At the Reformation, Presbyterian judicatories
proceeded to occupy the position of the old Consistory Courts.
They took cognizance of offences precisely similar, with the
exception of such as "speaking evil of saints," and "the
non-payment of offerings," or those which bore direct reference
to the Catholic faith. Under the Presbyterian system, the
Kirk-session exercised the functions of the Archdeacon's
Commissary, and Presbyterian Synods and the General Assembly
formed an appellate jurisdiction, similar to that which was
exercised by the Archdeacons and Bishops and the Archbishop of
St. Andrews. In renouncing the doctrinal errors of the Papacy,
the Reformers unhappily did not abjure the intolerant spirit of
those whose ecclesiastical system they had overthrown. An
enactment was passed under their direction, that all who
assisted in celebrating mass should be prosecuted criminally,
and that those who were for the third time convicted of saying
or hearing mass should be deprived of life. On the 21st May,
1563, John Hamilton, Archbishop of St. Andrews, was, along with
forty-seven other persons, arraigned before the High Court of
Justiciary on the charge of celebrating mass. The Archbishop was
sentenced to imprisonment within "the castell of Edinburghe," "thair
to remaine during our souerane ladies' plesour." Through the
intercession of the Queen, he was liberated and restored to his
archiepiscopate. He had formerly sentenced to the stake, for
alleged heresy, Adam Wallace and Walter Mill; he now proceeded
to endow a heritable executioner, in the hope that, on a
revolution of affairs, he might be enabled to wreak summary
vengeance upon his adversaries. But his hopes perished with the
defeat of Queen Mary at the battle of Langside. He was then
seized, and, at the instance of the Regent Lennox, ignominiously
hanged.
For baptizing and marrying "in the fashion of
the Papistry," Sir James Arthur, j a Romish priest, was tried
before the Justiciary Court on the 17th March, 1562 ; he was "fylit,"
or convicted, but his punishment was left to the discretion of
the Regent. John Knox relates that, in April, 1565, Sir John
Carvet, a priest, having celebrated mass at Easter, was seized
at Edinburgh. He was conducted to the Tolbooth, and being
invested in his canonicals, was carried to the market cross, to
which he was attached with ropes. He was kept for an hour in
this position, and boys were encouraged to bespatter him with
eggs. Next morning he was subjected to trial, and was sentenced
to undergo a repetition of the punishment he had experienced
without trial on the preceding day. He was bound to the cross
for three of four hours, attended by the hangman, "while the
boys were busy with egg-casting."
In October, 1563, Christian Pynkertoun,
spouse of James Roger, and twenty-one others, were arraigned
before the Justiciary Court on the charge of joining in the
celebration of mass within the chapel of Holyrood. Before the
same court, "Alexander Creychtoun, of Newhall," was arraigned,
on the 29th December, 1572, "for herring of the sacramentis
ministrat in Papisticall maner within his awin place of
Newhall." Creychtoun was committed to the Tolbooth, and his
friends adopted certain proceedings to prevent the forfeiture of
his estate.
In September, 1613, the Justiciary Court
banished Robert Philip and James Stewart, priests, for
celebrating mass. "John Logane, portioner, at Restalrig," was at
the same time, for " the wilfull hearing of ane Mess," subjected
to the penalty of "ane thousand poundis." For maintaining the
supremacy of the Pope, John Ogilvie, a Jesuit priest, was, on
the 28th February, 1615, tried at Glasgow by a commission of the
Privy Council, found guilty, and condemned to be hanged and
quartered; the latter part of the sentence was remitted.William
Douglas, eldest son of William, Earl of Angus, and David Graham,
of Fintry, were tried before the Justiciary Court on the 19th
May, 1591, on the charge that "they had declynit fra the trew
and Christiane religioun, refuising to resorte to the preicheing
of Godis worde." They were further charged that "be ressoning or
dispersing of buikis or lettres, they had presumit to persuade
his maiesteis subiectis to declyne fra the professioun of the
trew religioun." Both the accused persons appeared, and the
former bound himself by a cautioner, that within forty days he
would leave the kingdom, and not return to it without the king's
licence, "vnder the pane of ten thousand poundis." The sentence
against Graham is not recorded.
In 1612, the Synod of Fife, which
comprehended within its jurisdiction the counties of Fife,
Perth, and Forfar, ordained the brethren to report the names of
"non-communicantis." Among those "delated," the more notable
were George, first Marquis of Huntly, and Francis, ninth Earl of
Errol. The former owned large possessions, was married to the
king's cousin, and was esteemed at court. He had long refused to
conform to Presbyterianism, and he was now fortified in his
resolution by his wife, whose father, Esme, Duke of Lennox, had,
after much vacillation, at length embraced Episcopacy. The Earl
of Errol had remained firm in his attachment to the Eomish
faith, and on this account had suffered imprisonment and
considerable loss of fortune. With respect to these noblemen,
the Synod arrived at the following judgment:
"Sept. 1612. Forasmeikle as all dealing that-
the Kirk vnder takes against papistrie and the professoures
thairof is vneffectual, sa lang as no ordour is takin with the
principallis, viz., the Marqueis of Huntlie and the Earle of
Errol, heirfor it is concludit that my Lord Archbishop sail
direct ane supplicatioune to his Majestie fra this assemblie
with all dew reverins, regraitting the evill that arysis and
groweis in the countrey throch the oversyht granted to them, and
craving that the Marqueis and his Lady (as thei quho ar gryt
perverteris of vtheres) may both be removed from the countrey,
and the Earl of Erroll committed to ane more fitt ward than
heretofoir."
This deliverance was followed by the sentence
of excommunication against both the noblemen, who were subjected
to all the inconvenience of ecclesiastical outlawry. In a letter
addressed to Sir Dudley Carleton, dated the 24th August, 1616,
Sir Thomas Chamberlain thus writes:"The Duke of Lennox is newly
returned out of Scotland, whither he made a posting journey to
reconvey the Marquis Huntley, who being (upon what occasion I
know not) excommunicated by the Kirk in Scotland, came hither,
and (much about the time I wrote to you last), at the
consecration of the Bishop of Keith, was absolved at Lambeth by
the Archbishop of Canterburie, and in the presence of five or
seven bishops, and many other persons of good account, received
the sacrament." The Earl of Errol withstood the sentence of the
Church till 1617, when, on his publicly renouncing Popery, he
was absolved.
In 1612, the Synod of Fife were engaged in
negotiating with another nobleman for Nonconformity. Andrew,
eighth Lord Gray, had professed himself willing to receive
instruction in the Protestant doctrines, but had never found
leisure to receive his ecclesiastical teachers. At length the
Synod of Fife appointed four of their number "to wait on him at
his residence, every Tuesday and Wednesday, for three months
without intermission," on the condition that "the said Lord
behave himself, induring the space above designed, dewtifullie
in frequenting the kirk for heiring of the Word, and keep the
tyme assigned to his lordship for conferens. And also that he
bind and obleis himself induring the space foirsaid, that he
sail nether heir masse, nor sett into his place, priest, Jesuit,
or excommunicate papist." Sir Walter Ogilvie, of Findlater, and
Sir Alexander Falconer, of Halkerston, presented themselves
before the Synod, and became cautioners for his lordship's
obedience. In April, 1613, the Archbishop of St. Andrews
reported to the Synod that Lord Gray had submitted himself, and
had taken the communion "in the paroche kirk of St. Androis."
The Synod triumphed thus far; but in 1649, thirty-six years
after his public acceptance of Protestantism, Lord Gray was
discovered to be a rank Papist, and was excommunicated by the
Commission of the General Assembly.
The Synod of Fife having adopted various
measures to induce George Gordon, of Gicht, to abjure Popish
errors without success, proceeded, in September, 1612, to renew
and publish against him sentence of excommunication. "He has
heretofoir," proceeds the minute, "giffen manifold
declaratiounes of his wilfull and obstinate continowans in
papistrie, and tried to illude the kirk;" therefore it was
ordained " that the excommunicatioune be intimate of new in all
the kirkes of this Synode, with straitt inhibitioune to any
persone to resaitt him, and that evrie Exerceis sail try such as
salbe found to failzie herein, and proceid against thame be the
censuris of the kirk."
On the 22nd April, 1647, the Synod of
Dumfries ordered intimation to be made from all the pulpits of
their bounds, that sentence of excommunication had been passed
upon John, Lord Herries, Dame Elizabeth Beaumont, Countess of
Nithsdale, Dame Elizabeth Maxwell, Lady Herries, Dame Elizabeth
Maxwell, elder, of Kirkconnell, and about thirty other persons.
In 1649, James, second Earl of Abercorn, was,
on account of his Popish tendencies, excommunicated by the
Commission of the General Assembly, and ordered to depart from
the kingdom ; his Countess was, at the instance of the Church,
subjected to three years' imprisonment at Edinburgh.
Some noblemen of high rank submitted in a
struggle in which the issues were not doubtful. At a meeting of
the Presbytery of Lesmahago, held on the 9th of May, 1644, the
Duke of Hamilton, who had for seven years endeavoured to escape
the meshes of that court, presented himself to the brethren, and
offered "to subscrive the covenant in what manner the
Presbiterie should enjoine." It is curious to remark that he is
styled, in the records of Presbytery, Marquis of Douglas,
though, the year before, he had been raised to ducal honours.
The Duke did not prove faithful to his vow, and his infidelity
having become the subject of further proceedings, the
Presbytery, on the 7th January, 1647, caused him to acknowledge
his offence upon his knees; he also consented to appear in his
parish church of Douglas, there publicly to acknowledge his
perversity.
The Duke of Hamilton was taken prisoner at
the battle of Preston, and was executed at London on the 9th
March, 1649. He was succeeded in his title and estates by his
younger brother, William, who, with his Duchess, was arraigned
before the Presbytery of Lanark, in 1650, for having renounced
the Protestant faith. The Duke and Duchess, in order to avoid
incessant molestation, consented to subscribe the covenant.
Those who countenanced the adherents of the
Papacy were subjected to pains and penalties. In 1595, Gabriel
Mercer was publicly rebuked for harbouring "ane excommunicate
Papiste." In 1634, several burgesses of Dumfries were arraigned
before the Privy Council for exercising hospitality towards
certain Romish priests, ami being present at mass. They were
punished with imprisonment. In September, 1615, William
Sinclair, Robert Wilkie, and Robert Cruikshank, were tried
before the Justiciary Courts, for having harboured Ogilvie, the
Jesuit priest, who was executed during the spring of that year.
The sentence of death being pronounced upon them, they were
conducted to the scaffold, when the King's pardon was read to
them; they were afterwards banished. At the same assize James
Moffatt, a Jesuit priest, was, for "the tressonabill hearing of
mass within this cuntrie twenty yeir syne or thairby," and for
having further ventured, as a Jesuit, "to present himself within
the realme," was sentenced to be "banischet his Maiestie's
dominionnes, and nevir to returne againe within the samyn under
the pane of deid. In August, 1622, Andro Hathoure, "burges of
Glasgow/' and his wife, were convicted by the Court of
Justiciary, for the tressonabill recept of George Mortimer, a
Jesuit priest ; they were banischet furth of Scotland." In 1631,
Sir John Ogilvy, of Craig, was imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle,
and afterwards at St. Andrews, for " daily conversing " with
members of the Romish Church.
Those persons who possessed Popish books, or
accepted employment from priests or monks, were subjected to
high censures. Shortly after the Reformation, David Calderwood,
a citizen of Glasgow, was denied church privileges, owing to a
copy of Archbishop Hamilton's Catholic Catechism having been
found in his dwelling. At the same period another citizen of
Glasgow was subjected to discipline for painting crucifixes.
Henry Ross, another painter, was "delated" to the Presbytery of
Glasgow, under the suspicion of his having accepted employment
from Papists. He was acquitted "on emitting a declaration that
he had not paynted the pictures of the Father, the Son, and the
Haly Gaist, in ony houssis within this realme."
