Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Ministers and elders of the Church of Scotland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromMinister of the Church of Scotland)
Leaders of Church of Scotland congregations
This article has multiple issues. Please helpimprove it or discuss these issues on thetalk page.(Learn how and when to remove these messages)
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Ministers and elders of the Church of Scotland" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(June 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article'stone or style may not reflect theencyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. See Wikipedia'sguide to writing better articles for suggestions.(June 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
icon
This article'slead sectionmay need to be rewritten. Please review thelead guide and helpimprove the lead of this article if you can.(June 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

The Ordination of Elders in aScottish Kirk, painting byJohn Henry Lorimer, 1891
Alexander Webster, minister of the Tolbooth Kirk inSt. Giles, Edinburgh andmoderator of the Church of Scotland in 1753, was responsible for providing the first reliable estimate ofScotland's population in modern times. Based on returns from parish ministers, mostly for the year 1755, he calculated Scotland's population at 1,265,380. His census did not, however, include most ofthe country's small Roman Catholic minority, figures for which relied on ministers reporting the number of "papists" in their parishes. Internal evidence suggests that this was done inconsistently.

AChurch of Scotland congregation is led by itsminister andelders.[1] Both of these terms are also used in otherChristian denominations: seeMinister (Christianity) andElder (Christianity). This article discusses the specific understanding of their roles and functions in the Scottish Church.

Terminology

[edit]

The Greek termπρεσβύτεροςpresbýteros, used in theNew Testament as a designation for the leaders of theEarly Church (e.g. Acts 11.30), has three different equivalents in English:elder,presbyter andpriest.Priest is the oldest, a borrowing intoOld English viaLatin,elder (first attested 1526) is a translation of the underlying meaning of the Greek word, andpresbyter (1597) is a learned correction of theloan-word. However, thesemantics ofpriest are complicated by the fact that it is traditionally used also as thetranslation of a different New Testament Greek word,ἱερεύςhiereús, which refers to those who performsacrificial rites in theJerusalem temple and in pagan temples, but also appears as a title forJesus (Heb 7.26). Consequently, the wordpriest was rejected by theReformed andPuritan traditions as a term for Christian leadership, as part of the more general rejection of sacrificial elements in theCatholic understanding of themass.Elder andpresbyter remain theoretically assynonyms in Church of Scotland usage, but in practicepresbyter is often reserved for those elders who are members ofpresbytery, one of the highercourts of the Church.

Minister comes from a Latin word meaning servant, and is also used in the Church as a verb: to minister to the needs ofGod's people.

Concepts

[edit]

In calling itself aPresbyterian Church, the Church of Scotland declares itself to be a Church governed by elders. Although colloquial usage in the Church distinguishes between ministers and elders, the minister is understood theologically to be an elder with a special task. The minister is styled as a "teaching elder", the other members ofKirk Session are known as "ruling elders". All elders are ordained, and the ordination of ministers is understood to be anordinance of a similar nature to that of elders, but with a different charge.

Role of the minister

[edit]

A minister is ordained by the Presbytery to the "ministry of word and sacrament", and is regarded as being theteaching elder.

A minister has the pastoral responsibility for a congregation, which they exercise under the supervision of the Presbytery. The minister is responsible for the conduct of public worship, and is alone authorised to administer the sacraments ofbaptism andcommunion.

The minister ismoderator of the Kirk Session, is a member of the Presbytery, and on average is a member of theGeneral Assembly once every four years.

Selection and training of ministers

[edit]

The longstanding system ofministry training has recently changed.[when?]

Selection

[edit]

People who express interest in entering the ministry must first attend a one-day conference, at which various options (including the ministry of Word and Sacrament, the auxiliary ministry, thediaconate and other forms of church work) are outlined. Thereafter, applicants for the full-time ministry must undertake a variety of assessments, leading up to a residential two-day procedure known as an "Assessment Conference" (previously "Selection School") held at various locations around Scotland. Those who are accepted at the end of this selection procedure are recognised as candidates for the ministry.[2] From this point on, they are under the supervision of their home presbytery, but also of the Ministries Council in the Church's offices inEdinburgh.

