Rogers was one of the
ejected ministers under the Act of Uniformity in 1662. He was a
diligent, fervent preacher. After his ejectment, he preached in his own
house, and was also in the habit of going to some neighbouring lead
mines, to preach to the poor miners. Many a troublesome journey did he
take to these neglected people, through very deep snows, and over high
mountains, when the road was extremely bad, and the cold very severe.
But he made nothing of the fatigue, through his love to souls. For all
this service he received but about fifty dollars per annum.
The following anecdote is well authenticated: Sir Richard Cradock, a
justice of the peace, who was a violent hater and persecutor of the
dissenters, and who exerted himself to enforce all the severe laws then
in being against them, happened to live near Mr. Rogers, to whom he bore
a particular enmity, and whom he wanted, above all things, to have in
his power. Hearing that he was one day to preach some miles distant, he
thought that a fair opportunity offered for accomplishing his base
design; and in order to do it, he hired two men to go as spies, and take
down the names of all the hearers whom they knew, that they might appear
as witnesses against both them and Mr Rogers. The plan seemed to succeed
to his wishes. The men brought him the names of several persons who were
present at the meeting, and he warned such of them as lie had a
particular spite against, together with Mr. Rogers, to appear before
him. Knowing the violence of the man, they came with trembling hearts,
expecting to be treated with the utmost severity.
While they were waiting in the great hall, expecting to be called upon,
a little girl about six or seven years of age, who was Sir Richard’s
granddaughter, happened to come into the hall. She looked at Mr. Rogers,
and was much taken with his venerable appearance. He, being naturally
fond of children, took her upon his knee and caressed her, which
occasioned her to conceive a great fondness for him. At length Sir
Richard sent a servant to inform him and the rest, that one of the
witnesses being ill was unable to attend, and that therefore they must
come again another day.
They accordingly came at the time appointed, and being convicted, the
justice ordered their mittimus to be written to send them all to prison.
Mr. Rogers, expecting to see the little girl again, brought some
sweetmeats with him to give her. As soon as she saw him she came running
to him, and appeared fonder of him than before. This child, being a
particular favourite of her grandfather, had got such an ascendency over
him, that he could deny her nothing; and she possessed such a violent
spirit that she could bear no contradiction, so that she was indulged in
every thing that she wanted. At one time when she had been contradicted,
she run a penknife into her arm, to the great danger of her life. This
bad spirit in the present instance was overruled for good. While she was
sitting on Mr. Rogers’s knee eating the sweetmeats, she looked earnestly
at him and asked, " What are }rou here for, sir?” he answered, “I
believe that your grandfather is going to send me and my friends to
jail.” “To jail,” says she, “why, what have you done?" “ Why, I did
nothing but preach at such a place, and they did nothing but hear me.”
“But,” says she, “my grandfather shan’t send you to jail.” “Ay, but my
dear,” said he, “he is now making out our mittimus to send us all
there.” Upon this she ran up to the chamber where Sir Richard was, and
knocked with her head and heels till she got in, and said to him, “What
are you going to do with my good old gentleman in the hall?” “That’s
nothing to you,” said he, “get you about your business.” “ But I won’t,”
says she; “he tells me that you are going to send him and his friends to
jail, and if you send them, I’ll drown myself in the pond as soon as
they are gone; I will indeed.” When he saw the child thus peremptoiy, it
shook his resolution, and induced him to abandon his malicious design.
Taking the mittimus in his hand, lie went clown into the hall, and thus
addressed these good men: “I had made out your mittimus to send you to
jail as you deserve; but at my grandchild’s request, I drop the
prosecution and set you at liberty.” They all bowed and thanked his
worship. But Mr. Rogers, going to the child, laid his hands upon her
head, and lifting up his eyes to heaven, said, “God bless you, my dear
child! May the blessing of that God whose cause you did now plead,
though as yet you know him not, be upon you in life, at death, and to
all eternity !” He and his friends then went away.
The above remarkable story was told by a son of Mr. Rogers, who had
frequently heard his father relate it with great pleasure; and the
celebrated Mr. Thomas Bradbury once heard it from tiim as he was dining
at the house of Mrs. Tooley, an eminent Christian lady in London, who
was distinguished for her religion, and for her love to Christ and his
people; whose house and table, like Lydia’s, were always open to them.
What follows is .yet more remarkable, as containing a striking proof of
the answer which was returned to good Mr. Rogers’s prayers for this
child, and the blessing which descended upon her who had been the
instrument of such a deliverance for these persecuted people of God.
