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THE ample details which
have been given in the three last chapters from Mr. Burns’ own journals,
of the nature of his labours, and the scenes amongst which he mingled,
at Kilsyth, Dundee, and Perth, will render it unnecessary to give such
extended extracts with reference to his evangelistic work at Aberdeen.
The spirit in which he laboured, and the results which followed, were
here in all essential respects identical with what we have just
described elsewhere, and might be said to be simply the continuation of
what was there begun. The same unresting activity, intense earnestness,
and vivid realization of the unseen world on the part of the
preacher—the same mighty and gradually swelling tide of interest,
inquiry, irrepressible emotion, on the part of the throngs that waited
on his ministry and hung upon his lips—were here as there the salient
features of a movement which was the subject of solemn joy to one part
of the community, and of wonder, consternation, scorn, or anxious
misgiving to the other. Sermons to densely crowded audiences in three
several churches on each Lord’s-day; prayer-meetings in the morning and
afternoon, and a public address in the evening of each week-day, with
generally an additional hour of counsel, instruction, and prayer, for
those whose intense anxiety still detained them after the long service
was over, with words by the wayside and conferences with inquirers and
young disciples at all other available hours, constituted the daily
history of his work, so far as it can be written by man, for weeks
together. An occasional sermon, too, in the open air—in Castle Street,
or at the foot of the Barrack Hill—startled and scandalized a Christian
community, which has since seen the same self-denying service done, with
no other feeling than that of admiration, by so many others. Even his
brethren in the ministry, who in all other respects approved and
furthered his work, with one single exception deprecated a course which
all the existing conventions condemned, but which, by its remarkable
results, in sounding the depths of a class of society which no other
agency had reached, more than justified itself:—
“In the evening,” says he, “I (April 26) preached in Castle Street to an
immense audience, chiefly men, on the willingness of Jesus to save the
chief of sinners, from the ‘thief on the cross.’ I felt more of the
divine presence than on any former occasion in Aberdeen, and laboured to
pull sinners out of the fire. The impression was very deep; many
weeping, some screaming, and one or two quite overpowered. At eight
o’clock we adjourned to the North Church, where Mr. Wilson from Belfast
was preaching, and when he had concluded we remained with a crowded
audience for another hour in exhortation, prayer, and praise. After this
we dismissed the people; but a great many were so deeply moved that we
could not get away, and accordingly I returned with Mr. Murray, who
addressed along with me about four hundred, from the precentor’s desk.
After prayer and singing, we dismissed about ten o’clock. Getting with
difficulty out of the crowd, I went down to Albion Street, and addressed
in a school-room about seventy of the poorest and vilest of the people
in that degraded district. They were very solemn and interested to all
appearance. We separated about eleven. Though this was a day of uncommon
toil, yet, praise to the Lord! I was not worn out, but felt strong as
ever on my way home.....I may here record that none of the ministers
were in favour of the street-preaching but Mr. Parker. He and his
session all went to Castle Street; though I felt that I did not need
human countenance, having so clear a conviction of the duty, and being
so conscious of the divine support in this effort to advance the glory
of Jesus.”
Other tokens besides the immediate sense of the “divine support,” and
the access opened to him to “ the poorest and vilest of the people,”
soon appeared to confirm his conviction that he was in this matter in
the right line of action. “When walking on the links,” says he in his
journal of next day, “in the afternoon I met some poor lads, with whom I
prayed among the sand-banks. They were very serious for the time, and
one of them said he had been in Albion Street school the night before.
He said that many were praying for the first time, and he among the
rest, after I went away.” We are not surprised, accordingly, to find him
soon again on the same battleground, renewing the charge from the same
point at which he had already effected so wide a breach. The scruples of
his brethren, too, soon gave way, as they witnessed and gladly hailed
the good results of the bolder course from which at first they had
shrunk:—
“Tuesday, April 28th.—In the evening I preached, to an immense audience
at the foot of the Barrack Hill, including multitudes of the worst
people in the town. I was hoarse and the situation was very unfavourable,
owing to its vicinity to the public road; yet with all these
disadvantages the audience were most fixed and solemn in their
attention, and I was encouraged to intimate a similar meeting in the
same vicinity for Thursday night, though I had previously proposed to
leave Aberdeen on the afternoon of that day. This afternoon I had also
at half-past five a meeting in the barracks with about thirty of the
soldiers. They seemed much impressed, and some of them shed tears when I
came away.
“Wednesday, April 29th.—I preached in the evening in Holborn Church; an
immense audience, the result of the outdoor preaching, as Mr Mitchell
granted with good-will, his mind seeming to be a good deal changed on
this point. Mr. M., Mr. Parker, and Dr. Dewar all took part in the
services.
“Thursday, April 30th.—I was again at the barracks in the afternoon;
appearances just such as on the former day. I preached thereafter at the
foot of the Barrack Hill to an immense audience. I had been thinking on
the subject of conversion, but I was led in the time of the opening
prayer to think of Matthew xi. 28, and I preached on it with perhaps
more of the divine assistance than I had done at any time before.
