CONTENTS.

[CHAPTER I.]

THE LAW AND THE LIBERTY OF PRESBYTERIAN WORSHIP

[CHAPTER II.]

THE AGE OF KNOX: THE FORMATIVE PERIOD OF PRESBYTERIAN WORSHIP

[CHAPTER III.]

KNOX'S BOOK OF COMMON ORDER.

[CHAPTER IV.]

A DIET OF PUBLIC WORSHIP IN THE TIME OF KNOX

[CHAPTER V.]

THE PERIOD OF CONTROVERSY

[CHAPTER VI.]

THE WESTMINSTER ASSEMBLY AND THE DIRECTORY OF WORSHIP

[CHAPTER VII.]

LEGISLATION CONCERNING PUBLIC WORSHIP IN THE PERIOD SUBSEQUENT TO THE REVOLUTION

[CHAPTER VIII.]

PRESBYTERIAN WORSHIP OUTSIDE OF THE ESTABLISHED CHURCH OF SCOTLAND

[CHAPTER IX.]

MODERN MOVEMENTS IN PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES RESPECTING PUBLIC WORSHIP

[CHAPTER X.]

CONCLUSION

"Inward truth of heart alone, is what the Lord requires. Exercises superadded are to be approved, so far as they are subservient to Truth, useful incitements, or marks of profession to attest our faith to men. Nor do we reject things tending to the preservation of Order and Discipline. But when consciences are put under fetters, and bound by religious obligations, in matters in which God willed them to be free, then must we boldly protest in order that the worship of God be not vitiated by human fictions."—CALVIN.