Mrs. Tooley had listened with uncommon attention to Mr. Rogers’s story,
and when he had ended, she asked him, "And are you that Mr. Rogers’s son
?” He told her he was; upon which she said, ‘-Well, as long as I have
been acquainted with you I never knew that before, and now I will tell
you something which you don’t know: 1 am the very girl your dear father
blessed in the manner you have related, and it made an impression upon
me I can never forget.” Upon this double discovery, Mr. Rogers and Mrs.
Tooley found an additional tie of mutual love and affection, and then he
and Mr. Bradbury expressed a desire to know how she, who had been
brought up in an aversion to the Dissenters and to serious religion, now
discovered such an attachment to both, upon which she gave them the
following narrative: After her grandfather’s death she became sole
heiress to his estate, which was considerable. Being in the bloom of
youth, and having none to control her, she ran into all the fashionable
diversions of the age, without any restraint. But she confessed that
when the pleasurable scenes were over, she found a dissatisfaction both
with them and herself, that always struck a damp to her heart, which she
did not know how to get rid of in any other way than by running the same
round over and over again; but all was in vain. Having contracted some
slight illness, she thought she would go to Bath, hearing that it was a
place for pleasure as well as health. When she came thither, she was
providentially led to consult an apothecary who was a very worthy and
religious man. When he inquired what ailed her, she answered, “Why,
doctor, I don’t ail much as to my body, but I have an uneasy mind that I
cannot get rid of.” “Truly, miss,” said he, “I was so till I met with a
certain book, and that cured me.” “'Book!” said she; “I get all the
books I can lay my hands on; all the plays, novels, and romances I hear
of; but after I have read them, my uneasiness is the same.” “That may
be, miss,” said he, “and I don’t wonder at it; but as to this book I
speak of, I can say of it, what I can say of no other I ever read, that
I never tire in reading it, but can begin to read it again, as if I had
never read it before; and I always see something new in it.” “Pray,
doctor/’ says she, “what book is that?” “Nay, miss,” answered he, “that
is a secret I don’t tell every one.” “Put could not I get a sight of
that book?” says she. “Yes,” replied he, “if you speak me fair, I can
help you to a sight of it.” “Pray, then, get me it, doctor, and I will
give }rou any thing you please.” “Yes,” said he, “if you will promise me
one thing, I will bring it you; and that is, that you will read it once
carefully, and if you should not see much in it at first, that you will
give it a second reading.” She promised faithfully that she would. After
coming two or three times without it, to raise her curiosity, he at last
took it out of his pocket and gave it her. This hook was the New
Testament. When she looked at it, she viewed, with a flirt, “Pooh! I
could get that at any time.” “Why, miss,” said he, “so you might; but
remember, I have your solemn promise that you will read it carefully.”
“Well,” said she, “though I never read it before, I will give it a
careful reading.” Accordingly she began to read it, and it soon
attracted her attention. She saw something in it, wherein she had a deep
concern; but her mind became ten times more uneasy than ever. Not
knowing what to do, she soon returned to London, resolved to by again
what the diversions there would do to dissipate her gloom. But nothing
of this kind answered her purpose. She lodged at the court end of the
town, and she had with her a female companion. On Saturday evening she
had a remarkable dream, which was, that she was in a place of worship,
when she heard a sermon, but when she awoke, she could remember nothing
but the text. The dream, however, made a deep impression upon hei hear*
and the idea she had of the place and the minister’s person, was as
strong as if she had been long acquainted with both. On the Lord’s day
morning, she told her dream to her companion, and said that, after
breakfast, she was resolved to go in quest of the place, though she
should go from one end of London to the other. They accordingly set out,
and went into several churches as they passed along, but none of them
answered to what she saw in her dream. About one o’clock, they found
themselves in the heart of the city, where they dined, and then set out
again in search of the place of worship.
Being in the Poultry about half an hour after two o’clock, they saw a
great number of people going down the Old Jewry, and she determined to
see where they went. She mingled with the company, ancl they conducted
her to the meeting house in the Old Jewry, where Mr. Shower was then
minister. As soon as she entered the door and surveyed the place, she
turned to her companion, and said, with some surprise, “This is the very
place I saw in my dream.” She had not been there long before she saw Mr.
Shower go up into the pulpit, and, looking at him with great surprise,
she said, “This is the very man I saw in my dream, and if every part of
it hold true, he will take for his text, Ps. cxvi. 7: “Return unto thy
rest, 0 my soul, for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee.” When he
rose up to pray she was all attention, and every sentence went to her
heart. Having finished his prayer, he took that very passage which she
had mentioned for his text, and God was pleased to make the discourse
founded upon it, the means of her saving conversion; and thus she at
lust found, what she had long sough! elsewhere in vain, rest to her
soul. And now she obtained that blessing from God the fountain of
felicity, which pious Mr Rogers, so many yews before, had sc solemnly
and fervently implored upon her behalf. |