1839-40font>
WITH the return of Mr.
M'Cheyne, Mr. Burns’ stated labours at Dundee necessarily came to a
close, and though the somewhat delicate state of his friend’s health
still for a season rendered his assistance in pastoral work more or less
needful, his movements became henceforth of a more varied and desultory
kind. On the 27 th he was at Abemyte, of which his endeared friend Mr.
Hamilton was then the assistant minister, where he addressed a crowded
audience from the words, “God so loved the world,” &c. “The people
seemed much solemnized, and at the close a few were shedding silent
tears. Mr. Wilson, the old minister, stayed till near the end (about
twelve o’clock), and seemed much interested; and dear James Hamilton,
who I think is decidedly growing in grace, spoke to the people a little
towards the end in a very close and affecting way.” From thence he
proceeded to Bridge of Earn, where, though he complained that he “did
not feel particularly assisted in preaching, and was much humbled, on
coming out, from a view of his own want of simple and supreme desire for
the divine glory,” he enjoyed much the congenial society of the
minister, Mr. Cumming, and rejoiced to hear of some hopeful tokens of a
coming blessing on his field of labour. “Pray on,” Mr. Somerville had
said at the close of the communion services the week before, “and you
will soon have a revival here.” Next morning he was in Perth, and had
his first sight of a field already white unto the harvest, and in which
he was soon to spend many a day of abounding but delightful labour:
“Friday, November 29th, 1839.—I had intended to leave Perth this morning
by ten o’clock, but was prevailed on by Miss M , whom I saw at the
Bridge of Earn, to think of remaining till four P.M.*, and then thought
I might as well stay all night and preach among them; accordingly I came
to Perth at one o’clock, and having met Andrew Gray at Mrs. M ’s, where
I took up my lodging, it was agreed that I should preach in his church
at seven o’clock. Some men were accordingly sent'round to give
intimation, and short and partial as the notice was, the church was
crowded, and hundreds went away who could not get admittance. I preached
from Job xxxiii. 24, and had unusual liberty throughout. We did not
separate till near eleven, and I am persuaded that had I had time to
wait there were not a few who were in deep anxiety about their souls; as
it was, two men and four or five women came up after me to the vestry
under deep concern.
“Saturday, November 30th, 1839.—I this morning met at breakfast Andrew
Gray and Mr. Milne, who has just been settled in St. Leonard’s Church,
and with them I walked about on the quay for a considerable time waiting
for the boat, which was considerably behind her time owing to the flood
in the river, and had much interesting conversation. Both of these dear
friends, but especially Mr. Milne, seem deeply anxious for a stirring
among the dry bones in poor Perth, where they are very many and very
dry, and both kindly pressed me to come back to them soon.”
He returned to Dundee, but only on his way to St. Andrews, to which he
had been strongly urged to return with the view of following up the
impression created at his first visit:—
“Sabbath, November 31 st, 1839—I preached in the forenoon for Mr. Robb
at Strathkinnes—text, John xv. During the first prayer I had great
nearness to God. Riding straight home I went almost immediately to the
parish church, and there preached to an immense audience, including Drs.
Haldane, Buist, &c., Professor Jackson of the divinity chair, Sir D.
Brewster, Mr. Gillespie, &c. Before all these learned men, blessed be
the Lord, I was not allowed to feel in the least abashed, but testified
the gospel of the grace of God to them all with as much plainness and
liberty as on most other occasions—subject, Job xxxiii. 24. I preached
to a most densely crowded audience in the evening in the Secession
Church, with more enlargement than during the day, from Isaiah liv. 5.
At half-past nine I went home, feeling less fatigued than in the
morning, though I had spoken for between seven and eight hours.
“Monday, December 1st, 1839.—This morning I preached to the inquirers,
in Mr. Lothian’s church at eleven o’clock, from Psalm li., upon
repentance. It was a solemn season. At two o’clock I met the fishermen
in the Secession Church, and preached to them in as nautical a mode as I
could command, feeling much supported. At eight o’clock I lectured to a
crowded audience in the Secession Church from Luke vii. 36-52. It was an
affecting subject, and not a few of the people as well as myself
appeared to be in a very tender frame. On coming down from the pulpit
many came to bid me farewell, with whom I was led by circumstances to
stand and speak for a considerable time. Many at this time were weeping
profusely, and hope the Holy Spirit was sealing some souls to the day of
redemption.”
These hopes were not disappointed. “To many,” says an old disciple,
whose name will long be fragrant in the city and neighbourhood of St.
Andrews, “ that season, I trust, was the birth-time of their souls, and
to believers a time of great revival and refreshment. To me, it was a
feast of fat things, and I trust of great blessing. Certainly I never
heard the gospel message so clearly preached, so unfettered, so
unbeclouded; and as faith cometh by hearing, so faith came to my soul,
and, out of obscurity, I saw and felt the love of God in a way so
melting and so overflowing as to make me weep. May I never lose the
impression produced' by that sermon from these words: ‘He that believeth
doth enter into rest' and another also from Mr. Wight, ‘ Hold fast the
beginning of your confidence steadfast unto the end.’ What an exhibition
of the fulness and freeness and completeness of salvation to the
believing soul! “Doubting Castle” was quite demolished; every chain
struck off; closed lips opened to shout for joy and sing praise to our
redeeming God.” . . .
On the 6th December he expresses himself as “in great difficulty in
knowing my own duty, whether to remain steadily in Dundee or to visit it
only among the many places which seem at present ripe for the harvest.”
