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Dissent After Disruption: Church and State in Scotland, 1843–63, By Ryan Mallon. Scottish Religious Cultures. Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2021. ix + 306 pp. £85 (paperback, 2023, £24.99).

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Dissent After Disruption: Church and State in Scotland, 1843–63, By Ryan Mallon. Scottish Religious Cultures. Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2021. ix + 306 pp. £85 (paperback, 2023, £24.99).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2023

Andrew T. N. Muirhead*
Affiliation:
Clackmannanshire, Scotland
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews and Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Society of Church History

Even to those well-versed in the arcane world of splits and unions in Scottish Presbyterianism, the relationships and negotiations amongst the post-Disruption dissenting Presbyterians give the impression of an impenetrable tangle of ever-shifting attitudes and relationships. Ryan Mallon has tackled the first twenty years of this tangle with admirable aplomb.

Book-ended by Introduction and Conclusion, the work is split into four two-chapter parts. Part 1 first describes the build up to the Disruption from the Patronage Act of 1712, and then discusses the new Free Church, particularly concentrating on the “establishment principle.” Part 2 looks at the relationships between the dissenting churches after the Disruption and the embryonic and tentative moves towards a union of the churches opposed to patronage. Part 3 considers the place that anti-Catholicism played in the ecclesiastical politics of the time, looking at length at the Maynooth Controversy and the churches’ influence on the parliamentary elections, particularly those of 1847 and 1852. Finally, Part 4 looks at urban mission and at the influence of the dissenting churches on the gradual movement towards state-controlled and state-financed education.

In his introduction, Mallon explores very fully the differing points of view of modern historians. The United Presbyterian Church (UPs) had come into existence by union only four years after the Disruption. Some have ascribed this union of the United Secession Church and the Relief Church as a deliberate challenge to the Free Church, or at least a defensive reaction to it. Coming just after the 1843 split in the United Secession Church over the “atonement controversy,” the 1847 union brought together churches of “New Light” views, which were moving inexorably toward voluntaryism and the breaking of ecclesiastical links with the state. Contrariwise, the Free Kirk, like the “Old Light” Seceders, were in full agreement with church-state links so long as state interference was not in evidence. The positions of the Free and UP Churches were not compatible. There is some discussion about the smaller Presbyterian churches and their attitude to the Free Church, concluding that to an extent these churches saw the Free Church as the “true” Church of Scotland from which they were separated. Sadly, although space is given to the union between the Free Church and about half of the Old Light Seceders in 1852, information on the surviving smaller churches dwindles thereafter. In a book about church and state, the Reformed Presbyterians’ ban on members voting in public elections, causing increasing disagreement as the franchise expanded and leading to the split in the denomination in 1863, might have found a place.

The controversy over whether Maynooth Seminary should receive public funds waxed long and bitter, particularly in Scotland, and forms a major segment of the book. The controversy enjoyed considerable attention in the public press and in a wide variety of denominational publications. One has to admire the author for his assiduous combing of them. This section in particular is heavily reliant on contemporary newspapers. In the mid-nineteenth century, as now, the press concentrated on what it thought would sell newspapers. But the Victorian reader had a much more informed interest and engagement in church matters, and all aspects of church life were covered very fully, with different newspapers supporting their chosen church factions. Reportage, therefore, was not necessarily balanced any more than it is now, and bias was evident. Mallon does, however, complement the newspaper coverage with official records, and, to a small extent, unpublished material.

Having identified his themes of anti-Catholicism, urban mission and education, Mallon does not have space to consider response to the potato famine of the 1840s in detail, although he does question whether the Free Church's haste in putting a relief package in place was counter-productive. It did, however, establish the Free Kirk as the champion of highland Christianity even if, at a later stage, the tensions between a lowland church (essentially commercial and middle class) and a highland church (theologically much more conservative) was to lead to a further disruption.

Turning to the urban missions, Mallon shows how churches worked together, but with tensions. There was, however, a real ambition to cooperate in an effort to Christianise the slums. Chalmers’ pre-Disruption efforts in Glasgow and his later Free Church “West Port Project” in Edinburgh are considered in the context of whether they were ever viable on a large scale. It might have been useful to move from the administrative description of what was happening to actual experience, shown, for example, in John G. Paton's account of his life as teacher in Maryhill Free Church School and in Glasgow City Missions in the 1850s (John Paton, John G. Paton, Missionary to the New Hebrides: An Autobiography, 1889), This is missing from an otherwise very full bibliography

The debate over education and particularly religious education takes up the final chapter and begins to show a movement toward rapprochement between the Free Church and the Established Church, though less so with the UPs. It has to be said that reading the churchmens' opinions through the mouthpiece of newspapers, which had slightly different agendas, makes for a confusing narrative, but Mallon has largely succeeded in unpicking it.

The first twenty years of the Free Church was a time of great hope and ambition, tempered with a growing realization that the central pillar of the Disruption, the replacement of the Established Church with a new “true” Free Church as the national church, was not going to happen. Dissent after Disruption finishes at a point when the Established Church was beginning to recover from the loss of so much of its talent and when the dissenting churches were embarking on the next phase of operating in a multi-denominational state and moving toward union. Despite minor shortcomings, Mallon has done a great service to historians in unpicking the strands of ever-changing opinions and positions to deliver a cogent picture of the mid-Victorian church in Scotland and its relationship to affairs of state.