Francesco Faa di Bruno

 Felix Faber

 Frederick William Faber

 Johann Faber (Theologian)

 Johann Faber (of Heilbronn)

 Johann Augustanus Faber

 Matthias Faber

 Philip Faber

 Pope St. Fabian

 St. Fabiola

 Joseph Fabre

 Honoré Fabri

 Diocese of Fabriano and Matelica

 Fabrica Ecclesiæ

 Hieronymus Fabricius

 Robert Fabyan

 Façade

 Jacopo Facciolati

 Canonical Faculties

 Faculties of the Soul

 Facundus of Hermiane

 Diocese of Faenza

 Prospero Fagnani

 Giulio Carlo de' Toschi di Fagnano

 Etienne-Michel Faillon

 Faith

 Protestant Confessions of Faith

 Sts. Faith, Hope and Charity

 Rule of Faith

 The Faithful

 Society of the Faithful Companions of Jesus

 Juan Conchillos Falco

 Faldstool

 Thomas Falkner

 Diocese of Fall River

 Gabriello Fallopio

 Vicomte de Falloux du Coudray

 False Decretals

 Falsity

 Famagusta

 Familiars

 Family

 Diocese of Fano

 Fanon

 Henri Faraud

 Abbey of Farfa

 Diocese of Fargo (Fargus)

 George-Barthélemy Faribault

 Jean-Baptiste Faribault

 Paolo Farinato

 Daniele Farlati

 Alessandro Farnese

 Diocese of Faro

 Faroe Islands

 Fast

 Fatalism

 Fate

 Fathers of Mercy

 Volume 7

 Fathers of the Church

 Lawrence Arthur Faunt

 Charles-Claude Fauriel

 Sts. Faustinus and Jovita

 Faustus of Riez

 Faversham Abbey

 Hervé-Auguste-Etienne-Albans Faye

 Fear (in Canon Law)

 Fear (from Moral Standpoint)

 Ecclesiastical Feasts

 Febronianism

 John de Feckenham

 Johann Michael Feder

 Rudolph William Basil Feilding

 Andreas Benedict Feilmoser

 Johann Ignaz von Felbiger

 Felician Sisters

 Felicissimus

 St. Felicitas

 Sts. Felicitas and Perpetua

 Pope St. Felix I

 Pope Felix II

 Pope St. Felix III

 Pope St. Felix IV

 Anti-Pope Felix V (Amadeus of Savoy)

 Célestin-Joseph Félix

 Sts. Felix and Adauctus

 St. Felix of Cantalice

 St. Felix of Nola

 St. Felix of Valois

 François-Xavier de Feller

 Johann Michael Nathanael Feneberg

 François de Salignac de la Mothe-Fénelon

 John Fenn

 Nicolaus Ferber

 Bl. Ferdinand

 Ferdinand II

 St. Ferdinand III

 Diocese of Ferentino

 Sts. Fergus

 Feria

 Jean-Baptiste-Antoine Ferland

 Archdiocese of Fermo

 Antonio Fernández

 Juan Fernández

 Diego Fernández de Palencia

 Diocese of Ferns

 Archdiocese of Ferrara

 Gaudenzio Ferrari

 Lucius Ferraris

 Vicente Ferre

 Antonio Ferreira

 Rafael Ferrer

 Abbey of Ferrières

 Heinrich Freiherr von Ferstel

 Joseph Fesch

 Josef Fessler

 Domenico Feti

 Fetishism

 François Feuardent

 Baron Ernst Von Feuchtersleben

 Feudalism

 Feuillants

 Louis Feuillet

 Paul-Henri-Corentin Féval

 Benito Jerónimo Feyjóo y Montenegro

 St. Fiacc

 St. Fiacre

 Marsilio Ficino

 Julius von Ficker

 Fideism

 St. Fidelis of Sigmaringen

 Diocese of Fiesole

 Francisco de Figueroa

 Francisco García de la Rosa Figueroa

 Francesco Filelfo

 Filial Church

 Vincenzo da Filicaja

 Filioque

 Guillaume Fillastre (Philastrius)

