The History of the Reformation of Religion in Scotland: With Which Are Included Knox's Confession and the Book of Discipline
1559

The History of the Reformation of Religion in Scotland: With Which Are Included Knox's Confession and the Book of Discipline
1559
This is not history written from a safe distance. John Knox composed these pages with the炽热 conviction of a man who believed he was witnessing divine providence unfold in real time. The Scottish Reformation was not a gentle theological debate; it was a violent reckoning with centuries of spiritual authority, and Knox was at its burning center. Here he records the martyrdom of Patrick Hamilton, the courage of dissenting friars who risked everything to speak against clerical corruption, and the chaotic birth of a Protestant nation from the wreckage of Catholic Scotland. The included Confession and Book of Discipline reveal not just doctrine but the audacious blueprint for a society rebuilt from the ground up in service to God. Knox writes with the urgency of someone who knows his account will outlive him, who believes these words constitute a testimony before posterity. For readers interested in the raw, unfiltered voice of religious revolution, this text offers something rare: the chance to hear the Reformation as it happened, not as scholars later interpreted it.