The General Assembly inhibited the
publication of any work on the subject of religion before it had
been approved by the "superintendent" of the province. In 1568,
Thomas Bassandyne, the King's printer, was ordered to recall
certain books published by him, as being unsuitable for general
circulation. While suppressing an obnoxious literature, the
General Assembly evinced a commendable zeal for the wide
circulation of the Scriptures. Every reformed pastor entreated
his wealthier parishioners to permit inquirers the use of their
copies of the English Bible; and, in 1576, the Estates enacted,
at the instance of the Church, that every householder worth 300
merks of yearly rent, and every yeoman or burgess worth £500
stock, should acquire a Bible and Psalm-book, under the penalty
of ten pounds Scots. The Privy Council employed "searchers" to
enforce the provisions of the Act. In 1579, the Geneva
translation of the Scriptures was printed at Edinburgh; and, in
the following year, the magistrates of that city issued a
proclamation, commanding every householder to purchase a copy
under certain penalties.
In procuring informations and enacting
prosecutions against the adherents of the Romish Church, many
unprincipled and worthless persons obtained congenial
occupation. Soon after the Reformation, one Robert Drummond
obtained the confidence of the Church on account of his activity
in capturing priests and monks. From the promptitude with which
he discharged his duties as a detective, he was familiarly
styled "Doctor Handie." But Drummond secretly practised the
worst vices. He was twice convicted of adultery. After his
second conviction, which took place at Edinburgh, he was placed
in the stocks, in the public street, and branded in the cheek.
Overcome by the execrations of the populace, he drew his
pocket-knife and plunged it into his heart. The family of
Grierson of Lag possessed an especial aptitude for oppressing
those who differed in religions sentiment from the party in
power. In 1628, Sir William Grierson of Lag, at the instance of
the Privy Council, went to New Abbey, and there apprehended two
Komish priests, who were performing the rites of their religion.
His grandson, Sir Robert Grierson, of Lag, executed, with equal
zeal, the instructions of the Privy Council, in hunting down and
slaughtering the adherents of the Presbyterian Church.
Though excluding titled ecclesiastics from
offices in the Church, the early adherents of Scottish
Presbyterianism avowed their desire to retain among their
officebearers persons of noble rank and of civic arid
territorial dignity. They made special provision that Town
Councils and the Universities should send lay representatives to
the General Assembly, and permitted Presbyteries to elect to
that judicatory members of the laity along with their clerical
representatives. Kirk-sessions were composed of the minister and
the principal heritors, or landowners, and the more substantial
tenantry. These explanations are made in order to satisfy the
reader, that the Presbyterian clergy were not solely responsible
for a course of procedure which, in these more enlightened
times, can only be regarded with abhorrence or regret.
Next to the idolatrous practices of the
Church of Rome, the Scottish Reformers ranked the crime of
sorcery or witchcraft. Indictments against witches were
presented chiefly by Kirk-sessions, who recompensed
"witch-finders," remunerated "watchers," and procured
commissions from the Privy Council for the condemnation of the
accused. The destruction of a witch on the day of rest was
deemed a sanctifying of the Sabbath. About the year 1650, the
Kirk-session records of Glammis report that on a particular
Sunday public ordinances were omitted, on account of the
minister being absent at the execution of a witch.
The ecclesiastical authorities at Aberdeen
were early conspicuous in their efforts for the extirpation of
sorcery. Consequent on their strong representation, James
VI., in 1596, appointed a commission
for " haulding justice courtis on witches " at Aberdeen. The
following "dittays," or indictments, preferred at this
commission against certain of the accused seem worthy of
recital. The " ittay " against Isabell Richie proceeds :
"Thou art indyttit for the being at the two
devylische dances, betwixt Lumphanand and Craigleanche with
unquhill Margaret Bane upon alhallowevin last, quhair thou
conferritt with the Dewyll, and at that time thou ressauit thyne
honours fra the Dewyll, thy maister, and were appoynted by him
in all tymes thaireafter his special domestic servant and
furriour, quhilk thou can nocht deny."
Margaret Og is thus accused,"Thou art
indyttit as a notorious witche, for the bewitching of unquhill
Agnes Pvoss, Lady Auckinhuiff, in manner following, to wit: the
said unquhill Agnes having bocht a schowder of muttoun fra Johne
Dryer, at the nrilue of Auckinhueff in the moneth of Marche,
four scoir fyftene yeris, and the said unquhill Agnes having
brocht the said schowder to the houss of Bertrix Rebbie, thy
dochter, compartner with thee in all thy deuilische practizes,
quhair the said unquhill Agnes tareit all that night, thou and
thy dochter tuk out thrie grippis out of the middist of the said
schowder, and causit rost the same upon the morn quhilk being
rosted, and the said unquhill Agnes eating thereof, scho
instantly contractit a deadlie disease, quhairin scho continowet
the space of thrie quarteres of a yere, the ane halff of the day
burning as giff it had been in a fyrie fornace, and the other
halff of the day melting away in a caulds weyte, qurof scho at
last departed this lyff, and this thou can nocht deny, for the
said unquhill Agnes immediately befoir her departure left the
wyet on the and thy said dochter."
The "dittay" against Margaret Clerk includes
the following charge:"Thou art accusit, that being desyrit by
Alexander Cultis att the mylne of Auch-lassin, to cum to him,
quho had then ane cow caffit and the said cow wald na ways
suffer hir calff to souk hir, nether wald the cow taik with the
calff, bot contineulie repynet and strak the sam, thou said then
to the said Alexander, I sail remeid this, and sail gar the cow
to taik with the calff, and the calff souk the cow. And
immediatlie thairefter, thou passin in the byre quhair the calff
and cow was, and wald not suffer the said Alexander nor hys wyff
gang in the byre with the, nor no other, but put them all out
except thy selffe allone, and thair by thy devilische sorcerie
and inchantment after thou had sitten downe in the stane before
the cowis head, thou gave ane devilische low and terible voice,
quhair throu the haill houss tremblit and schaick, and
hnniediatlie the cow taik with the calff and the calif with the
cow, and soukit hir ; and throu the quhilk terrible cry and
deuilische grayn by the at the time aforesaid, the wyiif of the
said Alexander being ex-ceedinglie affraugit and terrifiet tuik
and contractit immediatelie ane deidlie sickness be thy sorcerie,
and was never curyt thereof quill scho departit this lyff."
In 1623, the Kirk-session of Perth petitioned
the Privy Council respecting three persons whom they charged
with witchcraft. The accused were thereupon tried by a
commission, condemned, and executed. We subjoin a portion of the
preliminary evidence, as recorded in the Kirk-session
minute-book.
Respecting Margaret Hornscleuch, it was
deponed that she came to the dwelling of Alexander Mason, and
having seen his wife who was sick, she requested that
south-running water should be brought from the Tay, the bearer
to be silent both in going and returning, and to hold the mouth
of the water-vessel towards the north. That she washed Mason's
wife with the water, and afterwards placed her "in a bath of
great meal," and that the patient forthwith was restored, and
arose and supped with her. That she cured Marjory Lamb, by
washing her with south-running water, and rubbing her arms with
fresh butter. That she had restored milk to the cow of Robert
Christie, from Ruthven, by causing "a peck of draff" to be
placed before the cow, "in the name of the Father, the Son, and
the Holy Ghost." That she had restored milk to the cow of Andrew
Louraine, in Myreside, "by mumbling some words over a firlot of
' draff;'" that sending Andrew to his house, she bid him cut the
cow's leg, and mix the blood with the draff, which he did, and
the cow gave milk. That Patrick Auchenleck having become ill at
the plough she was sent for to cure him ; and that " she
commanded him to be washed with south-running water, and bathed
in black wool and butter."
Concerning Isobel Haldane, the evidence bore
that "she cured Andrew Duncan's bairn by bringing water from the
burn at Turret Port, and therewith washing the bairn in the name
of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost." Being asked whether she had
any intercourse "with the fairy folk," Isobel answered, that, "
ten years since, when she was lying in her bed, she was taken
forth, whether it was by God or by the Devil she knows not, and
carried to a hill-side, when the hill opened and she entered.
That she staid there three days, to wit, from Thursday till
Sunday at twelve hours, when a man with a grey beard came to
her, and brought her forth again. That she made three several
cakes, every one of them being made of nine curn of meal, which
had been gotten from nine women that were married maidens; that
she made a hole in the crown of every one of them, and put a
bairn through every cake three times in the name of the Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost; and that there were women present who put
the same bairns thrice backwards through every cake, using the
same words. Then she went silent to the Well of Ruthven, and
returned silent, bringing water from thence to wash John Gow's
bairn; that when she took the water from the well, she left a
part of the bairn's sark at it, which she took with her to that
effect; and that when she came home again she washed the bairn
with the water."
With regard to the charge against Janet
Traill, it was sworn that Janet Barry brought her bairn to her,
and told her that it started in the night. That she told the
mother that the bairn had gotten a dint of ill-wind, and
directed her to cause two persons to go down to south-running
water, and bring as much of it as would wash the bairn, and that
they should be dumb when bringing the water ; and that, after
the bairn was washed, they should carry back again the water
with the bairn's sark, and cast them into the place where the
water had been taken up. She further directed her to bathe the
bairn with black wool and butter. That she got a shot star at
the burnside, and sent it in with black wool; and that after the
cure was used the child was healed. That Duncan Jarvis and
Isobel Haldane came to her at her house in Black Ruthven, and
Duncan told that he thought his bairn was taken away, it being
stiff as an aik tree and unable to move; that having heard this,
she promised to come in and see the bairn. That when she came in
she took the bairn upon her knee before the fire, and drew the
fingers of its hands, and every toe of its feet, mumbling all
the while some words that could not be heard, and immediately
the bairn was cured. Being asked where she learned her skill,
she deponed: 'When I was lying in childbed, I was drawn forth
from my bed to a dub near my house door in Dunning, and was
there puddled and troubled.' Being asked by whom this was done,
she answered, ' By the fairy folks, who appeared, some of them
red, some of them grey, and riding upon horses. The principal of
them that spake to me was like a bonny white man, riding upon a
grey horse. He desired me to speak of God, and to do good to
poor folks; and he showed me the means how I might do this,
which was, by washing, bathing, speaking words, putting sick
persons through hasps of yarn, and the like."
Having consigned those healers by enchantment
to the flames, the Kirk-session of Perth next proceeded against
those who superstitiously consulted them. These were sentenced
to appear in the parish church during the morning service,
"clothed in black, and standing under the bell-strings."
The Presbytery of St. Andrews took a deep
concern in the suppression of witchcraft. In the records of that
Court such entries as the following are not unfrequent:
"Nov. 15th, 1643.Mr. Robert Blair, Mr.
Colein Adams, Mr. Robert Traill, and Mr. James Wood * are
appointed to goe to Craill on Tysday, and attend the execution
of some witches, and give ther advyce to the Judges concerning
the delations against others, if they may be apprehended and
tryed."
In 1649, an insane woman in the parish of
Crawford-Douglas accused as witches twelve of her neighbours.
The information was received by the Presbytery of Lanark, who
ordered " George Cathie, the pricker, to find out the marks."
Cathie reported that he "did prik pinnes in everie ane of them,
and in diverse of them without paine the pinne was put in, as
the witnesses can testifie." On this report the Presbytery were
satisfied concerning the guilt of all the accused, and appointed
watchers to keep them awake till their trial by a commission.
The Presbytery also determined that the cost of the watchers
should not entirely fall upon the parish of Crawford-Douglas,
but that "each paroch should proportionablie to their quantity
furnish twelve men every twenty-four houris." It is to be hoped
that the watchers were more humane than the spiritual watchmen
by whom they were employed. The lunacy of the informant became
so apparent, that, notwithstanding the testimony of Cathie and
his accomplices, the women were acquitted and restored to their
homes.
