1839
THE reader will have seen
that in turning aside to refer to the second communion at Kilsyth, and
thus bring into one view the history of the remarkable movement there,
we have necessarily anticipated somewhat the actual course of events in
Mr. Burns’ life. He returned to Dundee on the 8th of August, and almost
immediately on his arrival found himself in the midst of scenes
essentially similar to, and scarcely less remarkable than those he had
left behind. “For some time before,” says Mr. Bonar in his admirable
memoirs of M‘Cheyne, “Mr. Burns had seen symptoms of deeper attention
than usual, and real anxiety in some that had hitherto been careless.
But it was after his return from Kilsyth that the people began to melt
before the Lord. On Thursday, the second day after his return, at the
close of the usual evening prayer-meeting in St. Peter’s, and when the
minds of many were deeply solemnized by the tidings which had reached
them, he spoke a few words about what had for some days detained him
from them, and invited those to remain who felt the need of an
outpouring of the Spirit to convert them. About a hundred remained; and
at the conclusion of a solemn address to these anxious souls, suddenly
the power of God seemed to descend, and all were bathed in tears. At a
similar meeting, next evening, in the church, there was much melting of
heart and intense desire after the Beloved of the Father; and on
adjourning to the vestry the arm of the Lord was revealed. No sooner was
the vestry-door opened to admit those who might feel anxious to
converse, than a vast number pressed in with awful eagerness. It was
like a pent-up flood breaking forth; tears were streaming from the eyes
of many, and some fell on the ground, groaning, and weeping, and crying
for mercy. Onward from that evening meetings were held every day for
many weeks; and the extraordinary nature of the work justified and
called for extraordinary services. The whole town was moved. Many
believers doubted; the ungodly raged; but the Word of God grew mightily
and prevailed.”
The scenes at Kilsyth were in every essential particular repeated here,
allowing only for the difference between a quiet country village and a
large and busy manufacturing town. The crowded and solemnized assemblies
in the church from night to night for months together; the eager throngs
of inquirers, sometimes so numerous as to form themselves a
congregation; the varied and weighty instructions of ministers, followed
generally by more special counsels and prayers for those whose
overmastering anxiety constrained them to remain behind; the numberless
prayer-meetings of old and young, in private rooms, in workshops, in
retired gardens, in open fields; the nightly journey of thirsty souls
from far distances in the outskirts of the city, and in the rural
parishes around; the general sensation and spirit of
inquiry—half-serious, half-curious—which pervaded more or less the
entire community,—were here as there the salient features of a time
which none who lived through it, and entered in any measure into the
feeling of it, can ever have forgotten. For its more authentic and
inward history, however, I now gladly return to Mr. Burns’ own journal,
which after a few broken and fragmentary notices, becomes again
continuous and copious:—
“August 24th.—I ought to have been daily recording the wonders of the
Lord’s love in this book, had they not been so many that I could not
find time to speak of them all. I shall now however try to do so
regularly, though in the briefest form. Since the 20th, many notable
things have occurred. The church has been crowded every night, and many
have been forced to go away without getting in. Mr. Reid assisted me on
Wednesday, preaching in a very searching manner on regeneration from
John iii., and Mr. Bonar from Kelso followed him on Job xxii. 21. I then
myself prayed and spoke till near n p.m., on Joel ii. 28-32. On Thursday
James Hamilton from Abernyte lectured on the young man, Mark x. 17,
after which I read and commented on a passage from Robe’s narrative.
Last night Mr. Baxter preached with much solemnity and more of the
freeness of the gospel than usual, from Jeremiah xv. 15, after which I
read another passage from Robe, and before pronouncing the blessing was
led to speak particularly to Roman Catholics, and of our duty towards
them. Mr. Roxburgh was there last night. Indeed we have daily not a few
of the ministers in town and from a distance among the audience. On
Thursday I was called to visit a Roman Catholic family, the mother very
ill; they had been visited by the priest, but were not satisfied, and
seemed to welcome me. I hear daily many interesting evidences that the
work of the Lord is going on through his own mighty power. Some of the
greatest drunkards have been abstaining from day to day from their cup
of poison that they may attend our meetings, and they appear to be daily
receiving deeper impressions. O Lord! grant that these may at last prove
saving. I was told of a man last night who, though previously ungodly,
had been so much impressed by attending the meetings, that his wife, a
godly woman, missing him the other morning at the breakfast hour, found
him in the other room on his knees, and again awaking at four in the
morning and missing him from his bed, she rising found him in the same
room with his Bible in his hand.”
