FORMER deputy first minister Jim Wallace was “humbled and honoured” as he officially took up the role of Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland earlier today.

Jim Wallace was the first to hold the Scottish Parliament post after the 1999 election and now sits in the House of Lords.

Previously the LibDem leader of the House of Lords, he now sits an unaffiliated peer after suspending his party membership over the Church of Scotland role.

The Kirk revealed he’d taken up the post in October, but it only became official at the General Assembly today, where he was inducted at the Assembly Hall in Edinburgh.

His wife of 38 years, Rosie, their daughter Helen and his brother Neil were amongst the onlookers. Wallace’s other daughter Clare watched online.

The Orkney man will now act as the Kirk’s ambassador at home and abroad and is the second elder in modern times to take up the 12-month role.

After the induction, Green MSP Ross Greer tweeted: “Really chuffed to see Jim Wallace take up the role of @churchmoderator this year. He’s got the combination of diplomatic skills and creative thinking the Kirk needs right now.”

Wallace, a member of St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, told the General Assembly: “I stand before you, today, feeling both humbled and honoured and, I should add, with feelings of excitement and trepidation.

“Upon my nomination as Moderator-Designate, I received many messages of goodwill and many assurances of prayerful support.

“One of my predecessors described her experience as Moderator like ‘being carried along on a carpet of prayer’.

“Today, I ask for your prayers that during this Assembly and in the coming year, I may fulfil these responsibilities with love, grace and wisdom.

“And that if, or more likely when, I get it wrong, your prayers will be ones of forgiveness.”

The peer wore a robe that belonged to Very Rev Dr David Steel – Moderator in 1974-1975 – for the ceremony. He borrowed that from the late minister’s son Lord David Steel of Aikwood, a LibDem peer and former Presiding Officer.

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Nicola Sturgeon also attended the General Assembly, where she greeted Prince William, who gave an opening address in his role as Lord High Commissioner for the Queen.

He told the event, his connection to Scotland “will forever run deep” as a result of connections to Balmoral and St Andrews. Recalling how he was in Balmoral when he was told his mother had died, he said Scotland “is a source of some of my happiest memories but also my saddest”, adding: “Scotland is incredibly important to me and will always have a special place in my heart.

“I’ve been coming to Scotland since I was a small boy.

“As I grew up I saw how my grandmother relishes every minute she spends here and my father is never happier than in walking among the hills.

“My childhood was full of holidays having fun in the fresh air, swimming in lochs, family barbecues with my grandfather in command, and yes the odd midge.”

The Earl of Strathearn is on a week-long visit to Scotland and his wife will join him for the rest of the tour tomorrow. It comes after his brother again criticised the royal family in an US TV interview.