 Vincenzo Filliucci

 Felix Filliucius

 St. Finan

 St. Finbarr

 Ven. John Finch

 Ven. John Finglow

 Grand Duchy of Finland

 St. Finnian of Moville

 Joseph M. Finotti

 Sts. Fintan

 Fioretti di San Francesco d'Assisi

 Liturgical Use of Fire

 Firmament

 Firmicus Maternus

 Firmilian

 First-Born

 First-Fruits

 Fiscal Procurator

 Symbolism of the Fish

 Philip Fisher

 Daniel Fitter

 James Fitton

 Henry Fitzalan

 Maria Anne Fitzherbert

 Sir Anthony Fitzherbert

 Thomas Fitzherbert

 William John Fitzpatrick

 Richard Fitzralph

 Henry Fitzsimon

 Thomas Fitz-Simons

 Placidus Fixlmillner

 Armand-Hippolyte-Louis Fizeau

 Flabellum

 Ælia Flaccilla

 Flagellants

 Flagellation

 Benedict Joseph Flaget

 Thomas Canon Flanagan

 Flanders

 Jean-Hippolyte Flandrin

 Flathead Indians

 Ven. Mathew Flathers

 Flavia Domitilla

 St. Flavian

 Flavias

 Abbey of Flavigny

 Flaviopolis

 Esprit Fléchier

 Bertholet Flemael

 Patrick Fleming

 Richard Fleming

 Thomas Fleming

 John Fletcher

 William Flete

 Zénaide-Marie-Anne Fleuriot

 Abbey of Fleury

 André-Hercule de Fleury

 Claude Fleury

 Flodoard

 Abbey of Floreffe

 Archdiocese of Florence

 Florence of Worcester

 St. Florentina

 Enrique Flórez

 Jean-Pierre Claris, Chevalier de Florian

 The Florians

 Florida

 Florilegia

 Florus

 John Floyd

 Archdiocese of Fogaras

 Diocese of Foggia

 St. Foillan

 Teofilo Folengo

 Diocese of Foligno

 Folkestone Abbey

 José Ribeiro da Fonseca

 Pedro da Fonseca

 Antonio da Fonseca Soares

 Carlo Fontana

 Domenico Fontana

 Felice Fontana

 Jeanne Fontbonne

 Fonte-Avellana

 Abbey of Fontenelle

 Order and Abbey of Fontevrault

 Abbey of Fontfroide

 Feast of Fools

 Ambrogio Foppa

 John Forbes

 Comte de Charles-Auguste-Marie-Joseph Forbin-Janson

 Egidio Forcellini

 Andrew Foreman

 Laurenz Forer

 Catholic Orders of Foresters

 Forgery, Forger

 Diocese of Forli

 Form

 Henry Formby

 Pope Formosus

 Formularies

 William Forrest

 Arnold Förster

 Frobenius Forster

 Thomas Ignatius Maria Forster

 Diocese of Fortaleza

 Fort Augustus Abbey

 Bl. Adrian Fortescue

 Fortitude

 Fortunato of Brescia

 Venantius Honorius Clementianus Fortunatus

 Diocese of Fort Wayne

 Forty Hours' Devotion

 Forty Martyrs

 Ecclesiastical Forum

 Diocese of Fossano

 Diocese of Fossombrone (Forum Sempronii)

 Fossors

 John Gray Foster

 St. Fothad

 Constant Fouard

 Jean-Bertrand-Léon Foucault

 Foulque de Neuilly

 Foundation

 Foundling Asylums

 Fountains Abbey

 Jehan Fouquet

 Four Crowned Martyrs

 Annals of the Four Masters

 John Fowler

 Fractio Panis

 France

 French Literature

 Marc' Antonio Franceschini

 Bl. Frances d'Amboise

 St. Frances of Rome

 Ausonio Franchi

 Francia

 Francis I

 Rule of Saint Francis

 St. Francis Borgia

 Franciscan Order

 St. Francis Caracciolo

 St. Francis de Geronimo

 St. Francis de Sales

 St. Francis of Assisi

 Bl. Francis of Fabriano

 St. Francis of Paula

 Francis of Vittoria

 Bl. Francis Regis Clet

 St. Francis Solanus

 St. Francis Xavier

 Kaspar Franck

 Giovanni Battista Franco

 Michael Sigismund Frank

 Graf von Frankenberg

 Council of Frankfort

 Frankfort-on-the-Main

 Franks

 Johann Baptist Franzelin

 Diocese of Frascati

 Claude Frassen

 Fraticelli

 Fraud

 Joseph von Fraunhofer

 Denis de Frayssinous

 Louis-Honoré Fréchette

 Fredegarius

 Fredegis of Tours

 Frederick I (Barbarossa)