In the meantime, however, he continues his evangelistic excursions,
guided simply by the calls which immediately pressed upon him, and
having no other plan than that of doing what his hand found to do, and
doing it with his might. The next entry is interesting, as illustrating
the manner in which he unweariedly sought to sow the precious seed
beside all waters, scarcely ever losing an opportunity of speaking a
word in behalf of his Master wherever there was a human ear to hear it,
whether in the house or by the way, on the top of a coach, on the deck
or cabin of a boat, or to the random travellers on a country road.
Instances of this occur perpetually, and in every variety of
circumstances, in his journal, and give perhaps more than anything else
in his life and ministry, the impression of one who lived for nothing
else but to serve and glorify Christ. It is touching often to mark how
eagerly and thankfully he hailed such opportunities, not as calls to the
discharge of a difficult duty, but as special tokens of the divine mercy
and favour towards himself. To give him the liberty of conducting divine
worship and delivering the message of grace, at any time or in any place
where a few immortal souls were gathered together, was to lay him under
the deepest of all obligations. Thus no one who ever spent the briefest
time alone with him, or even met him casually by the way, Could for a
moment doubt that in the truest and fullest sense to him “to live was
Christ:”
“Thursday, December 8th, 1839.—I this day went by coach from Dundee to
Cumbernauld. ... At Cumbernauld I left the coach, after giving tracts to
all on it and in it (a practice which I intend to follow wherever I go,
as eminently calculated to advance the salvation of souls), and walked
over the hill towards Kilsyth. I first made up to two boys going home
from school, who seemed very ignorant of Jesus. I Spoke to them, gave
them tracts, and shortly prayed with them on the road. I next met Mr.
Lusk going home, with whom I also prayed on the road. At the
Craigmarloch Bridge I met widow Mitchell and her daughter Agnes, an old
school companion of my own. With them I prayed—going for a little into
the house. At home I found all well—my father absent at the presbytery,
and expected to return in the evening with some minister to officiate in
the evening meeting. This duty, however, was devolved upon me. ... I
preached from Ephesians v. 1, chiefly seeking the edification of those
lately converted to the Lord. During the service my father and Dr.
Smyth1 of Glasgow came in. It was delightful indeed for me to meet,
after the congregation dismissed, with many of the dear lambs of Jesus’
fold, who appeared to be growing in faith and love both towards Jesus
and towards each other. All the road home was strewed with little groups
of these dear believers waiting to welcome me back among them and
receive some word of exhortation.”
One object he had had in coming to the west had been to address once
more the members of the Glasgow University Missionary Society, which had
formed so important a link in the history of his higher life, and with
which so many hallowed associations were connected. Difficulties,
however, had arisen in obtaining the use of the usual place of meeting
within the University, and he was constrained to content himself with a
few hours of private, but to him most delightful intercourse with some
of those who were most like-minded with himself in regard to the great
cause he had come to plead. Meanwhile, important work was awaiting him
in another quarter, where he was not expected, but much desired:
"Saturday, December 7th.—In the afternoon I sailed down the Clyde, but
was in a very dead frame of soul, and could hardly bring myself to speak
for Jesus to any of the passengers. Indeed, though it is always duty to
be doing the work of an evangelist, it is a duty entirely dependent upon
the prior one of ‘living in the Spirit.’ It is a fearful sin to be going
through the world with a light kindled by the Holy Ghost to guide
sinners to Jesus, and yet to carry this as a dark lantern which can give
no benefit to any one. But ah! how vain is it, on the other hand, to
hold up a lamp to one when the light is almost out, and the oil is
nearly done! May I always be like a lamp full of oil (the Holy Spirit),
burning brightly with the love of Christ, and guiding those that are in
darkness to the strait gate and narrow way that leadeth unto life!
“Before I left the boat I spoke to a young woman from Gourock, whom I
saw in mourning, and who, I found, had lost within the last six years
her father and mother, and her uncle and aunt, with whom she went to
live after her parents died. She seemed anxious, but in great danger of
settling on the quicksands of legality. I gave her a copy of Ralph
Erskine’s sermon on the Harmony of the Divine Attributes.
“At Port-Glasgow I found the Simpsons all well, and was delighted to
find that I had indeed come opportunely, and according to a marvellous
dispensation of the Lord’s providence. Mr. Kennedy, expecting my brother
I to preach his first sermon in his church on Sabbath, had agreed to go
to Greenock on that day, and fill Mr. Smith’s pulpit in his absence at
Rutherglen communion, but, to his dismay, on Saturday morning he got a
letter from I saying that he could not come, and that Mr. K. was
mistaken in supposing that he had ever given a promise to do so. Mr. K.
was just sitting with the letter in his hand, and hardly knowing what to
say or do, when Mr. Simpson came in and showed him my letter from
Glasgow, which I had written without any concert with I , intimating
that I would be in Port-Glasgow on Sabbath, and that I would wish him if
possible to secure Mr. Smith of Greenock’s pulpit for me one half of the
day—the very pulpit which Mr. K. had agreed to fill. It was accordingly
fixed that I should preach forenoon and evening in Port-Glasgow, and
afternoon in Greenock.
“Sabbath, December 7th, 1839.—In the forenoon of this hallowed day I
lectured to Mr. Kennedy’s people from Romans iii. 19. They seemed
attentive. Riding down to Greenock, I preached, with considerable
liberty from the fear of man, and desire for the glory of God in the
salvation of sinners, from Job xxxiii. 24. Riding home again I preached
to a crowded audience from Isaiah xlii. 21. . . . After coming home I
enjoyed with the Simpsons a sweet season of communion, especially at
family worship. Dear and godly Mr. Simpson seemed full of the Holy
Ghost, &c. . . .
