1841 - 44
DURING the next three
years Mr. Bums was incessantly engaged in evangelistic work, partly in
places which he had already visited, and partly in new fields. Of the
latter the most conspicuous were Newcastle, Edinburgh, and Dublin, and
to a brief notice of his labours there I propose to devote the present
chapter. They were, of course, in most respects essentially similar to
those which we have already described in Dundee and Aberdeen, but still
possessed some features sufficiently distinct to deserve a separate,
though less detailed record. At Newcastle, the first aspect of the field
and his first trial of the work were not encouraging. I know not if the
“sins and sorrows of the great city” be really greater there than in
other communities of similar extent and character with which he had been
before acquainted, but it seemed to him, at least, as if it were so. The
giant forms of evil with which he had everywhere to contend, stood forth
before the eye in more naked and unblushing prominence, as though
iniquity were, in tmth, too strong to feel ashamed or hide its face. He
found himself in the presence of a power which, alike in its extent and
terrible energy, startled and shocked him, and threw him back as scarce
ever before on the power that is infinite and divine. “The people of
God,” he writes a few days after his arrival, “are rallying in their
places, and we have them of every name on our side. Ah! but the Lord is
with me as a mighty, terrible one. This is enough.” “I ask it as a
favour,” he writes to his endeared friend Mr. Milne, “andplead for it,
that you will lay before your people the case of Newcastle, an
iron-walled citadel of Satan. Almighty power, and that alone, can make a
breach and plant the banner of salvation in the Lamb on its proud
ramparts. They must cry, they must wrestle; for the devil is in the
field, and the day will be hot.” While, too, “the enemy thus came in
like a flood,” it seemed to him as if the forces on the other side were
comparatively few and feeble. “The Scotch Church,” says he, “is low
here; the audiences were not large. During the week I preached every
night but Tuesday and Saturday, but chiefly to the church-going few,
including some Christians, with a view to stir them up to come nearer to
God. . . . Went out at meal hour and began to invite sinners. Very
apathetic. The sleep of death is on the city.”
The spell of apathy, however, was soon, at least partially, broken. The
announcement of a Sabbath pleasure trip of a more than usually offensive
kind having met his eye, his spirit was stirred within him, and he
denounced it in a terrible placard, which he signed with his own name
and posted up in every street and open place in Newcastle. It fell like
a bomb-shell in the midst of the community, startled the ears alike of
friends and foes, and drew general attention to the preacher and his
message. A solemn tract on the sins of the city and the impending
judgments of God was at the same time prepared and sown broadcast among
the people. The newspapers too, both local and metropolitan, took up the
matter, bitterly denounced his proceedings, and thus still more loudly
rang the bell of alarm in the ears of a community from whom he only
desired a hearing, even though they should strike while they heard him.
“Newspapers and Socialistic placards,” wrote his friend Mr. Bonar of
Kelso, “have been making Edinburgh, and I suppose other places, ring
with your doings in Newcastle.” But he remained calm amid the storm,
unmoved alike by the rage of enemies and by the doubts and fears of
friends, so only the cause of Christ were helped, and not hindered. “The
people in Scotland,” said he, “are thinking that the opposition must be
awful here. But it is like bomb-shells thrown over our heads and
bursting at a distance. They know more of it in London than I do in
Newcastle. ‘Thou hast covered my head in the day of battle.’” Meanwhile,
according to his wont, he soon exchanged the empty churches for the open
and crowded streets— preaching to varying audiences and with varying
tokens of success on the quay, at the ’Spittal Square, in the Corn and
Cloth Markets, in the open space beside the castle, sometimes in
continuous and impressive discourse, sometimes in a running fire against
Secularist or Romish objectors who started up as opponents from amongst
the crowd; sometimes alone, and sometimes dividing the ground with the
political lecturer or the puppet showman, who spread forth their rival
wares at a few paces’ distance. He had some encouragement, but no very
marked or decisive evidence of blessing. He speaks from time to time of
“solemn attention;” “very ‘great attention and eagerness;” “a very large
and deeply solemn audience;” “a large audience who stood rivetted to the