 Frederick II

 Berenger Fredoli

 Free Church of Scotland

 Ven. William Freeman

 Free-Thinkers

 Free Will

 Federigo Fregoso

 Freiburg

 Diocese of Fréjus (Forum Julii)

 James Fremin

 Nicholas French

 French Catholics in the United States

 Charles-Emile Freppel

 Frequent Communion

 Augustin-Jean Fresnel

 Friar

 Order of Friars Minor

 University of Fribourg (Switzerland)

 Xaver Ehrenbert Fridelli

 St. Frideswide

 St. Fridolin

 Friedrich von Hausen

 Society of Friends (Quakers)

 Friends of God

 Abbey of Frigolet

 Fringes (in Scripture)

 Samuel Fritz

 Jean Froissart

 Eugène Fromentin

 Count Louis de Buade Frontenac

 Bl. Frowin

 St. Fructuosus of Braga

 St. Fructuosus of Tarragona

 Johann Nepomuk von Fuchs

 Joseph Führich

 Fulbert of Chartres

 St. Fulcran

 Diocese of Fulda

 St. Fulgentius

 St. Fabius Claudius Gordianus Fulgentius

 Fulgentius Ferrandus

 Lady Georgiana Charlotte Fullerton

 Bartolommeo Fumo

 Diocese of Funchal

 Fundamental Articles

 Funeral Dues

 Funeral Pall

 Diocese of Fünfkirchen

 Franz Xaver von Funk

 Furness Abbey

 Furni

 John Furniss

 St. Fursey

 Franz Friedrich Wilhelm von Fürstenberg

 Fussola

 John Fust

 William Benedict Fytch

Free Church of Scotland


(Known since 1900 as the UNITED FREE CHURCH)

An ecclesiastical organization in Scotland which includes (1908) more than 500,000 of the 1,200,000 inhabitants of that country professing adherence to Presbyterian principles. The existence of the Free Church as a separate ecclesiastical body dates from 1843, when a large number of members, both lay and clerical, of the Established Church of Scotland, severed their connection with that body as a protest against the encroachment of the civil power on the independence of the Church, especially in the matters of presentation to vacant benefices.

According to the Free-Church view, the Church of Scotland, from the date of its inception in 1560, upon the overthrow of the old religion had possessed the inherent right of exercising her spiritual jurisdiction through her elected assembly, absolutely free of any interference by the civil power. Such an independence had been asserted by her first leaders, Knox and Melville, and especially laid down and claimed in both the first and second books of discipline, issued in 1560 and 1581. The restoration of "prelacy"(the episcopal form of church government) in 1606 by James I, the revival of self governing powers of the Assembly in 1649, its subsequent suspension under Cromwell in 1653 and again after the Restoration, the Revolution settlement in 1690, and the Act of Queen Anne in 1712 re-establishing the system of private patronage in the Presbyterian Church , were the principal crisis , now favorable, now the reverse, to the cherished principles of spiritual independence, through which the Church passed during the first century and a half of its existence. Throughout the eighteenth century a party within the Church continued to protest against civil interference with her rights, especially as regarded patronage; but at the same time there grew up the ecclesiastical party known as Moderates, who in this and other questions displayed an indifference towards state encroachments which more than neutralized the sentiments of the more fervent section. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, however, the latter was strengthened by the growing force of so-called " Evangelicalism", which was sweeping over Scotland as well as England.. The views of the two parties, the Evangelical and the Moderate, became more and more opposed, the final result being the "Ten Years Conflict" between them, which ended in the triumph of the former, and in the passing by the General Assembly in 1834, of the famous "Veto Act". This act asserted (or rather reasserted, for the principle had often been declared in previous Assemblies) that it was a fundamental law of the Church that no pastor should be intruded upon a congregation contrary to the popular will, and that any presentee to a living should be rejected on the dissent of a majority of the heads of families. This direct blow at the right of private patrons was soon challenged in the civil courts, and was ultimately decided (1838) in the famous Auchterarder case against the Church. The decision immediately elicited from the Assembly a still clearer and more outspoken declaration of independence of the Church; and when it was finally confirmed by the House of Lords, in 1839, the Assembly resolved to transmit to the sovereign, through the Lord High Commissioner who presided over its proceedings, a "claim, declaration and protest" complaining of the encroachment of the civil power, and praying for the abolition of patronage. An unfavorable answer was received, and in response to a petition submitted to the House of Commons, that body refused any redress of the grievances complained of. Accordingly at the next meeting of the General Assembly, 369 members, afterwards increased to 474, withdrew in a body, and constituted the first Assembly of the new Free Church, under Dr. Thomas Chalmers as moderator. The ministers and professors adhering to the newly constituted body publicly renounced all claims to the benefices which they had held in the Established Church, thus surrendering an annual income of upwards of £ 100,000.

