The
Book of Common Prayer had been introduced as the primary
liturgical book of the
Church of England post-
English Reformation, replacing multiple medieval
Catholic texts with vernacular and reformed rites. The
1549 and
1552 prayer books–the latter more reformed than the former–were both largely the work of
Thomas Cranmer, the
Archbishop of Canterbury. Cranmer, at the behest of
Edward VI, had produced the
Edwardine Ordinals which were increasingly associated with the prayer book and often bound in with the text. Following the death of
Mary I, who had briefly reintroduced Catholic practices and service books in the Church of England,
Elizabeth I assumed the throne and restored the reformed liturgy according to the 1552 model with the
1559 prayer book. Elizabeth I was contending with pressures from Protestant
nonconformists, Catholic
recusants, and debates such as the
Vestarian Controversy within her church. These strains resulted in the
Elizabethan Religious Settlement and the Church of England seeking to strike a
via media between Protestant and Catholic influences. The Calvinistic worship in Scotland when
James VI sat on the Scottish throne was the
Book of Common Order, in conformity to
John Knox's
Genevan Form of Prayers. According to a rumour in Scotland,
Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine had unsuccessfully attempted to convince
Mary, Queen of Scots–James's Catholic mother and the
cardinal's niece–to adopt the Elizabethan English prayer book. This was poorly received by the staunch
Scottish Reformers, who viewed it as little better than Catholic practice. The young King James VI was gifted an English prayer book by
Adam Bothwell and copies were sold in Jacobean
Edinburgh. However, James opposed the "evil
mass said in English" and some Puritans were trying remove even the Calvinist
Book of Common Order from public worship. In his
Basilikon Doron, James implicitly supported the
via media approach. ==Hampton Court Conference and adoption==