end;” of a “service of three hours’ duration, in the castle-yard where
Whitfield preached of old;” “and would have remained almost till
midnight;” “a considerable audience who continued immovable under
darkness and rain;” “the people so much impressed that the stars were
out in the sky before we separated;.” “some of the old sailors on the
quay weeping, and pressing their money on those who gave away the tracts
at the end;” yet there were few or none who sought him out in private
for spiritual counsel and instruction. Perhaps this might in part arise
from the fact that his street audiences here consisted almost
exclusively of men—the softer and more impressible sex having, as he
suggests, either less curiosity, or more fear of noisy crowds, than in
the cities of the north. Now and then, too, after all his labours were
over, he would go forth into the dark streets, with a bundle of his
“plain sentences ’ under his arm, that he might see the city in its
midnight dress, look down into the depths of that abyss of ruin which
for the love of God and man he so vehemently longed to sound, and it may
be hold out the torch of life eternal to some poor wanderer whom he
might never hope to meet at any other place or time. Strange scenes
would sometimes on these occasions meet his eyes and ears: “I went out
after coming into my room and with a bundle of the “plain sentences”
paraded some of the chief streets. In this I met with some strange
incidents. I offered near the mouth of the Arcade a copy to a gentleman
half-intoxicated. He swore fearfully and said, ‘Oh, what a cursed
country this is! I might go through every town on the Continent, and not
meet with such another rascal as you infesting me. Rome is infinitely
better than this,” &c. On another occasion he writes: “After the meeting
I spent a half-hour on the street with tracts, and met with awful proofs
of the enormous wickedness of the people, also with many whose language
amid their sins seemed almost to be, Oh! that I were saved, oh! that you
could do me any good.” One is reminded of the heathen in Tertullian’s
days, of whom he tells us that even their oaths and ejaculated
utterances of grief and fear bore witness to their deep consciousness of
God and of a higher world, and showed that the “testimony of the soul”
was by its very nature on the side of Christ.1 Sometimes conscience
would still more distinctly speak and take part with the reprover
against the sinner: “I spoke to three young gentlemen intoxicated; they
mocked; but one of them, having separated from the rest, went along with
me a short way. He then left me and whistled for his companions, but
they had deserted him; and conscience-stricken he called after me, and
when I went back asked where I was from, my name and residence, and
promised to call on Friday at five p.m., saying with some feeling, ‘he
had much need of a lecture.’”
Still there was no deep and general impression, and even the partial
interest that had been excited began after a season gradually to die
down towards the former state of apathy. The congregations in church
were small, the audiences in the open air less numerous and less solemn.
The sensation created by the Sabbath placards was passing away, and no
deeper and mightier influence apparently had come to supply its place.
Even some of his friends, who had most sanguinely hoped for a rich and
widespread blessing, began to lose heart. “I had hope at one time,” said
one of the most ardent of these, “but now I confess it is gone. Every
ear seems closed.” He himself too almost despaired. Receiving a letter
from Mr. Parker, in which he expresses his astonishment that the people
could bear his words, he writes in his journal bitterly, “Alas! the
people can bear anything here as yet. The body seems so dead, that
though you plunge the knife to the heart there is no pain.” But it was
only the lowest ebb, before the turning of the tide, and before another
day had passed it was in full and buoyant flow. God had only made him
utterly to despair of self, that he might the more simply and wholly
triumph in Christ. We cannot here indulge in numerous extracts, but one
or two continuous passages must be given, as affording a vivid picture
of the nature of the hot battle which he had expected and which had come
at last, and of the spirit in which he fought it:
“Thursday, September 23d.—During the day I was very weak in body, and
was tempted to think of neglecting an opportunity of doing good at the
cattle-show, which is held here this day. But the passage turned up, If
thou say, Behold, I knew it not,’ &c., and I was compelled to go. I
found that there was no opportunity for preaching, as the show was
within a park, and the people outside were staying but a few minutes.
