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Disruption of 1843

The Disruption of 1843, also known as the Great Disruption,[2] was a schism in 1843[3][4] in which 450 evangelical ministers broke away from the Church of Scotland[5] to form the Free Church of Scotland.[6] The main conflict was over whether the Church of Scotland or the British Government had the power to control clerical positions and benefits. The Disruption came at the end of a bitter conflict within the Church of Scotland, and had major effects in the church and upon Scottish civic life.[7]

The Disruption Assembly by David Octavius Hill
Disruption brooch showing the graves of Andrew Melville, John Knox, David Welsh, James Renwick, and Alexander Henderson. Chalmers, Dunlop and Candlish are also mentioned.[1]

The patronage issue edit

"The Church of Scotland was recognised by Acts of the Parliament as the national church of the Scottish people". Particularly under John Knox and later Andrew Melville, the Church of Scotland had always claimed an inherent right to exercise independent spiritual jurisdiction over its own affairs. To some extent, this right was recognised by the Claim of Right of 1689, which ended royal and parliamentary interference in the order and worship of the church. It was ratified by the Act of Union in 1707.

 
Disruption Brooch. Back side.

On the other hand, the right of patronage, in which the patron of a parish had the right to install a minister of his choice, became a point of contention. Many church members believed that this right infringed on the spiritual independence of the church. Others felt that this right was a property of the state. As early as 1712 the right of patronage had been restored in Scotland, amid remonstrances from the church. For many years afterwards, the church's General Assembly tried to reform this practice. However the dominant Moderate Party in the church blocked reform out of fear of conflict with the British Government.[8]

The "Ten Years' Conflict" edit

Veto Act edit

 
Parishioners walk out of church in protest at the unpopular appointment of a minister in the parish of Marnoch, Strathbogie in 1841

In 1834, the evangelical party attained a majority in the General Assembly for the first time in 100 years. One of their actions was to pass the Veto Act, which gave parishioners the right to reject a minister nominated by their patron.[9] The Veto Act was to prevent the intrusion of ministers on unwilling parishioners, and to restore the importance of the congregational "call". However, it served to polarise positions in the church, and set it on a collision course with the government.

The first test of the Veto Act came with the Auchterarder case of 1834. The parish of Auchterarder unanimously rejected the patron's nominee – and the Presbytery refused to proceed with his ordination and induction. The nominee, Robert Young, appealed to the Court of Session. In 1838, by an 8–5 majority, the court held that in passing the Veto Act, the church had acted ultra vires, and had infringed the statutory rights of patrons. It also ruled Church of Scotland was a creation of the state and derived its legitimacy from act of Parliament.

The Auchterarder ruling contradicted the Scottish church's Confession of Faith. As Burleigh puts it: "The notion of the Church as an independent community governed by its own officers and capable of entering into a compact with the state was repudiated" (p. 342). An appeal to the House of Lords was rejected.

Further conflicts edit

 
Mr Dunlop and David Welsh by Hill & Adamson. Dunlop wrote a memoir of Welsh.

In a second case, the Court of Session summoned the Presbytery of Dunkeld for proceeding with an ordination despite a court interdict. In 1839, the General Assembly suspended seven ministers from Strathbogie for proceeding with an induction in Marnoch in defiance of its orders. In 1841, the seven Strathbogie ministers were deposed for acknowledging the superiority of the secular court in spiritual matters.