Initial training

[edit]

All ministers of the Church of Scotland must have a university qualification intheology ordivinity. While foreign qualifications are accepted, most candidates study for aBachelor of Divinity (B.D.) degree at thetheological colleges of theancient universities of Scotland (St Mary's College, St Andrews;Trinity College, Glasgow;Christ's College, Aberdeen andNew College, Edinburgh). In 2006 theHighland Theological College, Dingwall, was also approved as a centre for training.[3]

An increasing number of ministers are opting to take a further qualification, such as theDiploma in Pastoral Theology (Dip.P.Th.),Master of Theology (M.Th.) orDoctor of Ministry (D.Min.) degree courses.

The B.D. course was traditionally a three-year post-graduate degree, though mature students may be permitted to take a shorter course of studies. Since the 1980s it has also been permissible for school-leavers to go straight to theological college to do a B.D. as a first degree; in this case the course of study is longer, at least five years. The recently revised system has introduced a course with a system of four placements in congregations, replacing the former student attachments, 12 or 18 month probationary period and "trials for licence".

In addition to their academic studies, they are also trained through a conference programme and through the "Ministries Trainling Network" in church law exams, public speaking, safeguarding and pastoral care.

On completing their studies, candidates were formerly "licensed to preach" by their home presbytery and became a probationer, serving a 12 or 18 month full-time probationary period in a parish. This probationary year has now been replaced by a final 15 month placement, although the objective remains very similar (albeit with more short residential training courses.)

When the training has been sustained, the candidate is free to seek a charge. The Church of Scotland does not ordain ministers without simultaneously inducting them into their first charge. This is because, theologically, ministers are ordained "to do" a task rather than "to be" a minister. This stands in contrast to some other denominations which ordain their clergy on completion of training.

Theological colleges

[edit]

Before Church reunion in 1929, theUnited Free Church of Scotland maintained its own colleges in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Glasgow,[4] whilst candidates for the ministry in the Church of Scotland studied in the University Faculties of Divinity. The union of 1929 necessitated the integration of the two systems. The theological colleges now form integral academic schools at the universities ofSt Andrews,Glasgow,Aberdeen and Edinburgh. The Church used to appoint the Professors of Divinity along with certain other chairs but the cost of maintaining these chairs necessitated transferring patronage to theacademic senate oruniversity court of each university.

Though technically still Church colleges, these are almost indistinguishable from the university schools. The Church still advises on the appointment of professors and advises on the appointment of the principal of the college. The head of the School of Divinity at St Andrews is currently (2015)Mark Elliot. The principal of St Mary's College isIan Bradley and as he is an ordained Church of Scotland minister, he is entitled to use the prenominalVery Reverend whilst in office.

Role of the elder

[edit]
Memorial windows commemorating past elders of theTron Kirk inEdinburgh

A ruling elder is ordained by the minister and Kirk Session of the parish, and is answerable to the Kirk Session. Like a minister, an elder is ordained for life.

Unlike members of parish councils in other denominations, elders are understood to have pastoral responsibilities, which they carry out under the guidance of the minister. Usually a parish will be divided into elders' districts, and the elders are expected to visit the church members resident in their district on a regular basis. Elders also often assist the minister in the distribution of the elements at a formal Communion Service.

All elders are members of the Kirk Session. They may also be members of the higher courts of the church. Each Kirk Session appoints one of its members to attend Presbytery, and on average once every four years, one of its members might be commissioned by Presbytery to the General Assembly. Since retired ministers, theology professors and ministers with non-parochial charges are members of Presbytery and sometimes of the Assembly, "equalising elders" are required in the higher courts of the Church to maintain the principle that ministers and elders are represented in equal numbers. Elders are eligible for appointment to any function in the higher courts, including Moderator of the Assembly.

When a congregation is unable to form a Kirk Session, for example when a new congregation is first founded, so-called "assessor elders", from neighbouring Kirk Sessions, may be appointed by the Presbytery.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Our structure".Church of Scotland. 22 February 2010. Retrieved30 June 2025.
  2. ^"Application and Assessment Process".Church of Scotland. 12 February 2024. Retrieved30 June 2025.
  3. ^"What can I study? - Ministry training".www.htc.uhi.ac.uk. Retrieved8 February 2025.
  4. ^Methuen, Charlotte; Firn, Annika; Henneberry, Alicia; Novotny, Jennifer (2019). "The University of Glasgow's Faculty of Divinity in the First World War".Scottish Church History.48 (1):1–33.doi:10.3366/sch.2019.0002.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ministers_and_elders_of_the_Church_of_Scotland&oldid=1299201296"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp