“SO your loved and
honoured William,” wrote the Rev. Charles Brown to his mother, on
hearing the tidings of his death, “has obtained the fulfilment of
Christ’s prayer, ‘Father, I will that they also whom thou hast given me
be with me where I am, that they may behold my glory.’ I am confident
that amid the sorrow of your great loss, you are enabled to give thanks
and say, ‘It is the Lord:’ ‘It is well.’ He makes no mistake as to the
time, or the place, or the way of removing his servants to be with
himself. Your dear William’s history has, in fact, been one so palpably
stamped with the signatures of a divine leading, that it were unlawful
to entertain a doubt that the Lord just saw his work done, and the time,
for him, of the everlasting rest arrived. I confess that I was quite
unprepared for the tidings. I had dreamed that there remained for
William a time of coming home (necessitated of course by his serious
illness); that you would have the happiness of embracing him once more;
that we should all see again his grave benevolent countenance; and that
the Church and the cause of China and her missions might be greatly
benefited. But now that the Lord has given his own unerring decision, I
think I can see things that go to reconcile me to it, even apart from
its simple unerringness as given by Him. I am not sure that William
would have taken kindly to going up and down this country and talking.
China and its labours, far from the ear and eye of man, was his sphere.
He had literally buried himself in that vast land —a noble, living
burial! No doubt, also, his system was spent. He had done his work (not
a short one, be it remembered) in such a manner that even his robust
constitution was undermined. And so things have just reached their
natural close.”
Doubtless this is the true reading of the matter, so far as it can be
read by us on this side the vail. If now I must speak more of the
character and work of my beloved and lamented brother, it must still be
in the words of others; and for this there are abundant materials in the
numerous and most touching tributes to his noble life and precious
labours which have spontaneously come from every side. Of these it is
fitting that I should quote first the words of his esteemed colleague
and friend, the Rev. W. S. Swanson, in a sermon preached at Amoy shortly
after receiving the tidings of his death:—“ And now that his life has
closed, so far as regards earth, it remains as a precious legacy to us
who are left. In reviewing it, what shall we say were the main
characteristics of this man? He was a thorough scholar, with a
well-furnished and an active mind; he possessed in no ordinary degree a
sound judgment, and a large amount of common sense; he was one of the
ablest and most popular preachers of his day; he was a man of great
energy, indomitable perseverance, and of ardent zeal. But not these
properties severally, nor all combined, seem to me to be the reason to
account for the power he possessed, the success that followed his public
work, or the mark he has left behind him.
'“In personal intercourse with him one thing struck me above all
others—his prayerfulness; and herein I believe we get some insight into
his remarkable success and power. No matter what he did, or had to do,
whether of importance or of a nature you might call trivial, he made it
a matter of prayer. This prayerfulness of his seems to me to be the
outstanding feature of his Christian life and his missionary work.
“Another very marked feature of his character was his faithfulness. You
never could mistake what he .was, nor whose servant he considered
himself to be. He believed, as we all do, that Christ and the world
could not amalgamate; and he was faithful to his belief. And what was
the result? The testimony of those who care little for Christ and the
things of his kingdom is unanimous in this, that he was a faithful,
earnest, and consistent Christian; and this testimony they never
withheld. Agree or not with him as they might, they did not fail to
perceive, and were not slow to acknowledge, the faithfulness of the man
to the great Master he served. This faithfulness made him sometimes seem
harsh, it may be, to some, and not so regardful as they might have
wished him to be of the feelings of others. But this could be thought
only by those who did not know him. He was very tender, and very chary
of giving offence; but not so much so as to prevent him from denouncing
where denunciation was needed, or rebuking where rebuke seemed to him to
be required.
“There is one other point in his character to which I must refer, and
then I have done. To many he seemed eccentric, and to some morose. He
was neither. There might be some shadow of seeming evidence for the
former; there was none for the latter. He set a high ideal before
himself as the ideal of the Christian missionary; and he did not
hesitate to adopt any mode of life, or to enter upon any course of
action, that seemed to him to be necessary, or even beneficial, to the
proper carrying on of the work he came to do. As I have said already,
the motive from which he acted was always the same; and one hardly dared
to blame him in matters of no importance whatever when this was known.
