Samuel Rutherford is one
of those characters whom every one thinks he should know by his
writings, as familiarly as if he had seen him face to face. Rutherford
was the most popular preacher of his day, and was distinguished as much
for his learning as for his eloquence, lie received invitations to the
chair of philosophy in more than one of the foreign universities; but
such was his love to his native country, that he could not desert her in
the midst of her troubles. The following anecdote of his infancy, though
it approaches the marvellous, is so characteristic of the future man and
the age in which he lived that it deserves to be preserved: while
amusing himself with some of his companions, Samuel, then a mere child,
fell into a deep well; the rest of the children ran off to alarm his
parents, who, on reaching the spot, were astonished to find him seated
on an adjoining hillock, cold and dripping. On being questioned how he
got there, he replied, that “a bonnie white man came and drew him out of
the well.”
The minutest particulars concerning such a person are interesting. The
following are curious:—“I have known many great and good ministers in
this church,” said an aged cotemporary pastor, who survived the
Revolution, “but for such a piece of clay as Mr. Rutherford was, I never
knew one in Scotland like him, to whom so many gifts were given; for he
seemed to be altogether taken up with every thing good, and excellent,
and useful. He seemed to be always praying, always preaching, always
visiting the sick, always catechizing, always writing and studying. lie
had two quick eyes, and when he walked it was observed that he held his
face upward. He had a strange utterance in the pulpit, a kind of skreigh,
that I never heard the like. Many times I thought he would have flown
out of the pulpit, when he came to speak of Jesus Christ.”
One day, when preaching in Edinburgh, after dwelling for some time on
the differences of the day, he broke out with— ‘‘Woe is unto us for
these sad divisions, that make us lose the fair scent of the rose of
Sharon,” and then he went on commending Christ, going over all his
precious styles and titles, about a quarter of an hour; upon which the
laird of Glanderstone said in a loud whisper, “Ay, row you are right —
hold you there.”
Rutherford died in 1661, shortly after his book, called “Lex Rex,” was
burned by the hangman at Edinburgh. He departed just in time to avoid an
ignominious death; for, though every body knew he was dying, the council
had, with impotent malice, summoned him to appear before them, at
Edinburgh, on a charge of high treason. When the citation came, he said,
“Tell them I have got a summons already, before a superior judge and
judicatory, and I behove to .answer my first summons; and ere your day
arrive, I will be where few kings and great folks come.” When they
returned and reported that he was dying, the parliament, with a few
dissenting voices, voted that he should not be allowed to die in the
college! Upon this Lord Burleigh said, “Ye have voted that honest man
out of his college, but ye cannot vote him out of heaven.” Some of them
profanely remarked, “he would never win there—hell was too good for
him.” “I wish I were as sure of heaven as he is,” replied Burleigh, “I
would think myself happ}r to get a gripe of his sleeve to haul me in.”
Among his brethren, who came to pray with him on his death-bed, were Mr.
Wood, an excellent man, and Mr. Honeyman, who afterwards was made a
bishop, and distinguished himself for his opposition to the cause of
God. It was observed that when Mr. Wood prayed, the dying man was not
much affected, but when Mr. Honeyman was engaged, he wept all the time
of the prayer. Being afterwards asked the reason for this, he replied,
“Mr. Wood and I will meet again, though we be now to part; but, alas for
poor Honeyman! He and I will never meet again in another world —and this
made me weep!”
When dying, he frequently repeated, “O for arms to embrace them! O for a
well tuned harp! I hear him saying to me, ‘Come up hither!”’ “And thus,”
says Howie, “the renowned eagle took its flight into the mountain of
spices.” |