Friday, January 18, 2013

Of Stubborn Scots, an Obdurate King and a Little Book of Prayer

by Anna Belfrage

In a simplified version of history, the Scottish Covenanter movement sprang from a smouldering fire to a huge bonfire through the actions of one Jenny Geddes. A devout member of the Scottish Kirk, Jenny was in St Giles the day the dean chose to read from the new Book of Common Prayer, and so incensed was she by these proposed changes to her familiar liturgy that she stood up and spontaneously hurled her stool at the poor dean.

Whether spontaneous or not – and a lot of things point to this being a well-planned protest – it is a fact that when the new Book of Common Prayer was introduced, the majority of the Scots were already convinced this was a fiendish attempt at weaning them away from the true religion as advocated by the Scottish Kirk, luring them into the dangerous mires of popery.


Had Charles I understood just what havoc his insistence on implementing this new Prayer Book was to have, he would probably have desisted. However, being anything but prophetic, Charles I took a mulish approach to the loud protests from Scotland, and in so doing fanned the flames of religious fervour into a devastating inferno that was to consume his three kingdoms and ultimately cost him his life.

Charles I was neither unintelligent nor uneducated – rather the reverse, in fact – but he does seem to have had a tendency to compensate his short stature with an authoritarian approach to most things in life. As anointed king, he firmly believed it was his responsibility and duty to care for his subjects, leading them up the right path in all matters, including faith. Minor obstacles such as the said subjects reluctance to follow him down the chosen path, mainly because they did not agree with their king’s opinion in matters of faith, were generally ignored by Charles, who to further undermine his religious credibility in his kingdoms committed the faux-pas of marrying a catholic princess – not a popular move in a time and age when the whole of Europe was a battlefield between the Protestants of the north and the Catholics of the south.

So what was the argument about? What were those principles of faith that had the majority of the English – and Scottish – citizens of the seventeenth century walking about with their knickers in a twist? (Not that all that many of them had any knickers to twist in the first place …) Well, to answer that we must leapfrog backwards a century to the heady age of the Reformation.

In England, Henry VIII proclaimed himself the Head of the Anglican Church, disbanded the clerical orders and severed his ties with Rome. But the rituals remained virtually unchanged, the Anglican Church building on the medieval (and therefore catholic) rites that were already well-established within the kingdom.

In Scotland, the Reformation was led by John Knox, a disciple of Calvin himself, but was ultimately a bid for Scottish independence from the French interests as represented by Marie de Guise, mother of Mary Queen of Scots. The hundred or so Scottish nobles that headed this coup probably found it convenient to set a religious label on their actions – it had a better ring to it than to admit they were only doing this to protect their own interests. However, in difference to England, the Reformed Scottish Kirk very quickly divested itself of “popish” ritual and practise, emphasising instead the importance of the Word (scripture) and faith.

By the seventeenth century, the Scottish Kirk was a robust and thriving organisation in which the local parishes played a strong role. It was also an organisation dominated by leaders who shuddered at the thought of having their cleansed and purified Kirk besmirched by the papist trappings that still lingered in the Anglican Church. So when Charles I decided to harmonize the religious practices in his three kingdoms by advocating a Book of Common Prayer he was throwing in a lit fuse in a munitions store, and eventually the whole thing exploded in his face.


A Book of Common Prayer valid in all three kingdoms was not a new idea. Already James I (VI) had tried to go down that way, but having far better political instincts than his unfortunate son, he backed off in the light of the Scottish protests. In difference to Charles, James understood his Scottish subjects, having spent his first 37 years as king of Scotland only. Charles on the other hand was born in Scotland, but he was raised and educated in England, and his first visit to Scotland was for his coronation in 1633. As stated above, Charles was also somewhat jealous of his royal prerogative, and where his father would have been open to discussions about the incendiary book, Charles refused to budge. He was the king and knew best what his subjects needed to fortify their spiritual life.

The Scottish Kirk wasn’t about to keel over without a fight. Upon hearing that Charles was planning a new Book of Common Prayer, the Kirk began its countermoves which involved all the parishes but also a massive PR effort with a number of printed documents (pamphlets, tracts) defending its principal tenets of faith. Well before the Book of Common Prayer had been published “everyone” in Scotland knew that it was full of potentially popish garbage, and matrons in Edinburgh were heard protesting about this terrible little book well in advance of Jenny’s little stunt with her stool.

