IT was as far back as 1851
that the late Rev. George Philip, D.D., was, by resolution of General
Assembly, translated from Stonehaven to be first minister of Union Church,
Glasgow, which was then the furthest west congregation of any denomination
on the South Side. There was not a single church in Pollokshields, which
consisted only of St. Andrew's Road; not one in Kinning Park, which was
unbuilt; none in Plantation, then a trim residential estate, nor any at all
on the road to Paisley. The nearest was in Govan, where there were but
three. It will thus be seen that Union served a wide potential area, and so
it came to pass in after years that, when new churches were planted in
the regions beyond, their initial life-blood was
largely drawn from it. It was a vital centre of Christian training for
successive bands of young men, who have gone into all the earth, and many of
whom have risen to distinguished positions in banking, insurance,
commercial, literary and municipal circles.
The church was seated for
about 1200 persons, and was soon fully let, the committee having sometimes
to sit till the small hours of morning in order to adjust rival claims.
Thomas Miller, the church officer, was grave and consequential, as was
befitting, wearing a marvellously twisted white neck-cloth and
swallow-tailed coat on Sundays. Though never over-burdened with duties, he
delighted to magnify their importance and used to remark sententiously that
"it was better to wear out than to rust out." R. M. Walker, the precentor,
was tall, handsome, clean-shaven, with a superlative voice. When on duty he
appeared in gown and white tie, and sometimes, I think, in gloves. He had a
rich Doric accent, and just before the intercessory prayer would frequently
announce that "the prayers of the congregation are requisted for a young man
gawing abrode." I believe it was never quite authoritatively settled between
him and Thomas as to which was the more indispensable functionary.
The great landmarks in the
congregational year were the spring and autumn communions held in April and
October, for which elaborate arrangements had to be made in advance. The
preceding Thursday was kept as a "Fast-day," when business in the city was
suspended.
There were two well-attended
services as on Sabbath, a third being held in the evening, at which young
communicants were publicly admitted. On Saturday afternoon there was another
diet of worship, and on Monday forenoon a thanksgiving service. For each of
these a preacher was brought from a distance, the Saturday one usually
taking the heavy duty of assisting also on the following day. At such
seasons our house was full and sometimes we entertained angels.
On Sabbath public worship
began at 11 a.m. and lasted continuously till 3.30 p.m. or later. After the
"action" sermon three tables were served in succession, each with an address
before and after, and finally, a concluding exhortation, always taken by the
minister himself. We children insisted on being allowed to sit out the whole
with a ten minutes' interval for sandwiches in the vestry. A small brother,
having been forcibly taken home by a servant, simply opened the door the
moment her back was turned and found his own way back.
For us the special interest
began with the giving out of the 35th Paraphrase when communicants were
invited to take their places, while the elders brought forward the Communion
elements. In the course of this singing Thomas threw open the side door, and
a stately procession entered bearing the bread and wine on napkined salver
and in shining cup and deposited the same on the Communion Table just as we
reached the words —
With love to man this cup is
fraught,
Let all partake the sacred draught,
Through latest ages let it pour,
In memory of my dying hour.
The good men "wist not that
their faces shone" or that their every posture was a sermon. How simple and
eloquent was the entire service! the "Fencing of the Table," the reading of
the "Warrant," the prayer of Thanksgiving, the breaking of the Bread, the
ordered distribution, the kindly passing from hand to hand, the reverent
partaking, the return to the platform of the elders with muffled step, the
solemn silence which followed, broken, at length, by a silvery voice,
beginning a tender admonition and ending with the words "Go then from His
Table singing His praise "—
O, thou my soul bless God the
Lord
And all that in me is
Gently striking his pitchfork
the dignified precentor led us into Coleshill or New London and then
continued sonorously, reciting two lines at a time —
Be stirred up His holy name,
To magnify and bless
and so on, as pew by pew the
communicants dispersed, while others pressed in to take their places.
This was our opportunity to
retire for hasty refreshment, but we did like to be back in time for the
lines—
Such pity as a father hath
Unto his children dear
and would on no account miss—
Frail man ! his days are like
the grass,
As flower in field he grows
where we thought the
precentor excelled himself.
In the evening there was
invariably a crowded Thanksgiving service for which we were occasionally
allowed to choose the Psalms. This would ensure for the opening—
The Lord of Heaven confess
On high His glory raise
while the concluding praise
would likely be
Now Israel may say
or the favourite Paraphrase—
To Him that loved the souls of
men
My recollection is of "many
lights in the upper chamber," of condensed human breaths trickling down the
window-sills, of one eloquent exhortation from the words of Paul, "So run
that ye may obtain," and of another from the letter to the Church at Sardis
"They shall walk with Me in white for they are worthy." Of baptisms I
remember as many as a dozen at one time — a rare sight nowadays — though in
the Oude Kerk at Amsterdam I once witnessed, as many as forty, when the
continuous wailing was as the bleating of lambs.