And now when we look back on his history, we may perhaps be led to
believe that even in regard to the mode and localities of his missionary
life, he acted in the way which, in his case, and with his peculiar and
most marked individuality, was calculated to be of most benefit.”
The feature of his Christian life here first referred to, is so
pre-eminently characteristic, that I am tempted to add the following
words of another:—“Above all,” says an able writer in the Sunday at
Home, “ Mr. Burns was a man of prayer. No one could be long in his
company without discovering that. All the week long ‘he filled the
fountains of his spirit with prayer,’ and on Sabbath the full fountain
gave forth its abundant treasures. There was a freshness, a simplicity,
a scriptural force and directness in his prayers, that formed the best
of all preparations for the discourse that was to follow. Out of doors,
we have often felt, as we heard him preach, that the opening prayer of
the service was like the ploughing up of the field, it so opened the
heart, and quickened and informed the con' science; the sermon that
followed was the sowing of the seed in the prepared soil; and the
concluding prayer was like the after harrowing of the ground, fixing
down the seed that had been sown.”
To any one in the least degree acquainted with him, or who had come even
for a day into casual contact with him, it would not have been needful
to have said even this much in regard to that which was in truth so much
a part of himself, as to be inseparable from his very idea. His whole
life was literally a life of prayer, and his whole ministiy a series of
battles fought at the mercy-seat. A friend who was under the same roof
with him the day before he began his labours in St. Peter’s, tells me
that after walking round the parish with one of the elders, whose guest
he was, he shut himself up in his chamber, and was found long afterwards
lying on his face in an agony of prayer— the source doubtless of the
holy calm which so struck the hearers on the succeeding morning. There
is an entry in his journal, during the time of his residence in
Edinburgh, which is perhaps too sacred to quote, but to which I cannot
withhold a reference in this connection. He seems to have possessed a
private key to the church of St. Luke’s, and there we find him, at least
on one occasion, “detained” a whole night in solitary prayer “before the
Lord.” Such incidents as these let us far into the secret of where his
great strength lay.
The Rev. Dr. Talmage, of the American Board of Missions, who, along with
his admirable and lamented colleague, Mr. Doty, knew him so well during
his early labours at Amoy, adds one or two characteristic traits which
his friends will delight to recognize:—“He was,” he says, “very careful
of his health, avoiding unnecessary exposure, abstemious in his diet,
and very particular in regard to his clothing, guarding against sudden
changes of temperature. Although living by himself, he made it a rule to
take tea, and spend a part or the whole of the evening of every day of
the week, except one, with some one of the missionary families. We all
enjoyed greatly, we waited for his coming down stairs to dinner, we
heard a heavy groan. Thinking he had been taken ill, Mrs. Thoms ran up
stairs, and found him lying on his face on the floor groaning before the
Lord! He had gotten such an overwhelming sense of his responsibility for
the souls of that people, that he could then think of nothing else. In
his absence of mind, he had left his door partially open, which Mrs.
Thoms shut; and we did not see him again till late in the evening, when
he came for the family worship. His prayer then was one continued strain
of self-loathing, and pleading for mercy through ‘the blood of the Lamb
of God.’ It happened that his room was next to mine, and all that night
I heard him still groaning in prayer!”
and felt profited by this social intercourse with him. . . . He also
carefully watched the indications of Providence, expecting to be led in
the right way. I may mention a fact to illustrate this. He had planned a
visit with some of our native helpers to the island of Quemoy, situated
on the north-east side of the entrance to Amoy harbour. The day
appointed to go proved rainy; from this he gathered • that he should go
in some other direction. While meditating on this subject an inquirer
from a village near Pechuia came to his room, and requested him to visit
the region of his native place. This was forthwith decided on. On their
way to the boat they were met by an elderly man, an inquirer, who, on
learning in what direction they were going, told them that he had a son
in business at the village of Pechuia, and invited them to go to his
son’s shop, who, he said, would give them a hearty welcome. Such were
the leadings of Providence, by which the gospel was first carried to
that region. The remarkable blessings which followed that visit are well
known. . . .