The evangelical party later presented to parliament a Claim, Declaration and Protest Anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session. The claim recognised the jurisdiction of the civil courts over the endowments that the government gave to the Scottish church. This "The Claim of Right" was drawn up by Alexander Murray Dunlop.[10] However, the claim resolved that the church give up these endowments rather than see the 'Crown Rights of the Redeemer' (i.e. the spiritual independence of the church) compromised.[11] This claim was rejected by parliament in January 1843, leading to the Disruption in May.[12]

The Disruption edit

 
St Andrew's Church, Edinburgh, scene of the Disruption
 
The 1843 deed of demission

On 18 May 1843, 121 ministers and 73 elders led by David Welsh met at the Church of St Andrew in George Street, Edinburgh.[13] After Welsh read a Protest, the group left St. Andrews and walked down the hill to the Tanfield Hall at Canonmills. There they held the first meeting of the Free Church of Scotland, the Disruption Assembly. Thomas Chalmers was appointed the first Moderator. On 23 May, a second meeting was held for the signing of the Act of Separation by the ministers. Eventually, 474 of about 1,200 ministers left the Church of Scotland for the Free Church.[14]

In leaving the established church, however, they did not reject the principle of establishment. As Chalmers declared: "Though we quit the Establishment, we go out on the Establishment principle; we quit a vitiated Establishment but would rejoice in returning to a pure one. We are advocates for a national recognition of religion – and we are not voluntaries."

Perhaps a third of the evangelicals, the "middle party", remained within the established church – wishing to preserve its unity. However, for those who left, the issue was clear. It was not the democratising of the church (although concern with power for ordinary people was a movement sweeping Europe at the time), but whether the Church was sovereign within its own domain. The body of the church reflecting Jesus Christ, not the monarch nor Parliament, was to be its head. The Disruption was basically a spiritual phenomenon – and for its proponents it stood in a direct line with the Reformation and the National Covenants.

Splitting the church had major implications. Those who left forfeited livings, manses and pulpits, and had, without the aid of the establishment, to found and finance a national church from scratch. This was done with remarkable energy, zeal and sacrifice. Another implication was that the church they left was more tolerant of a wider range of doctrinal views.

There was also the issue of needing to train its clergy, resulting in the establishment of New College, with Chalmers appointed as its first principal. It was founded as an institution to educate future ministers and the Scottish leadership, who would in turn guide the moral and religious lives of the Scottish people. New College opened its doors to 168 students in November 1843, including about 100 students who had begun their theological studies before the Disruption.[15]

Most of the principles on which the protestors went out were conceded by Parliament by 1929, clearing the way for the re-union of that year, but the Church of Scotland never fully regained its position after the division.

Photographic portraiture edit

The painter David Octavius Hill was present at the Disruption Assembly and decided to record the scene. He received encouragement from another spectator, the physicist Sir David Brewster who suggested using the new invention, photography, to get likenesses of all the ministers present, and introduced Hill to the photographer Robert Adamson. Subsequently, a series of photographs were taken of those who had been present, and the 5-foot x 11-foot 4 inches (1.53 m x 3.45 m) painting was eventually completed in 1866. The partnership that developed between Hill and Adamson pioneered the art of photography in Scotland. The painting predominantly features the ministers involved in the Disruption but Hill also included many other men – and some women – who were involved in the establishment of the Free Church. The painting depicts 457 people of the 1500 or so who were present at the assembly on 23 May 1843.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Disruption Brooch". Retrieved 1 June 2019.
  2. ^ Buchanan 1854a.
  3. ^ Durham, James; Blair, Robert (preface) (1659). The dying man's testament to the Church of Scotland, or, A treatise concerning scandal. London: Company of Stationers. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
  4. ^ Macpherson, John (1903). McCrie, C.G. (ed.). The doctrine of the church in Scottish theology. Edinburgh: Macniven & Wallace. pp. 91–128.
  5. ^ Miller, Hugh (1871). The Headship of Christ (5th ed.). Edinburgh: William P. Nimmo. pp. 472–479. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  6. ^ Walker 1895.
  7. ^ Bayne 1893.
  8. ^ Withrington, Donald J. (1993). The Disruption: a century and a half of historical interpretation. Scottish Church History Society. pp. 119–153. Retrieved 25 August 2018.
  9. ^ Lynch, Michael (1992). Scotland: A New History. Pimlico. p. 401. ISBN 0-7126-9893-0.
  10. ^ Johnston 1887, pp. 205–209.
  11. ^ Claim 1842.
  12. ^ Johnston 1887, p. 209.
  13. ^ Johnston 1887, p. 210.
  14. ^ Wylie 1881, p. cxii.
  15. ^ Brown, Stewart J. (1996). "The Disruption and the Dream: The Making of New College 1843–1861". In Wright, David F.; Badcock, Gary D. (eds.). Disruption to Diversity: Edinburgh Divinity 1846–1996. Edinburgh: T&T Clark. pp. 29–50. ISBN 978-0567085177.
  16. ^ Brown, Thomas (1893). Annals of the disruption. Edinburgh: Macniven & Wallace. pp. 132–143. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  17. ^ Harvey, George. "Quitting the Manse". National Galleries of Scotland. Antonia Reeve. Retrieved 8 July 2017.
  18. ^ Goold, David (1 September 2022). "Free High Church and Free Church College". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. Retrieved 1 September 2022.