Towards the end especially, many were screaming and in tears. ... I felt
as if 1 could pull men out of the fire; indeed, I never had more of this
feeling than this evening, and on Sabbath evening in Castle Street. In
order to escape the crowd I slipped into the barracks, and after walking
up and down in concealment a little, I went up to some of the men and
spoke to them of Jesus and salvation. I got a good many of them to come
and have a last prayer-meeting before our parting, which we had
accordingly. When going up to the room I met dear J. C.1 standing with
streaming eyes alone. He had run up Union Street, thinking to overtake
me, but not seeing me, and being obliged to be in by nine o’clock, he
returned disconsolate, thinking that he might never see' me again, the
regiment being to leave Aberdeen for Paisley on Tuesday first. Our
meeting was sweet indeed, and our parting affecting, but full of the
hope of meeting in the presence of the Lamb. Glory to his matchless
name!”
Of the after-history of individual souls amongst those neglected
multitudes in Albion Street and Barrack Hill, to whom the gates of the
eternal kingdom were thus opened for once at least, so widely, but few
and broken fragments can be gathered from the records of earth. The
names of some of them occur in connection with the labours of a
committee of inquiry soon after appointed by the presbytery of the
bounds, and the cases of others are doubtless well known to individual
ministers of the city, under whose ministry the seeds of life then sown
were cherished and ripened to holy fruitfulness. With his friends
amongst the soldiers, however, he was destined to meet again in other
and deeply interesting circumstances, when, five years afterwards, they
rallied round him, and acted as his gallant body-guard amid the rude
assaults of the ruffianly mob at Montreal.
Throughout these manifold and arduous labours Mr. Burns had enjoyed, as
ever afterwards in Aberdeen, the valuable countenance and co-operation
of several of the ministers of the city, and particularly of Dr. Murray
of the North Parish, Mr. Parker of Bonaccord Church, and Mr. Mitchell of
Holborn, in one or other of whose churches most of his meetings both on
Sabbaths and on week-days were held. The two former have since
died—leaving behind them the rich savour of a revered and blessed
memory. Mr. Parker was a man of deep, thoughtful, and even severe piety,
with peculiarly profound and solemn views of the holy law and sovereign
grace of God—who had been recently translated to his present charge from
a chapel in Dundee, where he had laboured for several years with
remarkable acceptance and success. Dr. Murray was a ripe scholar, a
sound divine, a brave and godly man, and especially during his earlier
ministry, in Trinity Chapel, a stirring and successful preacher. He
lived to a good old age, and0 passed away amid the universal respect of
a community that had for long years honoured him as one of its most
worthy and true-hearted citizens. Both loved and befriended the young
evangelist with that peculiar and beautiful affection which one
sometimes sees in those of more advanced years towards the young.
On Tuesday, May i, he left Aberdeen for a season, in order to fulfil
some other pressing engagements—thus briefly summing up the result of
his labours there during the past month:—
“I am now come to the end of my sojourn in Aberdeen, and must notice a
few general features in what met my eye and ear. We had meetings every
'morning to the end, in Bonaccord Church, which were very sweet and
solemn, and increased in size towards the end. I also continued to meet
almost every afternoon, from one to three, with anxious inquirers. Many
that came to these meetings, as well as many that called at the house,
seemed in a most promising state, and altogether, upon a review of all I
saw of this kind in Aberdeen, there seemed to be very hopeful symptoms
of an extensive awakening. And now, Lord Jesus, grant me and all thy
people there, the Holy Ghost as a Spirit of praise for all the tokens of
thy glorious and gracious presence there; and may those who were
impressed by thy power not be left to fall back into their former
security beneath the abiding wrath of God, but be brought to wash in thy
blood, and put on the glorious wedding-garment of thy righteousness, and
adorn the doctrine of God their Saviour by a life and conversation
becoming the gospel; and to thee be all the glory! Amen.”
His retirement from Aberdeen, however, was only temporary. Neither in
his own judgment nor in that of the brethren who had laboured with him,
had he yet made full proof of his ministry there; and accordingly, after
an absence of five months, we find him again in the field, prosecuting
with equal devotedness and zeal, and with even still more remarkable
results, the work which he had before begun. For two months together, on
weekdays and Sabbath-days, the attendance at the meetings continued
unabated, and the number of inquirers increased. I find on one of the
last pages of his Aberdeen diary specific mention of the 200th case of
spiritual anxiety with which he had had to deal since the commencement
of his visit; and those who sought him out on this errand, and with whom
he was able to converse, were of course only a fraction of those who
were more or less affected by the general and wide-spread impression. So
great at one time was the number of the anxious, that appointments made
for their special behoof would be responded to by such crowds, that
individual instruction became impossible, and the inquirers’ meeting
grew into a congregation. Meanwhile the intensity of feeling manifested
by those who were the more especial subjects of the movement was often
very great, and found vent to itself in the case of those who were of a
more impressible nature, and were least habituated to self-control, now
in silent weeping, and now in loud sobs and cries. There was undoubtedly
at this time a good deal of what is called religious excitement. The
solemn impressions of eternal things renewed night after night, in
crowded congregations composed in large measure of the same individuals,
and under the spell of a voice that seemed as if the very echo of
eternity, gradually grew to an intensity which became at last altogether
uncontrollable; and as this aspect of the movement attracted a good deal
of public notoriety at the time, and formed the subject of a special
inquiry on the part of the presbytery of the bounds, it may be right to
give one or two extracts illustrative of its nature:—
"October 2'id.—In the evening I preached in Trinity Church at seven to a
full church, from the Pharisee and the publican. The impression was
solemn. At an after-meeting a great many remained, and the impression
became deeper, many being in tears. We parted at ten, but as we were
leaving the session-house many crowded round us, and one mill-girl cried
aloud, so that I had to return to the session-house with the concourse.