“Monday, December 9th, 1839.—At Paisley I stayed with my dear sister
till twelve o’clock, when I set out by coach for Glasgow. She has indeed
been sorely chastened, but it has been in infinite mercy, and she seems
to be becoming through this means in the hand of a redeeming God and
Father, a partaker of his holiness. Praise to the Lord!
“After being an hour and half alone at Uncle I ’s, I went down to a
prayer-meeting of our Missionary Society Committee at Mr. Govan’s.1
There were about sixteen present. Mr. Govan began with prayer, and after
we had sung I then read and spoke for some time with much comfort from a
part of the 68th Psalm: ‘ O God! thou to thine heritage,’ &c.; after
which we sang a part of this sweet Psalm, and prayed, the service
devolving upon me. After the blessing was pronounced, the memorial to
the Senatus was read, and as its success was closely connected with the
glory of the Lord in the salvation of the students, I suggested that we
ought to lay it before the Lord in special prayer before we separated.
Mr. Stevenson2 accordingly prayed with us in regard to it; and we
parted, seeming to have all enjoyed our meeting, and some of us at least
having, I trust, found it a meeting with the Lord Jehovah, the portion
of Israel. It seemed to us a token for good that the Lord by his
providence had shut us up, beyond our own intention, to begin our
missionary meetings with one for prayer alone, a thing which we had
never before done. Before parting I pressed upon my dear brethren the
necessity of labouring for the conversion of the students of their own
acquaintance, and of having prayer-meetings to which to invite such as
might be under some concern about salvation, though not far enough
advanced to take part in conducting such meetings.
“Tuesday, December 10th, 1839.—. . . . Preached to the dear Kilsyth
flock in the evening from John xv. 1. 2. . . . I had in the afternoon of
this day several very interesting conversations with particular
individuals—as widow Miller, a remarkable old woman, who was converted
on Monday evening, July 29th, in the meal-market, while I was speaking
after Mr. Somerville had concluded. She appears to be making marvellous
progress in the knowledge and love of Emmanuel, and being naturally of a
superior cast of mind, she makes the most beautiful and striking
remarks; she said, for instance, ‘ Oh! you must rouse them, you must
rouse them to-night, just as a mason drives his chisel with his mell
upon the stones; and are we not all stones—rough stones, till God hew
and polish us? You roused them before, just as if you were to put a cold
hand on a man’s warm face.’ She said also to a poor old beggar, ‘Oh! you
must be made new Robby; it’s old Robby with you yet. I was old Betty,
but I am new Betty now, and you must pour out your old heart before the
Lord and get a new one,’ &c.”
After brief visits to Bo’ness, Dunfermline, and other places by the way,
he reached Dundee once more on the 23d, and thence proceeded two days
after to Perth, in which he was to find his chief scene of labour for
several months to come.
The nature of the field on which he now entered, as well as the
character of him with whom especially it was his lot there to labour,
will be familiar to very many of my readers from the admirable memoir of
Mr. Milne, lately given to the world by Dr. Horatius Bonar. He was
indeed “a man greatly beloved,” and a true and worthy “yoke-fellow” of
the subject of these pages throughout the whole course of those
memorable days. Of one mind and of one heart, of differing gifts, but of
equal devotedness and singleness of purpose in the service of Christ,
they fought the good fight side by side, without a dream of personal
rivalry, or any other thought whatever, but that of “striving together
for the faith of the gospel.” It was especially admirable to mark the
perfect self-abnegation with which the young and gifted pastor saw his
work, as it were, for the moment taken out of his hands ere ever he had
almost entered on it; and rejoiced in the fruit of his brother’s labours
even as though it were his own, content either to thrust in his own
sickle or to see the harvest reaped by another hand, so only the
Master’s garner were filled. Closely linked together in life, in
affection and in sympathy, it was interesting to many also to notice
that in death they were not long divided, having been called to their
eternal rest within a few weeks of one another, and both at a
comparatively early age, having lived much and long in a little time.
The rapid and pregnant brevity of the first notices of Mr. Burns’
labours here indicate at once the remarkable power with which the sacred
movement set in almost from the first day of his arrival on the scene,
and the incessant and absorbing occupation which in consequence devolved
upon him. His days and nights were so filled up with acts, and with
those intense exercises of soul which are the living breath of acts,
that he had little time either to narrate or describe:—
11 December 26th, 1839.—Took up my abode at Mrs. M.’s, my kind friend,
at 2 King’s Place. Agreed to preach twice to-morrow.
“Sabbath, December 29th, 1839, forenoon.—Preached in East Church, Dr.
Esdaile’s. I was not left to myself, I hope. Subject, Isaiah xlii. 21;
time too short to allow of sufficient fulness; church full, the gay
people of Perth—the magistrates present. Afternoon, St. Leonard’s, great
crowd; subject, conversion, Matthew xviii. 3; more aided than ever
before on this text, I think; solemnity deep. Inquirers invited to meet
at seven in the evening, and at one p.m. on Monday. Evening: about one
hundred and fifty were present. The Lord was very near. ... We had to
continue together till about eleven o’clock. . . . This was a meeting
very similar to some of the Lord’s most gracious visits at Kilsyth and
Dundee. Praise and glory to his matchless name!