Sources edit

  • Bayne, Peter (1893). The Free Church of Scotland : her origin, founders and testimony. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark.
  • Brown, Thomas (1893). Annals of the disruption with extracts from the narratives of ministers who left the Scottish establishment in 1843 by Thomas Brown. Edinburgh: Macniven & Wallace.
  • Bryce, James (1850a). Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843. Vol. 1. Edinburgh: Blackwood.
  • Bryce, James (1850b). Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843. Vol. 2. Edinburgh: Blackwood.
  • Buchanan, Robert (1854a). The ten years' conflict : being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland. Vol. 1. Glasgow ; Edinburgh ; London ; New York: Blackie and Son.
  • Buchanan, Robert (1854b). The ten years' conflict : being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland. Vol. 2. Glasgow ; Edinburgh ; London ; New York: Blackie and Son.
  • Dunlop, Alexander Murray (1839). An answer to the dean of faculty's [J. Hope's] Letter to the lord chancellor on the claims of the Church of Scotland. Edinburgh: John Johnstone.
  • Hanna, William (1849). Memoirs of the life and writings of Thomas Chalmers. Vol. 4. Edinburgh: Pub. for T. Constable.
  • Johnston, John C. (1887). Treasury of the Scottish covenant. Edinburgh: Andrew Elliot.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • MacGeorge, Andrew (1875). The statements in the claim of right : are they true?. Glasgow: James Maclehose.
  • Macpherson, Hector C. (1905). Scotland's battles for spiritual independence. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd. pp. 205–222.
  • M'Crie, Charles Greig (1893). The Free Church of Scotland : her ancestry, her claims, and her conflicts. Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • Turner, Alexander (1859). The Scottish Secession of 1843 : being an examination of the principles, and narrative of the contest, which led to that remarkable event. Edinburgh: Paton and Ritchie.
  • Walker, Norman L. (1895). Chapters from the History of the Free Church of Scotland. Edinburgh: Oliphant, Anderson & Ferrier.
  • Welsh, David; Colquhoun-Stirling-Murray-Dunlop, Alexander (1846). Sermons by the Late Reverend David Welsh D.D. With a Memoir by A. Dunlop. Edinburgh: W. P. Kennedy.
  • Wilson, William, minister of St. Paul's Free Church, Dundee (1880). Memorials of Robert Smith Candlish, D.D. : minister of St. George's Free Church, and principal of the New College, Edinburgh with a chapter on his position as a theologian by Robert Rainy. Edinburgh: A. and C. Black.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Wylie, James Aitken, ed. (1881). Sketch of the Disruption Day from Disruption worthies : a memorial of 1843, with an historical sketch of the free church of Scotland from 1843 down to the present time. Edinburgh: T. C. Jack. pp. 131–136.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  • . Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland. Archived from the original on 2 May 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.

