The
Spiritual State of Scotland
The majority of Church of
Scotland presbyteries vote today on the acceptance of office-bearers in gay “marriages”
– the denomination has already accepted practicing homosexuals in "civil partnerships". It seems
to me that a quibble about terminology, (marriage or civil partnership),
overlooks the fact that the sin is in the approval and practice of unbiblical
conduct, whatever it may be called. The
denomination has already whitewashed the sin by its previous approval and seems
unlikely to listen to the valid biblical and legal objections that will be
raised by the evangelicals. The
situation is dire!
However, God is sovereign, and
Scotland has risen out of the mire of a destructive theological progressive
liberalism and insipid evangelicalism before:
“Over
vast tracts of the country, a cold, semi-sceptical moderatism held undisturbed
sway, while the evangelism which here and there nominally maintained its ground
was seldom of that strong, fervent, and high-toned type with which happily we
are now so familiar. Error spoke aloud with clear and unfaltering tongue on the
high places of the land, while truth, scorned and down-trodden, uttered its
voice with stammering and muffled accents, and offered but a feeble resistance to
the strong, triumphant tide of latitudinarian indifference that was rolling on.
There was a good deal of nominal orthodoxy — fully more, perhaps, than a few
years afterwards — but little holy unction. fervour, or power.”
"The Pastor of Kilsyth ; or,
Memorials of the life and times of the Rev. W.H. Burns D.D." Rev. Islay
Burns, St. Peter's Free Church, Dundee. 1860.
The renewal that followed could not be contained within the established national church and eventually led to the Disruption and the formation of the Free Church of Scotland, (1843). The differences are significant, however, for what was being faced then was the cold semi-orthodoxy of Moderatism, not the high handed rejection of Scripture, Christian ethical tradition, and fundamental truths of Christian and Reformed orthodoxy.
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