“Monday, December 30th, 1839.—From two to three hundred were present at
one o’clock; a solemn season; separated about four. Evening; an
immensely crowded audience in the Gaelic Church; subject, Isaiah liv. 5,
first clause; much aided; great solemnity; some in tears. After the
blessing spoke a little to some that lingered; much affected. I was
pressed by them to go into the session-house. It was overflowing ; all
in tears nearly. Sang, read, spoke and prayed for an hour—they would not
go; Mr. Stewart concluded with prayer, the tears were standing in his
eyes; indeed it was an affecting scene!
“December 31st, 1839, forenoon.—Meeting at one, a few hundreds present;
Mr. Cumming, who had promptly answered our call for aid, began. I then
followed upon Psalm ex. 3; a solemn meeting; when it was ended the
vestry was filled with weepers, with whom we had to pray and sing a long
time. Evening in Mr. Turnbuirs church, at seven o’clock; subject,
Matthew xi. 28; dense crowd. Meeting at ten o’clock in St. Leonard’s
Church, to bring in the New Year. We all took part in the service, Mr.
Cumming first, Mr. Milne second, and myself third; we separated about
one o’clock on the New Year’s morning; a sweet season. I never brought
in the New Year so sweetly before.
“Wednesday, January 1st, 1840.—Meeting forenoon from eleven to four; Mr.
Cumming, Mr. Milne, and myself officiated.
11 Friday, January 3d, 1840.—Meeting in the forenoon in Kinnoul Street
Church, Mr. Bonar of Collace present, and officiated along with Mr.
Milne, Mr. Turnbull, and myself. We met with many interesting cases in
the vestry. I went off to Dundee at four o’clock, and left Mr. Bonar to
officiate in the evening. He preached to a most densely crowded audience
in St. Leonard’s Church, from the Ethiopian eunuch; Mr. Milne also
spoke, and it is said to have been a most solemn season, not a few in
tears.
“Sabbath, January 8th, 1840, forenoon.—Sat in St. Leonard’s, Mr. Milne
on the barren fig-tree. Afternoon, I preached in Mr. Gray’s on Ezekiel
xxxvi. 26, 1st clause. Evening, in Dr. Findlay’s immense church, from 2
Cor. v. 21; very much aided in exposition and application; densely
crowded; thousands went away, I am told, without getting in. Glory to
the Lamb!”
Prayer, temptation, and deep humiliation of soul, as usual, prepared the
way for more abounding joy and strength:—
"Friday, January 10th, 1840.—In the evening I spoke from Romans v. 1,
but felt much straitened, and was so filled with self-complacency, vain
elation, and spiritual blindness, that I had to stop in a very short
time and felt called on to tell the people that I believed, and had been
made to feel for some days, that unless we were humbled under God’s
mighty hand and the people ceased from their idolatrous confidence in
instruments and looked more to God alone, I was convinced his work would
not go on, &c.
“Saturday, January 11th, 1840.—I was alone during the greater part of
the day seeking humiliation before the Lord, and began through grace to
discover how far, alas! I have fallen from that contrition of soul for
sin which I once enjoyed. Lord, I am indeed set in slippery places.
Lord, humble me and keep me from falling into the snare of the devil!
"Sabbath, January 12th, 1840, afternoon.—Preached in Mr. Gray’s from
Romans xii. 1, with some degree of brokenness of heart and comfort in
the Lord. Evening, preached in Dr. Findlay’s from Ephesians iv. 30, on
the work of the Holy Spirit. It was a solemn season, an immense
assembly. I had great liberty, especially in pressing sinners not to
resist the Holy Ghost. Dr. Findlay was with me in the pulpit. . . .”
Here, as elsewhere, and perhaps even more than often elsewhere, he was,
in the most emphatic sense, instant in season and out of season, never
deeming any place or time unsuitable in which a word might be spoken for
his Master, and an effort made to win the life of souls. The highways
and hedges, the river steamboat, the roadside inn, the mart of business,
the purlieus and haunts of vice and crime, were to him, equally with the
crowded church or upper chamber, the fit arena in which to fulfil his
divine ambassadorship, and “compel men to come in” to the house of God.
The following incident is strikingly illustrative of this, as well as of
the pervasive influence of the movement in the Perth community at this
time, and the unlikely quarters into which it found its way:—
“January 16th, 1840.—In the evening I met a great many-young men in the
vestry, and found among them a great number of interesting cases. At
eight o’clock I visited the prayer-meeting of females in Miss Ramsay’s,
which was very full and interesting. Coming out I saw behind a
public-house some men and women sporting themselves, and went up and
said, ‘You are making work for the day of judgment.’ They all ran in
except one young man, a son of the housekeeper ; he was subdued. I asked
him if he would allow me to go in and pray. I got into a large room;
many assembled, and we had a very solemn meeting. They all promised to
come out to the meetings at parting.”
The sequel appears in a brief entry about a fortnight after:—
“January 30th, 1840.—When I went home Mr. Milne told me he had heard
that Mr. L., the public-house keeper, in whose house I was so remarkably
led in God’s providence to hold a meeting, had given intimation to his
landlord that he was going to give up his shop at the next term, and to
leave the spirit-trade. . . . Praise to the Lord!
The power indeed that attended his words, and the effects which often in
the most unexpected quarters followed them, was at this time most
remarkable. “I never thought,” exclaimed a strong, careless man, who had
heard him, “to have been so much affected; it is surely something
altogether unearthly that has come to the town.” Another “had come with
a companion to our meetings one night to mock, and they both did so, and
went from the church to a public-house. However he would not go in,
refusing with an awful oath to do so. On his death-bed he called for his
companion, and asked him if he remembered these things. He replied he
did.
‘Well' he says, ‘I would give a thousand worlds to-night that my soul
were in the state his is.’ He died after he said these words!”