Further reading edit

  • Cameron, N. et al. (eds.) Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology, Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1993.
  • Burleigh, J. H. S. A Church History of Scotland Edinburgh: Hope Trust 1988.


disruption, 1843, also, known, great, disruption, schism, 1843, which, evangelical, ministers, broke, away, from, church, scotland, form, free, church, scotland, main, conflict, over, whether, church, scotland, british, government, power, control, clerical, po. The Disruption of 1843 also known as the Great Disruption 2 was a schism in 1843 3 4 in which 450 evangelical ministers broke away from the Church of Scotland 5 to form the Free Church of Scotland 6 The main conflict was over whether the Church of Scotland or the British Government had the power to control clerical positions and benefits The Disruption came at the end of a bitter conflict within the Church of Scotland and had major effects in the church and upon Scottish civic life 7 The Disruption Assembly by David Octavius Hill Disruption brooch showing the graves of Andrew Melville John Knox David Welsh James Renwick and Alexander Henderson Chalmers Dunlop and Candlish are also mentioned 1 Contents 1 The patronage issue 2 The Ten Years Conflict 2 1 Veto Act 2 2 Further conflicts 3 The Disruption 3 1 Photographic portraiture 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 Further readingThe patronage issue edit The Church of Scotland was recognised by Acts of the Parliament as the national church of the Scottish people Particularly under John Knox and later Andrew Melville the Church of Scotland had always claimed an inherent right to exercise independent spiritual jurisdiction over its own affairs To some extent this right was recognised by the Claim of Right of 1689 which ended royal and parliamentary interference in the order and worship of the church It was ratified by the Act of Union in 1707 nbsp Disruption Brooch Back side On the other hand the right of patronage in which the patron of a parish had the right to install a minister of his choice became a point of contention Many church members believed that this right infringed on the spiritual independence of the church Others felt that this right was a property of the state As early as 1712 the right of patronage had been restored in Scotland amid remonstrances from the church For many years afterwards the church s General Assembly tried to reform this practice However the dominant Moderate Party in the church blocked reform out of fear of conflict with the British Government 8 The Ten Years Conflict editVeto Act edit nbsp Parishioners walk out of church in protest at the unpopular appointment of a minister in the parish of Marnoch Strathbogie in 1841 In 1834 the evangelical party attained a majority in the General Assembly for the first time in 100 years One of their actions was to pass the Veto Act which gave parishioners the right to reject a minister nominated by their patron 9 The Veto Act was to prevent the intrusion of ministers on unwilling parishioners and to restore the importance of the congregational call However it served to polarise positions in the church and set it on a collision course with the government The first test of the Veto Act came with the Auchterarder case of 1834 The parish of Auchterarder unanimously rejected the patron s nominee and the Presbytery refused to proceed with his ordination and induction The nominee Robert Young appealed to the Court of Session In 1838 by an 8 5 majority the court held that in passing the Veto Act the church had acted ultra vires and had infringed the statutory rights of patrons It also ruled Church of Scotland was a creation of the state and derived its legitimacy from act of Parliament TheAuchterarder ruling contradicted the Scottish church s Confession of Faith As Burleigh puts it The notion of the Church as an independent community governed by its own officers and capable of entering into a compact with the state was repudiated p 342 An appeal to the House of Lords was rejected Further conflicts edit nbsp Mr Dunlop and David Welsh by Hill amp Adamson Dunlop wrote a memoir of Welsh In a second case the Court of Session summoned the Presbytery of Dunkeld for proceeding with an ordination despite a court interdict In 1839 the General Assembly suspended seven ministers from Strathbogie for proceeding with an induction in Marnoch in defiance of its orders In 1841 the seven Strathbogie ministers were deposed for acknowledging the superiority of the secular court in spiritual matters The evangelical party later presented to parliament a Claim Declaration