THE Free Kirk
communion
services, held
on Do'ull
Uilleam's cow
pasture, on the
other side of
the burn, just
opposite the
deserted church,
commenced at
eleven instead
of twelve
o'clock, which
was the usual
worship hour, on
account of the
long distances
intervening
between the
place of worship
and the
scattered abodes
of the outlying
sheep-farming
and
sheep-herding
parishioners.
This morning the
outlying people
were early on
their way, and
so were large
detachments from
neighbouring
parishes that
came riding on
horseback,
driving in
carts, or
spanking
bare-footed,
through the
heather, best
brogues, or
boots with
stockings to
suit, being
carried in hand
until a
customary "
sitting place"
near the church
was reached.
The visitors
were expected,
and warmly
welcomed. Their
horses were
stabled, or
hobbled and let
out on good
pasture. They
were themselves
supplied with as
much milk as
they liked to
drink. Before
communion more
substantial
hospitality
would not be
according to
rule. Abstinence
before communion
was perhaps due
to the Roman
Catholic habit
of fasting
before Mass ;
for in the
Highlands,
although the
people were
never at any
time very
submissive to
Papal authority,
the older Church
left many marks
on the fervid
Presbyterianism
which succeeded,
and which
revived in a
large measure
the earnest
mysticism of the
Culdee Church of
the early
centuries.
Among other
visitors, the
neighbouring
parishes sent
elders and
leading men,
who, although
not formally
commissioned,
possessed a
representative
character. They
came to
encourage the
pastorless Glen
Free Kirkers in
well-doing, by
giving them the
right hand of
fellowship, and
reporting how
the good cause
was thriving
everywhere, and
how the
Residuary Kirk
was everywhere
desolated,
except in just a
few backward
parishes, found
here and there
as black spots
in a generally
well-illuminated
land. It was of
course assumed
that in the
black parishes
the Sun of
Righteousness
had never shone
forth with real
healing under
its wings. This
language,
although bearing
the stamp of a
vivid
imagination
which shaped
what the heart
desired, was not
the cant of
hypocrisy. Not a
few of those who
used it spoke
naturally, as
the great
reality, of a
power which they
had seen
changing others,
or felt working
in themselves. A
Lourdes
Pilgrimage, a
Methodist Camp
Meeting, and a
Presbyterian
Revival, may be
equally the
power of God
unto salvation,
for those who
can enter into
the spirit of
them heart and
soul; while to
others, who are
in their way not
less pious, they
are all equally
condemnable as
grovelling
superstitions or
deceitful animal
magnetism.
It
was assumed
generally by the
Seceders of 1843
that God had
once and for
ever abandoned
the Residuary
Kirk and its
cold morality,
and had
miraculously
raised up the
Free Kirk to put
down Popery,
Prelacy, and
Paganism, and to
gather up the
nations into its
own bosom as the
only true
Church,
conquering and
to conquer until
the Lord came.
Some few tares
and other weeds
might remain
mixed up with
the wheat until
the harvest.
There might be a
few brands fit
for the burning
in the new
Israel, as there
were mutineers
and unbelievers
in the
Wilderness
despite
continual
miracles, and as
there was a
Judas among the
twelve; but to
all whose eyes
were opened, it
was supposed
that God had
manifestly
raised up the
Free Church to
be his Holy
Priesthood and
Peculiar People
in the latter
days ; and that
the light of the
Millennial era
was already
dawning upon the
earth. Results
differed from
expectations ;
but after all
this was a
nobler faith
than the
material gospel
of the
Manchester
School.
The
tent on the
heath-pasture
was placed with
its back to the
vacant church,
which stood up
in the sunshine
like a whited
sepulchre of
desolation.
Still the
swallows
twittered about
its eaves,
busied in
feeding their
young, which
importunately
cried for
rations from
snug
mud-and-straw-built
abodes. The Free
Church
gathering,
numbering more
than a thousand,
arranged itself
for a long
sitting, in
bands and
sections, with
faintly marked
lanes following
the hollows of
the ground
between, on a
series of small
mounds which
formed a sort of
double crescent
in front of the
tent. The
heath-pasture
had once been
covered by a
shallow bay of
the primeval
Glen lake, and
the duns or
mounds now
clothed with
heath just
bursting into
purple bloom,
were at first
heaps of gravel
and sand beneath
the water, which
the burn washed
down from the
hills, long
before it cut
for itself on
the level the
deep channel
through which it
afterwards made
its way,
brawling and
struggling with
angled rocks and
big boulders, to
the river below.
Fragrant thyme,
graceful
alchemilla,
yellow
saxifrage,
modest
eyebright, and
trailing arbutus
mixed with the
deep fringes of
heather on this
mountain
stream's banks ;
and a few large
beech trees near
the church and
the old stone
bridge over the
burn broke up
the background
panorama of deep
valley, weird
conies, and
towering bens,
into many
picturesque and
fantastic
scenes.
Warm
was the sun,
very still the
air. The distant
song of the
river, the
nearer brawl of
the burn, the
voice of the
grouse from the
leacain,1 the
lowing of cattle
and neighing of
horses from the
pastures, and
the buzz of the
busy bee
gathering his
honey close at
hand, and even
making daring
incursions among
the crowd, were
sounds which
mingled with the
psalm, and came
as responses in
the pauses of
the fervent
prayer.
Accessories of
worship go far.
The Free Church
worshippers,
with the proof
of having
followed their
leaders into the
wilderness, so
manifest to all
eyes, felt that
they were verily
worshipping in
the temple not
made with hands,
and that God was
with them.
Although mainly
the work of an
Englishman, the
rugged metrical
version of the
Psalms, which
the Covenanters
amended and
adopted, and
which the Scotch
Churches still
use, must have
suited the
requirements of
the hill
conventicles
rarely well in
the hard
persecution
times. At the
Disruption
period the old
feeling came
back, and the
psalm tunes
chiefly in vogue
retained the
undertone of
wail and
suffering,
swelling
occasionally
into prophetic
bursts of
triumphant joy
for ultimate
victory, which
best harmonised
with the
sentiments of a
deeply religious
people, when
persecution had
driven them into
wild fanaticism.
This day all the
services at the
burnside
communion were
in Gaelic, and
the Gaelic
version of the
Psalms, although
notagreat poetic
glory to the
authorsof it,
is, thanks to
the genius of
the language,
infinitely more
musical than the
English one. The
religious
leaders of the
Glen had for a
quarter of a
century fought
foolishly hard
to extinguish
fiddling,
piping, and
song-singing.
They only
countenanced
psalm and hymn
music; but the
teaching of
music to the
young in classes
only took place
whenever it
suited blind
Duncan Macdiarmid to
come and keep an
evening music
school in winter; and as Duncan
reasonably
wished to make a
good thing of it
when he came,
and his Slope
of the hill. teaching
circuit was
wide, he only
visited the Glen
once every three
or four years.
But in spite of
these drawbacks,
the musical
legacy of former
times was not
yet exhausted.
The voices of
the Glen girls
were still sweet
and flexible,
and there was
still the bardic
and warrior ring
in the modulated
notes from men's
throats. They
did not lack
ear, although
they lacked
training. This
day by the
burn-side, when
a great occasion
stirred their
hearts and fired
their
imagination,
their singing,
with its vocal
nature
accompaniments
and scenic
surroundings,
was more
impressive than
a grand
cathedral choir
performance. |