On Sabbath the 19th he was at the communion at Dundee, when he had the
solemn joy of sitting down at the table of the Lord, “ along with many
dear believers, not a few of them his own children in the Lord,” but
immediately afterwards returned to his work in Perth, which seemed still
steadily to grow in depth and widespread influence:—
“Sabbath, February 9th, 1840, afternoon.—Preached in Mr. Turnbull’s to a
crowded audience, from John iii. 14, 15. I felt under the bonds of
unbelief during the chief part of the discourse, but towards the close
was enabled by the Lord fairly to break loose and speak with some degree
of faith and joy in Emmanuel, especially when insisting on the stronger
grounds for faith in our case than in the case of the Israelites. They
were called to look to a piece of brass as a saviour, and thus their
looking was an act simply based on the divine word; but we are called by
the same divine word to look for life not to an object of no intrinsic
power or value, but to the most glorious Object in the universe, the Son
of God purchasing the church on the cross with his own blood, &c. I saw
several persons in tears; I was weeping myself, and found this a blessed
time. Praise to the Lord! — Evening: the crowd was so great seeking to
get into St. Leonard’s Church, that it Was supposed there were more
collected in the street an hour before the time than would have several
times filled the church. The press was so great when the doors were
opened, that several persons were somewhat injured. I preached from
Romans x. 4, and felt considerably aided; though to myself the season
was not quite so sweet as in the afternoon. We prayed particularly for
the raising up of Jewish missionaries, according to the call of the
Jewish Committee by circular, and prayed that some of those present, if
it were the Lord’s will, might be called to this glorious work.
“Monday, February 10th, 1840.—The day of Queen Victoria’s marriage. Last
night about eleven o’clock Agnes S , Miss R , and two other females,
called to express their regret that no advantage had been taken of the
cessation from labour on this day for advancing the glory of Jesus. I
had amid so many engrossing duties never thought that this was the day,
and it had escaped Mr. Milne also. We prayed together on the
subject.....I met the people of God and many inquirers at half-past
twelve, and we continued together till three. I spoke upon Colossians
iii. I met with several people during the day; walked with Mr. Milne
distributing many tracts, and having many interesting conversations with
persons on the road.—Evening: there was to be a grand display of
fireworks on the Inch, and we hardly thought that the church would be
anything like filled. However, it was quite full, and after a time not a
few were standing. I spoke upon the 45th Psalm, commenting on the glory
of the Bridegroom Emmanuel, and the privileges of the Bride the Lamb’s
wife, and thus enforcing the divine call, ‘Hearken, O daughter, and
consider,’ &c. I felt much of the Lord’s presence, and had a full
persuasion from the frame of the hearers that some, if not many, were in
the act of being betrothed to Christ for ever in righteousness, and
judgment, and loving-kindness, &c., Hosea ii.; and while we were thus
celebrating in the British dominions the marriage of our beloved
sovereign, I trust there was joy in the presence of the angels of God
over sinners espoused to the Lamb. How infinitely does the one event
transcend the other in importance and glory! and yet, alas! this poor
world, blinded by Satan, extols the one and despises the other.....
Awake, O gracious Lord, awake this sleeping world! Amen.
“February 26th, 1840, evening.—We had a very large and solemn meeting. I
concluded the exposition of Hosea xiv., and then spoke of the nature of
the duties for to-morrow (appointed among us along with some of the
people at Dundee, Kilsyth, Dunfermline, and Stanley, as a day of
fasting, humiliation, and prayer), and also of the reasons for the
appointment of this day.
“March 1st, 1840.—We had this day a solemn fast, kept by many I have no
doubt very strictly, as far as the duty of abstinence is concerned. We
met at two o’clock P.M. I spoke upon the exercises appropriate to this
day:—
“1. Self-examination in order to the discovery of sin—of the heart and
nature as well as of the tongue and life—by the law and the Spirit of
Jehovah. 2. Humbling the soul before God under sins discovered. 3.
Confession of sin, full and particular, free and filial. 4. Penitent
turning from all sin. 5. Entering into the covenant of grace by the
receiving of Emmanuel and the surrender of the soul to him and to God
through him. 6. Special prayer for the outpouring of the Holy Spirit
upon this city, and the other places united with us in this fast— the
great end designed in its appointment. There was very great
solemnity.—Evening: we met again in Mr. Turnbull’s church, Kinnoul
Street, and concluded the subject. I had at this time more melting of
heart under a sense of the love of God than ever I remember to have had.
in the pulpit, and I think shed more tears than ever before in
preaching. The people also seemed in an unusually tender and solemn
frame. Glory to the Lamb!
“March 10th, morning.—Alone, and writing letters, especially to the
young people attending Miss Haldane’s Greenside School. While writing
this letter, and speaking of the interposition of Jehovah-Jesus between
the wrath of God and sinners, I got a view of the glory of this mystery
surpassing anything I had ever enjoyed before, and the tears fell
plentifully from my dry eyes.”