“His greatest power in preaching seemed to me to consist in the manner
in which he quoted the Holy Scriptures. In this I do not think that I
have ever heard him surpassed. Hence, in labouring among the Chinese, it
was over the native Christians and inquirers that he exerted his
greatest influence for good. ,
“On this account it seemed to some (perhaps to all) of us that his
labours would have been still more efficient if he had remained longer,
or had settled down permanently in some one district of country, instead
of pursuing so desultory a course of labour. A man with his gifts, I
should suppose, would be just adapted to a field of labour such as Amoy
now is, where there are so many small churches and companies of
inquirers scattered throughout the region, and where the good seed of
the Word has been sown so widely. Such a field would have had more
likeness to those fields in Scotland and Canada, where his labours had
been so wonderfully blessed.
“I say it seemed, for knowing his earnestness in seeking the divine
guidance, we dare not say that he did not obtain it.
“He was a great (not perhaps in the eyes of the world) and good man; but
he regarded himself as having peculiarities, and did not think that
others should adopt his plan of labour.”
Of the style of his preaching at his best times, I cannot better speak
than in the words of a writer already quoted:— “ His voice was clear,
full, and of a great compass and power. By nearly constant use, indoors
and out, its finer tones were roughened when we heard it; but, for all
the purposes of an evangelist, it was one of the finest we have ever
heard. In preaching he used no notes, had but little action, and no art.
His power was solely, humanly speaking, from the weight, clearness,
abundance, and vigour of his matter, and from the vivid force of his own
feelings and convictions of the truth of what he was uttering. He
believed, and therefore spoke. God was visible to him as he preached;
and so he soon became visible also to at least some of his hearers. He
used but few illustrations, and when he did use them they were short and
telling. His style was firm, terse, Saxon, abounding in short sentences;
and he was mighty in the Scriptures. Sometimes you would have thought,
in listening to some of his solemn appeals, that you were hearing a new
chapter of the Bible when first spoken by a living prophet. His manner
was not only solemn, but preeminently solemnizing. Few—we might say
none—that came to laugh remained long in the laughing mood. He was a
man, whether in the pulpit or out of it, whom you might treat many ways,
but you could nowhere, nowhen, laugh at him. And if you tried to argue
with him, you came away, if victorious in your own eyes, at least
thoroughly conscious that you had grappled with no despicable, no common
adversary. He was ever calm, cool, self-possessed. Preaching one day in
Montreal, Mr. Bums was roughly handled by a Popish crowd, some of whom
threw stones, by one of which Mr. Bums was cut in the face. A party of
the 93d Highlanders heard of the fracas, and rushed to the rescue,
headed by one Hector MTher-son, now labouring as a missionary at St.
Martin’s, near Perth, and to whom the preaching of Mr. Bums had been
blessed. To the earnest inquiry of the soldier, ‘What’s all this?’ Mr.
Bums quietly wiped off the blood, and with a smile said, ‘Never mind;
it’s only a little wound received in the Master’s service.’1 If in
preaching, indoors or out, he was in any way interrupted, he was never
flurried, and knew well how to turn any interruption to his own
advantage. A friend has often graphically repeated to the writer an
instance illustrative of this. Once on a fine summer Sabbath evening, he
was preaching to a vast crowd at the approach to a railway station. A
tall man, slightly intoxicated, in the outer edge of the crowd was
rudely interrupting, and interjecting occasional comments, exciting the
risibility of those around him. Mr. Burns paused a moment, turned his
eyes on the man: ‘You are tall and strong; but you are not too tall for
a coffin, nor too strong for the worms! You are tall and strong; but not
too tall for the grave, nor too strong for death! You are tall and
strong; but you will soon have to stand forth, one of the crowd, before
the great white throne; and how will you face the Judge of the whole
earth! Tall and strong as you are, you cannot be hid from God; the rocks
and mountains will not cover you; his all-seeing eye is on you now!’
This was spoken with a slow deliberation that made every word tell, not
only on the man, but on the crowd. ‘It was absolutely withering and
terrible,’ our informant used to say; the man was sobered in one moment.
