June 2, 2026

Faith & History

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Before the Modern Prayer Movement: Scotland, Saint Andrew, and the Ancient Tradition of Continual Worship

Long before the modern 24-hour prayer movement, Scotland carried historical records of continual worship, pilgrimage, and sacred devotion connected to the ministry of Saint Andrew. This article explores how medieval Scotland understood itself as a nation spiritually shaped through prayer, worship, and the ministry of one of Jesus’ own disciples — and why that history still matters to modern prayer communities today.

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Medieval Scotland Spoke About Saint Andrew as the Apostle Who Converted Their Ancestors to Christianity and Founded Their Nation

A new historical investigation examines the medieval Scottish chronicles behind the Declaration of Arbroath and asks an important question: why did medieval Scotland speak about Saint Andrew not merely as a symbolic patron saint, but as someone connected to the founding and earliest identity of the nation itself? Featuring surviving chronicles, lost archives, and the historical memory Scotland preserved for centuries.

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Saint Andrew, the Declaration of Arbroath, and Scotland’s Lost Historical Memory

A new historical investigation explores the Declaration of Arbroath, Scotland’s ancient connection to Saint Andrew, and the destruction of Scottish religious archives during centuries of war and conquest. Did medieval Scotland preserve a far deeper understanding of its sacred origins than many modern narratives acknowledge today?

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The Spiritual Roots of Scottish Independence

The Spiritual Roots of Scottish Independence examines Scotland’s forgotten foundations as a nation born from prayer, faith, and biblical heritage. Tracing its origins to St. Andrew, this editorial argues that spiritual authority preceded political sovereignty — and that Scotland’s loss of freedom followed the deliberate suppression of worship, prayer, and national identity. A reframing of history that challenges modern narratives and calls the Church to remember what was deliberately erased.