and Protest Anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session The claim recognised the jurisdiction of the civil courts over the endowments that the government gave to the Scottish church This The Claim of Right was drawn up by Alexander Murray Dunlop 10 However the claim resolved that the church give up these endowments rather than see the Crown Rights of the Redeemer i e the spiritual independence of the church compromised 11 This claim was rejected by parliament in January 1843 leading to the Disruption in May 12 The Disruption edit nbsp St Andrew s Church Edinburgh scene of the Disruption nbsp The 1843 deed of demission On 18 May 1843 121 ministers and 73 elders led by David Welsh met at the Church of St Andrew in George Street Edinburgh 13 After Welsh read a Protest the group left St Andrews and walked down the hill to the Tanfield Hall at Canonmills There they held the first meeting of the Free Church of Scotland the Disruption Assembly Thomas Chalmers was appointed the first Moderator On 23 May a second meeting was held for the signing of the Act of Separation by the ministers Eventually 474 of about 1 200 ministers left the Church of Scotland for the Free Church 14 In leaving the established church however they did not reject the principle of establishment As Chalmers declared Though we quit the Establishment we go out on the Establishment principle we quit a vitiated Establishment but would rejoice in returning to a pure one We are advocates for a national recognition of religion and we are not voluntaries Perhaps a third of the evangelicals the middle party remained within the established church wishing to preserve its unity However for those who left the issue was clear It was not the democratising of the church although concern with power for ordinary people was a movement sweeping Europe at the time but whether the Church was sovereign within its own domain The body of the church reflecting Jesus Christ not the monarch nor Parliament was to be its head The Disruption was basically a spiritual phenomenon and for its proponents it stood in a direct line with the Reformation and the National Covenants Splitting the church had major implications Those who left forfeited livings manses and pulpits and had without the aid of the establishment to found and finance a national church from scratch This was done with remarkable energy zeal and sacrifice Another implication was that the church they left was more tolerant of a wider range of doctrinal views There was also the issue of needing to train its clergy resulting in the establishment of New College with Chalmers appointed as its first principal It was founded as an institution to educate future ministers and the Scottish leadership who would in turn guide the moral and religious lives of the Scottish people New College opened its doors to 168 students in November 1843 including about 100 students who had begun their theological studies before the Disruption 15 Most of the principles on which the protestors went out were conceded by Parliament by 1929 clearing the way for the re union of that year but the Church of Scotland never fully regained its position after the division Photographic portraiture edit The painter David Octavius Hill was present at the Disruption Assembly and decided to record the scene He received encouragement from another spectator the physicist Sir David Brewster who suggested using the new invention photography to get likenesses of all the ministers present and introduced Hill to the photographer Robert Adamson Subsequently a series of photographs were taken of those who had been present and the 5 foot x 11 foot 4 inches 1 53 m x 3 45 m painting was eventually completed in 1866 The partnership that developed between Hill and Adamson pioneered the art of photography in Scotland The painting predominantly features the ministers involved in the Disruption but Hill also included many other men and some women who were involved in the establishment of the Free Church The painting depicts 457 people of the 1500 or so who were present at the assembly on 23 May 1843 Gallery edit nbsp A minister and his family leaving their Church of Scotland manse during the Disruption engraving J M Corner 16 based on Quitting The Manse 17 oil painting G Harvey featuring Tullibody Old Kirk nbsp New College on the Mound designed by William Henry Playfair and built 1845 1850 18 nbsp Hill amp Adamson took photographic portraits of all the clergymen who had been at the assembly See also editHistory of Scotland Religion in the United KingdomReferences editCitations edit Disruption Brooch Retrieved 1 June 2019 