Here follow a number of interesting cases.
11 August 28th.—On Saturday evening the congregation was large. I
preached with very considerable assistance from God on Psalm xxxii.,
particularly with a reference to the day of fasting, humiliation, and
prayer, which by the recommendation of the session I was to intimate for
Tuesday, the fair-day. On Sabbath forenoon I preached with much of God’s
presence and power from John iv. 10, and in the afternoon with still
greater liberty from Romans viii. 34. In the forenoon the church was
densely crowded, and in the afternoon every corner was filled, so that I
could not, without much difficulty, force my way to the pulpit; hundreds
were forced to be excluded. I never felt so powerfully as in the
afternoon the absolute certainty of the believer’s acceptance as
righteous through Jesus; and the people appeared to be much impressed,
although I have not yet heard of any new cases of awakening or
conversion. In the evening I thought it better not to preach, in order
to save my bodily strength for preaching, as I had intimated I would, in
the Meadows; but being told that a great crowd was assembled, I ran up
to renew the charge on Satan’s hosts, and was told that Mr. Miller1 a
preacher from Edinburgh, who had filled Mr. Lewis’ pulpit during the
day, and was come along to be a hearer, would gladly assist me. When
however I went up, the multitude had dispersed, and we would have given
up thoughts of preaching had not a few pressed us to go on. Mr. Miller
accordingly preached from John iii. 8 to a considerable number, which
was rapidly increasing when we dismissed. On Monday night Mr. Macalister
preached a truly admirable gospel sermon from John xii. 21, after which
I intimated the fast for Tuesday, with remarks as I was enabled to make
on the subject. We particularly agreed to keep from 10 to 11 in secret
prayer by concert. On coming home I found a letter from the magistrates
interdicting the preaching in the Meadows for Tuesday, which did not
surprise "me, but led me to meditate solemnly on that approaching
conflict with the world and Satan in which many will probably be called
to die for the name of Jesus. O Lord! may Jesus Christ be magnified in
me whether by life or by death! I immediately was led to see the
propriety of exchanging the Meadows for St. Peter’s Churchyard, and
accordingly next day, at the hour appointed, Mr. Baxter, Mr. Miller, and
myself, after intimating the will of the magistrates in the Meadows,
walked, accompanied by a great number, from thence to the churchyard,
where many were already assembled. Mr. Baxter began the services by
praise and prayer, and I was then called after prayer to preach. I had
however no enlargement, and after speaking about the usual time under
great conscious desertion of the Spirit, I came to a close. Mr. Miller
concluded with prayer and praise. In the evening Mr. Miller preached an
interesting sermon from 1 Corinthians x. 31, after whom Mr. Walker from
Edinburgh gave us a precious discourse on Psalm lxxxix. 15. I think the
Spirit of God was much among the people of God on this occasion, filling
them with joy and wonder at the free and infinite love of Jehovah. This
evening Mr. Walker preached an excellent sermon from 2 Corinthians vii.
5, after which I begaji to read Robe, where, finding an allusion to the
Spirit convincing usually of particular sins, in the first place, I was
led to speak in very plain terms of many prevailing sins, and especially
of the peculiar sins of the fair-day. I had great liberty from the
Spirit of God, I believe, to tell all I knew of the truth on these
points, and O! may the Lord greatly bless for his own glory all his own
truth which any of his servants have spoken, and pardon through the
blood of Jesus all that we have said of our own invention, according to
the darkness and folly of carnal reason.
“September 2d.—In the evening Mr. Macalister preached an excellent
sermon on Song of Solomon ii. 16, after which I read Robe’s narrative,
and engaged in prayer more than once for the outpouring of the Spirit,
which I think we received more signally perhaps than on any former
night, if we except the very first meetings. There were many crying
bitterly, one fell down, and when near the end I stopped and sat down in
silent prayer for five minutes, that all might be brought to the point
of embracing Jesus. The feeling was intense, though most calm and
solemn, and to believers very sweet.
“September 3.—In the evening Mr. Somerville, who is on his way home from
an excursion of three weeks in search of bodily vigour, preached from
Genesis iii. 22, &c., a most impressive discourse, under which not a
few, I am persuaded, were very much revived. After he had concluded and
prayed, I read Robe, and felt so desirous to press home thq glad tidings
and to call down the Holy Ghost by more importunate prayer, that after
the blessing had been pronounced I waited with nearly as many as could
find seats out of the immense multitude who had been present till a
quarter past eleven, partly instructing and exhorting them to an
immediate acceptance of Jesus, and partly praying for the Holy Ghost.