Amid these abounding and exhausting labours in a sphere in which so wide
and effectual a door had been opened to him, he still found time and
strength for occasional evangelistic excursions amid the villages
around, the results of which were often deeply interesting. In this way
he visited at different times during this period the parishes of
Auchtermuchty, Strathmiglo, Dunfermline, Muthil, Stanley, Auchtergaven,
Caputh, Kinfauns, &c. One or two notices of these more desultory, but
not less fruitful labours may be given, as examples of what, for several
years to come, constituted a large and important part of his work. Thus,
of date February 18th, 1840, he writes:—
“Tuesday, February 18th, 1840, forenoon.—In closet, wrote several
letters, drove out to Stanley in gig, gave tracts to all by the way;
well received.—Afternoon, with Mr. Mather the minister, and chiefly in
closet; a humbling season.—Evening: immense crowd in the spacious
church; a thousand people work in the mills—subject, Luke xxiv. 47; more
aided than ever on the same subject. A very solemn season; many met me
deeply affected as I retired. Walked home to Perth seven miles, arriving
at half-past twelve, accompanied by nearly twenty from Perth; men,
women, and children seemed all very solemn and heavenly in their
demeanour; prayed before we parted.
“February 25th, 1840.—I drove out to Balbiggie to preach in the
Secession Church. The man who drove me seems very like a Christian, and
told me that of late, especially since our meetings began, there had
been an astonishing change on the face of the country round in point of
morality and anxiety about religion; on the way out all the people came
to their doors with a great appearance of anxiety, and I gave away many
tracts. The hour of meeting was six; the people were many of them
assembled at two o’clock, and at half-past four, when I went, the church
was full. I preached on Psalm ex. 3, and had considerable assistance,
feeling much joy in my own soul, &c.
“March 19th.—(Returning from Auchtergaven.) We made up on the way to the
Stanley people, a great crowd, and I knelt down with them at the
roadside under the bright moon and prayed. Their love and deep solemnity
put me much in mind of the first Christians. After singing and
pronouncing the blessing, we parted in affecting silence!
“Sabbath, March 22d, 1840.—I rose this morning strong in body, but with
much conscious deadness of soul, and awfully assaulted, as I often am,
by doubts regarding every truth of God in his Word. I preached in the
church from Matthew xi. 28, and had little enlargement in the exposition
of the text, feeling still an inward struggle with infidelity. However,
after I had closed the Bible, and was concluding with a few words of
exhortation, the Lord gave me the victory over unbelief, and I had such
an impressive realization of the state of the unconvert -, that I was
enabled to speak very closely to their consciences, and beseech them
with all my heart to awake from the sleep of death and flee to Jesus for
refuge. I saw the tears starting from the eyes of some men advanced in
years, and felt that the Lord was indeed present. The meeting lasted
three hours and a half. After dinner, Mr. Maclagan,3 who was very kind,
pressed me to come again, saying that a number of his people had been
benefited by our meetings in Perth.”
The period of his continuous ministry in Perth was now drawing to a
close. He had received repeated and urgent invitations to visit
Aberdeen, the scene of his second home, and of his college days, which
he was unable any longer to resist, and he felt at the same time that he
had already remained in Perth long enough to fulfil the functions of a
distinctively evangelistic ministry. What further work remained to be
done in order to turn to the best account the powerful impulse that had
been given, was more of a pastoral than of a missionary kind, and that
work he felt was abundantly safe in the hands of Mr. Milne, Mr. Gray,
and the other brethren with whom it had been his privilege and delight
to labour throughout the whole course of those eventful days. The sacred
spring-tide, however, flowed on with unabated force to the last, and he
closes, immediately before leaving Perth, the first year of his ministry
as a preacher of the gospel, and the twenty-fifth year of his earthly
life, in a sort of solemn “triumph in Christ,” who still continued in so
remarkable a manner to make manifest through him the savour of his
saving knowledge and grace.
“I drove home, praying all the way, and after an hour alone I went to
the church (St. Leonard’s) at six with clear direction to Deuteronomy
xxxii. 35 as my subject. The church was as usual a solid mass of living
beings. I availed myself of many hints in Edwards’ sermon, proceeding in
the following order:—I took the whole verse as my subject and
considered, I. What was meant by vengeance, recompense, and calamity,
the things that are coming on the wicked; which, copying Edwards in his
application, I opened up in three particulars: 1st. It is the wrath of
Jehovah. 2d. The fierceness of his wrath. 3d. The fierceness of
Jehovah’s wrath for eternity. II. In the second place, I put the
question, What is it that defers this wrath till the due time, the day
of calamity? in other words, what is it that keeps an unconverted sinner
a moment out of hell? To this it was answered, Negatively, 1st. It is
not divine justice. This has already sentenced the sinner to eternal
wrath. 2d. It is not that God is pleased with the sinner; on the
contrary, he is awfully angry with him, and in many cases more angry
than with many that are already in hell. 3d. It is not on account of
anything that the sinner has done, or is doing, or intends to do. 4th.
It is not on account of a good bodily constitution or great care to
preserve life on the part of the sinner or other persons on his behalf.
5th. It is not on account of any promise given by God to the
unconverted. But, Positively, Sinners are kept out of hell from moment
to moment only by the long-suffering of God, who ‘endures with much
long-suffering,’ &c. I then came to apply the subject to the case of the
unconverted, and went on to point out that they were suspended by the
hand of a long-suffering God over the pit of hell, and were yet madly
hating and resisting that God, and provoking him to let them go and fall
into the flames, especially by rejecting Jesus his unspeakable gift.
These statements appeared to be accompanied with an extraordinary
measure of the Holy Ghost, and the feeling of the hearers became so
intense that when one man in the gallery passage audibly exclaimed,
‘Lord Jesus, come and save me,’ the great mass of the congregation gave
audible expression to their emotion in a universal wailing. I
immediately changed the theme, and began, as at Kilsyth, to repeat such
invitations as Isaiah liii., pressing Jesus on all as God’s free gift.