Alas! perhaps it may be found in the day of God that there was
opportunity. Certainly the showmen found an opportunity of attracting
many. However, I only gave away tracts, spoke to the people here and
there, and intimated that I would preach in the cloth-market in the
evening, which is at the end of the corn-market, the place where, at
three P.M., about a thousand were to dine together. The tracts were
received by high and low. . . . After dinner I felt my strength of body
renewed, and had hope of something being done of God in the evening. A
little after six we went to the scene of action, and found a great crowd
around the place, many of them trying to see in through the windows, and
multitudes waiting for the music at intervals. I thought of heaven
lighted with the brightness of a thousand suns, and of poor lost souls
longing to be in when it is too late, and forced to hear from afar the
joyful praises of the redeemed, loud as the noise of many waters. We had
no sooner begun than an immense crowd gathered round. Some of the
enemies were enraged arid urged the police to interfere, crying, ‘Down
with him, down with him.’ The policeman told me that the people were
disturbed by us within, but this was so absurd that he did not insist on
it; and as he could not find us guilty of a breach of the peace, he soon
went away. But although the enemy could riot oppose us by legal force,
they did not cease to show their deadly hatred of what was said and
done. Once a stone was thrown, again a quantity of manure, which
bespattered my clothes. Afterwards, in the time of prayer, when we were
prevailing against them without hand, they raised a burst of horrid
laughter, and pushed the crowd at the side on me with the view of
overthrowing the pulpit. At this time I had to pause in the prayer, and
when I began to tell them that they could do nothing without the Lord’s
permission, and that all they did would promote his cause, &c., they
were quieted for a time; and I was led out to speak with greater power,
perhaps, than ever before in Newcastle, putting the sword into the very
heart and bowels of the town’s iniquities. At this time, and ever after
it until ten o’clock, when we parted, there was the greatest solemnity,
and a deep impression; and though I was frequently interrupted with
questions, they all tended to bring out in a marvellous way the truth of
God, so that they who put them were silenced and the people rejoiced.
During the first hour and half we were obliged to contend, at intervals,
with a tumult of people all around the music in the Corn-market, and the
movements of a travelling show taking up its encampment close to us.
Even amid those trials, although increased by the contradiction of
sinners, I was enabled not to waver nor faint; afterward, however, the
meeting in the market broke up, the show people were quiet, the streets
were nearly empty, and we worshipped the Lord amid solemn silence for
another hour and half. At this time the singing was truly sublime; and
the whole scene, when contrasted with what it had lately been, was
fitted to deepen the impression of the word in the hand of the Spirit. I
did not speak on any text, but used the various circumstances of the
feast so near as to set off by way of comparison and contrast the feast
of fat things on Mount Zion. I did not proceed regularly, but from time
to time noticed such topics as these: — That feast is for the body, this
is for the soul; that is one of which you easily take too much, in this
you cannot exceed that is soon over, this will last eternally; that
would tire and nauseate if often repeated, this becomes sweeter every
day; that is only open to those who can pay for a place, this is
provided freely for the poor: it is made free not because it is of
little value, but because it is so costly that no money can buy it, and
in order that it may be a feast for allj that is made on bullocks and
fatlings, but this, oh! wonder of wonders, is made on the body and blood
of God’s own Son; the greatest sinners are welcome to it now, and the
greater they have been they will sit nearer the head of the table as
honoured guests, in order that the more the grace and mercy of Jehovah
may be displayed to view! These and similar points gave ground from time
to time for varied information to the mind, and appeals to the
conscience which seemed to arrest many; and the effect of this was aided
by the many truths which were from time to time drawn out by the
questions and objections of enemies. One man cried there was no hell,
and demanded a definition of it. He was answered, ‘If thy right hand
offend thee,’ &c., and remained silent. Another said there were no
devils, and this was the occasion of tearing away the veil from the
iniquities of the town, and exposing their power over men in its
deformity and dreadfulness. Many in different ways tried to vex us, but
this explained the text, ‘ Consider him who endured,’ &c., and gave us
ground for praise that we had not yet resisted unto blood. Nay, one
shameless man, whose question the people would hardly bear, asked me,
'How are you supported?’ a matter of general wonder. I answered him that
I never needed to ask a penny from any one, but that even since I came
here £10 had been sent to me unasked, and partly without a name! They
seemed confounded. At ten o’clock we asked the parting blessing and
separated—indeed only for a moment, for when I got to the lamp I took
out my Bible to look at a verse, and the whole crowd gathered round and
stood with breathless attention while I read what God had sent me, ‘None
of these things move me/ &c., and told them some things about my own
conversion. We then parted, and it would not have been so soon, had not
the policeman desired it.
“Though I spoke nearly four hours amid such difficulties in the open air
I was not fatigued, and am well to-day. Oh! that I were only well in
soul, and fit to renew the combat. Come, Lord Jesus! come quickly! Amen!
Amen! Glory to Jehovah!
“P.S.—When I came into my room and looked at the Bible which was lying
open, my eye rested on Psalm cxi. 4, 5. Oh! how glorious and how
seasonable it was! ‘He hath made his wonderful works to be re?nembered;
the Lord is gracious, and full of compassion. He hath given meat unto
them that fear him: he will ever be mindful of his covenant/’
Halleluiah!