There was no visible movement, but I trust some hearts were seen by
Jesus moving towards him.
“September 4th, 1839.—I had this forenoon a call from Mr. Morgan2 of
Belfast, who had heard of the extraordinary movement among us when in
Ireland, and being in Scotland felt induced to come and see its true
character. He and I with Mr. Kirkaldy and Mr. Fairweather3 the preacher,
walked together a long time on the river side, conversing on the subject
of the work at Kilsyth and here, after which we came into my lodgings
and engaged together in Divine worship, Mr. Morgan officiating with
great suitableness to our present state. Before parting he kindly agreed
to preach this evening, which he accordingly did at the usual hour. His
text was Romans v. 20, 21. He treated the subject with great clearness
and scriptural accuracy, and added many very useful directions suited to
our present circumstances. He also told me of an interesting work of God
going on during the last three months in Tipperary under Mr. Trench. He
had called on his people to pray specially for the unconverted, and in
consequence many were awakened, and already between one and two hundred
had been to all appearance savingly converted to God. Mr. Morgan is a
very interesting and most judicious man, and we wonder at the marvellous
goodness of our God in sending him among us. It is, like all his other
blessings towards us, to the everlasting praise of the glory of his
grace. After he had concluded I read as usual a quotation from Robe and
made a few remarks upon it. This day I also conversed with J. J., who is
in a most interesting state, and wrote home a letter to the people of
Kilsyth.”
Here he begins a fresh volume of the Journal, which is inscribed “A
Record of the Lord’s Marvellous Doings for me and many other Sinners at
Dundee, 1839,” and which consists for the first seventy-four pages of
notices of individual cases of awakening and earnest inquiry, all deeply
interesting, but too brief and fragmentary to be here presented. This
part had been evidently examined in the following year, in connection
with the after history of the individuals referred to, by Mr. M‘Cheyne,
in whose hand-, writing I find appended to many of the names such
pregnant entries as the following: “Holds on her way rejoicing, October,
1840;” “I trust goes on well and steadily, October, 18403” “Admitted her
to the communion; she seems a true disciple of Christ, October, 1840;”
“Admitted her joyfully to the Lord’s table, April, 1840;” &c.
“September 13th.—I went
at two o’clock to M‘Kenzie’s Square and preached to one or two hundred,
many of whom, alas! were from other quarters. I spoke from the words, 1
Corinthians xv. 55-57, at first with great want of faith and power, but
after I had stopped and prayed, with very considerable liberty. When I
was just going to begin the last prayer two gentlemen came near, whom I
supposed to be one of our physicians and a friend, who had been passing
accidentally and been attracted by the sound, but after I had done, one
of them, a reverend-looking oldish man, was gone, and the other came up
and told me that this was Caesar Malan from Geneva, and that he was
Robert Haldane, W.S., Edinburgh. I at once recognized him, having
sometimes called on him in the days of my vanity when with Uncle A. in
Edinburgh. He told me that Malan was desirous to preach this evening,
which I intimated with joy to the people as they were dispersing. How
marvellous are the Lord’s ways towards me and his people here! He is
sending his servants to us from east and west and north and south!
Surely he has some great work of his glorious grace to do among us. All
the glory shall be his
“Went to the church,
where I met Malan, Mr. Baxter, and Mr. M‘Leod, just translated from the
Gaelic chapel, Edinburgh. Malan, after solemnly engaging in prayer, went
to the pulpit, where he again knelt down and prayed for a minute or two
in silence. He then prayed aloud shortly, sang, and then prayed sweetly
at greater length. He read the 14th of John, and preached from the 27th
verse. His heads were that the peace of Jesus was, 1st, a sovereign
peace; 2d, a just peace; 3d, an all-ruling peace; 4th, a glorious peace.