Some of the parochial clergy undertook, in
the absence of "the prickers," to discover "the Devil's mark."
In 1650, Mr. John Aird, minister of Stow, informed his
Kirk-session that " he had thrust ane priene (pin) to the heid
in the pannel's schoulder, she noways shrinking thereat." Soon
after, the reverend gentleman and his elders despatched to
Jedburgh William Mader, parish schoolmaster and session-clerk,
there to purchase a haircloth " for the persons apprehended for
witchcraft, to help to bring them to a confession."
Divorce courts were unneeded ; a gratuity to
the pricker accomplished all. The Kirk-session records of Stow
contain the following:
"July 28, 1630.The qlk day Wm. Leyis was
content yt his wyf be weardit in Lauder or elseqr., and yt she
be tryed over again be jobing or be anie uther examination, and
obleiged himself to present her on Monenday at xii. at Lauder."
In July and August, 1648, the Kirk-session of
Dunfermline were occupied in considering the case of William
Crichton, "a vagrant beggar," who was "under ane ill report as a
warlok." The charge rested on the statement of Mause Hutchons,
in Mylburn, who alleged that, having refused Crichton a night's
lodgings, he had threatened him that "he should not rew it ones
bot ever," and that "thereafter he (Maus) contracted a heavie
sicknes and a continuall sweating." Crichton, on being brought
before the Session, denied the charge, but, being afterwards
"strait" He posed and dealt with be the ministers and watchers,"
he confessed that "he had made a paction with the Devill to be
his servant 24 yeires and more since." He was tried and burnt.
Those who trafficked in charms were punished
with severity, but not fatally. In January, 1628, the
Kirk-session of Stirling deliberated on a case of charming,
which is set forth in these words :
"The quhilk day compeared Margaret
Donaldsoune, spous to James Forsythe, and being accused of the
brethren for giving ane sark of her bairnis to Helen Syngar to
tak to Margaret Cuthbert in Garlickcray for to charme the same;
the said Margaret Donaldsoune confessed that schoe gave her the
sark and the said Helen Syngar confessed thatscohetuikit to that
Margaret Cuthbert, intending to have it charmed, but denyes that
it was charmed at all, becaus the said Margaret Cuthbert
refused. Therefair the breatherein orderis the said persounes,
to witt, Margaret Donaldsoune for giuing of the baimes sark, and
Helen Syngar for receav-ing of it, to sitt togidder upon the
seat quhair the breakers of the Sabbathe sitts, and make than
publick repentance upon thair kneis befoir the congregatione."
On the 30th April, 1633, the Kirk-session of
Stirling-were again engaged with a case of charming. The minute
proceeds:'The quhilk day compeirit Margaret Chapman, spous to
Johne Bennet, and being accused be Agnes Kennie, spous to Andrew
Bell, wabster in Stirling, for taking of hir milk from out of
hir breist, schoe having abundance thairof, be unlawful! means,
and laying of sickness upon hir and hir bairne, as the said
Agnes Rennie alledges; the said Margaret Chapman confest that
schoe learned of ane Margaret Dundie in Sanct Johnstone, quhen
any woman lost hir milk, to cause the woman's bairne that wants
the milk, to suck ane uther woman who hes milk in hir breist;
becaua ane greidie eye or hart tuik the milk from the woman that
wants the milk; and that schoe learned be Margaret Downie, spous
to Thomas Burne, smith in Stilling, to nipe the woman's clothes
who had the breist of milk, and be so doing the milk would
returne agane to the woman that wanted it; and swa accordinglie
the said Margaret Chapman confessed that schoe practised the
samyne, and caused her bairne to suck Agnes Rennie, and that the
said Margaret Chapman nipped Agnes Rennie's apron," &c. Margaret
Chapman was censured and "humbled" for her offence.
On the 10th July, 1623, Bessie Smythe
confessed before the Presbytery of Lesmahago, that she had been
guilty of "charming of the heart feavers." Her patients "knelt
and socht thair health for Godes saik," when "she appoyntit them
the wayburne leaf (plantain) to be eaten nyne morningis." Her
charm was in these words :
"For Gode's saik
For Sanct Spirit
For Sanct Arkit
For the nyne maidens that dyed into the
Buirtie in the Ledywell hank;
This charme to he heuk and bell to me
God that sua he."
Bessie was left to the discipline of the
Kirk-session of her parish.
The Ki-rk-session of Perth, in May, 1631,
reprimanded Laurence Beck and his wife for using charms in the
cure of sores. The offenders acknowledged that they had uttered
these rhymes :
"Thir sairs are risen through God's wark,
And must he laid through God's help,
The mother Mary and her dear Son
Lay thir sores that are begun."
In December, 1643, the Kirk-session of
Markinch extorted from Janet Brown that, in healing ailing
bestial, she spoke as follows:
"Our Lord forth raid,
His foalies foot staid,
Our Lord down lighted,
His foalies foot righted,
Saying flesh to flesh, blood to blood,
And bone to hone.
In our Lorde's name."
The kingly prerogative of touching for the
cure of scrofula was, in 1643, assumed by John Morris, a
parishioner of Carnbee, Fifeshire, on the ground that he was
"the seventh sonne of a woman." What success attended his
practice is not recorded, but his using the charm of "takeing
vpon him to heall the cruelles by touching them" subjected him
to church discipline. The Kirk-session records of Humbie, East
Lothian, contain the following details relative to the "charming
of kine."
"Sept. 23, 1649.The which day Agnes Gourlay
being questioned anent the charming of kine, deponed as follows
: That about three years since Anna Symp-sone, then servant to
Robert Hepburne, of Keith, could not please the milk of their
kine, for it gave no creame; and the said Agnes said, ' Can you
not cast some of it over into the grass, for they say to ane by
word, God betack ws to, they are under the yird that have as
much neede of it as they that are above the yird.' Confesses how
shee went and saw the milk, and it was no ways altered as shee
thought; hereafter shee went with them to the milking of the
kine herselfe, but remembered not whether shee did milk the kine
or not; but confesses shee did cast over the milk into the grass
herselfe, and said, ' God betak ws to, there may be they are
under the ea.rthe that have as much neede of it as they that are
above the yird.' Grants likewise shee did put salt and wheat
bread into the cow's lugs. Being posed where shee gat the wheat
bread, and how long it was betuixt the time she did cast the
milk into the grass and the puting of the salt and bread into
the cow's lugs, answered, That Anna Sympsone and Rachell
Forrester brought it from Hadingtone, and that it was that day,
or else the day after, betuixt the casting of the milk into the
grass and putting of the salt into the cow's lugs, and that at
the same time Anna Sympsone and Rachell Forrester were present.
Being asked who did learne her, answered, she heard it of ane
going man. The Session, taking to consideration her deposition,
referred her to the Presbiterie." The Presbytery ordained Agnes
Gour-lay "to mak publick repentance in sackcloth."
The Kirk-session of Auchterhouse, on the 9th
July, 1646, appointed a fast to be held, "because of the scandal
of witches and charmers in the district;" and for the further
reason that some neighbouring congregations had "long been
starved by dry-breasted ministers."
In 1653, Bessie Chapman appeared before the
Kirk-session of 't)unino, Fifeshire, on the charge of
"consulting with witches." She declared that "ane day there came
up to her twa beggar wyves, and told her she had ane hard weird
; that there was witchcraft cast on her husband before he died,
and that the said witchcraft was casten within three foot of her
doore." "The weird wyves," she added, "came into her house and
got milk, they bringing with them three eggs, which she did
seeth to them." They then told her "they would show her a way
how to remove the ill which was casten for her, if she would do
the thing they bade her." She said "she delivered herself to
God." One of the women called for a straw out of her bed, and
they cast the straw into the fire, saying thus:"All your sorrow
goe with it." They next sought "water in a copp," and "her
holiday coat, hose, and shoes." They "took her blew coat, and
held it above the water, and the water turned into blood." She
gave them a " foure-shillen piece, which they laid in a napkin,
and tooke with them." The Kirk-session referred Bessie Chapman
to the Presbytery, who decreed that she should appear before the
pulpit in sackcloth.
"Turning the riddle" was a charm for the
discovery of theft. The nature of this charm is set forth by
'Reginald Scott, in his " Discoverye of Witchcraft," published
in 1575. He writes: "Sticke a paire of sheeres in the rind of
a sive, and let two persons set the top of each of their
forefingers upon the upper part of the sheers, as holding it
with the sive up from the ground sedelie, and ask Peter and Paul
whether A, B, or C, hath stole the thing lost, and at the
nomination of the guilty person, the sive shall turne round."
On the 26th November, 1626, the Kirk-session
of Stow considered a case in connexion with "turning the
riddle." James Ormiston having missed sixteen shillings, waited
"upon Isobel Oeghorne, in the Stowe," who, on "turning the
riddle," assured him that George Pringle, in the Torquhan, was
the thief. Pringle repudiated the charge, and brought Ormiston
before the Session, to answer for his calumny. Ormiston was
penitent, withdrew the imputation, and readily consented to
submit to the decree of the court, which was that "next Sabbath,
in presence of the congregation, he should acknowledge his
offence to God, and his offence to George Pringle, as also to
pay twentie shillings to the poore."
In 1709, the Kirk-session of Kilmorie, Isle
of Bute, deliberated on a case of charming. The circumstances
are thus set forth:
"Janet Hunter, being formally summoned and
called, compeared, and being questioned anent the report that
was given forth on her, that she used a charm for the discovery
of theft, by 'turning the riddle,' she plainly confessed that
she did use it; and being further interrogate, what words she
used, she replied, that she used no words ; and being asked if
she did not say, ' by Peter, by Paul, it was such a person,' she
replied that she did use these words, and none else; and being
farther interrogate, if the riddle did turn at the naming of any
of those persons suspected, she replied that it did actually
turn at the naming of one; and being interrogate farther, who
employed her, she replied it was Barbara McMurchie, in the same
town ; and she being farther interrogate, if she had any other
body with her at the said exorcise, she replied that there was
one Florence McDonald, servitrix to Hector McAlister, who was
holding the side of the shears with her. She being farther
interrogate, if she thought there was any fault or sin in it,
she replied that she thought there was none in it, seeing she
used no bad words; and she being farther interrogate, if she
knew who it was that turned the riddle, she answered that she
did not know, bat declared it was not she, nor the other who
held it with her, so far as she knew; and it being told her that
if neither of them two turned it, that it behoved to be either
God or the devil that turned it; to which she replied that she
did not think it was God, and she hoped it was not the devil;
wherefore the minister laboured to convince her of the horrid
sin of this hellish art, and the heinousness of it, and how she
had gone to the devil to get knowledge of secret things, and how
she might be guilty of blaming innocent persons, and exhorting
her to lay her sin to heart and repent. She was removed, and the
Session taking her confession into consideration, with the
hatefulness of the wicked practice, and, after mature
deliberation, having the advice of the Presbytery on the like
affair, they do unanimously appoint her to make her compearance
before the congregation three several Sabbaths, to give evidence
of her repentance; and for the terror of others that use such
arts, they refer her to the civil magistrate, to be punished as
shall be thought fit by him, either corporally or pecunially;
and she being called in again, this was intimate unto her."
The superstitious practice of frequenting
wells dedicated to saints called forth the frequent exercise of
ecclesiastical discipline. Christ's Well, near the village of
Doune, Perthshire, greatly reputed for its healing virtues, was
held to be especially remedial during the Sundays of May. To
prevent "pilgrimages" being made to it in May, the Kirk-sessions
of the neighbourhood made persistent but fruitless efforts. The
following deliverance on the subject was passed by the
Kirk-session of Falkirk in 1628 :
"It is statute and ordained that if any
person or persons be found superstitiously and idolatrously
after this to have passed in pilgrimage to Christ's Well, on the
Sundays of May, to seek their health, that they shall repent in
sacco * and linen three several Sabbaths, and pay twenty lib.t
toties quoties, for ilk fault; and if they cannot pay it,
the baillie shall be recommended to put them in ward, and to be
fed on bread and water for aught days."
In 1652, the Kirk-session of Auchterhouse
dealt with a woman for carrying her child to a well in May. The
minute is curious:
"Sunday, 2nd May, 1652.Margaret Robertsonne
was brought before the court for carrying her child to the
Kirktowne Well, and washing her daughter's eyes, saying,
'Fish beare fine, and fulle beare gall;
All ye ill of my bairn's eyen ye will fall.'
Being accusit of this, confessit shoe did so,
and that Janet Fyffe learned her; for ye qlk. ye minister is to
acquaint the Presbyterie of it before shoe be further examined."
The well at Strathill, near Muthill, like the
more reputed fountain of St. Fillan, in Strathearn, was believed
to cure persons afflicted with lunacy. An insane woman at Airth,
Stirlingshire, having been conducted to Strathill for cure, Mr.
Drummond, minister of Muthill, sought information on the subject
from Mr. Forsyth, minister at Stirling. Mr. Forsyth's letter in
reply will be read with some interest :
"March 16, 1663.I received a letter from
you, to be communicat to the minister at Airth, anent ane Agnes
Sympson, who was brought to your well at Strathill. I obeyed
your desire in the face of the Presbytery. The minister hath
called the man who conveyed that woman before his Session, and,
upon Wednesday last, they appeared before our Presbytery. All of
them, being four, two of them named James Mitchels, and two John
Sympsons, friends of the woman, did freely confess that they had
taken that woman to the well; that they had stayed two nights at
an house hard by the well ; that the first night they did bind
her to a stane at the well, but she came into the house to them,
being loosed without their help. The second night they bound her
over again to that same stane, and she returned loosed. And they
declare also that she was very mad before they took her to the
well, and since that time she is working and sober in her wits.
The Presbytery hath required me to give you an account of their
diligence, and to desire what further ye require to be done. And
they do intreat you to let them know what course the Church hath
used to take in the like case, and what censure was inflicted
upon such delinquents?"
In 1695, the Presbytery of Penpont consulted
the Provincial Synod respecting a superstition which largely
prevailed as to the virtues of the Dow Loch. The Synod ordered
the Presbytery to denounce the practice of making pilgrimage to
the loch, from every pulpit in their bounds.
From the Reformation downwards the observance
of festival days has been prohibited by the Church. In January,
1573, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews sentenced certain persons
to make "open satisfaction for observing Zuill day," and
ordained that Sunday only "sould be kept holyday." In 1605, the
Kirk-session of Dundonald examined John Wyllie on the charge of
" nott yoking his plough on Zuill day." He escaped censure by
declaring that he was at the " smiddie, laying and mending the
pleuch yernes."
By an Act passed on the 13th February, 1645,
the General Assembly prohibited "masters of schools and
colleges" from granting Yule as a holiday, under the pain of
high censures. The Assembly further resolved that any school
children or college students, who, by the superstitious
observance of festival days, should violate the rules of the
Church, should not be again received, unless on submission, into
any schools or colleges within the kingdom.
On the 26th December, 1683, the Kirk-session
of Glasgow ordained five persons to make public repentance
because they had observed Yule, and the bakers of the city were
warned to discontinue the practice of baking " Yule bread."
Certain recreative practices anciently
observed at Christmas were condemned by the reformed clergy.
Soon after the Reformation, the Kirk-session of Aberdeen
ordained that Christmas mask-balls should be stopped, and that
those who engaged in them should be subjected to discipline.
Early in the seventeenth century, the Kirk-session of Ayr
prohibited a Christmas game, named "Lady Templeton." The nature
of this game has not been ascertained.
An ancient custom of extinguishing fires on
Midsummer eve was obnoxious to the Church. On the 24th June,
1647, the Presbytery of St. Andrews consulted the Provincial
Synod, in order to more forcible methods being enacted for its
suppression.
Prior to the Reformation, Sunday was kept
sacred only during the hours of worship. It was held to commence
on Saturday evening at six, and to terminate on the following
evening at the same hour. This method of reckoning the beginning
and close of Sunday continued long after the establishment of
the Reformed Church. The Kirk-session of Glasgow approved the
method by a deliverance in 1590, but, in 1640, they determined
that Sunday should commence and close according to the present
system.
So long as Sunday was held to close at 6
p.m., the remainder of the evening was appropriated to
merrymaking. The links at St. Andrews were covered with golfers;
theatres were thrown open ; buffoons collected crowds to listen
to their coarse wit; morrice-dancers performed; sports of all
kinds were prosecuted.
Marketing was conducted on Sunday in
cathedral closes and within the precincts of the monasteries.
The practice doubtless arose from a desire to provide
refreshment for those who came from a distance to attend the
Sunday services of the religious houses.
The reformers experienced difficulty in
checking these abuses. The Kirk-session of St. Andrews decreed,
in 1599, that whoso was found golfing during the time of divine
service, should, for the first offence, pay ten shillings;
twenty shillings for the second; for the third, should be placed
on the repentance pillar; and, for the fourth, should be
deprived of office. In 1606, the Kirk-session of Ayr dealt with
nine persons for practising secular amusements on the Sunday.
Seven of the number had played "at ye nine-hole," and two "at
cappieshell,"the latter having aggravated their offence by
making their sport within "ye walls o' ye kirke." A defaulting
piper was thus warned by the Presbytery of Glasgow, in a
deliverance passed on the 30th April, 1594:"The Presbyterie of
Glasgow statutes and ordenis that gif Mungo Craig sail playe on
his pypes on the Sondaye fra the sunrising till the sun going
to, in ony place within the bounds of the Presbyterie, that he
incontinent thereafter sail be summarlie excommunicato'
In their efforts to suppress Sunday trading,
the reformed clergy encountered a determined resistance. In
1596, the Presbytery of Meigle complained to the Privy Council
that the inhabitants of Strathmore had positively refused to
abandon marketing on the Sabbath. The Town Council of Aberdeen,
in 1598, framed a scale of penalties against Sunday trading, so
formidable in amount that the practice was subdued. In certain
districts small marketings on Sundays were long continued. So
lately as 1848, fruits and sweetmeats were sold to Sunday
visitors at Cambuskenneth Abbey, Stirlingshire.
Miracle plays proved serviceable to the
promoters of the Reformation by the ridicule cast by these
celebrations on the corrupt lives of the Romish priesthood. The
reformers therefore permitted plays to be acted in provincial
theatres at the close of the statutory Sunday, adopting measures
to prevent unseemly accompaniments. On the 21st July, 1574, the
Kirk-session of St. Andrews gave license " to play the comedy
mentioned in St. Luke's Evangel of the forlorn son, upon Simday,
the 1st day of August next to come," such license being
accompanied with the proviso that the play should be "revised by
the minister, the provost of St. Salvador's College, and the
principal of St. Leonard's College," and further, that "the
performance should not interfere with the hours of divine
worship." In the year following, Sunday plays were denounced by
the same Kirk-session, as "expresslie forbidden by Act of
Parliament."
On the 16th March, 1627, nine millers at
Stow, in Mid-Lothian, appeared before the Kirk-session of that
parish, and owned that " their milnes did gang on the Sabbath in
tyme of divine service." They were sentenced to make public
repentance, and each to pay a penalty of "fourtie shillings."
They were further prohibited from causing their milnes to gang
on the Sabbath, from eight hours in the morning till four hours
in the afternoon." In 1644, the Kirk-session of Dunino,
Fifeshire, ordained Alexander Colme, "for causing his mylne to
grind upon the former Lord's day," to make public repentance,
and "to pay in mulct thirty shillins."
The securing of grain on Sunday during a late
harvest was not acknowledged as a work of necessity, for, on the
18th November, 1641, Alexander Russell, farmer in Wester
Balrymont, was, along with his female servant, arraigned before
the Kirk-session of St. Andrews, on the charge of "leading corn
on Sabbath evening." Russell and his maid were ordained to
"crave God's mercy on their knees before the Session," and "to
pay 40s. penalty." The penalty "was given to ane Gordon, a
distressed woman come from Ireland."
On the 24th July, 1627, the Kirk-session of
Stirling ordained Jhone Heggie "for breaking of the Sabbath be
basking his netts, to mak his repentance the next Sabbath." It
was further ruled that "gif he or any uther be found guiltie of
ye lyk offence, that is to say, ayther shutting thair cobbles,
or basking thair netts,or mending thair netts, from Saturday at
twal hours at even to Sonday at twal hours at even, they sail
pay fourtie shillings and mak thair public repentance."
For "watering her kaill on the Sabbath,"
Margaret Brotherstone was sentenced, by the Kirk-session of
Humbie, in June, 1644, "to give evidence in publick of her
repentance next Lord's day." In September, 1666, the
Kirk-session of Dunfermline ordained two persons, for gathering
nuts on Sunday, "to sit doun on their knees before the Session,
to seek pardon of God." The Kirk-session of Melrose, in
September, 1703, sentenced George Penman and Stephen Belman, for
gathering nuts on the Sabbath, "to be rebuked in presence of the
congregation." One of the heaviest sentences for Sunday
desecration which we have remarked, was passed on a woman by the
Kirk-session of Crail, in August, 1648. "For seething bark on
Sunday," she was ordained "to be jagged three several Sabbaths,"
and the last day "to make her repentance before the pulpit."
Many offences against the Sabbath, of a
trivial character, were visited with severity. A parishioner of
Birse, Aberdeenshire, was subjected to censure for "holling
(digging) beesbykes on the Sabbath." The Kirk-session of Humbie,
in May, 1649, cited Robert Romanes " for playing at the bullets
on Sabbath." The Kirk-session of Dunfermline, in December, 1683,
caused John Thomson, a joiner, to stand before the congregation,
"for making a dead kist on Sunday." In March, 1664, the Town
Council of Dumfries enacted that "persons walking idly from
house to house, and gossipping on Sabbath, should, for each
offence, pay thirty shillings to the kirk treasurer for the use
of the poore." William Howatson was, on the Oth May, 1652,
ordained, by the Kirk-session of Stow, "to humble himself before
the session, and crave God's mercy, for having, on the Sunday
previous, walked a short distance to see his seik mother."
Sunday tippling was rigorously punished. On
the 26th April, 1668, three persons were, for "drinking a chapon
of aill" on the Sunday preceding, sentenced, by the Kirk-session
of Port of Menteith, "to sit bair headit beffore the pulpit, and
after sermon to acknowledge their scandal on their knees." On
the 27th May, 1647, the Presbytery of Cupar considered a remit
from the parish of Abdie, in the case of David Blyth, who had
made a shooting excursion on a preceding Sunday. Their
deliverance was in these words,"David Blyth, in the paroche of
Ebdie (for shedding of blood on the Sabbath day), is appoynted
to stand at the kirke doore of Ebdie, Sonday next,'barefooted
and bareheadit, with the gun in his hand wherewith the blood was
shedde, untill the last bell, and thairafter to sitt before the
pulpitt the tyme of sermon, and after sermon to acknowledge and
confesse vpon his knees his sin, and then be received."
Youths who desecrated the Sabbath were
whipped. The Kirk-session of St. Andrews, in May, 1649,
sentenced a young man who had broken the Sunday, "to be scourged
in the Tolbooth by ane of the town officers, at the sight of the
magistrates." On the 25th February, 1685, the Kirk-session of
Dunfermline ordained two apprentices, " being lookit upon by the
Session as twa of the perversest knaves in all the burgh for
Sabbath breaking," to be whipped before them, and then confined
"in the bell-house."
For some time after the Reformation,
marriages were solemnized on Sunday as well as on other days.
