28 February 1638 A.D. Scotland Signed the National Covenant
28 February 1638 A.D. Scotland Signed the National Covenant
Bibliography:
Graves, Dan. “Scotland Signed National
Covenant.” Christianity.com. Jun 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1601-1700/scotland-signed-national-covenant-11630097.html. Accessed 19 Jul 2014.
Scotland took seriously the
religious reforms introduced in the sixteenth century by John Knox, which
included church rule by elders. When King Charles I and Archbishop William Laud
attempted to force Scotland to adopt the English prayer books and a form of
church government controlled by bishops, the Scots balked. They were so fierce
about it that the Bishop of Brechin felt he had to read from the new prayer
book with a pair of pistols in his hands. The Scots determined not to give
ground.
Several times before in the short
history of the Scottish reformation, groups of Scots had covenanted together to
hold some line or another. In 1638, they drew up the greatest of their
covenants.
This National Covenant was not
directly an act of rebellion, although it demanded changes in the political
arrangement. Its authors, Archibald Johnston of Wariston and Alexander
Henderson demanded that the Scottish Parliament and General Assembly be free
from the King's interference. They called for the abolition of bishops, who
were usually agents of the king. Although loyal to the king, the Scots would
not let him tell them how they should pray. They said they would resist to the
death any attempt by him to steal Christ's rights in the church.
The document contained an intriguing
mixture of citations from the law and allusions to the Bible. It concluded by
calling "...the LIVING GOD, THE SEARCHER OF OUR HEARTS" to be a
witness..." God, they said, knew their sincere desire and that they
weren't faking their determination. They knew they had to give an account to
Jesus Christ in the judgment day, and said so. To break the covenant would be
to come under God's everlasting wrath, and to lose the respect of the world.
Therefore, they humbly pleaded with the Lord to strengthen them by his Holy
Spirit, "and to bless our desires and proceedings with a happy success;
that religion
and righteousness may flourish in the land, to the glory of GOD, the honour of
our King, and peace and comfort of us all."
On this day, Wednesday, February 28, 1638, the covenant was first read aloud in
the Greyfriars Church of Edinburgh. This was the same church where John Knox
had once been taken for trial. It was already dear to the Scots, and now would
be more so. Leading individuals signed the covenant on the spot.
The next day, it was taken to
Tailors Hall, where the burghers of the city added their names. In subsequent
days and weeks, the movement gained force as copies made their way not only
throughout Scotland, but into Ireland. Everywhere, people signed.
The Scots stood by their word,
too. When the king would not listen to them, Civil War ensued. A few years
later, Parliament adopted a similar document, known as the Solemn League
and Covenant. A people bound to the covenant emerged who became
known as Covenanters. Eventually they won many of the rights that they had
claimed in their covenant.
Bibliography:
"National Covenant." The Oxford
Dictionary of the Christian Church, edited by F. L. Cross and E. A.
Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
Orr, Brian. "The National Covenant and
Greyfriars Kirk." http://www.tartans.com/articles/cov9.html.
Smellie, Alexander. Men of the Covenant; the story of
the Scottish Church in the Years of Persecution. New York: Fleming
H. Revell Company, 1903.
Various encyclopedia and internet articles.
Last updated June,
2007.
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