His great design appeared to be to press on believers, ‘in the name of
Jesus,5 the duty of believing that they are saved. His teaching seemed
to me to differ from that which is common among our best ministers, not
in holding that assurance is of the essence of faith, which he seemed
plainly not to do; nor hi anything at variance with particular
redemption, which he seemed also to hold distinctly, speaking always of
Jesus dying for ‘his beloved church,5 &c.; but in pressing us very
specially to believe in the name of Jesus as the Son of God with
adoration and love, and again pressing all who do so to believe that
they are saved, because God says so, not seeming to notice or to suppose
the case of those who do not know whether they believe or not. He
illustrated the effect of true faith in the witness of God by the
following anecdote: One day when Bonaparte was reviewing some troops,
the bridle of his horse slipped from his hand and his horse galloped
off. A common soldier ran and laying hold of the bridle brought back the
horse to the emperors hand, when he addressed him and said, ‘Well done,
captain.5 The soldier inquired, ‘Of what regiment, sire?5 ‘Of the
guards,5 answered Napoleon, pleased with his instant belief in his Tord.
The emperor rode off, the soldier threw down his is irpsket, and though
he had no epaulets on his shoulders, no ^word by his side, nor any other
mark of his advancement than The word of the emperor, he ran and joined
the staff of commanding officers. They laughed at him and said, ‘What
have you to do here?5 He replied, ‘I am captain of the guards.'
They were amazed, but he said, ‘The emperor has said so, and therefore I
am.’ In like manner, though the word of God, ‘he that believeth hath
everlasting life,’ is not confirmed by the feelings of the believer, he
ought to take the word of God as true because he has said it, and thus
honour him as a God of truth, and rejoice with joy unspeakable. He told
us plainly that we ought not to pray for the beginning of faith in Jesus
in ourselves, though we might pray for its increase, but that we must
believe and pray in faith. He seems to fear all excitement in divine
worship, going to the very opposite extreme from the Methodists, saying
as he did to me, that this leads men away from the simple testimony of
God; and he told me he thought I had far too much when he heard me speak
a few words and pray, in the afternoon. I cannot, however, agree with
him altogether, and I think many facts in regard to the preaching which
has been most honoured in this land prove that that which is accompanied
with the deepest impression of the truth on the speaker’s soul, and
consequently most affects the hearers, is in general most blessed for
leading men to flee from the wrath to come.
“September 14th.—. . . I called at the M.’s, and found these sisters
rejoicing with solemn delight in the death of their beloved sister with
all its remarkable circumstances, which so clearly mark the hand of the
gracious Lord who has called her to his kingdom and glory!4 They told me
many interesting and affecting facts regarding her last days. She
appears to have fed with remarkable relish upon Christ in the word
during her last days, and especially the night and morning before her
departure. I prayed with them, and felt drawn uncommonly near to the
divine presence of our Father in heaven. We entreated earnestly that as
the Lord had not allowed her to manifest her love to him in the world,
he might show his love to her by making her death the means of
quickening many souls. 0 Lord Jesus, hear this prayer, and answer it
abundantly to-morrow, yea, to-night! Coming home at six I found many
gathered together praying and singing praises; . . . went in and prayed
with the young men and women in the other room. I had much nearness to
God with unspeakable composure of soul, which, praise be to the Lord,
has never been ruffled during these remarkable days; though many of them
were very much affected, and all seemed to realize eternity and the
preciousness of Jesus! It was indeed a sweet season. W. L. came and
joined the meeting with great joy, which broke in upon him with such
power at the meeting last night, that he went home in transporting
ecstasy. This is a sweet youth. Lord, make him a minister of thy
gospel.”
In the following exalted strains of adoration and fervent aspiration he
closes the record of a week of incessant, but to him delightful labour:—“20
minutes to 12—When this week is expiring I would again, with praises
which must echo through all the arches of heaven, set up my Ebenezer and
say, Hitherto the Lord hath helped me! O what a week of mercy and grace
and love! Last week was wonderful, this is much more so; what will the
next be? Perhaps it may be with Jesus in glory! O that it may at least
be with Jesus, and that it may redound to the eternal glory of his grace
in me and many thousands of redeemed souls! Come, Lord Jesus, come
quickly! O scatter the clouds and mists of unbelief which exhale afresh
from the stagnant marshes in my natural heart, the habitation of
dragons, and pour afresh upon my ransomed soul a full flood of thy
divine light and love and joy, in the effulgence of which all sin dies,
and all the graces of the Spirit bloom and breathe their fragrance! Nor
do I pray for myself alone, but for all my dear friends— father, mother,
brothers and sisters.....—for all the people here—all the ministers of
every name whom Jesus hath called to preach his gospel, and for all who
shall to-morrow hear or read the glad tidings of great joy which shall
yet be to all people! Lord, hasten the latter-day glory! Come quickly,
and reign without bounds and without end! And now wash me in thy blood,
whose price I cannot tell, but need to cleanse me, so great a
transgressor am I. Glory to thee, O Lamb of God, and to thee, O Father,
and to thee, O Holy Ghost, eternal and undivided! Amen!”