A notable event to us
children, of a totally different kind, was the annual congregational soiree.
This was held in the City Hall or Merchants' Hall, and was a function far
removed from the modern conversazione or social. Several hundreds sat down
together. Elaborate programmes were printed. Tickets were sold in
neighbouring shops — "Price is. 3d. for adults and 9d. for juveniles." For
this a good tuck-in was expected and provided in the shape of substantial
tea, followed by two "services of fruit," the first consisting of oranges
and the latter of raisins and almonds, with a top dressing of Almeria
grapes. The tea was understood to be infused — if not, indeed, boiled — in
subterranean cauldrons, and seemed endowed with a special faculty for
scalding the tongue. It was at one of these services of fruit that I first
saw a blood orange, and naturally concluded that a waiter had cut his finger
while dividing it.
Soiree speaking was regarded
as one of the fine arts and assumed many forms. Dr. Walter C. Smith, for
instance, began his address by quoting an old couplet—
Ah, me ! what perils do
environ
The man that meddles with cold iron
which he proceeded to parody
as follows:—
Alas ! the ills that do
embarrass
The man who has to speak at swarries,
and forthwith proceeded to
add many words of wisdom and encouragement.
The Revs. William Arnot and
Dr. John Forbes were introduced as the "great bells of St. Peter's and St.
Paul's." On one occasion Dr. Robert Buchanan gave a luminous exposition of
the "Cardross Case," though it is doubtful if we young people ever clearly
understood the legal subtleties of " satisfying production." The wittiest
address I can recall was one by that genial Irishman, the Rev. Jacob
Alexander of Stockwell. It was full of good things, and overflowed with
telling humour. The worthy treasurer would conclude his somewhat
matter-of-fact financial statement with the consoling reflection that we
were " now in the happy position of owing no man anything but love and good
works." The precentor revelled in the opportunity of demonstrating the
capabilities of his choir, which, though it had comparatively little scope
on Sunday, was here permitted to show its paces in the "Heavens are telling"
or the "Cloud-capt towers and gorgeous palaces."
Home Misson work always lay
near the heart of minister and people, and Chalmers Church, long since
removed from its original location, was the crowning outcome of these
efforts. The earliest beginnings were made in a disreputable- looking hall
reached by a rickety flight of outside stairs in Chapel Close, off Main
Street, Gorbals. Centuries before a "leprois hospitall" had existed in this
neighbourhood, to which was attached a chapel dedicated to St. Ninian, hence
the name of this most unpromising "close." Within the walls of its dingy
apartment a ragged school was taught daily by David Rattray, while on
Sundays an evangelistic service was conducted in the same place by the Rev.
Adam White, afterwards of India, and others. It was no uncommon occurrence
to have a rat or two cross the floor during worship. How very different from
the cosy and well-lighted mission halls of to-day! Yet noble men, and women
too, worked there night and day, giving of their best, that a good
foundation might be well and truly laid.
For many long years a heavy
burden of debt remained on the church, to the removal of which Mr. Philip
steadily set his face. At the very first big soiree in the City Hall he pled
for £1,000, which was duly subscribed with astonishing liberality. Bit by
bit the load was lessened, until all that remained was some £500. Once more
the annual collection had come round, when it was hoped to obtain a further
£60 or £70. Mr. Philip had exchanged pulpits with Mr. Arnot, of St. Peter's,
in the forenoon, and when they met afterwards on the Broomielaw Bridge Mr.
Arnot was able to inform his friend that no less than ^350 had already been
put into the plate. It turned out that an eccentric old gentleman who had
latterly been coming much about was responsible for £300. By the afternoon
the total had been so considerably increased that two generous members laid
their heads together and wiped out the balance. The writer can remember
being taken to call upon the old man in the evening, partly to acknowledge
his unexpected liberality and partly to make quite sure that there had been
no mistake. We were ushered into a cold, gaunt room with all the crystal of
the establishment laid out upon the centre table. A quaint figure with
mediaeval neckcloth shortly appeared, and with the utmost simplicity
explained that he usually attended an Established church, but did not feel
he had been doing his full duty towards the support of evangelical
ordinances in the city, and that his gift was freely offered with all
sincerity and gratitude for benefits received.
Ever since its inception the
Union congregation has been ministered to by a succession of able preachers,
and the church has recently been remodelled on institutional lines, in order
more effectually to meet the present needs of the district.