He seemed to bow himself down, as if to hide himself from that eye, and
became at once the most attentive, and eager, and respectful listener
the preacher had.” ‘
In regard to the manner of his outer life, no man ever held himself more
absolutely loose to the world, and to the things that are in the world.
Literally he deemed not that anything that he possessed was his own,
save only that he might use it in the service of Christ and human souls.
Scrupulously exact and methodical in the use of his means, and rigid in
his economy as regarded himself, he was conspicuously bountiful and
free-handed in the dispensation of them to others. His whole income,
from the first day on which he had any income to the last, was thus
spent, with the exception only of what was necessary to supply for
himself the barest necessities of life, and an annual gift of love to
his one surviving parent. He literally fulfilled his own ideal, as
conveyed in words that have been often quoted:—“The happiest state of a
Christian on earth seems to be this—that he should have few wants. If a
man have Christ in his heart, and heaven before his eye, and only as
much of temporal blessings as is just needful to carry him safely
through life, then pain and sorrow have little to shoot at—such a man
has very little to lose. To be in union with Him, who is the Shepherd of
Israel, and to walk very near to Him who is a sun and shield—that
comprehends all that a poor sinner requires to make him happy between
this and heaven.”
How vividly do I remember the moment, a little more than a year ago,
when the trunk which had come home from China containing nearly all of
property that he left behind him in the world was opened, amid a group
of young and wondering faces,—a few sheets of Chinese printed matter, a
Chinese and an English Bible, an old writing-case, one or two small
books, a Chinese lantern, a single Chinese dress, and the blue flag of
the “Gospel Boat.” “Surely,” whispered one little one amid the awestruck
silence, “surely he must have been very poor!” There was One, we felt,
standing amongst us, though unseen, who for his sake had been poorer
still.
Of the results of his work in the Chinese field it is difficult to
speak. Undoubtedly his life there was far more powerful as an influence
than as an agency. It was not so much by what he said, or by what he
did, as by what he was, that he made his presence felt over so wide a
surface of that vast land, and that “being dead, he yet speaketh.” “I
never expect to see his like again,” says an esteemed missionary of
another communion, who only knew him for a very short time. “We are all,
as I believe, serving God in our divine vocations, with greater
gladness, and more fervid zeal, from having communed with your brother
in his heavenly walk and noble aspirations.” “Know him, sir?” exclaimed
another, with almost indignant surprise, when asked if he knew a brother
missionary of the name of William Burns, “all China knows him; he is the
holiest man alive.” His life, in short, was “a sign” to all who came in
contact with him, and in the face of a luxurious and self-indulgent age,
of an absolute | consecration of heart to God, which knew no reserves,
I flinched from no sacrifices, and in very deed counted all /things loss
for Christ. In fine, to use the words of the Rev. James Johnston, once
his colleague in mission work, and since for many years the esteemed
secretary of the Scottish Committee:—“Reckoned by the number of
conversions under his direct preaching, the results are small; measured
by the effect of his personal influence, the results are great. From the
nature of the work for which he was specially qualified, and to which he
entirely gave himself—that of a pioneer or evangelist—he could not
expect to reap the fruits himself. His work was to break up the ground
and sow the seed, not to gather the harvest. No man in this age, so far
as we know, has so entirely devoted himself to this self-denying work.
Again and again has our departed brother laboured for years in some dark
and unpromising field, and just when the- first streak of dawn appeared
on the horizon, he would leave another to enjoy the glorious sun-rise,
while he buried himself in some other region sunk in heathen darkness.