And so from day to day and from week to week the sacred work of this
remarkable time went on—the church nightly thronged with arrested and
deeply solemnized multitudes, and every other available hour occupied
with individual inquirers, who in very deed sought the eternal wisdom
“as silver, and searched for her as for hid treasure.” Twenty, thirty,
forty, would often come to him on this errand in a single day, gathering
in little groups in an outer chamber and pouring out their hearts in
united prayer, or in silent and solitary breathings, as they waited each
their turn for a personal interview. Generally at the public assemblies,
a large part of the audience would remain after the regular services
were concluded, for further and more special instruction; and even when
all was over, often at a late hour, eager groups would still cling
around the preacher as he retired to the vestry, in hope of hearing
still some last words of parting counsel and prayer. Occasionally even
then it was scarcely possible to shake off the importunate crowds who
hung upon the lips of Christ’s ambassadors as for their lives:—“When we
left the session-house,” he writes on September 19th, “we met a great
multitude still waiting to hear the word, and some of them in tears.
Many of these came along with Mr. W and me to the west end of the town,
and when we came to Roseangle, Mr.W at my suggestion engaged with them
in a parting prayer on the highway side, under the starlight faintly
shining through the dark windy clouds.” At one time the throng of
worshippers was so great, especially during a visit of Dr. M‘Donald of
Urquhart, that it was found expedient to change the place of meeting
from St. Peter’s to St. David’s Parish Church, the largest place of
worship in Dundee, the use of which was kindly given by the minister,
the Rev. George Lewis, who himself took a deep interest and bore an
efficient part in the services. The movement may perhaps be said to have
reached its climax—a kind of spring-tide flood—at the communion season
in October, when the late much esteemed and highly gifted Mr. Bonar of
Larbert, assisted by Messrs. Bonar of Kelso, M‘Donald of Blairgowrie,
and Mr. Flyter of Alness, dispensed the living bread to a vast concourse
of hungering souls, “many of whom seemed burning with desire after
nearness to Jesus.” On the evening of the day three several
congregations were assembled—one vast assemblage in the church, and two
lesser ones formed out of its overflow in the adjoining school-rooms,
and were addressed respectively by Mr. Bonar of Kelso, Mr. Bonar of
Larbert, and Mr. Burns. “During the whole of this communion Sabbath,” he
records in his journal, “there was, I am told by the ministers, an
unusually deep solemnity pervading the audience—the result, I trust, of
the near presence of Jehovah.”
Amidst those solemn scenes Mr. Burns himself remained, in a most
remarkable manner, calm and self possessed. The great objects of faith
which so mightily moved his soul, seemed to tranquillize, whilst they
solemnized and stirred him, so that he moved from day to day in an
element rather only of holy and exalted feeling than of excitement in
the ordinary sense of the term. At the close of the most exhausting day
of apparently exciting labour, his sleep would be as deep and soft as
that of a child, and he arose for the next day’s toil fresh and joyful,
as a strong man to run his race. “I rose,” says he (Sabbath, October 6,
1839), “at half past nine, and felt very strong, even after the
incessant duties of Saturday—so wonderfully does the Lord refresh me
with sweet sleep.” And again (November n), “I rose this morning at n
o’clock!! This appeared to be my duty after being so long and busily
engaged on Sabbath. Indeed, it is by sleeping until I am fully
refreshed, more than by any other means, that my strength has been
preserved undiminished, or rather, I may say, has increased during the
excessive labours to which I have been called during the last three and
a half months.”
In regard to the character of his preaching during this period, it would
appear from all I have been able to learn in regard to it, to have been
characterized by great fulness, freedom, and rich copiousness of
scriptural exposition and appeal, by a melting and persuasive unction,
and even by a clearness and force of thought and diction, which,
considering the incessant draughts made upon his resources, was very
remarkable. At the same time, as he ever sought to speak, not from the
mere remembered impression of past convictions, but from the immediate
and present sense of eternal things, and felt constrained either to
utter only that which he felt livingly in his soul or be silent
altogether, his preaching was subject now, as ever afterwards, to great
variations alike in fulness and in power. Thus the alternations of
feeling, and consequent liberty of speech, indicated in the following
extracts are only examples of what we find characteristic of his entire
ministry:
“In the evening Mr. Lewis of St. David’s preached from John x. 10 in a
very interesting and edifying way, after which I engaged in prayer, and
found so much enlargement that I continued for more than fifty minutes,
and at one time got so near a view of the glory of Emmanuel that I could
hardly proceed.
