Assessments of the impact on Scotland of the union of 1603 remain divided, with many continuing to regard 1625 as a more significant transition. Some believe that the advent of ‘absentee monarchy’ in 1603 coincided with a failure in mechanisms for counsel-giving, which persisted and led ultimately to the revolution of 1637-8. Others reject the concept of ‘absentee monarchy’, and some argue that institutional developments before 1603 allowed government to function without the day-to-day participation of the king. This chapter examines the means by which central government sought and received counsel during the reign of James VI. It explores the diversity of institutional contexts in which this operated, both secular and ecclesiastical. It tr...