Thank you, and yes, I have that information.
No, kirk is never written with a C as far as I know.
There was a Rev Thomas Ramsay in the parish of Kirkden, but his successor, one Patrick Durham*, was ordained in 1623, so it seems a bit odd, and I hoped that a fresh eye that did not know any of the background would be able to read it and confirm what I thought.
*I have no idea whether he was related to Grizel Durham. Or whether Rev Thomas Ramsay was related to Sir Gilbert Ramsay.
My ultimate objective is to find actual evidence for various statements, for example the assertion in the item quoted that the marriage was 'dissolved'. Dissolution of a marriage was such an exceptional event in the 17th century - even in the 19th century it required an Act of Parliament - that it must have required action at the highest level, but so far I have found no definite evidence for this particular marriage having been dissolved.
Some 'sources' say that Elizabeth Auchinleck was Gilbert Ramsay's first wife; some say that Grizel Durham was only married twice; some say that Gilbert Ramsay had a son by Grizel Durham; and others do not mention any family. With so many contradictions, I cannot trust any of the readily available secondary 'sources' and need to go back to seek primary sources - such as the will# of Grizel's first husband, who died in 1624, and this record of her marriage to Gilbert Ramsay in 1630.
#I have a copy of it, and I can read about one word in ten, but I can read the signature of Grizel Durham in it so I am pretty sure it's the right one!