“Friday, September 27th.—Sometimes when we think we are much assisted,
there may be less divine power attending the word than when we are ready
to conclude nothing has been done. I trust, however, that the Lord is
bringing me nearer to the town, and that soon his own artillery may be
opening fire with effect on its central towers and carrying alarm into
its citadel! It is not at once that we can come into close conflict with
such an enemy, and time is needed to study the enemy’s position and weak
points, that the fire may take full effect. The Captain of the Lord’s
hosts is all-wise to direct, and all-powerful to execute. He will work,
and who shall let it? Who art thou, oh great mountain? before Zerubbabel
thou shalt become a plain ! And he shall bring forth the top stone with
shoutings of grace, grace unto to promote the extension of thy blessed
kingdom in this poor ruined world. Amen.”
it. Oh! how glorious a sight to behold this town awakened from its deep
sleep, and calling upon God with the whole heart! ‘The waste cities
shall be filled with flocks of men!’ Be it unto us according to thy
word. Amen.
“Sabbath, 26th September. ... At five I went out to preach at the
’Spittal, as a man having no strength, yea, as a worm and no man, saying
to Mr. S , I never was so low as this. If it were so that I were truly
humbled, it would be different; but I am dead, and that is all. I could
not fix upon a text; indeed, every door of hope seemed closed, and I
knew that God, and he only, could grant deliverance. I found many
already assembled, and in the course of a very short time the crowd
became much greater than on any former day, and continued so, and even
increasing to the end. I thought of preaching on ‘feeing, therefore,
that we have a great high-priest/ &c.; but when I opened the Bible after
prayer, my eye rested on Revelations xx. 15, and this I fixed on, with
dawnings of hope that the Lord would again speak by my unclean lips. I
began from these sublime and awful words, ‘And I saw a great white
throne, and him that sat on it/ &c., making some simple remarks on the
throne— its greatness, its whiteness, &c. After prayer, I resumed, and
spoke a little with an increasing sense of the divine presence and power
on the rising of the dead, our individual rising and appearing at the
dread bar of judgment, &c. We then prayed again, and in doing so I
felt—more, perhaps, than since I came to Newcastle—as if a direct
communication were opened between my soul and the Divine Mind. My heart
was truly drawn out and up to God for the advancement of EmmanueVs
glory, even more than for the salvation of guilty worms, as a heart-sdl\siymg
end. After this I got closer still to the people, and was enabled in a
way quite new to me here, to open up the sins of the town, their
deformity, their dreadful working, and inconceivably awful issues in
eternity. I also found myself in an agony to compel sinners to come to
Jesus now, and not even the next hour, which I felt was not man’s but
God’s. Indeed, I felt so much that I could almost have torn the pulpit
to pieces, and the audience seemed to sympathize throughout. Oh! it was
a glorious, an awfully glorious scene! The fleecy clouds were showing
here and there bright stars, and the harvest moon was diffusing a sombre
peaceful light upon the quiet world around us. We dying, and yet
immortal creatures were contemplating the eternity before us, looking to
the appearance of the Son of Man in the clouds, conceiving ourselves
placed at his bar, wondering and thinking what would be our sentence,
and whether we would rise with him to heaven, or be drawn from him into
hell; some were, I hope, opening their eyes to their awful destiny as
sinners, and on the very point of seeking refuge,, for eternity from the
wrath of God in the cleft Rock of Ages. I trust that some were saved, I
have no doubt that God was with us of a truth. At a quarter to nine we
closed; and as we had remained so long in the open air, I thought it
better not to meet in the church as we intended, but to retire direct to
our closets. After I had been a few minutes in the house, two friends
came to me from the church, and told me that it was nearly full with a
congregation entirely different from what I had had in the open air, and
that they had been waiting for me since seven o’clock. I had again,
accordingly, to go out in the Lord’s name, and I spoke on the same as in
the open air, though by no means with the same consciousness of the
divine presence. We came out after a solemn meeting at a quarter to
ten.”
After visiting several other places in the north of England, and among
others Sunderland, where he preached “to a dense and hungry audience,
who seemed to open the mouth wide for the blessing,” he returned to
Scotland, in order to take the temporary charge of the congregation of
St. Luke’s, Edinburgh, in the absence of his valued friend Mr. Moody
Stuart. Of his labours here I am happy to be able to present the
following graphic account from the pen of a friend to whom I have been
already indebted, and who then watched his footsteps with deep and
sympathetic interest:—
“In the winter of 1841-2 Mr. Bums supplied the pulpit of St. Luke’s,
Edinburgh. Mr. Moody Stuart, owing to an affection of the voice, had
been advised to spend the winter in Madeira, and Mr. Bums was requested
to take his place. He began his work in Edinburgh on the 14th November,
preaching in the forenoon from 2 Co. iv. 1-6; and Dr. Bruce of St.