“Sabbath, October 6th, 1839.—I rose at a quarter past nine, and felt
very strong even after the incessant duties of Saturday, so wonderfully
does the Lord refresh me with sweet sleep. In the forenoon I preached
with much comfort, though not with much depth of experience or present
feeling of the truth, from Romans iii. 20, 21. In the afternoon I
preached from 1 John i. 3, last clause, and was much more assisted than
in the forenoon, getting a nearer view of Jehovah, and a firmer hold of
the truth and also of men’s consciences. The congregation seemed much
solemnized; I saw some young converts rejoicing greatly, and during the
last Psalm a young woman was so deeply wounded that she could not
restrain her feelings, and cried aloud for mercy from the Lord. In the
evening I preached in Hiltown church from Job xxxiii. 23, 24. At first,
and especially when I should have spoken of the Lord’s terrors from the
words ‘going down to the pit,’ I was much deserted, and was forced to be
both bare and brief; but when I came to speak of the Lord’s love and
mercy I got such an insight into the subject that its glorious grace
almost overcame me, the tears were flowing from my eyes, and I was
enabled to speak with some degree of tenderness both in expounding the
truth and in afterwards applying it to men’s hearts. I could not but
thank the Lord for restraining me from too much terror, and giving me on
this occasion a message of love, perhaps, to some of the gainsayers. The
crowd was most dense, and many hundreds were standing without or obliged
to go away. A blessed Sabbath.”
But anon the Beloved had withdrawn Himself and was gone:
“Friday, October 10th.—Mr. M'Donald met me along with Mr. Millar at Mr.
Thain’s gate, and we drove up together, praying each by himself for the
solemn work of the evening. On arriving, we found Mr. Gillies and Mr.
Mitchell of Persie Chapel waiting us. With these dear brethren we had
much prayer, but I was too little in secret, partly from want of time
and partly from feeling the need of mental relaxation after the
all-engrossing and incessant duties of the previous days. I went in
consequence to the pulpit under a load of self dependence, and with much
unbelief, which combined to intercept or prevent the rich communications
of the power of the Spirit. I was, in consequence, in a considerable
measure left to myself, and though in the first prayer, after struggling
long to get through the clouds which shut out my soul from the light of
God’s countenance, I did get some sweet and melting glimpses of Emmanuel
at the Father’s right hand; yet in preaching, which I did from Isaiah
liv. 5, I was confined almost entirely to exposition of doctrine, and
was not allowed to open and search and alarm the consciences of the
secure by any hortatory application of the subject.”
Amid these engrossing and abundant labours in the field of service
specially allotted to him, he found time also for occasional
evangelistic excursions to other places, the results of which were
sometimes interesting. Thus, instead of returning straight home from the
communion at Kilsyth, referred to in last chapter, he made a rapid visit
to Paisley, where he preached in the High Church to a densely crowded
audience, “with much assistance, from Job xxxiii. 23;” and “saw not a
few in tears,” as he was himself “considerably moved, not so much when
preaching, as when expounding briefly Philippians ii. 5-9.” On his way
to Paisley an incident occurred which is worth recording, as
characteristic alike of the time and of the man:
“Tuesday, September 24th.—In the afternoon, when on my way to Paisley, I
had hardly seated myself in the Glasgow boat when an acquaintance (John
Marshall, Auchinsterrie) said to me, ‘You should have worship here.’ ‘Of
course if it is agreeable to all it will be agreeable to me.’ All seemed
anxious for this, and the next minute the Captain came saying, ‘Will you
allow me to open the steerage door as the passengers there would like to
hear?’ This of course we gladly agreed to, and in a few minutes I found
myself, to my own joyful astonishment, standing at the partition door
and praying with the whole company. We also sang more than once; and I
would have expounded a passage, but I had a little hoarseness and did
not see it to be my duty to expose myself when I had so much of the most
important work before me.”
The next day he preached in the forenoon at Kirkintilloch, and in the
evening at Denny, where we catch a characteristic glimpse of one lofty
alike in stature and in moral bearing, whom all who were present at the
convocation of the ministers of the Church of Scotland in 1842 will
remember as perhaps the most striking figure in that assembly: “ There
was a most densely crowded audience, to whom I preached with
considerable assistance from Romans iii. 19, 22. Having ended at twelve
o’clock, Mr. Dempster, who seemed all on fire with earnestness for a
blessing on his people, came up and said a few words, adding, that if
any still, desired to hear more of the gospel, Mr. Duncan5 would be glad
to preach again.”
