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The renaissance of public worship in the church of Scotland, 1865–1905
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
On his way to one of the early meetings of the church service society, Story met Charteris on the street, who asked what were their aims. He replied, ‘To restore the ring in marriage, the cross in baptism, and the denial of the cup to the laity’. Charteris fled in horror.
Before discussing the renaissance of public worship in the church of Scotland it is necessary to look at the background. The lineage of reformed worship can be traced from Diebold Schwarz’s translation of the Hagenau Missal into German in 1524 through Bucer and Calvin, both of whom desired weekly communion, to the Scottish Book of Common Order (1564). When the civil authorities forbade weekly communion, Bucer and Calvin did not prepare an order of service for Sunday morning, but rubricated the order for communion as to how it should end when there was no celebration of the supper: that is, the eucharist was the norm for public worship.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Studies in Church History , Volume 14: Renaissance and Renewal in Christian History , 1977 , pp. 339 - 350
- Copyright
- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1977
References
1 J. Cameron Lees to John Kerr 31 January 1907.
2 Smend, J., Die evangelischen deutschen Messen (Göttingen 1896) p 146 Google Scholar. Hubert, [F]., [Die straszburger liturgischen Ordnungen im Zeitalter der Reformation] (Göttingen 1900) pp 57–75 Google Scholar.
3 Bucer, M., Psalter mit aller Kirchenuebig (Strasburg 1539)Google Scholar. See Hubert p 99. J. Calvin Opera 10 i 7, 25, 213; 2 1047-8; 4 xvii 46; 15 538.
4 italics mine.
5 Davies, H. R. Worship of the English Puritans (London 1948) p 157 Google Scholar.
6 Leishman, T. Westminster Directory (Edinburgh 1901) p xxxi Google Scholar.
7 C[hurch] of S[cotland Manual of] Church Praise (Edinburgh 1932) p 37.
8 Sprott, G. W. Euchologion (Edinburgh 1905) pp vii–viii Google Scholar.
9 Kerr, [J]. Renascence [of Worship] (Edinburgh 1909) p 8 Google Scholar.
10 Other important works were—Mason’s Letters on Frequent Communion (1803), Carstair’s Services for Holy Communion (1829), Brichan’s Communion Service (1842) and Liston’s Services of the House of God (1843).
11 Marshall Lang to John Kerr 7 April 1905.
12 C of S Church Praise p 45.
13 Euchologion (1867) p 43; (1869) p 151.
14 G. W. Sprott Euchologion (1905) pp xiv-xv.
15 Robertson, [A. K.] ‘The place of Dr Robert Lee [in the Developments in the Public Worship of the Church of Scotland]’, Church Service Society Annual, no 28, ed Hodges, D. A. (Cupar-Fife 1958) p 32 Google Scholar.
16 G. W. Sprott Euchologion (1905) pp xvii-xviii.
17 Kerr, Renascence pp 53-60.
18 Ibid pp 74-83.
19 Euchologion (1867) pp 42-3.
20 Ibid p 45.
21 Ibid p 31.
22 Ibid (1869) p 151.
23 Ibid p 20.
24 Maxwell, [W. D.], History of Worship [in the Church of Scotland] (Oxford 1955) p 178 Google Scholar.
25 Euchologion (1884) p 40.
26 Ibid (1890) p 49.
27 Maxwell, W.D., John Knox’s Genevan Service Book (Edinburgh 1931) pp 85–104 Google Scholar.
28 Robertson ‘The place of Dr Robert Lee’, p 40. See also Maxwell History of Worship pp 180-1. This is equally applicable to the sixth edition.
29 Euchologion (1896, 1905, 1913, 1919) p 176.
30 Book of Common Order (Oxford 1940, repr 1962) pp 13, 19, 25, 32, 38, 46, 114, 135. Divine Service (Oxford 1973) pp 5, 18, 33.
31 This is a summary so not always verbatim. For actual text see Kerr Renascence pp 95-7.
32 Euchologion (1890) pp 148-72.
33 Lee, R. Reform of the Church of Scotland, part i (Edinburgh 1864) pp 47-8Google Scholar.
34 Milligan, W. The Scottish Church Society: Some account of its aims (Edinburgh 1892) pp 15–18 Google Scholar.
35 Scotsman 27 May 1902.
36 Euchologion (1867) pp 216-20.
37 These were all published by William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh.
38 Robertson ‘The place of Dr Robert Lee’, p 32.
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