After a few minutes the great multitude became more composed; but as I
went on particularly addressing those who continued impenitent
spectators, the feeling became again as deep and general as before. To
me, looking from the pulpit, the whole body of the people seemed bathed
in tears, old as well as young, men equally with women. This second
display of feeling continued a few minutes and gradually ended, a few
only here and there throughout the church continuing in great and
visible distress of soul. When the impression became so deep and
overpowering, many that did not like, or did not understand, such a
glorious manifestation of the divine power, were offended, and one man
came up the stair of the pulpit and asked me to dismiss the people!
After I had prayed and sung with the people a considerable time beyond
the usual period, with brief addresses interspersed, I pronounced the
blessing, and asked them to disperse, promising to meet with any who
might wish further prayer and direction in a school-house. Hardly any,
however, would go away, and even after all the lights in the church but
two had been one by one extinguished, a few hundreds still remained in
the church, who would not, and in some cases could not, retire. Mr.
Milne arrived when it was nearly ten o’clock, and we found it necessary
again to sing and pray. After we had done so we at last got the people
away. I went down to Miss Ramsay’s school, and there met with as many as
the house and passage would contain, both men and women, though chiefly
the latter, all in deep distress about their souls, and in most cases in
tears. I remained for an hour, and then left them all to pray and sing
together, which they continued to do for some time longer. This glorious
night seemed to me at the time, and appears from all I have since heard,
to have been perhaps the most wonderful that I have ever seen, with the
exception perhaps of the first Tuesday at Kilsyth. There was this
difference chiefly between the two occasions, that a great many of those
affected at this time had been convinced or converted during the
previous weeks, while at Kilsyth almost all but the established children
of God were awakened for the first time. Glory to the Lamb! This is the
last Sabbath of the first year of my ministry as an ambassador of
Christ! To the praise and glory of infinite, eternal, free and sovereign
mercy and grace. Praise the Lord! . . .
“March 28th, 1840.—When during this day I tried to be grateful to the
Lord for all the marvellous work that I have seen during the year that
was closing, I felt my soul almost overwhelmed, and could only think
with joy on the subject, when I remembered that I had an eternity to
spend in praising and blessing God. Praise to the Lamb! infinite,
eternal praise; mercy sovereign, infinite, unchangeable, everlasting!
The Father electing, the Son redeeming, the Spirit renewing.
“To Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,
The God whom I adore,
Be glory, as it was, and is,
And shall be evermore! ’
“Wednesday, April 1st, 1840.—This day begins my 26th year. I would act
for the Lord Jesus henceforth as if I had hitherto done absolutely
nothing in his service. May He enable me. 1 spent the morning alone and
in fasting. The Lord, I trust, was near, though I cannot say that I
spent the season in a manner befitting such an occasion. Indeed, I can
hardly dare to think of God’s dealings with me. They overwhelm my soul
with astonishment. I wait for eternity to study and admire and extol
them.”
Such were those remarkable days at Perth during the spring of 1840, as
their history is traced in the simple and solemn words of the chief
actor himself. It may be desirable, however, for a moment to look at
those scenes as seen by another eye; and this we are enabled to do
through the following interesting recollections kindly furnished to me
by one who herself “owed much in afterlife ” to the sacred impressions
received at that memorable time. Of the after and permanent results of
the work then done we shall afterwards have occasion to speak; what we
have now to quote refers rather to the immediate aspect of the movement
while still in progress, as it presented itself to one who lived through
it and deeply shared its spirit:—
“It was in a hotel in Rome that we first read, in the columns of
GalignanVs Messenger, the name of William Burns. The article was a
bitter and sneering caricature. Returning to Scotland a few weeks later,
without having had any opportunity of being in church in the interval,
and with the bewitching mummeries of the Roman Church, as they
surrounded the person of Gregory XVI,, in vivid recollection, we were
taken to an inquirers’ meeting, conducted by Mr. Burns in Perth; and the
thirty years which have since sped away, instead of effacing, have only
deepened the impression of the scene we then witnessed. William Burns
was speaking from Revelation xix., of the doom of Antichrist, and the
hallelujah which shall rise from the redeemed when the smoke of her
torment shall ascend in their sight. He was warning the unsaved that
over their destruction also the same assenting ‘Amen, hallelujah,’ must
yet arise, if they persisted in rejecting Jesus. He was inviting poor
sinners to come to Calvary’s fountain and wash and_ be clean. He was
warning such as imagined they had washed and were living unholily, thus:
‘You are saying, ‘ If I sin it will easily be washed out again.’ Or, if
not saying it with the lip, you are acting it out fearfully in the life.
Ah ! the soul that has washed its filthy garments in the stream of
Calvary is careful how the remedy is used. Many believers have so much
allowed the stains of conformity to the world to disfigure the white
robe, that instead of representing the work of God within, they are
scarcely to be distinguished from the servants of the devil.’ He was
setting before believers the coming joys of the marriage-supper of the
Lamb, and said, ‘ This blessedness is not so far off as the world seems
to think; the meanest saint can tell that it has already set in with a
sweetness unspeakable. Ushered into the breast of many by billows of
affliction and temptation, beating wildly on the soul with their
tempestuous swell, yet are the beginnings so glorious and so blessed,
that they are an earnest of a springing up of a life eternal in the
heavens. On the joys which shall crown our union with Emmanuel no
destroyer shall lay the withering blight of his death-cold hand; no
ruthless separation shall snatch our happiness from us, or us from our
happiness. After washing for a few days more in the free fountain
here—after a few days more weeping on account of sin and sorrow—you
shall awake suddenly in the city of our God, to walk with Emmanuel for
ever in the courts above. The company, small here, will be innumerable
yonder. Ten thousand times ten thousand are their voices, and ten
thousand times ten thousand are the harps they tune; but it is as the
sounding of one voice. Hallelujah! ’tis the key-note of an eternal song.