The following extracts, the first of them deeply touching and
characteristic, will afford a glimpse of some of his labours elsewhere:—
“Edinburgh, October 16th, 1839.—This forenoon I visited, after seeing
several cases privately, the Orphan Hospital, under the government of my
dear friend M‘Dougall, with whom I one dark evening prayed in Bute upon
some lonely rocks by the sea-shore, and a pious matron, Mrs. Dickson. In
the governor’s room I saw a fine picture of Whitefield, who was a great
favourer of this institution, and when I went into the little pulpit of
the chapel, saw the dear orphans so neatly clad and so beautifully
arranged before me, and began to read Psalm ciii., ‘ Such pity as a
father hath,’ &c., I felt quite overpowered by a feeling of sympathy
with these dear children in their orphan state, mingled with grateful
wonder at the love of God in dealing so kindly with them. In prayer also
I had considerable enlargement, but particularly in speaking from 2
Corinthians viii. 9, and telling them some anecdotes, I felt unusually
melted myself, and yearned over them, I think, in the bowels of Jesus
Christ. Some of the boys and girls were crying, and when I bade them
farewell, they unwillingly and with many tears withdrew. O Lord, think
upon each of these dear children, convert them all to thyself through
Jesus, and raise up from among the boys a great band of holy and devoted
ministers and missionaries of Jesus! It was with peculiarly affecting
feelings that I hurriedly bade adieu to this most interesting
institution, running to be in time to visit, as I had promised, the
Green-side Female School, under the conduct of Miss Haldane and other
pious ladies.
“Edinburgh, November 1st.—I spent the whole of this forenoon till
half-past twelve in private with the Lord, and enjoyed more of his
glorious presence humbling and elevating my soul than I have had for
some time past when alone (O! for a day every week to spend entirely in
the secret of his presence!) At one o’clock I preached for the Senior
Female Society in St. George’s Church to a congregation composed of the
genteel society of Edinburgh. I was carried far above the conscious
desire of the favour, and the conscious fear of man; and in preaching
from Isaiah xlii. 21, I felt much more of the presence of the Holy
Spirit enlightening my mind in the knowledge of Christ, and melting my
heart under a view of his glory and his love, than I have for some time
enjoyed in public"
uNovember 4th.—At two o’clock I set out for St. Andrews in company with
James Hamilton, where we arrived at halfpast four, and found Mr. Lothian
come to dinner to meet me at Dr. Briggs’. At seven o’clock we adjourned
to the place of meeting, which was fixed to be the Secession church,
holding about five hundred, in consequence of my aunt having been led to
understand that I would not be allowed the parish church. This, however,
does not seem to have been the case, as Dr. Buist, when he heard it
rumoured that he had refused me his church, wrote to aunt, saying that
it was a mistake, and that he would give it if desired. The church was
crowded by the elite of the town, including Sir David Brewster, &c. Mr.
Taylor6, the minister, began with singing and prayer, and after Mr.
Lothian had said a few words, I entered the Secession pulpit and
preached after prayer and praise to a most attentive and solemnized
audience from Isaiah xlii. 21. A number of individuals remained to
converse about the state of their souls, most of them deeply affected,
and some of them only for the first time.
“After visiting Mrs. C , an interesting Christian widow, who travails in
birth again for her children, that Christ may be formed in them, and
praying with her and two of her dear children, I went at eleven to Mr.
Lothian’s; and after he had prayed and said a few words I spoke for a
little to about fifty or sixty people from John iv. 10. Many were
silently weeping, though, alas! my own hard heart did not feel so
tenderly as at some other times. We bade them all farewell at the door,
leaving many in tears as we went into the curricle that was to convey us
back to Dundee. On our way James H. and I both prayed and had much
conversation about the glorious work in which we were engaged, the
hopeful symptoms of an approaching revival in St. Andrews, and the
necessity of making full proof of our ministry, taking up our cross and
following Jesus whithersoever he goeth. There are a few names even in
this poor desolate place that have not defiled their garments, and who
begin to take pleasure in the stones of Zion and to favour her very
dust. O Lord! do thou appear in thy glory among them, and turn all their
hearts as the heart of one man to thyself. Father, glorify thy Son;
glorify thine own name. Amen.