The practice of marrying on Sunday began to be discountenanced;
it was latterly prohibited. In 1630, the Kirk-session of
Abercrombie, in Fife, passed the following decree:"Heirefter
none shall be married on the Sabbath except they pay to the use
of the poor 58s., and oblige themselves to keep good order." In
"discharging absolutlie any marriage to be solemnized upon the
Lord's day," the six Kirk-sessions of Edinburgh, in November,
1643, specified that they did not hold "the thing unlawful in
itself, but because it occasioneth profanation of the Lord's day
by such as must be employed for preparation of necessaries
thereto, as baxters and cooks." In these words did the
Presbytery of St. Andrews discountenance the interment of the
dead on Sunday,"March 8, 1648. Whereas there is a superstitious
practice of makeing graves upon the Lord's day, quhen it may be
convenientlie eschewed the Presbyterie do appoint that no graves
be made vpon the Lord's day, bot in case of urgent necessitie
allowed by the minister and session."
Attendance on ordinances was enforced by
penalties, along with the usual censures. The Kirk-session of
Aberdeen decreed, in 1568, that every one absent from divine
service should pay sixpence for each offence; a penalty of two
shillings being exacted from elders and deacons. Thirty years
afterwards, the Town Council of Aberdeen enacted that every
burgess and his wife should attend church on Sunday, under the
penalty of thirteen shillings and fourpence for each violation
of the law.
On the 22nd of October, 1588, the
Kirk-session of the united parishes of Anstruther, Kilrenny, and
Pit-ten weem, ordained that "the maister and mistress of every
house and sa many as are of years and judgment (except when need
requireth otherwise) sail be present in the kirk in due time
every Sabbath, to hear the sermon before and after noon, under
pain of 12 pence the first fault, two shillings the second, and,
for the third, five shillings, and toties quoties
thereafter."
Paupers were strictly enjoined to attend
service in their parish churches. In August, 1570, the
Kirk-session of St. Andrews resolved that the deacons should
withhold alms from such poor persons as did "not frequent
sermons, public prayers, examination and communion, present
their bairns to baptism, say the Lord's Prayer, the believe, and
the commandments, or at least sail learn the same within ane
month." In 1615, the Kirk-session of Lasswade, Mid-Lothian,
enacted that "all persons attend the kirke or be punished,
gentlemen to be damnified in 6s. 8d. Scots, men in 3s. 4d.,
servants in twenty pennies." The penalties for non-attendance
varied in different localities. The Kirk-session of Dunino,
Fifeshire, ordained, in 1643, that "whosoever shall be found
absent from the hearing of the Word on the Lord's day, shall for
the first fault mak publict repentance and pay twa shillings,
and for the second fault pay four shillings, and toties
quoties thereafter."
In administering discipline for
non-attendance on ordinances, the church dealt with an impartial
hand. No rank was spared. In 1660, Sir Ludovick Gordon, of
Gordonstown, was indicted before the Synod of Moray, for
withdrawing himself from ordinances, and refusing to submit to
discipline. The Synod reported him to the Estates of Parliament,
who imposed upon him the heavy penalty of £3,600 Scottish money.
The fine was paid in two instalments.
Attendance at the communion-table was
insisted on ; the neglect was punished rigorously. In 1603, the
Kirk-session of Aberdeen resolved to distrain the goods of
certain persons who had contumaciously absented themselves from
the communion. The resolution is in these words:"May 22,
1603.The quhilk day the session ordainis sic of the inhabitants
of Futtie as come not to the communion for be poyndit to the
doubill of the unlaw that they were poyndit for befoir, as
relaps in disobedience, becaus the communion wes of new agane
ministered and publiclie intimat." The edict was carried out
rigidly. At Dunfermline, in December, 1645, Helen Walker "made
repentance no hir knees" before the Kirk-session for "not
communicating at the Lord's table."
While prohibiting the holidays and festivals
of the ancient Church, the Scottish Presbyterian reformers
appointed fasts and thanksgiving days, which were invested with
the sacredness of Sunday. The Kirk-session of Dunfermline, in
December 1641, fined John Smart, flesher, eight marks, for
having " pott on a rost at his fire ye last fasting day." In the
larger burghs, week-day services were held at the- parish
churches every Wednesday and Friday. No work was permitted on
these days at the hours appropriated to worship, and those who
neglected to attend were debarred from the communion.
The Kirk-session exercised a strict espionage
over every member of the congregation. When the parish was
large, members of Session, or the magistrates under their
direction, watched in turn. In 1574, the Kirk-session of St.
Andrews passed the following edict:
"For good order to be observed in convening
to hear the word of God upon the Sabbath-day, and other days in
the week when the word of God is preached, as well as of the
students within colleges as inhabitants of this city, and others
in the parish, the seat (session) has ordained captors
(searchers) to be chosen to visit the whole toun, according to
the division of the quarters, and to that effect every Sunday
there shall pass a bailie and elder, two deacons and two
officers, armed with their halberts, and the rest of the bailies
and officers to be in attendance, to assist to apprehend
transgressors, to be punished according to the acts of the
Kirk." In 1583, the Kirk-session of Perth decreed that an elder
"should pass through his district every Sunday forenoon, and
note those that are in taverns, baxter's booths, or on the
gaits, that every one of them that is absent from the kirk may
be poindit for twenty shillings, according to the Act of
Parliament." The Kirk-session of Glasgow ordained, in 1600, that
"the deacons of the crafts "should make search among the
families of their freemen" for absents from the kirk," and
impose fines on those,"one half to be retained by the crafts,
and the other to be paid to the kirk." In August, 1611, the
Kirk-session of Aberdeen passed the following resolution:"The
baillies are desyrit by the ministers and session to tak painis
in ganging throw the toune on the orclinar preaching dayes in
the weik, as well as on the Saboth day, to caus the people
resort to the sermones, and Paul Mengzeis, baillie, is appoynted
to begin on Tuysday and Thursday." A similar resolution was
passed by the Kirk-session of Glasgow in 1642.
Proper behaviour in church was carefully
enjoined. In July, 1606, Andrew Garvine was reprimanded by the
Kirk-session of Ayr, " because the minister was in the pulpit
before he entered the church." Snuff-taking in church was
prohibited. An act by the Kirk-session of Saltoun,
Haddingtonshire, on the 11th of April, 1641, proceeds thus:" It
is statute, with consent of the minister and elders, that every
one that takes snuft' in tyme of divine service shall pay 6s.
8d., and give ane publick confession of his fault." In April,
1643, the Kirk-session of Dunfermline appointed the bellman " to
tak notice of those who tak ye sneising tobacco in tyme of
divine service, and to inform concerning them."
For a century after the Reformation, the
parish churches were generally open from sunrise till sunset.
During summer the churches of Glasgow were opened on Sunday at
five o'clock, a.m., and closed at nine o'clock evening. Many
persons assembled when the church bell wasrung at nine o'clock,
a.m., to listen to the public reading of the Scriptures by the
reader. At ten the bell summoned children and young persons for
religious instruction. Respecting the training of the young in
Christian knowledge on the Sundays, the Kirk-session of
Dunfermline passed the following resolution :
"Dec. 20, 1652. Recommendit to Mr. Thomas
Walker, schoolmaster, to have his schollers in reddines to
repeat the catechism everie Sabbath, betwixt the second an third
bell before noone and afternoone; the one to propose and the
uther to answer, that the people may heare and learne, it being
usit in uthyr kirks." A similar deliverance of the Kirk-session
of Stow, on the same subject, proceeded as follows:"March 2,
1656.The Session caused the schoolmaster to make two of his
pupils read the catechism 'betwixt the second and third bell in
the morning,' and between sermons, to the congregation in the
kirk; and an elder was appointed to see that the people went
home direct to their own dwellings at the close of the public
services."
Apart from the time voluntarily assigned to
private devotions, and that appropriated to hearing the
Scriptures publicly read, and listening to the instruction of
the young, every faithful adherent of the Reformed Church was
expected to attend the ordinary Sunday services, which generally
extended to nearly four hours' space. Before the close of these
protracted services, many of the young, the aged, and the
infirm, sought rest in slumber, while Kirk-sessions, unable to
perceive any justification for such an offence, proceeded to
pass regulations with a view to its punishment. In 1616, the
Kirk-session of Perth instructed their officer "to have his red
staff in the kirk on Sabbath-days, therewith to wauken sleepers,
and to remove greeting bairns forth of the kirk."
Except on the "kirking day," that is, the
first Sunday after marriage, when the bride and bridegroom were
accommodated on a form in front of the pulpit, all "married
women and maidens" were enjoined to "sit laigh," that is, on the
church floor. In reference to this practice, the Kirk-session of
Glasgow, in 1597, expressly forbade "women to sit upon the forms
men should occupy," and further decreed, "that all women sit
together in the kirk." The proper deportment of females, both at
kirk and market, was a subject of grave concern to the rulers of
the church. The practice of prohibiting women from enveloping
their heads in "plaids and hoods" was transmitted to the
reformers from the ancient church; it probably originated from a
reference to the disguise of the widowed Tamar.f In a sumptuary
law passed by the Estates in 1457, these words occur: "That na
woman come to kirk nor mercat with her face muffalled or
covered, that she may not be kend, under the paine of escheit of
the courchie."
To the Presbyterian reformers there were
cogent reasons for prohibiting the use of female head-coverings,
apart from any cause which might be derived from the customs of
a remote age. Muffled women might, in their lowly positions on
the church floors, sleep unseen. In 1621, the Kirk-session of
Glasgow enacted that "no woman, married or unmarried, come
within the kirk-doore, to preaching or prayer, with their plaids
about their heads, neither lie down in the kirk on their face in
tyme of prayer, with certification that their plaids shall be
drawn up, and themselves raiset be the bed-dall." A similar
enactment was passed by the Kirk-session of St. Andrews, in
June, 1649. It proceeds thus:"The Session dischargit weamen's
pleadis from their heads in the church, especially on the Lord's
day, with certificatione that the session will appoint ane of
the church officers to go through the kirk with ane long rod,
and tak down their plaidis from their heads, whoever are
disobedient to good order." The Kirk-session of Monifieth
adopted a still more effective method of abating the evil. On
17th September, 1643, they voted Robert Scott, the beadle, five
shillings, "to buy ane pynt of tar, to put upon the women that
held plaids about their heads."
Women naturally shrank from the exposure of
the repentance stool. But the clergy and elders would suffer no
concealment of countenance during the exercise of discipline.
The Kirk-session of Aberdeen passed this injunction:"That
because in times past most part of women that came to the pillar
to make their public repentance, sat thereon with their plaids
about their heads, covering down over their faces the haill
time of their sitting on the stool, so that almaist none of
the congregation could see their faces, or know what they were,
whereby they made nae account of their coming to the stool, but
misregarded the same altogether, the Kirk-session ordain that
the officer should thenceforth take the plaid away from each
penitent before her up-ganging to the pillar."
The Town Council of Edinburgh, by a
resolution dated 10th of April, 1631, prohibited women from
wearing plaids in the streets, since, by this dress, matrons
could not be discovered from loose-living women."
Before proceeding further, it is essential
that we should describe the ordinary instruments and appliances
of ecclesiastical punishment. The stool or pillar of repentance
has been named. It was placed in the church passage, and in
front of the pulpit, that the entire congregation might witness
those sentenced to occupy it. On the repentance stool,
delinquents generally stood up, but in certain parishes they
were permitted to sit upon it. Offenders were kept at the church
door till the close of the first prayer, and were then led in by
the sexton, who placed them on the stool, and there left them
till the close of the discourse, when he proceeded to remove
them. The ordinary hearers listened to the discourse with their
hats on, but the occupant of the repentance stool was
penitentially uncovered.
The Kirk-session of Perth possessed "a
cock-stool" and "a repentance-stool," erections of different
elevation, proportioned to the degrees of guilt. On the 7th
April, 1617, this Kirk-session ordered "a chair of stone to be
bigged in ane public part be the master of the hospital," for
the "accommodation in repentance of "flyteris and slanderers."
