Even more commonly,
The Free Kirk is heard as an informal name for the
Free Church of Scotland, the remnant of an evangelical presbyterian church formed in 1843 when its founders withdrew from the Church of Scotland. See: •
Free Church of Scotland (1843–1900) •
Free Church of Scotland (since 1900) A pair of rhyming jibes remain from the time of the heated split of the Disruption in 1843, when about a third of the Auld Kirk of Scotland left to form the Free Kirk. The Free Kirkers, who had sometimes given up homes as well as church buildings and started financially from scratch, were taunted with the rhyme: “
The Free Kirk, the wee Kirk, the Kirk without the steeple”. This rhyme linking the Free Kirk with the derogatory diminutive "wee" was offensive, and a reply was devised in:
The Auld Kirk, the cauld Kirk. The Kirk wi’out the people. ==High Kirk==
High Kirk is the term sometimes used to describe a congregation of the Church of Scotland that uses a building that had been a
cathedral prior to the
Reformation. As the Church of Scotland is not governed by
bishops, it has no cathedrals in the episcopal sense of the word. In more recent times, the traditional names have been revived, so that in many cases both forms can be heard:
Glasgow Cathedral, as well as the
High Kirk of Glasgow, and
St. Giles' Cathedral, as well as the
High Kirk of Edinburgh. The term "High Kirk", however, should be used with some caution. Several towns have a congregation known as the High Kirk that were never pre-Reformation cathedrals. Examples include: •
Dundee, where the High Kirk is not the historic
Dundee Parish Church known as St Mary's, but St David's; •
Paisley, where there were former congregations and parishes surrounding three churches: the High Kirk (now formally Oakshaw Trinity Church, but still retaining the High Kirk name), the Middle Kirk and the
Laigh Kirk, the Middle Kirk no longer existing as a religious institution and none of the three names referred to
Paisley's historic Abbey; • Stevenston High Kirk in
Ayrshire. There is no connection between the term 'High Kirk' and the term '
High Church', which is a type of
Churchmanship within the
Anglican Communion. ==Kirk Session==