The place was filled in a few moments, and almost all fell on their
knees and began to pray to the Lord. I continued to pray and sing and
speak with these until after twelve o’clock, having frequently offered
to let them go, but finding that they would not move, and feeling in my
own soul that the Lord was indeed in the midst of us. This was the most
glorious season, I think, that I have yet seen in Aberdeen. Many poor
sinners lay weeping all the night on their knees in prayer, and some of
the Lord’s people present seemed to be filled with joy.
“October 23d.—In the evening I met from three to four hundred in the
Albion Street school, chiefly mill-girls, and spoke chiefly from the
beginning of Luke xv. I was enabled to speak very awfully of the lost
state of sinners, and the enormity of many sins abounding among us at
one particular time; and the impression was so great that almost all
were in tears, and many cried aloud. This impression seemed so deep and
genuine, that it continued the whole evening afterwards, and though I
dismissed them three or four times, hardly any would go away, the
greater part crying aloud at the mention of dispersing. Accordingly we
remained until after eleven, and even then the greater part remained
behind me, and the beadle could not get some of them away for a long
time after this. It was indeed to all appearance a night of the Lord’s
power, and I trust a night of salvation to some.
“October 2%th, evening.—I met with anxious inquirers in the North Church
session-house, but so many came (they could not be fewer than two
hundred and fifty) that we had to go to the church; of these two-thirds
were mill-girls. After speaking to them all together until half-past
nine, I kept the mill-girls behind and took down about half of their
names. Some of them seemed in the deep waters, and a great many were
weeping silently. A few only seemed unmoved. I found that there were
individuals among them from all the mills in town, as far as I am aware.
Surely the Lord is dealing with some of these souls. I would not doubt
it, though my past experience of the deceitfulness of almost all
appearances makes me hesitate in regard to individual cases. At the
Saturday evening meeting a good man who works in Hadden’s mill told me
that he had seen that day what he never saw before, a number of the
workers bringing their Bibles with them to their work! Sweet token!
"November 19th.—At eight, Albion Street school; full attendance, though
I did not intimate at the mills. What a sweet contrast the meeting
presented at the time I came in to the appearance of these dear young
people when we first met in this place! Glory to the Lord! The subject,
‘Behold what manner of love/ &c. I desired to speak in an awakening way,
which is my natural bent, but could not; and was enabled in some degree
to speak for the comfort, examination, and instruction of those who are
under concern. Many wept tenderly during the whole meeting. There was
great solemnity and earnestness in prayer, and when we dismissed at a
quarter past ten many were almost unable to go away. Indeed, a great
number went into the lower schoolroom, in the dark, and remained there
for a considerable time in prayer, Miss C., the excellent teacher of the
infant school, being with them. I was told to-day by Mrs. M. that a
person had said to her, though he was not particularly favourable, ‘ I
am persuaded there is much good doing.’ It is said that now on a
Saturday night there is not one for ten that there used to be of these
young women walking in the streets! Praise!
"November 22nd., evening.—I preached for Mr. Foote in the East Church at
six o’clock: a collection for his infant school. The sermon was
therefore advertised. The church was choked as soon as opened. There
could not be fewer than two thousand five hundred, a great number of
whom were men. ... I preached from Romans ii. 4, 5. At eight o’clock, I
had to divide the subject in order to allow those to retire who needed.
As many nearly came in as went out, and we continued till nine. I saw no
men go away. There was a fixed and solemn attention to plain and
momentous truths throughout, and some girls cried out. Praise to the
Lord! . . . When I came out I heard a young man in the street, with a
curse, saying, ‘There is the rascal himself.’ I went and spoke kindly to
him, saying he did me no ill, but himself a great deal. He went along
with me and spoke a ittle more seriously, saying, ‘Perhaps I’ll turn to
God too.’ Turn him and he shall be turned. Praise!
“November 23d evening.—At eight we met in the church Bonaccord with
anxious inquirers, but in consequence of the movement so publicly seen
on Saturday night, there were so many came as nearly to crowd the
church, and among these many gentlemen drawn by curiosity. I read the
12th of Zechariah beginning with verse 9, and spoke upon it at first
more textually, and afterwards with greater variety and latitude, and I
obtained so great liberty that I spoke in a manner I have hardly ever
done before. We remained speaking and praying until half-past eleven
P.M., and hardly one even of the scoffers went away; many, even
gentlemen, remained rivetted to the spot, evidently having a witness in
their consciences to the truth. There were some avowed infidels present!
Glory to the Lord! There would have been a great outcry among the young
people, had I not at the beginning, and frequently as I went on,
debarred them from crying out that others might hear and be benefited.
Many sighed and wept aloud.
“Wednesday, November 25th.— Heard that the Dudhope Church is open to me
at Dundee. At the prayer-meeting spoke on the last chapter of 1st
Thessalonians. Tender weeping among many, nay almost all, when I
intimated my proposed departure. We fixed Friday for a day of fasting.
