Little Sister: A Second Israel in Seventeenth-Century Scotland
English


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About The Book

Description: The Christian state church emerged from the religion of pagan Rome. A declining western empire gave the church political power but provoked conflict between church and state. In the Scottish post-Reformation Stewart monarchy the king claimed to control the church by divine right. Covenanters exchanged state control for a theocracy built on the idea that Scotland like Israel had a God-given destiny. As the purest kirk in Christendom nation and kirk were the political and religious faces of one body. Like pre-Christian Israel Scotland was one of the only two nations ever covenanted to the Lord. This idea owed more to political pressure than theological insight. Today a mindset survives which still refuses to separate kirk from nation and thereby undermines the missionary calling. The urgent need is to recognize that God made a covenant with Israel alone and to think in terms of a second Israel was to misunderstand the development of church history. Todays Kirk must see herself not as the representative of the Christian faith of the Scottish people . . . to bring the ordinances of religion to the people in every parish of Scotland but as the representative of Christ with an apostolic mandate for evangelism.
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