On Sunday 23 July 1637, a number of loyalist ministers and bishops set out to their respective churches to use the new Book of Common Prayer for the first time. By the time the sun set, all of them had realised that implementing the new liturgy was a bad idea. Too bad they never got Charles to understand this. Over the coming months the protests did not abate – rather the reverse – and when Charles finally grasped just how serious the situation was, it had already snowballed into an unstoppable avalanche.

The protest culminated in the document known as the National Covenant. Drafted by Alexander Henderson , the Covenant was an elegant piece of work that professed the Kirk’s loyalty to God and the king – in that order – thereby attempting to avoid being labelled as treasonous. The Covenant also listed the acts of parliament against superstitious and papist rites, an oath to uphold the true reformed religion, plus an oblique reference to the king’s obligation to uphold the kirk. More importantly, there were a lot of things NOT SAID in the covenant, but implicit in the entire document was a clear threat: “Back off our Kirk, Mr King, or beware of the consequences.”

Charles I recognised the Covenant for what it was; a thrown gauntlet telling him quite clearly that should he not hold to his coronation oaths, well then … Unfortunately for him – and the thousands upon thousands of civilians that were to lose their lives, homes, families in the coming conflict – Charles severely underestimated his adversary, calmly convinced that his forces would prevail against whatever army the covenanters might put together. They didn’t, and even worse, the Covenanters inspired people of similar beliefs in England to also take up arms. The rest, as they say, is history, ending for Charles I on a cold January day in 1649 when his head was severed from his body.

The Civil War – and in particular the Covenanter movement – was a major source of inspiration for Matthew Graham, the deeply religious hero of my series of books set in the seventeenth century. The first two books, A Rip in the Veil and Like Chaff in the Wind, are available on amazon.com or amazon.co.uk plus a number of other e-stores.  


The third book, The Prodigal Son,  will be out later this year and will concentrate on the conflict between His Restored Majesty Charles II and the recalcitrant, obstinate Scottish Covenanters – among them Matthew – who blankly refused to give up their faith, no matter the cost.


Should you be interested in more information about me and my books, visit my website
http://www.annabelfrage.com






For those of you interested in reading more about God and the Civil War, I warmly recommend Michael Braddick’s “God’s Fury, England’s Fire”.
 

8 comments:

  1. Presumably, the loyalist church ministers had been appointed by the crown, ie, Charles, and I'm wondering if this was the initial event that eventually, some centuries later, brought about the Disruption and the break away of the Free Church of Scotland in 1843 which was caused, as I recall, by the ability of the lairds (ie, those in authority) to appoint church ministers. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disruption_of_1843#The_issues

    I was also curious about your use of 'in difference to' rather than 'unlike'. Is 'in difference to' the more formally correct phrase or is it perhaps an American expression?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes, James VI was clever in appointing his men, thereby exerting a discreet control over the General Assembly (which controlled the Kirk)

    As to "in difference to" I picked that up from a friend - or rather her Mum - and I've always liked that it sounds sort of old-fashioned...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for that. Yes, 'in difference to' has a certain something. I suspect with the Disruption that most peoples' concerns were in the present, but the memory of the trouble with Charles and his prayer book would have been perceived as part of their 'history' of being oppressed/interfered with by the state and authority. My Acts of the Servant (found at bardoftweedale)is alternate history but very Scottish and the after effects of the disruption feature.

      Delete
  3. I know it is simplified to say this sounds like it was caused by a case of stubborn pride and there was much more to it, but it does seem like it was a case of a leader being out of touch with his people.

    Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. A "leader being out of touch with his people" was not something that I think ever occured to Charles Ist. He probably thought it was his peoples' duty to stay in touch with him,

      Delete
  4. Charles I was an absolute monarch, ergo it goes without saying that he KNEW what his people needed and wanted, no matter that they vociferously tried to tell him otherwise. I am very ambivalent to Charles I - to some extent his troubles emanate from being the "wrong king at the wrong time" - the religious and political conflicts that exploded in the seventeenth century had their roots further back.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hmm, I'm much more ambivalent about Charles II. But it does seem there is something in the National Character that requires a King, even to the point of thrice* importing a monarch from abroad having run out of (or out of patience with) home-bred candidates.
      *James I, George I and William III

      Delete
  5. The Book of Common Prayer caused controversy, but maybe not in such a drastic way, when it was updated too. Interesting post, thanks Diana

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.