Oh! may it be indeed so. Many shook hands with me, young and old, rich
(‘not many’) and poor, when I came out with tender weeping. Praise!
Praise! Oh! may the week that remains to me here be pentecostal! Come
Jesus! Amen.”
It cannot certainly be matter of surprise that manifestations like
these, occurring in the midst of a great Christian community, should
have attracted a large measure of public attention, and should have been
thought deserving of serious consideration and inquiry on the part of
those intrusted with authority in the church. They were sure to be
variously, and by many severely, judged. Not only were those to whom
every expression and sign of religious earnestness were but as the
raving of fools sure to turn away from such scenes with contemptuous
scorn, but even some, to whom the struggles of the interior life were a
great and blessed reality, might question whether a spiritual movement,
attended by such a tumult of emotion, were likely to prove in the
highest degree solid or lasting. It was not that the spiritual concern
of those whose souls were most powerfully stirred by the melting and
thrilling words of the preacher was in itself too solemn or too deep. No
amount of solicitude in regard to interests so stupendous as the favour
and love of God, and the eternal life of the soul in him, could be
regarded as either unreasonable or extreme. Of such solicitude, whether
called by the name of excitement, or enthusiasm, or the awakening of the
spiritual life, well might it be said with President Edwards: ‘-If such
things are enthusiasm or the fruits of a distempered brain, let my brain
be evermore possessed of that happy distemper! If this be distraction, I
pray God that the world of mankind may be seized with this benign, meek,
beneficent, beatifical, glorious distraction.” But the question still
remained, whether a course of such continuous and exhausting excitement
of the feelings were not fitted rather to hinder than to help spiritual
inquiry in the highest sense—by preventing quiet thoughtfulness, and
possibly issuing in a reaction of deeper carelessness and apathy. Grace,
it was urged, while in itself supernatural and divine, yet works ever
according to the essential laws of our moral and physical constitution;
and whatever in any degree runs counter to those laws must tend in that
degree to hinder or to mar that work. Of those laws the healthy
equipoise of the different elements of our nature—the reason, the
conscience, the feelings— is one of the most fundamental, and therefore
any undue or exclusive predominance of one of these to the suppression
or abeyance' of the others must tell with more or less of injurious
influence upon all. It was alleged too that the excitement then
prevalent was in many cases an excitement of fear rather than of love or
moral feeling, and for that reason also the more liable to prove
evanescent, or to issue in morbid and unsatisfactory results. It was not
enough to say in answer to these considerations that the work was, as
most Christian men fully believed, in its essential nature and substance
a work of the Spirit of God; for a divine work was all the more sure to
be more or less marred by the erring touch of man; and that work, it was
maintained, would have been helped not hindered, and the spiritual birth
or holy progress of souls furthered, had the public meetings and
protracted and exciting services been fewer, and the hours of still and
meditative retirement more.
There was some truth, doubtless, in these considerations; but probably
not so much as those who urged them were disposed to think. It was not
enough considered that such a season of general awakening to the sight
and sense of eternal things was in its nature exceptional and temporary,
and that the intense excitement with which it was at first attended was
sure, in the course of nature, soon to die down into a more quiet and
tranquil condition of things. Whatever effects of a permanent kind might
result from the earthquake shock, in startling souls from the sleep of
death, its immediate tremor and concussion would soon pass away. Neither
in the public mind generally, nor in the history of individual souls,
would the tumult of emotion last long enough to produce, at least to the
full extent, that revulsion or paralyzing exhaustion of feeling that was
apprehended. Many of those who were most deeply moved by the prevailing
influence very soon passed the crisis of their anxiety, and through that
sore agony and travail of soul entered into a state of calm peace and
rest in God, which was the very opposite of all tumultuous excitement.
The same power that was mighty to wound was mighty also to heal, so that
“the bones which” that divine unseen hand “had broken” were speedily
made to “rejoice.” There was the gentle and reviving south wind, as well
as the biting north—the time of the singing of birds, as well as the
winter and the rain. Thus those whose desires after God, the living God,
were deep and real, did not long fail of the object of their quest, and
with it of that holy calm which can alone effectually still the tumults
of the heart; while in the case of those whose natural sensibilities
alone were stirred, there was enough in the cares of the world and the
pressing exigences of daily life soon to blunt the edge of excited
feeling, and preclude the danger of a too intense or long-continued
anxiety. Those in short who had then been roused to momentary
seriousness, would either inevitably soon sink into slumber again, or
have their eyes opened to the sight of Him, the beholding of whom alone
can permanently keep the soul awake, and in whom there is not only life
everlasting but peace unspeakable.
It should be remembered, also, that those to whose benefit Mr. Burns’
labours were at this time for the most part directed, belonged to that
class whom it is most difficult to arouse to any thought or care about
eternal things at all, and who when they are so roused, are then only
led to think when they have been first made to feel. Those rude and
untaught hearts in Albion Street and Barrack Hill, or amidst the crowds
of factory workers, who were brought to weep and wail aloud at the
thought of God and eternity, might never get beyond those mere sobs and
tears—might catch only a momentary glimpse of a higher world, and then
pass again into darkness; and yet surely the very state of mind which
made them capable of such tears had already raised them far above their
former state of stolid indifference and moral debasement, and brought
them at least several steps nearer the kingdom of God than they were
before. There are those—let us never forget it—whose deeper nature must
be reached, primarily and chiefly, not through the head, but through the
heart.
