[The Age of the Reformation by Preserved Smith]@TWC D-Link book
The Age of the Reformation

CHAPTER I
734/1552

Though bloodless, the Scotch revolution was as thorough, in its own small way, as that of Robespierre.

Religion was changed and a new distribution of political power secured, transferring the ascendency of the crown and of the old privileged orders to a class of "new men," low-born ministers of the kirk, small "lairds" and burgesses.

The very constitution of the new Parliament was revolutionary.

In the old legislative assemblies between ten and twenty greater barons were summoned; in the Parliament of 1560 no less than 106 small barons assembled, and it was to them, together with the burgesses of the cities, that the adoption of the new religion was due.
A Confession of Faith, [Sidenote: Scottish Confession] on extreme Calvinistic lines, had been drawn up by Knox and his fellows; this was presented to Parliament and adopted with only eight dissenting voices, those of five laymen and three bishops.

The minority was overawed, not only by the majority in {363} Parliament but by the public opinion of the capital and of the whole Lowlands.
[Sidenote: Laws of the estates] Just a week after the adoption of the Confession, the estates passed three laws: (1) Abolishing the pope's authority and all jurisdiction by Catholic prelates; (2) repealing all previous statutes in favor of the Roman church; (3) forbidding the celebration of mass.


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