The Revolution of 1688-90 was accompanied in Scotland by a Church Settlement which dismantled the Episcopalian governance of the church. Clergy were ousted and liturgical traditions were replaced by the new Presbyterian order. As Episcopalians, non-jurors and Catholics were side-lined under the new regime, they drew on their different confessional and liturgical inheritances, pre- and post-Reformation, to respond to ecclesiastical change and inform their support of the movement to restore the Stuarts. In so doing, they had a profound effect on the ways in which worship was conducted and considered in Britain and beyond.
List of contributors List of abbreviations Introduction: Liturgical Continuities and Denominational Differences Allan I. Macinnes 1. Liturgy in Scotland before 1560 Stephen Mark Holmes 2. Jesuits, Mission and Gender in Post-Reformation Scotland Patricia Barton 3. Liturgical Problems on the Catholic Mission: Franciscan Mission to the Highlands in the Seventeenth Century Thomas McInally 4. Liturgical Reform during the Restoration: The Untold Story John M. Hintermaier 5. Henry Scougal and the move away from Calvinism in the later seventeenth century Isaac Poobalan 6. Worship and Devotion in Multiconfessional Scotland, 1686-1689 Alasdair Raffe 7. The Episcopalian Community in Aberdeen in the Jacobite Period Kieran German 8. Jurors and Qualified Clergy: Adopting the Liturgy at Home and Abroad Tristram Clarke 9. Devoted Episcopalians, Reluctant Jacobites? George and James Garden and Their Spiritual Environment Marie-Luise Ehrenschwendtner 10. The Liturgical Tradition of the English Non-jurors Richard Sharp 11. Archibald Campbell: A Pivotal Figure in Episcopalian Liturgical Transition A. Emsley Nimmo 12. Clerics Behaving Badly: Ecclesiastical Commitment in the Jacobite Rising of 1745-6 Darren S. Layne 13. Bishop Thomas Rattray: His Eucharistic doctrine, The Ancient Liturgy of the Church of Jerusalem, and its influence on the Scottish Liturgy of 1764 W. Douglas Kornahrens
University of Strathclyde Patricia Barton is Subject Leader in History, School of Humanities, University of Strathclyde. University of Dundee
Reviews for Scottish Liturgical Traditions and Religious Politics: From Reformers to Jacobites, 1560–1764
"""A splendidly detailed collection which takes us beyond secular and sectarian history to demonstrate the intimate relationship between liturgy and ideology in early modern Scotland. A real advance in scholarship: next stop a Scottish version of Alexandra Walsham's Church Papists, please."" -Murray Pittock, University of Glasgow"