangelical Review, (1888):91Google Scholar: “God has given His Gospel for the regeneration of society as well as for the salvation of the individual.” James Stalker, The Preacher and His Model, said: “The preacher's vocation includes a message to the community as well as to the individual,” p. 78. Also see p. 82. Drummond, HenryThe Greatest Thing in the World and Other Addresses (London, 1894), pp. 129, 133Google Scholar, retained the concern for the renewal of the cities by means of the Gospel. He said, “Christianity is the religion of cities… to make cities—that is what we are here for. To make good cities—that is for the present hour the main work of Christianity. For the City is strategic.”
39. One tragedy of Victorian Scotland was the failure of the Church to reach the working class. See: MacLaren, Allan A., “Presbyterianism and the Working Class in a Mid-Nineteenth Century City,” The Scottish Historical Review 46 (1967):115ffGoogle Scholar. First Report of the Religious lnstruction Commission (New College Library, 1835), p. 32Google Scholar. Here the Commission notes the “indifference to religion and neglect of worship of the poorer classes.” The Second Report of the Religious Instruction Commission (New College Library, 1835), p. 33Google Scholar, makes the same observation for Glasgow. In 1896 the Old Kirk final report of the “Commission on the Religous Condition of the People” noted the “serious problem of non-Church-going among the masses of cities,” particularly Glasgow and Dundee. See Reports of the Schemes of the Church of Scotland (1896), p. 806Google Scholar. While it is not the purpose of this paper to deal at length with the reasons for this failure, it should be noted that there were at least three factors contributing to this: The first was economic. The people simply could not afford the proper clothes demanded for church attendance. Furthermore the people with lower incomes could not pay the seat rents which in 1835 in Glasgow ranged from 2 to 27 shillings per annum and in Edinburgh were from 2 to 42 shillings per annum. See: First Report of the Religious Instruction Commission, pp. 26, 27, 32. Second Report of the Religious Instruction Commission, pp. 22, 33. Also see: Reports on the Schemes of the Church of Scotland (1888), “Committee on Seat Rents,” pp. 737–751Google Scholar. The Church of Scotland, Acts of the General Assembly (1890), p. 56Google Scholar. Session Minutes of the Charlotte Street United Presbyterian Church (Aberdeen: 18 October 1848; 1 November 1848; 15 January 1849; August 1849). The second was cultural. Socially and educationally the puplit and the preacher were removed from the life and understanding of the masses. Cornelius Smith “The Attitude of The Clergy To the industrial Revolution” writes: “It was from a vantage ground of considerable security and elevation that the ministers made their survey of the social life around them. At £200 per annum they had eight times the day labourer's wages.” In 1896 the General Assembly of the Old Kirk received a report stating that the existing barrier between the poorer masses and the clergy could only be broken by the clergy actually moving into the “denser parts of the city parishes.” Reports and Schemes of the Church of Scotland (1896), p. 809Google Scholar. The third reason was personal and psychological. When the poor person did attend church he was often reminded of his status as a second class citizen. Thomas Guthrie in his Autobiography, 2 vols. (London, 1875), p. 367Google Scholar, notes that his church was not “accessible” because “no man likes to be branded before his fellows as a pauper” and for that reason the poor would not accept free sittings. in the Maxwell Church, Glasgow, the visitor or person holding a seat was greeted by this sign upon entering Church:
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