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EPISCOPALIANS IN SCOTLAND AND MAYBOLE
There has been an Anglican presence in Scotland since the time of the Reformation, the great reform movement of the 16th century, but the term ‘anglican’ itself did not come into general use until the 19th century. Up till then, Anglicans in Scotland were (and still can be) referred to as ‘episcopalians’ - episkopos being the Greek for overseer or bishop.
1560-1690 This is one of the most complex periods in British history, covering as it does the Reformation, the Union of the Crowns, the trial and execution of Charles I, the Civil War, the Commonwealth, the Restoration, and the ‘Glorious’ Revolution of 1688. Because church and state were regarded as indissolubly linked, changes in the way the Church ordered its affairs became entangled with political questions, often with disastrous and tragic consequences.
Twice - in 1610 and 1662 - bishops were reintroduced
into the Church of Scotland, and there was hope that the Church might
develop as an episcopal Church in fellowship with the Church of England.
However, popular feeling against bishops was strong and was made worse
by the crown attempting to impose uniformity in doctrine and worship,
often backed by military force. Matters came to a head in 1688 when
James VII
1690-1811
As a concession to those episcopalians who did not have Jacobite sympathies, and to meet the needs of members of the Church of England who had taken up residence in Scotland, Parliament eventually allowed the setting up of ‘Qualified Chapels’. These congregations were exempt from the operation of the penal laws, on condition that they prayed publicly for King George and did not recognize the authority of the Scottish bishops.
The bishops took the initiative. In 1811 a Synod was convened and declared to be the National Synod of the Episcopal Church in Scotland. A number of important Canons (laws of government for the church) were passed, and the ‘Qualified Chapels’ were gradually incorporated into the new national body. 1811-1918 During the 19th century, membership of the Scottish Episcopal Church grew at a phenomenal rate. The old episcopalian/Jacobite families were joined by immigrants from Ireland (in the wake of the famine in the 1840’s) and from England (joining in the economic boom brought about by the Industrial Revolution). Within Scotland new members were gained from other churches - mainly those who found presbyterian worship and doctrine excessively severe. The high point was reached by about 1918. Since then, in common with other mainstream churches, there has been a slow decline in numbers, although the Anglican ideals of tolerance and inclusiveness still attract those who find a narrow, sectarian approach to the faith less congenial.
AND IN MAYBOLE . . . In 1847 the Reverend William Scott Wilson, incumbent of Holy Trinity, Ayr founded a Mission in Maybole and for thirty-six years the congregation met in a small building in Abbott Street near the old Collegiate Church. In 1883 a building was built on land gifted to the church and this was dedicated on 19 December 1883 by the same William Scott Wilson who had opened the mission and had been Bishop of the Diocese since 1859. The church was dedicated to St Oswald and was served by the clergy from Ayr but the Year Book for 1900 gives the name of the Priest-in-Charge as the Reverend W A Gallacher, Rector of St John's Girvan. St Oswald's later became a dependent mission of Holy Trinity, Ayr. After a period it was again linked with St John's Girvan, and is now linked with St John's and Holy Trinity, Ayr, to form the South Ayrshire Team Ministry. |