The repentance-stool was regarded with a
species of reverence; its violation was severely punished. In
March,1675, the Kirk-session of Mauchline, Ayrshire, debarred
three persons from the communion "on account of their breaking
the stool of repentance, on which they had been sentenced to
stand in presence of the congregation."
Those placed on the repentance stool wore a
penitential habit. It was composed of the coarsest linen,
resembling canvas, and enveloped the person like a shirt or
cloak. The garment possessed a different name almost in every
district. In the southern counties it was styled "the harden
goun." "The harn goun" was its designation in Lanarkshire. As
"the sack goun" it was known in Western districts. In the
central counties, "the linens" was its common appellation. The
ecclesiastical phrase "in sacco" eventually superseded all the
others. Parishes which lacked repentance "habits" were ordered
to procure them by Presbyteries and Synods. In 1655, the
Kirk-session of Lesmahago expended £4 4s. 6d. in providing "a
harn goun for scandalous persons." Probably one of the latest
commissions, for the construction of a repentance habit, was the
following by the Kirk-session of Kirk-michael,
Ayrshire:"September 24th, 1693. The Session appoints John
Forgan to employ a Straitoun tailor to make a coat or covering
of sackcloth for the said Janet Kennedy, like unto that which
they have in Straitoun, there having been no such thing here for
these many years; its thought none of the tailors of this parish
know how to make it."
A garment of coarse linen, believed to be the
repentance habit of the parish of Kinross, is preserved in the
Museum of the Society of Scottish Antiquaries. Culprits were
occasionally permitted to occupy the repentance stool "in their
awn habit."
The Jagg, Juggs, or Jougs, was a
common instrument of punishment. It was an iron collar, which
passed round the neck like a yoke (jugum), and was secured at
the back by a strong padlock. The jagg was attached to
the church wall, close by the principal door, and was fixed at
such a height from the ground as to place the penitent in an
ignominious and painful attitude. While secured in the jagg the
offender wore the repentance habit, and remained in his degraded
position during the hour immediately preceding morning worship,
that the congregation might profit by the lesson of his
humiliation. Great offenders were "jagged" on a succession of
Sundays ; there were cases in which the punishment was
administered during every Sunday for six months. The punishment
was held to be peculiarly disgraceful, and the ecclesiastical
judicatories were occasionally obliged to have recourse to the
civil authorities to compel those sentenced to it to submit
themselves. In April, 1668, the Kirk-session of Port of Menteith
passed the following resolution:"The Session, after long
debate, did this day judge it most fitt for the bringing of
persons to the juges, to make choice of ane of thir two wayes,
either to desyr the respective heritor to present those in his
lands, or to cause a messenger-at-armes with Jon Battison, to
bring thereto, or to require the concurrence of the justice of
the peace. Resolving if any more compendious and legal way can
be fallen out hereafter, to follow that."
Subsequent to the period of the Revolution,
Kirk-sessions seldom ventured to enforce the punishment of the
jagg on their own authority. A shepherd at Lesmahago, who
had shorn his sheep on the parish fast, was brought before the
Kirk-session of that parish in June, 1697, and was held to merit
condign punishment. But the Session did not feel themselves
empowered to inflict aught beyond spiritual censures. Hence the
following minute:"The Session considering that there are
several scandals of this nature breaking forth, recommends to
the bailie of the bailerie of Lesmahago, to cause fix a pair of
jougs at the kirk door, that he may cause punish corporally
those who are not able to pay fines, and that according to law."
The jagg, when no longer serviceable to the
church, became an instrument of punishment in the hands of the
civil and municipal authorities. Down to the middle of the last
century, the justices at Mary kirk, Kincardineshire, confined in
the jagg those who had behaved riotously at the village fair.
Later in the century a farmer was placed in the jagg at the
cross of Stirling, on conviction for chicanery. The Stirling
jagg has been preserved ; it consists of an iron enclosure both
for the neck and wrists. The jagg of Galashiels is deposited in
the armoury at Abbotsford. Jaggs remain attached to the church
at Merton, Berwickshire, and to the church at Duddingston,
Mid-Lothian.
The Brank was an instrument for
punishing scolds and scandal-mongers. In shape like a helmet,
and composed of iron bars fitting round the head; it had a
triangular piece of iron which entered the mouth. Placed on the
head of the delinquent, it was secured by a padlock. The
offender wearing this degrading casque stood on the repentance
stool. Soon after his elevation to the primacy, Archbishop
Sharpe was conducting service in the parish church of St.
Andrews, when a woman stood up, and, in the face of the
congregation, accused him of an illicit amour with her, when he
was a college student. The accuser was one Isobel Lindsay, a
woman of humble station, resident in the city. She was arrested,
and brought before the Kirk-session, who sentenced her to appear
for a succession of Sundays on the repentance stool, wearing the
brank. A correspondent of the Gentleman s Magazine,
writing to that periodical in 1785, states that the father of
the then church-officer at St. Andrews, had witnessed Tsobel
undergoing her sentence. The brank of St. Andrews Kirk-session
has been preserved.
The punishment of the brank was not inflicted
solely by the ecclesiastical courts. Early in the sixteenth
century, Bessie Tarliefeir, in the Canongate of Edinburgh, who
had accused a bailie of "keeping ane false stoup" (measure), was
ordered by the magistrates to be "brankit," and set on the cross
for an hour. The burgh records of Glasgow set forth that two
scolds were condemned to be "brankit" in 1574. The following
minute, in which a shrew was handed over for branking to the
civil magistrates, was passed by the Kirk-session of Stirling,
in 1600:"Compeiret Margaret Wilsone, spous to Duncan Bennet,
quha be sufficient tryell is fundane abuser and blasphemer of
hir husband, of the eldaris of the kirk, and her nychbouris,
many and divers tymes, nocht onlie in the day licht bot in the
nicht, notwithstanding of many admonitions she has receivit of
the eldaris of the kirk of absteining thairfra ; and thairfor
the breithren of the kirk thinkis meit that the baillies put her
in the brankis in the naither end of the town, in the sycht of
hir nychburis, quhirby she may be movit to abstein fra the lyk ;
but if it be fund in her heirafter, that the baillies will be
desyrit to put her in the govts" The go vis or gyves were
applied to the legs and feet.
During the invasion of Cromwell in 1650, the
soldiers of the Commonwealth beheld with surprise and disgust
the degrading sentences inflicted by the church for offences
which they deemed utterly trivial. In a burst of rage they
everywhere swept away repentance stools, jaggs, gyves, and
sackcloth habits. The Kirk-sessions of Glasgow, Kirkcaldy,
Kennoway, Stow, Castleton, and other places resolved to pause in
the exercise of discipline till the rebellious strangers had
returned to their English homes.
Such sentences as "scourging," "ducking," "placarding,"
and "exposing upon carts driven through the town," were
frequently inflicted by the ecclesiastical tribunals.
Contumacious persons were imprisoned in the church steeple.
Notorious and incorrigible offenders were banished. Undutiful
children were punished on the hands with "palmers,"leathern
thongs burnt at the points. In 1598, the Presbytery of Glasgow
seriously deliberated on the case of a youth who had "passed his
father without lifting his bonnet." The Presbytery of Orkney, in
1632, sentenced Edmund Sinclair, for disrespectful conduct
towards his father, "to make his publick repentance in linen,
barefoot and barelegged, and to stand at the kirke door of Holme,
from the second bell to the third at the sermon, with a paper
upon his forehead, bearing his unnatural fault, and thereafter
to stand upon the stool of repentance during the sermon."
David Leyes, at St. Andrews, for striking his
father, was, in 1574, sentenced by the Kirk-session to undergo
severe and protracted discipline. He was, on the first Sunday,
to appear before the congregation "beir heddit and beirfuttit,
upon the highest degree of the penitent stuill, with a hammer in
the ane hand and ane stane in the uther hand, as twa
instrumentis be manneset his father with, ane papir writin in
great letteris about his heid, ther wordis, Behold the
onnaturail Son punished for putting hand on his father, and
dishonouring of God in him." On the second Sunday he was to
confess his guilt, "in meddis of the kirk." Then the following
Monday he was to "stand in the jaggs, in the market-cross, from
ten o'clock till twelve noon." At noon he was to be placed "on
ane cart," and then "to be cartit through the haill town, and be
oppin proclamation the pepill to be advertisit and informit of
his fait." The culprit was thereafter to be conducted back to
the cross, and there a proclamation made in his presence, "that
if he ever offended again his father or mother heirefter, in
word or deed, that member of his body quhairby he offendit salbe
cuttit off from him, be it tung, hand, or futt, without mercy,
in example to utheris to abstein fra the lyke."
Vituperation and scolding were punished with
severity. In 1562, the Kirk-session of Aberdeen decreed that
"all common skoldis, flytharis, and cardis be baneist the town,
and nocht sufFerit to remaine thairin for na request." On the
19th December, 1592, the Kirk-session of Glasgow "appointit
juggs and brankis to be fixit up in some suitable place for the
punischment of flyteris." By the Kirk-session of Stow it was
enacted that "flyteris sould pay xx sh. everie ane of them, and
stand in the jougs." On the 3rd May, 1668, the minister of Port
of Menteith "did intimat unto the people, after the first
sermon, and intrieted them that no person should flyt nor scold
on the Sabbath-day, or no ither day, or whosoever person or
persons should be scolding, should be punished both in their
persons and means, and to stand in the jogs." On the 15th
November, 1570, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews " warnit Gelis
Symson, spouse to George Upton, that she sould be made to sit in
the joggis twenty-foure houris," and be heavily fined if she
persevered in her fourfold offence of "miscayin her husband, fly
tin with hir neighbouris, selling candle and bread on Sundays,
and not resorting to the kirke." For scolding her husband, the
Kirk-session of Ayr, in 1606, sentenced Janet Hunter "to stand
in her lynnings at the cross on market days," and also "to stand
at the kirk door seven days, and in the public place of
repentance."
Margaret Short, at Stirling, having
grievously abused her husband, the Kirk-session devolved her
punishment upon the magistrates, in the following minute:
"March 23, 1598.Compeirit Margaret Short,
spous to Alexander Causland, quha being accusit of abusing of
her husband divers tymis within thir thrie oulkis, lyk as she
hes done of befoir, she confessis that, upon some wordis spokin
be him, she mintit ane shool to him, that she cast in his face
ane cap with aill, and that through angir she hes spokin angrie
wordis to him, and hes scartit his face; for the quhilk faultis,
and divers uther injuries done be hir to hir said husband, nocht
regairding his lyff, the breithrein desyris the baillies to
punish hir publiclie, quhairby she may be moveit to abstein fra
the lyk in timeis cuming, and that utheris may tak exampill."
The following deliverance, in the case of
maltreating a husband, was passed by the Kirk-session of
Dunfermline, in March, 1653 :
"Compeirit Margaret Markman for abusing David
Waterstoun, hir husband, with most cursed, cruel, and malicious
speeches, and she being found guiltie thereof, and the Session
knowing that she oftymes has fallen in sutch wicked contentions
before against hir said husband, refers hir to the magistrates,
to be imprisoned in the laighest prison-house, and theirafter to
be set on the tron on a mercat day, to the example of uthers,
with a paper on her browe, showing her notorious scandall, and
her remaining in prison and standing on the tron,t to be such a
space as the magistrates and session shall modifie." On the 5th
March, 1648, the Kirk-session of Dunfermline sentenced Margaret
Nicholsone "to stand and the branks on her mouth the next
Friday, being the mercat day, twa houris before noone, for hir
comon scolding and drunkenness, and that to the public example
of utheris."
Detraction was a vice common in ancient
Scotland. Magnus, the English ambassador, writing to Cardinal
Wolsey, in 1525, remarks, "there has been right rageous winds
with exceeding rain, and an open slander and a murmur raised
upon me, not only in this toun of Edinburgh, but through a great
part of the realm, surmit-ting that I should be the occasion
thereof, insomuch that I nor my servants could or might pass of
late in the streets, neither to move from the court, but openly
many women banned, cursed, swear'd, and gave me and mine the
most grievous maledictions that could be to our faces." At the
Reformation the church courts everywhere enacted that all
persons found guilty of calumny should be severely punished.