It was a time doubtless of high but in the main of sacred and salutary
excitement. Occasionally no doubt the tide of feeling was too
unrestrained—more continuous and less subjected to regulative control,
than with a view to solid and enduring results would have been
desirable. There was not indeed too much feeling; but there was perhaps
too little thought—not too much of the whirlwind and of the fire, but
possibly too little of the still small voice.
Without any less of the religion of the heart, there might have been
more of the religion of the informed judgment, the educated conscience,
and of the disciplined will. It is hard in any case, and under any
ministry, fully to reconcile and combine what may be called the
stimulative and the educative functions of the gospel message—to give
full scope at once to the powers that stir and to the principles that
should guide and control the spiritual nature. I do not say—least of all
would the subject of this memoir have said—that in the present instance
this reconciliation was perfectly attained. In the great lack, too, of
wise guides of souls, and in the comparative inexperience in such work
even of tliose who were most fitted for it, it is not wonderful if a
spiritual movement, at once so extensive and profound, should have got
occasionally somewhat beyond control; and if some portion of its good
results should thus have been lost or have passed away into impure and
morbid forms. Even a Divine work in human hands partakes ever and
necessarily more or less of the imperfection and the error of that which
is human. In the main, however, and with every reasonable allowance for
such imperfection and error, we believe this remarkable movement to have
been a real and most blessed work of the Spirit of God—a true awakening,
through His heavenly breath, of the spiritual nature, and quickening of
the springs of highest life in multitudes of human souls. If it was an
enthusiasm, it was an enthusiasm of faith, of love, and of holy
endeavour and aspiration.
Still let it be admitted that the dangers apprehended from excessive and
too continuous excitement, if often exaggerated, are nevertheless real,
and that so far as they can be avoided, they are, in the interest of the
work itself, and for the honour of Him whose work it is, to be
sedulously and anxiously guarded against. “There being a great many
errors and sinful irregularities,” to use again the words of Edwards,
“mixed with this work of God, arising from our weakness, darkness, and
corruption, does not indeed hinder it from being very glorious. Our
follies and sins in some respects manifest the glory of it. The glory of
divine power and grace is set off with the greater lustre by what
appears at the same time of the weakness of an earthen vessel. It is
God’s pleasure to manifest the weakness and unworthiness of the subject
at the same time that he displays the excellency of his power and the
riches of his grace. And I doubt not but some of these things which make
some of us here on earth to be out of humour, and to look on this work
with a sour countenance, heighten the songs of the angels when they
praise God and the Lamb for what they see of the glory of God’s
all-sufficiency, and the efficacy of Christ’s redemption. And how
unreasonable is it that we should be backward to acknowledge the glory
of what God has done, because the devil, and we in hearkening to him,
have done a great deal of mischief.” Still none the less error is error,
and sin is sin, and both are to be with the utmost watchfulness and care
guarded against, so that the work which we recognize as divine may not
only be, but be seen to be, “honourable and glorious,” and that no
needless stumbling-block may be thrown in the way of any true though
feeble seeker after God.
Whether, then, and to what extent, any such incidental evils had
appeared in the present case, was a most fair and important subject of
inquiry; and a committee was accordingly appointed for that purpose by
the presbytery of Aberdeen, moved thereto chiefly by some very unfair
and one-sided accounts of some of the meetings which had appeared in one
of the public prints. The result was eminently satisfactory. The
proceedings were conducted on the whole—as Mr. Burns himself most
cordially admitted—with candour and fairness, and in such a manner as
fully to elicit the essential elements of the truth. To the convener of
the committee in particular, the Rev. Wm. Pirie, he felt himself under
deep obligation for the kindness and courtesy with which he conducted
his own examination, when called personally to appear as a witness. A
part of his evidence it may be proper here to give, both as illustrating
his general character and views, and the light in which he regarded the
special matters then in question. We may only further premise, in order
to the clearer understanding of some of the questions, that the
newspaper attack referred to consisted partly of a professedly verbatim
report of the proceedings at one of the meetings, and partly of a
leading article, commenting thereon with great bitterness and severity:—
“Q. Could you state those peculiarities of the Herald’s report which
makes it, as you have said in your letter to Mr. Mitchell, a
‘caricature’ of what was spoken by you on the occasions referred to?
“A. Among these peculiarities, I may mention the following as occicrring
to me at the moment:—1st, The manner in which the whole is printed, by
the use of hyphens, and the parenthetical insertion of remarks by the
reporter. The reason of my speaking with peculiar slowness on the
occasion referred to, was to prevent, if possible, the charge of trying
to excite the people being brought against me by the enemies of the work
present. 2d, The omission of sentences throughout which are necessary to
exhibit the true connection of what was said, and the consequent
bringing together, and in some cases mixing up, of things which, as
spoken, stood apart. 3d, The entire omission of what was said during the
last hour of the address, the insertion of which is indispensable to
give a just impression of the whole service. 4th, The omission of some
introductory remarks, in which the speaker explained his reasons for
addressing those who seemed to have come as spectators, rather than
those ‘anxious inquirers’ for whom the meeting was intimated—a
circumstance this which led the speaker to leave the text on which he
was to have spoken, and to enlarge in a remonstrance with those whom he
supposed to have come from questionable motives.