“O Lord Jehovah! grant to me a heart for Jesus’ sake to praise thee with
becoming love for all the most marvellous displays of thy love and mercy
which I the chief of sinners am permitted to behold from day to day.
Breathe on me, O Holy Ghost! for the glory of Emmanuel, and fill my soul
with seraphic love, and my tongue with holy and unceasing praise, and O!
draw by thy omnipotent grace all these dear inquiring souls to the blood
and the bosom of that adorable Emmanuel whom they seek after, and whom
thou earnest to glorify in the hearts of sinners. Amen.”
On Thursday, November 23, Mr. M‘Cheyne returned from the interesting
mission which had led to Mr. Burns’ temporary occupancy of his pastoral
charge, and from that time accordingly his official connection with St.
Peter’s Church and congregation closed. The following extracts will show
the feelings with which he ended this first, and in some respects most
eventful period of his home ministry, and the tender bond of sacred
affection which still, in parting, bound him alike to that people and
their pastor:
“Had a letter from dear Mr. M‘Cheyne, written in a spirit of joy for the
work of the Lord, which shows a great triumph, I think, of divine grace
over the natural jealousy of the human heart. O Lord, I would praise
thee with all my heart for this, and would entreat that when thy dear
servant the pastor of this people is restored to them, he may be
honoured a hundredfold more in winning souls to Christ than I have been
in thine infinite and sovereign mercy. Amen.
“Sabbath, November 17th, 1839.—. . . In applying the subject I was
remarkably aided, and just as I was concluding it came into my mind that
though I might probably preach to the people again, yet that now I had
reached the termination of my ministry, and this gave me an affecting
topic from which to press home the message more urgently (subject “Union
to Christ,” John xv.) The season was indeed one that I shall never
forget. Before me there was a crowd of immortal souls all hastening to
eternity, some to heaven, and many I fear to hell, and I was called to
speak to them, as it were, for the last time, to press Jesus on them,
and to beseech them to be reconciled to God by the death of his Son. . .
. After I had intimated that Mr. M‘Cheyne was expected to be here on
Thursday, I spoke a few words on my leaving them, but I was so much
affected that I could say but little, and I felt that it was a cause of
praise that the Lord hid from me so much of what is affecting in my
present circumstances, though I believe it were good both for the people
and myself to feel this much more. The people retired very slowly when
we had dismissed about five o’clock, and many waited in the passage and
in the gallery until I retired, who wept much when I was passing along,
and obliged me to pray with them in the passage again. When I came out I
met with many of the same affecting tokens of the reality of my
approaching separation from a people among whom the Lord, in his
sovereign and infinite mercy, has shown me the most marvellous proofs of
his covenant love, and from among whom, I trust, he has taken, during my
continuance among them, not a few jewels to shine for ever in the crown
of Emmanuel the Redeemer! ‘Glory to the Lamb that was slain!’
“November 17th.—I spent the greater part of this day alone, excluding
all visitors, with the exception of the M.’s of Roseangle, with the B.’s,
and Miss H., who called and conversed with me together about the work of
God. I wished retirement, partly to rest and partly to write to Mr.
M‘Cheyne and a number of other persons in different places, who must be
considering me the most careless correspondent that could be imagined. I
was tired, however, and was obliged to go out a considerable part of the
day, so that I only got five pages written to Mr. M‘Cheyne. Truly the
work of the Lord is marvellous when I begin to look .back upon it from
the beginning. It must engage my harp and my tongue, with those of
countless multitudes of the redeemed in glory, throughout the endless
ages of eternity.
"Friday, November 23d, 1839.—I got safely home at four o’clock (from
Dunfermline), and after dining with Mr. Thoms at five I met Mr. M‘Cheyne
at his own house at half-past six, and had a sweet season of prayer with
him before the hour of the evening meeting. We went both into the
pulpit; and after he had sung and prayed shortly, I conducted the
remaining services, speaking from 2 Samuel xxiii. 1-5, and concluding at
ten. We went to his house together and conversed a considerable time
about many things connected with the work of God, and his and my own
future plans and prospects. I find he preached to a densely crowded
audience on Thursday night, and with a very deep impression, from ‘I am
determined to know nothing among you/ &c. He seems in but weak health,
and not very sanguine about ever resuming the full duties of a parish
minister. O Lord, spare’ thy servant, if it be for the glory of thy
name, and restore his full strength that he may yet be the means of
winning many souls for Jesus. Amen.”
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