The Free Church of Scotland: Her Origin, Founders and TestimonyT. & T. Clark, 1893 - 346 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 25
Page 24
... majority of Englishmen , been the more trusted of the two . But the old Scottish Parliament was autocratic , and had little connection with the body of the people . And Buckle seems to have had no idea - nor does it appear to have ...
... majority of Englishmen , been the more trusted of the two . But the old Scottish Parliament was autocratic , and had little connection with the body of the people . And Buckle seems to have had no idea - nor does it appear to have ...
Page 40
... majority , Andrew Thomson " lifted up his intrepid voice " and pleaded its cause . Intimately associated , both in personal friend- ship and ecclesiastical sympathy , with Dr. Thomas M'Crie , the biographer of Knox and Melville , and ...
... majority , Andrew Thomson " lifted up his intrepid voice " and pleaded its cause . Intimately associated , both in personal friend- ship and ecclesiastical sympathy , with Dr. Thomas M'Crie , the biographer of Knox and Melville , and ...
Page 46
... majority against him was , that the principle which he sought to vindicate had been called in question by no one , and needed no vindication . In the General Assembly of 1820 , Thomson had risen to repel the intrusive foot of Royalty or ...
... majority against him was , that the principle which he sought to vindicate had been called in question by no one , and needed no vindication . In the General Assembly of 1820 , Thomson had risen to repel the intrusive foot of Royalty or ...
Page 57
... majority of forty - two . But from Begg's lip had fallen the word that became a watchword in the ranks of the party , and a chief popular blazon on its banner - NON - INTRUSION ! The IN CHAPTER VIII . The Veto act . the Assembly NON ...
... majority of forty - two . But from Begg's lip had fallen the word that became a watchword in the ranks of the party , and a chief popular blazon on its banner - NON - INTRUSION ! The IN CHAPTER VIII . The Veto act . the Assembly NON ...
Page 62
... majority of forty - six . This was the famed Veto Act of 1834 . It decreed that , when a congregation reclaimed against the presentee nominated by a patron , their rejection should take effect . As it was not a voluminous piece of ...
... majority of forty - six . This was the famed Veto Act of 1834 . It decreed that , when a congregation reclaimed against the presentee nominated by a patron , their rejection should take effect . As it was not a voluminous piece of ...
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Other editions - View all
The Free Church of Scotland - Her Origin, Founders and Testimony Peter Bayne No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
admitted Andrew Thomson Assembly Auchterarder Begg Bible brethren Buchanan Candlish Carlyle Catholic century Chalmers chapel ministers CHAPTER Christian Church of England Church of Scotland Civil Magistrate Civil Power claim clergy Confession of Faith congregations connection constitution Convocation Cook Court of Session crown 8vo Cunningham Dean of Faculty declared Divine Dunlop duty ecclesiastical Edinburgh Erastian Established Church Evangelical exercise eyes favour Free Church gospel Guthrie Handbook Series Head heart honour House of Lords Hugh Miller Jesus King land lawyers leader liberty Lord Brougham Lord Melbourne Lord Moncreiff matter ment Moderate party moral never obey ordination parish parishioners Parliament pastor patron patronage practical preachers preaching Presby Presbyterian present principle pulpit question realise Reformed religion religious sacred Scot Scottish Scripture settlement solemn spiritual independence spiritual jurisdiction statesmen Strathbogie sympathy temporal theological things tion truth union Veto Act whole words
Popular passages
Page 16 - But Jesus called them to him, and saith unto them, "Ye know that they which are accounted to rule over the Gentiles exercise lordship over them ; and their great ones exercise authority upon them. But so shall it not be among you: but whosoever will be great among you, shall be your minister: and whosoever of you will be the chiefest, shall be servant of all.
Page 62 - That it is a fundamental law of the church, that no pastor shall be intruded on any congregation contrary to the will of the people...
Page 4 - The magistrate might withdraw his protection, and she might cease to be an Establishment any longer ; but in all the high matters of sacred and spiritual jurisdiction, she would be the same as before. With or without an Establishment, she, in these, is the unfettered mistress of her doings. The king by himself, or by his representative, might be...
Page 102 - The Parliament is the temporal head of the Church, from whose acts, and from whose acts alone, it exists as the National Church, and from which alone it derives all its powers.
Page 4 - ... but the mountain breezes to play around her, and nought but the caves of the earth to shelter her, as now, when admitted to the bowers of an Establishment.
Page 63 - Church ; and further declare that no person shall be held to be entitled to disapprove, as aforesaid, who shall refuse, if required solemnly, to declare in presence of the Presbytery, that he is actuated by no factious or malicious motive, but solely by a conscientious regard to the spiritual interests of himself or the congregation...
Page 285 - The Lord Jesus, as King and Head of his Church, hath therein appointed a government, in the hand of Church officers, distinct from the civil magistrate.
Page 232 - Faith, and ratified by the laws of this kingdom, and for the maintenance by them of the jurisdiction of the office-bearers, and the freedom and privileges of the members of the Church from that doctrine flowing, that this Church is subjected to hardship, and that the rights so sacredly pledged and secured to her are put in peril...
Page 232 - AND, FINALLY, the General Assembly call the Christian people of this kingdom, and all the Churches of the Reformation throughout the world, who hold the great doctrine of the sole Headship of the Lord Jesus over his Church, to witness, that it is for their adherence to that doctrine, as set forth in their Confession of Faith, and ratified by the laws of...
Page 345 - For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the LORD that hath mercy on thee.