In 1662, the Kirk-session of Aberdeen decreed
that "all slanderers should ask forgiveness of the persons whom
they had traduced, in presence of the congregation,"
accompanying their apology with the expression, "tongue ye
lied." In 1578, the Kirk-session of Perth caused John Tod, for a
slanderous speech, to stand in irons for two hours. The
Kirk-session of Dumfries sentenced slanderers "to stand at the
kirk-stile on the Sabbath, with branks upon their mouths."
Obstinate detractors were pilloried in the market-place. Vicious
and habitual calumniators were handed to the magistrates "to be
docked or shaven at the cross." In 1646, the Kirk-session of
Dunfermline sentenced Robert Shortis and his wife, for
slandering their neighbours, "to ask the parties offndit
forgivenness, before their awn doores in the street, publicklie
on thair knees." The same Kirk-session, in 1642, placed Marjorie
Cassin " in the stockes two houris, for denouncing Janet
Brown-side as "a comon theef, comon whoore, and a loun, to seven
or eight men." Margaret was warned that, on the further
indulgence of her wicked propensity, she should be "banished
from the place." It is edifying to discover the Presbytery of
St. Andrews, in 1643, expressing a belief that "there be some
quho slander those for witches against quhom ther is neither
presumption nor dilation," and enacting that "such should be
censured as most notorious slanderers."
Some of the sentences against detractors were
sufficiently severe. Thomas Malcolm was condemned to
imprisonment by the Kirk-session of Perth, in 1579, for calling
Thomas Brown "a loon Ceirle." Jonet Wely, at Dunfermline, was
sent to the pillar, in March, 1646, for saying that her
neighbour's wife was " a white bird." The Kirk-session of Ayr,
in 1606, sentenced John McCrie to "the joggs and the pillar of
repentance," for asserting that "no bodie had the wyte (blame)
of the poore folks but the devill and the priest."
Before the Reformation, profane swearing was
lamentably prevalent. Men swore by the Virgin, the saints, and
the wood of the Holy Cross. In 1592, the Presbytery and Town
Council of Aberdeen passed a joint enactment, whereby employers
were authorized to exact penalties from such of their servants
as used oaths, and to deduct the same in the settlement of their
wages. They were empowered to punish with "palmers" those
blasphemers who were unable to pay fines, and with the same to
chastise oath-speaking children. In 1644, the Kirk-session of
Glasgow appointed certain of their number to proceed throughout
the city on market-days, "to take order with banners and
swearers." Every individual detected in uttering an oath was
mulcted in the penalty of twelve pence, Scottish money.
About the same period the Kirk-session of
Dumfries called on the magistrates to visit, with "civil and
corporal punishment," a miller from Troqueer, who was gailty of
cursing. In June, 1651, the Kirk-session of Dunfermline
sentenced a woman to "stand at the croce or trone on ane publict
mercat day, with ane paper on her head, signifying her cursing
and blasphemies." The Kirk-session of Lesmahago, in August,
1703, having rebuked a profane swearer, further resolved to
complain of him to "Her Grace the Dutchess of Hamilton, that
such a person may not be continued as Fiscal of her Court at
Lesmahago."
Drunkards were punished by fines and public
censures. In 1612, John Stevenson, who had, through excessive
drinking, "lost sindrie of his senses," was sentenced, by the
Kirk-session of Stirling "to fall down on his knees, and crave
God and the kirk for forgiveness, and to pay twenty shillens
ad pios usus." In 1645, the Kirk-session of Dunino resolved
to impose penalties on drunkards according to a scale. Six
shillings were to be paid for the first offence, twelve
shillings for the second, and so on lolies quoties.
In May, 1668, the Kirk-session of Port of
Menteith made the following regulation, which was duly intimated
from the pulpit:"No brewir within the paroch should sell aill
to no person except alls much as wold quenche the thirst of
strangers, or to sick persons, and no to sell no aill to no
ither person within the paroch, and that under the paine of ten
pounds Scots, to be payed be the aill seller, and the person who
drink it to be punished as the Session shall think fit."
In 1712, the Kirk-session of Hawick appointed
certain persons to "perlustrate the town, to see who were
drinking in alehouses after eight o'clock at night."
For a century after the Reformation,
incestuous crimes occasionally occupied the attention of
Presbyteries and Synods. The following is a deliverance of the
Synod of Fife, in April, 1611, in a case of incest: "The Synod
ordained Laurence Ferguson, in the parish of Kirkcaldy, who had
been guilty of incest, to pas ilk Saboth day from kirk to kirk
per circulum., throughout the haill kirkes in the boundis
of the Exerceis of Kirkaldie, according as he salbe injoyned be
the brethren of the samine, and that in sackcloth, for the space
of ane yeir compleitt, without any intermissionne of dayes,
vntil the next diocesian Assemblie to be holdin (God willing) in
St. Androis, in the moneth of Apryl, 1612."
Adultery was, by the Estates, in 1563, made
punishable with death. David Gray and Helen Watson, adulterers,
were hanged at Perth in January, 1585. But the capital sentence
was seldom carried out. The church courts considerably varied in
their mode of punishing the crime. In 1568, the Kirk-session of
Aberdeen enacted on the subject as follows:
"That ilk persone convict in the said cryme
sail cum thre several Sundays, at the second bell ringing, to
the kirk door quhair the people enteris that day, bairfut and
bairlegd, cled in sackclayth, with ane crown of paper on their
heid, with the cryme written thairabout; and remaine thair
quhile the precheour begin his sermond; and thairefter sail cum
in to the oppen place of repentans, and remane standing until
the end of the preching, and then pass again to the same dur,
quhair thai sail remane to be ane spektakl to the hail! peple,
until all folkis be past hame, and departit fra the kirk."
The Kirk-session of Glasgow enacted, in 1586,
that adulterers should "satisfy six Sabbaths at the pillory,
barefoot and barelegged, in sackcloth, and should thereafter be
carted through the town." The same Kirk-session, ten years
afterwards, procured "ane cart for harlots," and had "ane
pulley" attached to Glasgow bridge, whereby adulterers might be
"duckit" in the Clyde. Probably owing to the continued
prevalence of the offence, the Kirk-session of Glasgow decreed,
in 1643, that adulterers should stand "three hours in the jaggs,"
receive "a public whipping," be imprisoned in the common jail,
and thereafter banished from the city. On the 15th October,
1635, the Kirk-session of Dumfries ordained two persons, guilty
of adultery, "to sit seven Sundays in sackcloth, and to stand
the first and last Sabbath at the church-door, barefooted."
Cases of adultery which called for the
cognizance of the superior judicatories, were dealt with most
rigorously. Paul Methven, minister at Jedburgh, who, in 1563,
acknowledged himself guilty of the offence, was subjected to
discipline of a most humiliating kind. The General Assembly
consulted the lords of the Privy Council respecting their
decision. At length, in the third year subsequent to his
confession, the Assembly permitted their erring brother to
prostrate himself on the floor before them, and, with "weeping
and howling," to entreat their pardon. His sentence was then
pronounced, that, at Edinburgh, the capital, Dundee, his native
town, and Jedburgh, the place of his ministrations, he should
stand in sackcloth at the church-door, and on the
repentance-stool, two Sundays in each place.
The Presbytery of Lanark, in May, 1642,
sentenced two adulterers "to go through the whole kirkes of the
Presbyterie, and at the kirke-doore of each to stand barefoot
and barelegged, from the second bell to the last."
Fornication was punished with a severity
nearly equal to that which attended the infraction of the
marriage vow. In 1576, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews ordained
that fornicators, convicted for the first time, should be
imprisoned in the steeple ; and that those who relapsed should
be pilloried at the cross, and have their heads shaved. On the
19th December, 1594, the Kirk-session of Glasgow enacted that
the punishment for " single fornication should be ane day on the
cock-stool, ane day at the pillar," and eight days' warding in
the steeple. By this court a new regulation was passed in 1605,
providing that fornicators should pay a heavy fine, and stand "ane
Monday at the croce, with ane fast band of yron about their
craig," and a paper on their foreheads, proclaiming their
offence. For relapse in fornication, Dionysius Blackwood was, in
1581, placed by the Kirk-session of Perth " on the cross-head on
the mercat-day, four hours locked in the irons." Four years
after, the Perth Kirk-session appointed James Pitlady, with a
yearly salary of forty shillings, "to shave the heads of
fornicators or fornicatrixes." During the same year, the
Kirk-session of Perth ordained Thomas Smith, who had, for the
third time, acknowledged himself guilty of uncleanness, to be
warded, shaven, and doukit in a puddle of water, according to
Act of Parliament."
In 1627, William McLay, who had been
convicted of fornication the second time, was sentenced, by the
Kirk-session of Stirling, "to stand on the mercat-crosse two
hours, to pay two merks, and to stand six severall Sabbaths upon
the pillar." During the same year, Alexander Sandilands, at
Stow, was, for his first conviction, " removed from the stool of
repentance, after having sitten eighteen dyetts upon it."
A woman who had fallen for the second time
was, in 1602, sentenced by the Kirk-session of Aberdeen in the
following terms:
"The Session ordainis Jenett Scherar quha was
ban-ischet befoir for harlatrie, and is cum in agane within this
court; but since her incumming hes fallen of new agane, to be
apprehendit and put in ward, and thairefter to be doukit at the
croce and publicklie banist of new againe at the mercat croce ;
provyding gif scho pay ten markis of penaltie, to be fre of hir
douking, and no utherways."
In 1701, the Town Council of Ayr, on the
recommendation of the Kirk-session, sentenced a woman, "who had
relapsed in fornication, to stand at the Fish-cross, between the
hours of eleven and twelve, with the locksman beside her, who is
to shave her head in presence of the people."
In order to the detection of offences against
social order, the ecclesiastical judicatories strictly charged
midwives, and others attending illegitimate births, to divulge
all they knew to the elders of the district. Accoucheurs who
concealed such information were personally subjected to
discipline.
Marriage was not permitted when the
contracting parties were in a state of religious ignorance. In
August, 1579, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews decreed that "nane
be resaivit to compleit the bond of matri-monye without they
reherse to the redar the Lord's Prayer, the Believe, and the
Commandments." Church courts likewise inquired as to the worldly
circumstances of parties proposing to be united in wedlock. The
Presbytery of Glasgow, in January, 1594, made the following
order respecting a proposed marriage :"Jan. 28, 1594. The
Presbeterie, in respect that James Armour is in greit debt,
thairfor can nocht ordein Helein Bar to be mareit upone him."
Matrimony was attended with strange delays
and useless incumbrances. Banns were proclaimed three several
Sundays in the parish churches of the parties. Then forty days
were allowed to elapse, wherein objectors might come forward to
oppose the union. Two obligations were meanwhile imposed upon
the pair: they had to make a pecuniary consignment in the hands
of the session-clerk, that their union would certainly be
solemnized, and to procure a cautioner, who became bound that
they would not cohabit before receiving the nuptial benediction.
Marriage feasts were a source of disquietude
to the church. In order to check the excesses which these
occasions called forth, Kirk-sessions issued regulations with
respect to the cost of the entertainments and the number of
persons who should be permitted to join them. In November, 1583,
the Kirk-session of Glasgow enacted that there should be no
superfluous gatherings at bridals, and that the lawin or
cost of the dinner or supper should not exceed eighteen pennies
Scots. The Kirk-session of Stirling, in 1599, permitted a lawin
of five shillings, but decreed that no marriage should take
place in the church unless the parties should deposit the sum of
four pounds, that it should not exceed that amount.