"Q. Assuming it to be as a religious exposition delivered from the
pulpit, by a licentiate of the Church of Scotland, would you hold the
report in the Aberdeen Herald (supposing it to be correct) as becoming,
decent, and in conformity with Scripture?
“A. I have no hesitation in saying that the report in the Herald, if
read under the idea of its being accurate, and without a knowledge of
the particular circumstances in which these meetings took place, would
seem open to the charge of being incoherent in the connection of its
meaning, and not well fitted to edify the hearer. Indeed, I have myself
met with judicious and godly friends who have been led to fear that the
speaker had been imprudent in the case referred to; while, on the other
hand, I have not met with any serious person of sound judgment, who was
present at the meeting and thought that anything unscriptural or
unbecoming in the circumstances had been said or done. Nor do I myself,
in the recollection of what took place, know of anything which ought to
be condemned by those who hold sound views of Bible truth.
“Q. You admit that the words, ‘This is the outpouring of the Spirit were
used by you; how did you know that at the time?
"A. This was my own deliberate conviction at the time, and continues to
be so. The grounds on which I was convinced of this were, not merely
those appearances of deep solemnity and a humbling sense of sin which
were manifested by many of the people, but also my general knowledge of
the state of many of them, from private conversation and the testimony
of others. No one can see the propriety of introducing such a statement,
unless he had been present and had witnessed the circumstances in which
it was made.
"Q. How did those appearances of deep solemnity and humbling sense of
sin, to which you have referred, manifest themselves in the hearers at
the time?
“A. The appearances to which I have alluded are, that deep solemnity
which one can judge of when present, and all the usual outward marks of
grief and humiliation. It is no doubt difficult to judge of such a
matter from visible tokens, and specially so in regard to individual
cases. But, as I have already said, the conviction which I expressed was
not founded solely on the appearances visible at that time, but also on
the grounds stated in answer to the previous question ; nor would I
think it safe to judge of such a matter by almost any appearances, if
taken apart from the causes which produced them and the effects by which
they are followed.
“Q. When you used the words referred to, ‘This is the outpouring of the
Spirit/ how was it possible for you, in conformity with the explanation
given in your last answer, to tell what the effects would be?
“A. I am fully convinced that it is a matter of the utmost difficulty to
judge, in regard to a particular individual, that the concern which that
individual feels is the effect of special and saving grace; but, at the
same time, I have no doubt that any one who is acquainted, from
Scripture, and especially by experience, with the saving work of God’s
Spirit, can on good grounds conclude that the Spirit of God is working
remarkably among a people, even before time has fully proved the effects
of that work upon the lives of individuals.
“Q. Did you know a great proportion of the parties beforehand?
“A. I was accustomed to meet them almost day by day; to converse
privately with those who were anxious; and, in this way, had an
opportunity of obtaining a general knowledge of their religious state. I
also heard, from various quarters, of the state of some of them when at
work and when at home, and thus could more confidently judge that they
were really impressed by divine truth.
"Q. Did you witness any physical manifestations on that night?
“A. If by ‘physical manifestations’ be meant the indications of grief
alluded to in such texts as in Zechariah xii. 10, ‘They shall look on me
whom they have pierced, and shall mourn for him, as one mourneth for his
only son, and shall be in bitterness for him, as one that is in
bitterness for his first-born’—if this be meant, I did see such
indications of feeling, and I would desire to see them on a far larger
scale.
"Q. It is meant, did you hear sobs, crying, screaming, or did you see
any one faint or fall into convulsions?
“A. I certainly did see, and expect to see in such cases, much weeping,
some audibly praying to God for mercy, and occasionally also individuals
crying aloud as if pierced to the heart. I don’t remember that any one
fell down or fell into convulsions on the night referred to, although I
have occasionally seen such cases, both in Aberdeen and in other places,
and among these, strong men in the prime of life.
“Q, Do you think persons so excited can by possibility further benefit
from pulpit ministrations?
"A. I should think that the most direct means of composing persons under
such spiritual concern, is the calm and tender ministration of the
gospel of Christ. Of course, if the bodily frame is so much affected as
to prevent the intelligent hearing of the word, no benefit can be
derived from it. When people have fallen into a swoon, the latter is the
case, and such persons had better be removed; but where there is much
weeping, there may be, at the same time, the best preparation for
listening to the exhibition of Christ.
“Q. Am I to understand you, when you said, in a foregoing answer, that
you did see persons weeping and audibly praying to God for mercy, and
occasionally also individuals crying aloud, as if pierced to the heart,
that you considered these as sure evidences that the Spirit of God was
savingly working upon these persons?
“A. I have already stated very fully the grounds of my conviction that
the Spirit of God was at that time powerfully working among the people
taken as a whole, but I have a firm and growing conviction that there
often are, at such seasons, individuals who manifest a great degree of
feeling, and yet afterwards show that they continue in their natural
state.
"Q. Do you not think public meetings protracted until ten, or eleven, or
twelve o’clock at night, likely to give offence, to interrupt family
worship, interfere with family arrangements, cause family disputes, and
to be hurtful to the interests of religion?