Only one name rests upon their lips, it is Emmanuel. They know but one
song, the song of the redeemed. It is sometimes difficult to say here
lall his judgments are righteous/ for they are often heavy and severe.
When you join that company, your narrow and short-sighted views will be
gone. If I were ever to see the smoke of your torment ascending before
the throne, I would have to say Amen; hallelujah! and if you, standing
on high, were to see the smoke of my torment ascending, you too would
cry Amen; hallelujah! ... An hour has nearly elapsed since we began to
speak with you; it is just taking wing; a few seconds and it will have
fled to bear its tale to the judgment-seat. Shall it announce the
submission of a sinner, the return of a prodigal, the adoption of a son
into the family above?’ The deepest solemnity pervaded the assembly, as
the simple searching truth was calmly presented. Individuals were
conversed with in St. Leonard’s Church for an hour or two afterwards;
and many a burden was there laid upon ‘ the Lamb of God that taketh away
the sin of the world.’ These inquiry-meetings were held three times a
week, and in the evening the church was open for the crowds that
thronged it from town and country. An hour before the time of service
every seat was filled. The multitude generally remained in silence, and
many heads were bowed in prayer. The stairs leading to the pulpit were
also filled, and it was with difficulty the preacher could be conducted
thither. The Rev. John Milne, the recently settled pastor of the
congregation, usually shared the pulpit with the speaker. We recall
especially one evening when a chair was handed up for James Hamilton,
then of Abernyte, to sit at their side. It seems now as if one chariot
had sufficed to carry home the three, ‘William Burns, John Milne, and
James Hamilton.’ That night was one of power.
‘Tough boughs require sharp pruning/ said the preacher, when some one
would have tried to blunt the knife, by advising him to the use of more
measured and tempered language. ‘A sleeping minister and a sleeping
congregation, what will they do in the day of judgment?’ He was
privileged to break this sleep—in congregations, in kirk-sessions, and
in manses. The first part of his discourse always embodied a mass of
telling doctrine, holding up the divine law right in face of the
sinner’s conscience. The appeals in the latter part were irresistibly
winning, brimming over with the freely offered love of Jesus. The Spirit
was glorified. He arrested many before the preacher had time to enter
his subject; in some cases the arrow sped from the first psalm that was
given out, and many were awakened during the opening prayer. It is not
easy to describe his prayers. Adoration of Jehovah’s uncreated glory, as
it falls on the darkness and corruption of man’s heart, and reveals the
abyss of a yawning hell, filled the first part. He brought himself and
the saved part of his audience down into the sides of the pit whence
they were hewn, in a way that made the greatest outcast in the church
feel that he or she was sympathized with and carried abreast; and then
his soul would as it were be seen to pass anew through the cleansing
flood, up into the very presence-chamber of the King of kings, and there
looked up into the Father’s face with unutterable love. His theology was
unbiased, and swung like a pendulum across the truth of God, avoiding
all limited, classified, partial, and one-sided expressions of it. His
training of young converts was thus invaluable to them. ‘ No cross, no
crown/ was the term of enlistment. ‘Suffering is the law of the
kingdom.’ ‘The greater your sacrifices for Christ, the more of his joy
will fill your heart.’ ‘Forsake the glass, the dance, and the song, if
you would drink of the rivers of his pleasures, if you would leap for
joy on the shores of Emmanuel’s land, if you would take up the unending
hallelujah.’
“He warned the young that if they would live near the Lord, they must be
content to be singular even among believers, and to travel sometimes
almost alone. ‘ I am often reminded of this/ he said, ‘when setting out
by the early stage-coach. The morning is sharp, companions few, and from
the top of the coach you see whole streets shuttered in as in the night.
But just here and there, one, earlier up than others, has begun her
morning work, with no one apparently to notice or thank her. She will
find out the good of it before nightfall. So with you. Forget the crowd,
walk with God alone.
“It was a high standard he himself set before them. ‘The longing of my
heart would be to go once all round the world before I die, and preach
one gospel invitation in the ear of every creature. He had a tender
regard for those who were kept long in darkness : saying, that those to
whom the Lord had revealed much of their own sin and misery in the place
of dragons, were often led into high places in the school of Christ.
“All the roads from the town were nightly trod by groups of country
hearers. Some were returning home to sing for the first time the new
song. Others with heavy pace carried an arrow rankling in the heart.
Others bore the good news of companions in town turning to God, the
public-house signs taken down, the police comparatively idle, and
families and workshops sharing the wide-spread blessing.
In the words, in fine, of Mr. Milne, used a year and a half afterwards,
on a retrospect of these remarkable scenes: “God’s people quickened;
backsliders restored; the doubting and uncertain brought to decision and
assurance; hidden ones who for years had walked solitarily brought to
light, and united to a family of brothers and sisters; a large number of
the worldly, thoughtless, ignorant, self-righteous turned to the Lord; a
peculiar people growing up, who are separate from the world, know and
love one another; watch over, exhort, and aid one another, and seem to
grow in humility and zeal;” such is the summary history of the work done
and the fruits of blessing gathered in at Perth during this signal “
time of power.” After a few more days spent in fulfilling some country
engagements, he started for Aberdeen on the 7th, amid a crowd of loving
friends who had assembled to bid him farewell; but rejoicing still more
to see, as he passed through Bridgend, “that William G ’s sign as a
spirit-seller was taken down!”
|