To elude clerical surveillance the
inhabitants of Stirling began to celebrate their nuptial
festivities in tents pitched in the open fields. To overcome
this subterfuge, the Kirk-session appealed to the Town-Council,
and a joint deliverance of the two bodies was adopted in the
following terms:"December 1, 1608. The brethren of the kirk
ratifies the act of counsell underwritten anent brydells, and
ordaris that na testimoniall be given but according thairto in
all points. The quhilk day the councell statutes and ordaines
that all and quhat sumevir persones dwelland within this burgh
or parrochin, quha sal happin to be proclamit for marriage
contractit betwix thame, sail mak thair brydellis and banquittis
within this burgh fra thyncefurth; and if thaye fealze, being
proclamit within the paroche kirk of this burgh be the
ministeris thairof, and mak thair brydellis outwith the said
burgh, in that caice the partie or parties that sal happin to
contrivein sal pay to the town the sume of twenty poundis money
; provyding alwayes that this act be onelie extendit against the
men and women quha sal happin to be joyned in marriage, bayth
dwelland within this burgh or parochin thairof. And if ony
persone dwelland within this burgh marie an outland woman, in
that caice it is statute and ordainit that it sail not be lessum
to him to desyr any ma per-sones nychtbouris of this burgh nor
twenty persones; and if it be fund or tryed that he dois in the
contrar, in that caice he sail pay to the towne the summe of ten
poundis ; and willis that the kirk, befoir they grant
testimonials, tak ane pund thairfor. Lykes if any outland man
marie any woman dwelland within this burgh, in that caice thair
brydelles and bankettis sal be maid within this burgh; and if
the woman contravein thairanent, in that caice sail pay uther
twenty pundis; and that befoir any testimoniall be granted be
the minister or reader, or yet befoir marriage, be solemnizit,
that they take ane pand for the said soume."
In July, 1657, the Town Council of Dumfries
ordained that "not more than twenty-four persons should assemble
at a wedding, and that the expense should not exceed eight
pounds, and that under the payne of twenty punds, whereof the
one half is to be payt by the bridegroom, and the other half by
the inkieper quhar the brydle is kept."
Despite the efforts of the Church, weddings
were long the occasion of large gatherings and of excessive
festivity. Even elders themselves did not always refuse to
sanction such periods of rejoicing when members of their own
families were united in wedlock. In 1703, John Hart, elder at
Hawick, acknowledged, "upon his knees," before his brethren,
that he had made a penny-bryddal at his daughter's marriage.
"Prayer was offered to God to grant him repentance," and he was
suspended from office.
Against dancing the church courts exercised
an uncompromising hostility. The ancient Scottish dances were
associated with lewd practices, and the gyrations introduced in
the reign of Queen Mary were even more obnoxious and unseemly.
Thus the Presbyterian reformers contracted a prejudice against a
species of recreation in itself innocent, and certainly
healthful. In 1599, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews dealt with
David Wemyss, in Raderny, for being present at a dance. He
acknowledged that he had, but justified himself by saying that
"he never saw that dancing was stayit (stopped before, and that
the custom wes kept at Raderny befor any of the session wes
born." Wemyss was imprisoned in the church steeple for contumacy
; he latterly submitted to discipline. In May, 1649, the General
Assembly "inhibited dancing," and referred "the censure thereof"
to "the care and diligence" of the several Presbyteries. In
September, 1649, the Kirk-session of Cambusnethan enacted that
"there sould be no pypers at brydells, and whoever sould have a
pyper playing at their brydellon their marriage day sail lose
their consigned money, and be furder punished as the sessioun
thinks fitt." In 1660, four men and two women were brought
before the Kirk-session of Dunino under the charge of
"promiscuous dancing." They pled guilty, and were "sharplie
rebukit." The piper who had discoursed music on the occasion,
was "humblit on his knees before the pulpit, in face of the
congregation."
Gambling and all games of chance were
forbidden. In 1598, the Kirk-session of Stirling dealt with two
persons who had played together at dice till four of the
morning, when they "discordit." They were remitted to the
magistrates for imprisonment, "their fude to be bread and watter."
In February, 1654, the Kirk-session of Dumfries sentenced a
person found card playing on a Saturday evening to pay twelve
shillings to the kirk-treasurer.
Persons arraigned for felony before the
criminal courts, were, though acquitted by these tribunals,
subjected to ecclesiastical censures.
In December, 1599, the Kirk-session of St.
Andrews absolved four persons for the murder of "unquhill James
Smith;" they had appeared two Sundays in presence of the
congregation, conformable with the regulation as to "murderous
repentance." In 1619, the Kirk-session of Redgorton considered
the case of Colin Pitscottie, eldest son of Andrew Pitscottie,
of Luncarty, who had been accused of the murder of Alexander
Bennett. After various delays, Pitscottie appeared before the
Presbytery of Perth, and acknowledged his guilt. He was ordained
to make " his publict repentance in the kirk of Redgorton, in
lyning clothes."
Upon Kirk-sessions devolved the
responsibility of providing for the wants of the poor. So long
as the bulk of the people adhered to the Established Church, and
church courts were invested with civil authority, funds to meet
the claims of the indigent were procured readily. Elders stood
beside the collecting plates at the church doors, and reminded
the opulent of their duty to the poor. In the bestowal of alms
liberality was not their fault. Many parishes possessed a public
wheelbarrow, in which the sexton might transport beyond their
parochial bounds aged and infirm persons who had no legal claim
upon them. In November, 1685, Margaret McOwen, a poor woman,
died at Dunfermline, while Robert Peirson, the joiner, was
preparing "a barrow " to "transport her out of the parish." The
same Kirk-session, at a meeting held on the 14th October, 1649,
appointed the burgh executioner to- "keep beggaris from entering
the kirk-yard on Sondays," lest their importunities might
diminish the contributions in the collecting plates. The
Kirk-session of Lesmahago exercised an unwonted liberality by
permitting infirm persons to be wheeled in the parish barrow
round the hamlet in quest of alms.
The minister and elders of the Kirk-session
did not hold themselves responsible only to the superior
judicatories. They acknowledged the authority of the people, and
invited them to criticise their judicial and private conduct. In
April, 1568, the Kirk-session of Aberdeen published the
following edict:"The haill assemblie or-dainis tryall and
examination of the minister, elderis, and dyaconis and redar, to
be had of them, off them-selfis, four tymes in the yeir,
concerning their liffis and conversation, according to the use
off uder kirkis. And befoir the tyme off communion that sik
tryall be maid, be the haill kirk, vpone the minister, redar,
elderis, and dyaconis, off their conversation."
Another resolution, to the same effect, was
passed by the same Kirk-session, in January, 1573. It proceeds
thus:"The assemblie ordainis the minister to charge and
admonyshe on Sunday next to cum, all and sundrie within this
town, to compeir on the nixt assemblie day, to try and examine
the lyffis of the minister, elders, and dyaconis, and to lay to
their charge sik thingis as thai know to be sklanderous to the
kirk."
For some time after the Reformation the lay
members of session selected the minister's texts, and the
portions of Scripture to be expounded by him ; they also
regulated the duration of discourses and of the entire services.
According to "The Buik of the Kirk of the
Canon-gait," of Edinburgh, the Kirk-session of that parish,
"after ripe consultation and invocation of the name of God,"
desired the minister "to begyne the Actes of the Apostles, after
that he had endit the first chapter of Esay, quhilk he was
intrattand, the quhilk he promised to doe." On the 30th May,
1598, the Kirk-session of St. Andrews thus ruled:"It is thocht
gude be ye brethren yt Mr. George Gladstanes, minister, proceids
in preaching of ye second book of Samuell and ye buik of ye
Kingis following upon ye Saboth day." On the 14th October, 1621,
the Kirk-session of Elgin ordered that "when Mr. David Philip
teaches, he turn the glass when he preaches, and that the whole
be finished within an hour."
Regular and prompt attendance at the
different courts of the church was rigidly insisted on. At a
meeting of the Presbytery of Glasgow, held on the 2nd August,
1597, Mr. John Bell, minister of Cadder, was found "lait of
entering." He pled that he had "wurkmen wirking, qhairby he
micht nocht cum soune," but the brethren " repellit" his excuse,
and he was "scharplie admonischit." In April, 1618, the
Kirk-session of Port of Menteith " ordained that none of their
number shall absent themselves from any session hereafter to be
holden, without sending their excuse in the day of ther absence,
which, at the next session following, they being present, is to
be cognosed upon be the session, and not being relevant, they
are to pay ten lbs (Scots), toties quoties."
At the Reformation, the lay members of
Kirk-sessions were selected for their knowledge and Christian
experience. Afterwards, the resident landowners, not being "
suspected of Papistrie," were added to the eldership. Latterly,
magistrates of burghs were expected to take their seats in the
Kirk-session courts. In 1599, the Kirk-session of Glasgow issued
a decree, providing "that whoever be chosen proveist or baillies
after this, sail be enrollit as elderis of the kirke." Nor was
the office of elder a mere sinecure, or post of honour. In
April, 1650, the Synod of Fife ruled,"That everie paroche be
divydit in several! quarteris, and each elder his owne quarter,
over which he is to have speciall inspectioun, and that everie
elder visit his quarter once everie month, at least, according
to the Act of the Generall Assemblie, 1649; and in their
visitatioun tak notice of all disorderlie walkeris, especiallie
neglectouris of God's worship in thair families, sweareris,
haunteris of aill houses, especiallie at vnseasonable tymes, and
long sitteris thair, and drinkeris of healthis; and that he
dilate these to the sessioun." The Kirk-session of Dumfries, in
October, 1654, ordered their individual members "to attend the
four parts of the burgh ilka Wednesday, (the day of the weekly
market), from twa till six, to take note of all persons found
drunk or scandalous, and to take such into' custody."
The obedience which however keenly resisted
for a time, was ultimately yielded to the authority of the
ecclesiastical courts, may readily be explained. They retained
the power of excommunication, that tremendous power which,
wielded by sovereign pontiffs, had brought kings and princes to
their knees, and which, in the hands of Presbyterian, pastors,
was not less formidable within the field of their jurisdiction.
By the ancient law of Scotland, a person excommunicated by any
of the church courts was deprived of his feudal rights; he could
hold no land ; he might be seized and imprisoned on an
application to the nearest magistrate; he was cut off from holy
offices, and was separated from the intercourse of relatives and
friends, and denied the assistance of his own servants. No
person might trade with him, or show him the most trivial
courtesy, under the pain of being subjected to like penalties.
The Reformed Church of Scotland did not renounce this power.
When Lord Hemes was excommunicated by the Provincial Synod, in
1647, two tradesmen who had business with him obtained, before
waiting upon him as an excommunicated person, special permission
to do so from the Kirk-session of Dumfries.
Among the humbler classes the Church enforced
obedience to its citations or decisions by fines and
imprisonments, the jaggs and the sentence of vagabondism. In
October, 1640, the bailie, or local magistrate at Salton, East
Lothian, reported to the Kirk-session of that parish that,
pursuant to their decree, he had taken poinds from refractory
and disobedient persons, viz., "from Jeane Reid ane yron pot,
from Agnes Litster ane yron pot, from Marion Home ane pan, from
Jean Coveurd ane pan, from Margaret Fluker ane coat, and from
Helen Allen ane coat." In November, 1627, the Kirk-session of
Stow "gave up as ane vagabond," one James Pringle, who had
declined the citation of the court; "it was intimate from the'
pulpitt that none within the parish should receive him or give
him harbour." On the 5th April, 1646, Christian White was warned
by the Kirk-session of Dunfermline that, should she again be
disobedient to the Church, she would be sentenced "to stand on
the tron in the juggs, and thair-after in sackcloth and
bare-fitted at the kirke doore."
In 1690, the civil consequences of the
sentence of excommunication were abrogated by an Act of the
Estates. Henceforth the severity of ecclesiastical discipline
began to wane. The punishment of crime at length devolved
entirely on the civil magistrate, and church discipline became a
work of kindly reproof and gentle exhortation.