A sustentation fund, was at once in inaugurated for the new organization, and nearly £ 400,000 was subscribed for the erection of churches in the first year after the "Disruption", as it came to be called. Colleges for the training of the clergy were subsequently built at large cost in Edinburgh and Aberdeen; manses (residences for the ministers) were erected at a cost of a quarter of a million; and an equal or larger amount was expended on the building of congregational schools. After the passing of the Education Act of 1872,most of these schools were voluntarily transferred by the Free Church to the newly established school-boards.

The Free Church never professed to adopt any new articles of faith, to inaugurate any new ritual, or originate any new principle of doctrine or discipline. She claimed to represent the Presbyterian Church of the country enjoying its full spiritual independence, and freed from the undue encroachment of the State; but it did not abandon the principle of establishment, or give up the view that the Church and State ought to be in intimate alliance. This raised the difficulty in the way of its union with the United Presbyterians, the nest most numerous and important body of seceders from the Establishment, and for many years rendered all negotiations for such union abortive. In 1876, Cameronians, or Reformed Presbyterians, joined the Free Church, and, possibly under the stimulus of this achievement, negotiations were renewed for union with the U.P.'s as they were familiarly called. These proved finally successful, and the union between the U.P.'s and the Free Church became an accomplished fact on 31 October, 1900. A small minority of Free Churchmen resisted the fusion of the two bodies, and these (the "Wee Frees", as they were nicknamed) were successful in the Scottish Courts in claiming, as the original Free Church, nearly all the buildings erected by the body in the previous fifty seven years. This anomaly, however was rectified by a subsequent Act of Parliament (following the Royal Commission) which permitted the "WEE FREES" to retain only such churches and other edifices as were proportionate to the small number of their adherents.

The well-wishers of the new United Free Church are naturally looking forward to an enlarged field of influence and a wider scope of activity, both at home and in the mission-field. What must, however, fill with anxiety every friend of Scottish Christianity who studies the teaching of this body, both in its training colleges and in its pulpits, is the spirit of rationalism by which it is becoming more and more pervaded. A generation has since passed away since its most brilliant member William Robertson Smith, was summarily removed from his professorial chair at Aberdeen on account of his latitudinarian views as expressed in his published articles. The "Higher Criticism" of the Free Church of today, largely based as it is on the rationalizationing influence of German Protestant theology, goes far beyond the "heresies and errors" for which Smith indicted thirty years ago. It is hardly too much to say that the modern Free Churchman is really not a Christian at all, in the Catholic sense of that word. The United Free Church, by the re-arrangement of its two constituent bodies has now (1908) twelve synods and twenty-four presbyteries. Its supreme court is the General Assembly, which meets every May in Edinburgh. According to the latest statistics the total membership body is about 504,000, divided into 1623 congregations. 244,000 scholars, taught by 26,000 teachers, frequent the Sunday Schools which number 2400. Some 300 agents from Scotland, and nearly 4000 native pastors and teachers, are employed in foreign mission work, and the whole income of the Church, at the close of this last financial year, was estimated at £ 1,029,000.

TURNER, The Scottish Secession of 1843 (Edinburgh, 1854); WILSON, Free Church Principles (Edinburgh, 1887); BROWN, Annals of the Disruption (Edinburgh,1885); BUCHANAN, Ten Years' Conflict (Glascow, 1849); SYNOW, Die schottischen Kirchen (Potsdam, 1845); HANNA, Life of Chalmers (1852).

D.O. HUNTER-BLAIR