Again and again have we seen him thus in prayers and tears sowing the
precious seed, and as soon as he saw the green shoots appear above the
dark soil, he would leave to others the arduous yet happy task of
reaping the harvest, and begin again his appointed work in breaking up
the fallow-ground. The full extent of his great life-work will not be
known until that day when ‘he that soweth and he that reapeth shall
rejoice together.’ The faith and patience of this devoted servant of God
is an example to the Church, and to every labourer in the Lord’s
vineyard, teaching us not to live upon the stimulus of a present
success, even in the conversion of souls. No man enjoyed so great
success as he did, or thirsted for the salvation of sinners with more
intense longing than he, yet have we seen him labouring for seven years,
according to his own testimony, ‘without seeing one soul brought to
Christ/ yet labouring on only with increased diligence and prayer, until
he saw, as he shortly did, the awakening at Pechuia, which reminded him
of Kilsyth. His influence in this way has been extended over a larger
field, and with his strongly marked individuality he left the impress of
his character and piety wherever he went. Missionaries felt it, and
blessed God for even a casual acquaintance with William Burns; converts
felt it, and have been heard to say that they got their idea of what the
Saviour was on earth from the holy calm and warm love, and earnest zeal
of Mr. Burns’ ‘walk with God.’ The converts in many parts of China, and
their children, will remember his high type of piety. His many
translations of Scripture and sacred books, like the Pilgrim's Progress,
and Line upon Line, will prove a rich legacy to the Church, and his
psalms and hymns in different dialects will help the faith and fan the
love of the Christian disciples, and spread abroad the Saviour’s name
among the heathen in the new songs sung in their hearing by the converts
at their work, or by the way, and in their worship in the church and
family. As a mission, we bless God for all that our departed brother
was, and for all that he did. He was God’s gift to us, and while we
fondly looked forward to a longer life, and further conquests in the new
and vast region on which he had entered with impaired strength but
undiminished zeal, we bow to our Father’s will in his removal on the 4th
of April. His grave stands on the borders of the great kingdom of
Manchuria, the advanced post of Christian conquests, beyond the northern
limits of China. The little mound casts its shadow over many lands, for
where is Burns not loved and mourned? But his life is the Church’s
legacy, and loudly calls for selfsacrifice and devotion to the cause of
Christ, and especially the cause of missions. His indomitable spirit
beckons us to the field of conflict and of victory, while his four last
converts, the conquest of his death-bed, stand like sentinels by his
grave, and pray and long for the advance of the Church’s hosts.”
In stature he was about the middle height, of strong, muscular, and
well-knit frame, and with a ruddy and pleasant countenance, which is but
faintly recalled by the worn and aged features of his Chinese picture,
but which will doubtless appear again in glorified form when He comes
who maketh all things new.
IN MEMORIAM.
As gazed the prophet on the ascending car,
Swept by its fiery steeds away and far,
So, with the burning tear and flashing eye,
I trace thy glorious pathway to the sky.
Lone like the Tishbite, as the Baptist bold,
Cast in a rare and apostolic mould;
Earnest, unselfish, consecrated, true,
With nothing but the noblest end in view;
Choosing to toil in distant fields unsown,
Contented to be poor and little known,
Faithful to death. O man of God, well done!
Thy fight is ended, and thy crown is won.
God shall have all the glory! Only grace
Made thee to differ. Let us man abase!
With deep, emphatic tone thy dying word,
Thy last, was this—“Thine is the kingdom, Lord,
The power, and glory! ” Thus the final flame
Of the burnt-offering to Jehovah’s name
Ascended from the altar! Life thus given
To God, must have its secret springs in heaven.
O William Burns! we will not call thee dead,
Though lies thy body in its narrow bed In far-off China.
Though Manchuria keeps
Thy dust, which in the Lord securely sleeps,
Thy spirit lives with Jesus : and where He,
Thy Master, dwells, ’tis meet that thou shouldst be.
There is no death in his divine embrace !
There is no life but where they see His face!
And now, Lord, let thy servant’s mantle fall
Upon another! Since thy solemn call
To preach the truth in China has been heard,
Grant that a double portion be conferred
Of the same spirit on the gentler head
Of some Elisha, who may raise the dead,
And fill the widow’s cruse, and heal the spring,
And make the desolate of heart to sing;
And stand, though feeble, fearless, since he knows
Thy host angelic guards him from his foes;
Whose life an image fairer still might be
Of Christ of Nazareth and Galilee—
Of thine, O spotless Lamb of Calvary!
China, I breathe for thee a brother’s prayer:
Unnumbered are thy millions. Father, hear
The groans we cannot! Oh, thine arm make bare,
And reap thy harvest of salvation there
The fulness of the Gentiles, like a sea Immense,
O God, be gathered unto Thee!
Then Israel save; and with his saintly train,
Send us Immanuel over all to reign!
H. Grattan Guinness
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