Moderatour said—There are a number of the Bishops who are ordained to be excommunicat, and now we are to consider the tyme when it shall be done—the persones that shall pronounce the sentence—the place where—and the maner how it shall be done; or whether the sentence shall be delayed any longer or not?

Lowdoun said—The delaying of the sentence would seeme to be verie prejudiciall. For these that are absent out of this toun, there is no appearance that we shall get them to deall with; neither is there any appeirance of their repentance as yet who hes subscrivet the declinatour: And becaus we know not what interruptions may be shortlie, it is good to make use of the occasion which God, of his great mercie, offers to red his Church of them; and it is the justice of God recompenceing their pride, on the ane hand, and the trumpet of his mercie to recall them to repentance, if it be possible, on the uther hand; and so the delay of such a good worke seemes to be verie dangerous. As for the place, where ye are seemes to be verie fitt; and for the persone, doubtlesse it must be yourselfe who is the mouth of this Assembly, to pronounce the Judgement of the Assembly against them, that this Kirk may be delyvered from the thraldome it was in.

The Moderatour said—There was no practice of the Kirk for that, and that Bishop Adamsone was not excommunicat by the Moderatour of the Assembly.

Nevertheless, the Assembly desyred that the Moderatour himselfe would take it upon him, and that he should delyver a Sermon in the same church the morne at Ten hours, and let them be excommunicat. This was concludit be the consent of the whole Assemblie.

Mr James Cunninghame, Minister at Sum ... oke, gave in a Bill to the Assembly, desyreing earnestlie that he might be transported, for many weightie reasones, such as his age and unabilitie to travell throw that paroche, being 9 or 10 myles boundes, and having small meanes of provision; that for thir thrie yeares he gat no stipend, and many uther pressing difficulties which the Assemblie fand to be true, and granted him libertie of transportatioun, by advyce of the Presbytrie, when God sends occasion.

Sess. 20—Decʳ 13, 1638.
[Deposition of the Prelates.]

[In the MS. from which this report is transcribed, the Sermon by the Moderator and Act of Deposition of the Bishops, appointed at the former sederunt, are entirely omitted. As, however, that was one of the most solemn and important proceedings of the Assembly 1638, we deem it incumbent on us to supply the void; and we have been so fortunate as to become possessed of the means for doing so. In the year 1762, Alexander Henderson’s Sermon, including the Act of Deposition, was published in a small pamphlet, entitled, “The Bishops’ Doom,” of which the whole title and a prefatory note are subjoined;[139] and although the particular record from whence that publication was taken is not specified in the note, we find its tenor corroborated by Mr David Laing’s MS. Report, formerly referred to (p. 128), in which the Sermon is given. These two copies we have accordingly collated, and what follows, therefore, may be considered as substantially correct.]


SERMON.
Psalm cx. 1.

“The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit thou at my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool.”