List of Church of Scotland synods and presbyteries explained

The Church of Scotland has a Presbyterian structure, which means it is organised under a hierarchy of courts. Traditionally there were four levels of courts: the Kirk Session (at congregational level), the Presbytery (at local area level), the Synod (at a regional level) and the General Assembly (the Church's highest court).

It is the presbyteries which have oversight of parishes and pastoral responsibility for parish ministers, and the Kirk Sessions of the individual parishes are subordinated to them. A parish minister is answerable to the Presbytery, not to the Kirk Session.

History and mergers before 2020

Scottish local government was reorganised in 1975, creating a new system of regions and districts to replace the long-standing counties and burghs. The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland also ordered a major reorganisation of presbyteries in the mid-1970s, redrawing presbytery boundaries to make them broadly contiguous with the then-new local government boundaries. An example was the union of the former Presbyteries of Cupar and St Andrews, creating a new Presbytery of St Andrews (which also included the Parishes of Newport-on-Tay, Wormit and Tayport, previously in the Presbytery of Dundee). This new Presbytery's boundaries mirrored the North East Fife District Council.

Following further local government reorganisation in the 1990s (replacing regions and districts with a single-tier system of councils), it was proposed to further considerably reduce the number of Presbyteries (possibly to as few as seven). This proposal was rejected by the General Assembly. However, the synods were abolished in the early 1990s.

The following mergers took place before 2020:

Mergers from 2020 to 2024

The Church of Scotland is currently in a process of consultations with the aim of reducing the number of presbyteries to around 12.[1] [2] The current completed mergers are as follows:

Therefore, the total number of presbyteries now stands at 14.[3]

Presbyteries

  1. Presbytery of Edinburgh and West Lothian (merger of West Lothan and Edinburgh)
  2. Presbytery of Lothian and Borders (merger of: Lothian; Melrose and Peebles; Duns; and Jedburgh)
  3. Presbytery of the South West (merger of: Annandale and Eskdale; Dumfries and Kirkcudbright; Wigtown and Stranraer; Ayr; Irvine and Kilmarnock; and Ardrossan)
  4. Presbytery of Clyde (merger of: Greenock and Paisley, and Dumbarton)
  5. Presbytery of Glasgow
  6. Presbytery of Forth Valley and Clydesdale (merger of: Lanark, Hamilton, and Falkirk)
  7. Presbytery of Fife (merger of: St Andrews, Kirkcaldy, and Dunfermline)
  8. Presbytery of Perth (merger of: Angus, Dundee, Dunkeld and Meigle, Perth, and Stirling)
  9. Presbytery of the North East and Northern Isles (merger of: Aberdeen and Shetland; Buchan; Gordon; Kincardine and Deeside; Moray; and Orkney)
  10. Clèir Eilean ì (merger of: Argyll, Abernethy, Inverness, Lochaber, Ross, Sutherland, Caithness, Lochcarron-Skye, and Uist)
  11. Presbytery of Lewis
  12. Presbytery of England
  13. International Presbytery (known as Presbytery of Europe until 2016)
  14. Presbytery of Jerusalem

Former presbyteries

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Scotland . The Church of . 2023-01-19 . Presbytery reform continues as three new presbyteries formed . 2024-06-04 . The Church of Scotland . en.
  2. Web site: Scotland . The Church of . 2020-03-02 . Church reform timeline . 2024-06-04 . The Church of Scotland . en.
  3. Web site: Scotland . The Church of . 2012-01-17 . Presbytery list . 2024-06-04 . The Church of Scotland . en.