The History of the Reformation of Religion in Scotland / With Which Are Included Knox's Confession and The Book of Discipline

JOHN KNOX.
The only authentic Portrait. Engraved for a book by Theodore Beza, published at Geneva in 1580.
BY JOHN KNOX
WITH WHICH ARE INCLUDED KNOX'S CONFESSION AND THE BOOK OF DISCIPLINE
A Twentieth Century Edition REVISED AND EDITED BY CUTHBERT LENNOX
LONDON: ANDREW MELROSE 16 Pilgrim Street, E.C. MCMV
It is really a loss to English and even to universal literature that Knox's hasty and strangely interesting, impressive, and peculiar Book, called The History of the Reformation in Scotland , has not been rendered far more extensively legible to serious mankind at large than is hitherto the case. There is in it, ... a really singular degree of clearness, sharp just insight and perspicacity, now and then of picturesqueness and visuality, as if the thing was set before your eyes; and everywhere a feeling of the most perfect credibility and veracity: that is to say altogether, of Knox's high qualities as an observer and narrator.... This man, you can discern, has seized the essential elements of the phenomenon, and done a right portrait of it; a man with an actually seeing eye....
Besides this perfect clearness, naïveté, and almost unintentional picturesqueness, there are to be found in Knox's swift flowing History many other kinds of 'geniality,' and indeed of far higher excellences than are wont to be included under that designation. The grand Italian Dante is not more in earnest about this inscrutable Immensity than Knox is. There is in Knox throughout the spirit of an old Hebrew Prophet, such as may have been in Moses in the Desert at sight of the Burning Bush; spirit almost altogether unique among modern men; and along with all this, in singular neighbourhood to it, a sympathy, a veiled tenderness of heart, veiled, but deep and of piercing vehemence, and withal even an inward gaiety of soul, alive to the ridicule that dwells in whatever is ridiculous, in fact a fine vein of humour, which is wanting in Dante....
The story of this great epoch is nowhere to be found so impressively narrated as in this Book of Knox's; a hasty loose production, but grounded on the completest knowledge, and with visible intention of setting down faithfully both the imperfections of poor fallible men, and the unspeakable mercies of God to this poor realm of Scotland.

John Knox
Содержание

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INTRODUCTORY NOTE.


TABLE OF CONTENTS.


APPENDIX.


THE REFORMATION OF RELIGION IN SCOTLAND


1422-1558.


1558-1559.


1559-1561.


1561-1564.


APPENDIX.


The Preface.


Of God.—Cap. I.


Of the Creation of Man.—Cap. II.


Of Original Sin.—Cap. III.


Of the Revelation of the Promise.—Cap. IV.


The Continuance, Increase, and Preservation of the Kirk.—Cap. V.


Of the Incarnation of Christ Jesus.—Cap. VI.


Why it behoved the Mediator to be very God and very Man.—Cap. VII.


Election.—Cap. VIII.


Christ's Death, Passion, Burial, etc.—Cap. IX.


Resurrection.—Cap. X.


Ascension.—Cap. XI.


Faith in the Holy Ghost.—Cap. XII.


The Cause of Good Works.—Cap. XIII.


What Works are reputed good before God.—Cap. XIV.


The Perfection of the Law and Imperfection of Man.—Cap. XV.


Of the Kirk.—Cap. XVI.


The Immortality of the Souls.—Cap. XVII.


Of the notes by which the True Kirk is discerned from the false, and who shall be judge of the doctrine.—Cap. XVIII.


The Authority of the Scriptures.—Cap. XIX.


Of General Councils, of their Power, Authority, and Causes of their Convention.—Cap. XX.


Of the Sacraments.—Cap. XXI.


Of the right Administration of the Sacraments.—Cap. XXII.


To whom Sacraments Appertain.—Cap. XXIII.


Of the Civil Magistrate.—Cap. XXIV.


The Gifts freely given to the Kirk.—Cap. XXV.


I. Of Doctrine.


II. Of Sacraments.


III. Touching the Abolition of Idolatry.


IV. Concerning Ministers and their Lawful Election.


V. Concerning Provision for the Ministers, and for Distribution of the Rents and Possessions justly appertaining to the Kirk.


VII. Of Schools and Universities.


VIII. Of the Rents and Patrimony of the Kirk.


IX. Of Ecclesiastical Discipline.


X. Touching the Election of Elders and Deacons, etc.


XI. Concerning the Policy of the Church.


XII. For Preaching and Interpretation of Scriptures, etc.


XIII. Of Marriage.


XIV. Of Burial.


XV. For Reparation of Churches.


XVI. For Punishment of those that Profane the Sacraments and do contemn the Word of God, and dare presume to minister them, not being thereto lawfully called.


The Conclusion.


GLOSSARY


OF OBSOLETE AND SCOTS WORDS AND PHRASES.


INDEX.


FOOTNOTES:


Transcriber's note:

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2015-02-13

Темы

Reformation -- Scotland; Scotland -- Church history

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