Andrew’s Church (of whom he always spoke with filial affection) in the
afternoon.
“The work of this winter forms a unique chapter in his life. A special
interest attaches to it. He had to become both pastor and evangelist.
Tme to the motto of his family, “ Ever ready,” he soon showed that he
could be both. He at once began a course of lectures on the Sabbath
forenoon upon the Epistle to the Romans, and another course at the
Thursday prayer-meeting upon the Epistle of James. On Monday evening he
taught two classes: a female class for expounding the miracles, and a
young men’s class at a later hour, where he took up the parables of
Christ. Every Saturday afternoon he conducted a class for children. Two
courses of lectures— three classes—sermons upon the Sabbath afternoon
suggested by the special circumstances of the times or of the
congregation: here was sufficient work for an ordinary man. But he was
no Qrdinary man. He was always longing to be on full work again. The
college session had begun. He taught a private Greek class in his
lodgings. The College Missionary Association met every Saturday morning
for prayer and the reading of essays upon topics connected with foreign
missions. He attended these meetings, and by the blessing of God infused
his own fire into the hearts of many of the students. At the concluding
general meeting of the Association, when about two hundred students were
present, he moved one of the resolutions, and it was the universal
impression that there never had been such a meeting in the college
before.
“A large number of students attended his ministry— not only divinity
students, but gownsmen of all stages with their pale eager faces. Memory
recalls such names as Alexander James Campbell, John Donaldson, John
Craven, Alexander Thain, Frederick Sandeman, Robert Ireland, Robert
Taylor, Duncan Maclaren, M. Macgregor,2 Walter Davidson, Donald
Sutherland, Patrick Neill, William Balfour, Neil Macleod, A. Luke,
Thomas Gardiner, Thomas Just, &c. He invited them to his lodgings; he
sympathized with their difficulties; he guided those who were groping in
the dark and seeking the way to Zion. Those who had the rare privilege
of meeting him in private, and seeing his close walk with God, were at
no loss to understand the power which attended his public ministrations.
“With him the winning of souls was a passion; calm, but intense,
consuming. As Foster has said of John Howard, ‘ It was the calmness of
an intensity kept uniform by the nature of the human mind forbidding it
to be more, and by the character of the man forbidding it to be less.’
He cast his net into all waters. He wished to get access to the soldiers
in the castle. He visited the barracks, distributed tracts, and invited
them to his open-air services in the High Street. He frequently visited
the Shelter, the jail, the bridewell, the Magdalene Asylum, the Orphan
Hospital, the Dean Bank Institution, &c., and preached to the inmates.
Wherever the lost or neglected were to be found he was there; like Him
who yearned over a world plunged in sin, telling them of rest for the
weary and hope for the guilty. From the very refuse of society he
gathered jewels for Emmanuel’s crown. Very touching to see him, as I
have done, giving tracts and speaking tender words to the fallen. To him
they were lost pieces of silver; and the thought that they might even
yet have Christ for their brother, and heaven for their home, filled him
with a tenderness which he had no name for.
“In the midst of his abundant labours in Edinburgh, the Lord opened a
wide door for him in Leith. From January to March he preached on
Wednesday and frequently on Sabbath evening in North Leith, South Leith,
and the Mariners’ Church, to densely crowded and (to use a favourite
word of his own) ‘hungry’ audiences. The weather was severe—keen frost
and snow—but the interest swelled and spread until the attendance even
on the Wednesday evening was overflowing, and so deep was the impression
that the people could not go away after the blessing. An after-service
for prayer and directing anxious inquirers had to be held; and such was
their distress that they had to be removed to the vestry, where he
sought to give them ‘the oil of joy for mourning.’ Mr. M‘Cheyne took
part in one of these services, and spoke and prayed with the anxious. It
seemed as if the ever-memorable scenes of Kilsyth, Dundee, and Perth
were to be repeated in Leith. So wide-spread was the impression, that a
gay lady in Leith said the people were all going mad. In his young
communicants’ class he soon gathered in abundant fruits of his labours
in Leith— sheaves of joy. To use his own words, “The Lord gave him
spring, summer, and harvest, that winter in Leith.” About the middle of
March, in consequence of the resolution of the directors of the
Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway to run trains upon the Sabbath, he ‘bade
the people of Leith farewell for a season, in order that he might give
his whole heart to the work in Edinburgh.’ “One memorable incident which
belongs to his work in Leith I must not omit. He wished to get access to
the sailors. One Sabbath afternoon Dr. Gordon agreed to take his place
in St. Luke’s, and he ran down to preach on the quay at Leith, taking
two or three of us with him to distribute tracts and invite the sailors.