Buchanan 1854a Durham James Blair Robert preface 1659 The dying man s testament to the Church of Scotland or A treatise concerning scandal London Company of Stationers Retrieved 22 April 2017 Macpherson John 1903 McCrie C G ed The doctrine of the church in Scottish theology Edinburgh Macniven amp Wallace pp 91 128 Miller Hugh 1871 The Headship of Christ 5th ed Edinburgh William P Nimmo pp 472 479 Retrieved 1 May 2017 Walker 1895 Bayne 1893 Withrington Donald J 1993 The Disruption a century and a half of historical interpretation Scottish Church History Society pp 119 153 Retrieved 25 August 2018 Lynch Michael 1992 Scotland A New History Pimlico p 401 ISBN 0 7126 9893 0 Johnston 1887 pp 205 209 Claim 1842 Johnston 1887 p 209 Johnston 1887 p 210 Wylie 1881 p cxii Brown Stewart J 1996 The Disruption and the Dream The Making of New College 1843 1861 In Wright David F Badcock Gary D eds Disruption to Diversity Edinburgh Divinity 1846 1996 Edinburgh T amp T Clark pp 29 50 ISBN 978 0567085177 Brown Thomas 1893 Annals of the disruption Edinburgh Macniven amp Wallace pp 132 143 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Harvey George Quitting the Manse National Galleries of Scotland Antonia Reeve Retrieved 8 July 2017 Goold David 1 September 2022 Free High Church and Free Church College Dictionary of Scottish Architects Retrieved 1 September 2022 Sources edit Bayne Peter 1893 The Free Church of Scotland her origin founders and testimony Edinburgh T amp T Clark Brown Thomas 1893 Annals of the disruption with extracts from the narratives of ministers who left the Scottish establishment in 1843 by Thomas Brown Edinburgh Macniven amp Wallace Bryce James 1850a Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843 Vol 1 Edinburgh Blackwood Bryce James 1850b Ten Years of the Church of Scotland from 1833 to 1843 Vol 2 Edinburgh Blackwood Buchanan Robert 1854a The ten years conflict being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland Vol 1 Glasgow Edinburgh London New York Blackie and Son Buchanan Robert 1854b The ten years conflict being the history of the disruption of the Church of Scotland Vol 2 Glasgow Edinburgh London New York Blackie and Son Dunlop Alexander Murray 1839 An answer to the dean of faculty s J Hope s Letter to the lord chancellor on the claims of the Church of Scotland Edinburgh John Johnstone Hanna William 1849 Memoirs of the life and writings of Thomas Chalmers Vol 4 Edinburgh Pub for T Constable Johnston John C 1887 Treasury of the Scottish covenant Edinburgh Andrew Elliot nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain MacGeorge Andrew 1875 The statements in the claim of right are they true Glasgow James Maclehose Macpherson Hector C 1905 Scotland s battles for spiritual independence Edinburgh Oliver and Boyd pp 205 222 M Crie Charles Greig 1893 The Free Church of Scotland her ancestry her claims and her conflicts Edinburgh T amp T Clark nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Turner Alexander 1859 The Scottish Secession of 1843 being an examination of the principles and narrative of the contest which led to that remarkable event Edinburgh Paton and Ritchie Walker Norman L 1895 Chapters from the History of the Free Church of Scotland Edinburgh Oliphant Anderson amp Ferrier Welsh David Colquhoun Stirling Murray Dunlop Alexander 1846 Sermons by the Late Reverend David Welsh D D With a Memoir by A Dunlop Edinburgh W P Kennedy Wilson William minister of St Paul s Free Church Dundee 1880 Memorials of Robert Smith Candlish D D minister of St George s Free Church and principal of the New College Edinburgh with a chapter on his position as a theologian by Robert Rainy Edinburgh A and C Black a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wylie James Aitken ed 1881 Sketch of the Disruption Day from Disruption worthies a memorial of 1843 with an historical sketch of the free church of Scotland from 1843 down to the present time Edinburgh T C Jack pp 131 136 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain ACT XIX 1842 Claim Declaration and Protest Anent the Encroachments of the Court of Session Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland Archived from the original on 2 May 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2008 Further reading editCameron N et al eds Dictionary of Scottish Church History and Theology Edinburgh T amp T Clark 1993 Burleigh J H S A Church History of Scotland Edinburgh Hope Trust 1988 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Disruption of 1843 amp oldid 1218850306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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