"A. I confess I am more and more convinced of the great importance, in
general, of a sacred regard to the ordinance of God in regard to family
and secret worship, and of the importance consequently of having public
meetings, as far as possible,-concluded at an early hour; at the same
time, I have no doubt that there are cases in which it is for the glory
of God that public worship should be more protracted. In places where
the people cannot meet earlier than eight o’clock I have generally found
that we could not end before ten o’clock, and this is the hour at which,
generally, the public meeting has been dismissed, although, in a few
cases, it has seemed necessary to remain to a later hour with those who
were anxious about their souls.”
Besides these oral statements, the following written replies to some of
the questions proposed by the presbytery seem to me worthy of permanent
record:—
“Q. Have you had many opportunities of seeing persons in different
places affected at religious meetings in the way in which the persons
referred to were affected in Bonaccord Church?
“A. I have had many such opportunities.
“Q. What have you found to be the result generally, in as far as the
religious state of those persons was concerned, as displayed in their
after-conduct?
“A. I have known cases in which persons so affected, even to a great
degree, have turned out ill; though I believe they were at the time
really affected with a sense of their guilt and danger. In the
generality of cases, however, I have had good reasons to hope that such
persons underwent a saving change. They were at least greatly changed to
the eye of man.
“Q. Have you carefully inquired as to such results?
“A. I have been careful to inquire as to these results, and often feel a
burden of concern on my soul about the case of such persons, using all
the means in my power to ascertain and to insure their consistency, and
their growth in the knowledge of God.
“Q. Have you found that, when persons have not been strongly affected,
to all appearance, in religious meetings, they had been awakened to any
great concern about their spiritual state?
“A. I have found many who have been brought to a deep, spiritual, and
abiding sense of sin, without manifesting their concern to those around
any farther than by silent tears or deep seriousness of demeanour. Such
cases, if really deep, are in general, I think, to be marked for
stability.
“Q. What sort of persons have you generally seen much affected at such
meetings? Were they those who had been utterly careless about religious
truth, and very ill acquainted with the facts of religion, or those who
had been accustomed to pay some attention to religious ordinances, and
had an acquaintance with these facts?
“A. They have been of both the classes mentioned in the question. I do
not know that persons of little knowledge are harder to bring to a sense
of sin than others better informed; the Spirit of God worketh when and
where he pleaseth. But I think that I have found those persons generally
most stable after they were awakened, who had full religious knowledge,
and especially who lived in godly families. Yet I know remarkable
instances of persons becoming eminent for godliness in the most
disadvantageous circumstances, and who seemed rather to get good than
evil from seeing the wickedness of their relations around them.”
One or two extracts from letters to the convener of the Committee will
complete the account of the part borne by him in this deeply interesting
and important investigation.
Allow me, also, here to express the kindness shown to me, by the
Committee and by the Convener, at my appearance before them. The truth
will always bear examination. In this case I fear nothing, except a
superficial or prejudiced consideration of the facts. A close and holy
scrutiny will indeed expose the emptiness of the work of mans but the
work of Jehovah, like his inspired Word, the more it is examined will
appear the more clearly to be worthy of his own infinite perfections. .
. .
“I may take, also, this opportunity of explaining more clearly than I
was able to do in my examination before the Committee, my deliberate
opinion of the grounds on which I would feel warranted to judge of the
reality of the Holy Spirit’s work among a people, or in the case of an
individual.
“The full and complete evidence of His work, whether in the case of a
people or of an individual,' is to be drawn from the manner in which
they are affected under the preaching of the gospel, taken in connection
with the truths by which they are so affected, and the effects which are
afterwards habitually manifested in their temper of soul and outward
conversation. It is the safe method, as a general rule, to judge of any
real or supposed work of God among a people from these sources taken all
together; and in the case of individuals, except the instance be very
remarkable indeed, I would not think it safe to decide that a saving
work of the Holy Ghost had taken place, until the spiritual, consistent,
and permanent character of the individual had made it evident. I am,
however, fully convinced that a minister of God, if experimentally
acquainted with the saving work of God on his own soul, and especially
if he has had opportunity of witnessing the work of the Holy Spirit on a
large scale, may be warranted, in remarkable cases, to conclude that
God’s Spirit is at work among a people, before time has fully proved the
work by its permanent effects; nay, that he may even do so from
witnessing the power of the truth on the minds of an audience at a
public meeting, and without particular previous knowledge of the state
of individuals, and yet not be liable to the charge of rash and
unwarrantable judgment. I conceive, for instance, that the apostles must
have been convinced that the Holy Ghost was remarkably outpoured on the
day of Pentecost, when they saw the mighty power of the gospel on the
souls of thousands. I have no doubt that Mr. Livingstone, and other
ministers and people of God, were convinced, at the Kirk of Shotts, of
the same things, without needing to wait until the permanent fruits of
the work were developed. I could myself have no more doubt of this than
of any Scripture truth, on that memorable day when the work of the Lord
began in so glorious a manner at Kilsyth. On many other occasions, also,
I have considered myself warranted in coming at the time to the same
general conviction; and have never yet found that this general
conviction was weakened, much less destroyed, by after-experience. In
the meeting referred to, in Bonaccord Church, on Monday the 23d
November, 1840, I could have no doubt, from the nature of the truth
spoken, the manner in which I felt supported of God’s Spirit in speaking
it, and the evident effect produced by it on the minds of many of the
audience, and, more or less, on the minds of almost all, that the Holy
Ghost was then exerting his gracious power among us; at the same time,
as I stated to the Committee when examined, it is a matter of fact that
my judgment, expressed in the words which I felt called on to use, ‘This
is the outpouring of the Spirit,’ was actually founded, not merely on
the circumstances I have just stated, but also on the knowledge which I
had previously obtained regarding the state of many persons under deep
concern about the salvation of their perishing souls.”
