author
Best known as a church body rather than a single writer, this North American Reformed Presbyterian group is linked to classic covenanting texts and testimonies that reflect a strict, historic Presbyterian tradition. Its books read less like personal memoir and more like windows into a community’s theology, worship, and public witness.

by Reformed Presbytery of North America

by Reformed Presbytery of North America
The Reformed Presbytery of North America is a collective religious author: a Presbyterian church body in the covenanting tradition rather than an individual person. Library and public-domain listings credit it with works such as Act, Declaration, & Testimony for the Whole of our Covenanted Reformation and related covenant documents, which were produced in the name of the presbytery rather than a single named author.
Historically, this tradition belongs to the wider Reformed Presbyterian family in North America, whose roots reach back to Scottish Presbyterianism. Modern denominational and historical sources describe the broader Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America as having been organized in Philadelphia in 1798, while also noting later separations that included a continuing Reformed Presbytery branch.
Because this is an institutional author, there is no single confirmed personal biography to give in the usual sense. Readers will get the clearest picture by treating the name as the voice of a church court: formal, doctrinal, and deeply concerned with preserving its understanding of biblical worship, covenant obligations, and historic Reformed belief.