The committee of presbytery very properly extended their inquiries
beyond the sphere of their own immediate jurisdiction, to some of the
other scenes of Mr. Burns’ labours, where a religious movement
essentially similar to that at Aberdeen had taken place, and where from
the lapse of time its real nature and tendency could be the better
tested. The result was a remarkable concurrence of weighty and
impressive testimony aljke to the depth and extent of the influence at
work, and of the holy and enduring fruit in the hearts and lives of
multitudes of its subjects. Some portions of that evidence will be given
in the Appendix to this volume. It may be enough here to present the
general result of the presbytery’s investigation, as embodied in the
deliverance adopted by them, on a full consideration of the whole facts
and bearings of the case:—
“The Presbytery, having taken into their solemn consideration the
evidence on revivals of religion received by their Committee on that
subject, resolved,
“1. That a revival of religion, consisting in the general quickening of
believers, and the conversion of multitudes of unbelievers, by the Holy
Spirit, cannot but be an object of most earnest desire to every follower
of the Lord; that the genuineness of such a revival is chiefly to be
tested by the nature and permanence of the effects by which it is
followed; that it can only be expected to flow from the use of the
appointed means, accompanied with the abundant outpouring of the Spirit
of God; that it should be made a subject of fervent and persevering
prayer; and that, when such a revival takes place, it should not be
dreaded or spoken of with levity, but should be carefully and seriously
marked, and acknowledged with devout thanksgiving.
“2. That the evidence, derived from answers to certain queries sent by
the Committee to ministers and others in different parts of the country,
amply bears out the fact that an extensive and delightful work of
revival has commenced, and is in hopeful progress in various districts
of Scotland— the origin of which, instrumentally, is to be traced to a
more widely diffused spirit of prayer on the part of ministers and
people, and to the simple, earnest, and affectionate preaching of the
gospel of the grace of God; that this work in the districts referred to,
many of which are locally far distant from others, has been attended
with few of those evils which have generally more or less characterized
seasons of great religious excitement; and that, on the whole, an amount
of good has been accomplished, which loudly calls for gratitude and
praise to Him ‘who turneth the hearts of men as the rivers of water.’
“3. That in the case of Aberdeen, to which the evidence more especially
refers, it clearly appears, so far as the test of time can be applied to
the subject, that a very considerable number of persons, chiefly in
early life, have been strongly, and it is hoped savingly, impressed with
the importance of eternal things, and. are in the course of further
instruction; that many of all ages have been awakened to a more serious
concern about Christ and salvation than they formerly felt, and have
been quickened to activity in well-doing; and that the labours of Mr. W.
C. Burns, preacher of the gospel, are peculiarly discernible in
connection with these results. At the same time, the Presbytery cannot
but regret that such an exclusive reference should have been made to two
particular meetings at which Mr. Burns presided, where the services were
protracted to a late hour, and where much outward excitement
prevailed—circumstances obviously liable to much inconvenience as well
as misconception—while it appears from the evidence that many other
meetings were held for religious instruction, through the same
instrumentality, which could be liable to no such misconception, and
where much good was wrought. And, upon the whole, the Presbytery are
convinced that, if it had entered more into the nature of the inquiry to
ascertain simply the extent of the awakening that has been effected in
this city and neighbourhood, the evidence of a favourable kind would
have been such as to lead to increased thanksgiving.
“4. That the Presbytery having considered the whole evidence that has
been laid before them on this unspeakably important subject, feel
themselves called upon to recommend to all ministers, preachers, and
elders within their bounds, in their respective spheres, to labour more
and more diligently and prayerfully, in the use of all scriptural means,
to promote the cause of vital religion, which needs so much to be
revived among us; and they would also exhort and entreat all the private
members of the Church to study to grow in grace, to abound in all the
fruits of righteousness, and to plead more earnestly with the great Head
of the Church that he would pour out of his Spirit more plentifully upon
us, and bless his appointed ordinances, that the wilderness may become a
fruitful field, and the fruitful field be counted for a forest.”
Before the commencement of the investigation, Mr. Burns had already
closed his labours at Aberdeen, having been called to take the temporary
charge of a new church at Dundee. He left for that town on the 5th of
December, at early dawn; but not too early to find awaiting him at the
place of departure a number of those who had learned to look to him “
even as an angel of God,” and who parted from him with many tears:—
"Saturday, December 8th.—Though I was very late up last night (this
morning), and had but a short time for sleep, I awoke of my own accord
at the proper time quite refreshed, and set out at twenty minutes to
seven with the Dundee mail. A number of my young friends had found out
the time of my departure, and stood by on the pavement in tears. The
mockery of many around made our tongues silent: we looked at each other,
with Jesus in our hearts’ eye I hope, and wept.”
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