It was on the 2d January, 1842. He stood half-way between the upper and
lower bridges. I was never more struck with his tact and fertility of
resource. A large crowd assembled—a sea of bronzed faces. After reading
his text—Ecclesiastes viii. 11: ‘Because sentence against an evil work,’
&c.—
it began to rain heavily. He paused, and prayed that God would restrain
the clouds that the people might hear the word. The rain continued,
however, and we adjourned to a large shed at the head of the quay. He
resumed, and the rain ceased. I shall never forget the look of wonder
with which that crowd gazed on the clear sky. They plainly felt that
there is something deeper in prayer than is dreamed of in human
philosophy. The preacher spoke as if he had spent his life before the
mast: his skilful use of sea-phrases gave rare zest to his discourse
—and, rising to a climax, he cried, ‘ Sailors! the breakers are ahead!
the storm is rising! you are running upon a lee-shore! in a few moments
the ship (the world) will strike and go down! The life-boat is Christ!
It is lying alongside—it is ready to move off! Come away, sailors, come
away, or it will be too late!’
“It was on Sabbath the 13th of March that the first Sabbath train was
run between Edinburgh and Glasgow. Mr. Bums’ spirit was stirred to its
depths in connection with this question. His zeal for God and his love
for his country were ‘as a burning fire shut up in his bones.’ He
regarded the Sabbath as the palladium of Scottish Christianity. In name
of the session of St. Luke’s he wrote a remonstrance to the
shareholders, setting forth the Tearful iniquity’ of trampling upon the
sacred day, and the ‘awful judgments’ which it must inevitably bring
down upon the land. He attended the two great meetings held in the
Hopetoun Rooms and in the West Church by the friends of the Sabbath to
oppose the opening of the railway; and spoke with great thankfulness of
the powerful speeches of Drs. Cunningham, Candlish, and C. J. Brown, and
Messrs D. T. K. Drummond and Makgill Crichton, in favour of the entire
sanctification of the Lord’s-day. He preached for several Sabbaths upon
the subject, and discussed it in all its aspects; he prayed with even
more than his wonted fervour, that He who saith to the sea, ‘Hitherto
shalt thou come, but no further, and here shall thy proud waves be
stayed/ would arrest the advancing tide of Sabbath desecration: and he
intimated that he would preach at the railway-station every Sabbath at
seven in the morning and at six in the evening —the hours at which the
trains were advertised to start.
“True to his word, he was at the railway-station at seven o’clock on the
following Sabbath morning. He spoke of it as ‘a momentous day in the
history of Scotland.’ A great crowd assembled, and joined with deep
solemnity in the service. It was after nine before they dispersed, some
of them in tears. He conducted the ordinary services in St. Luke’s, at
eleven and two, with unusual tenderness and power, as if the morning
service had only put a keener edge upon his spirit; and was at the
railway-station again at six, surrounded by a dense concourse of several
thousands. The station was then at the Hay-market, in the outskirts of
Edinburgh, and as the bruit spread, the people poured out to hear this
extraordinary man, as they once did to hear the Baptist in the
wilderness. v Like a soldier mounting the breach, or leading a forlorn
hope, he stood upon a large stone, and sang the Psalm:— .
‘Horror took hold on me, because in men thy law forsake/ &c., and
preached one of his most characteristic sermons to a deeply impressed
audience. He continued till nine o’clock in the evening, having been
about nine hours engaged altogether. For the next three months his usual
Sabbath work was four services—two at the railway-station and two in St.
Luke’s. He was often engaged for eight or nine hours—he often had to
raise his voice so as to be heard by thousands; and yet he used to say
that he was as fresh on Monday as on Saturday. He was ‘a wonder to
many.’ Like Ezekiel, he was set for a sign. His brethren in Edinburgh
were full of joy at his lion-like courage and noble testimony; and only
wished that they had bodily strength to stand by his side. As he himself
said, Even if no good was done to souls by these services, the lifting
up of a bold testimony for the Lord’s-day in the hearing of thousands,
and in the face of the world, was a work worth living and dying for.
“So grave did he consider the crisis to be that he resolved to hold
meetings for prayer every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at noon—to
preach in the open-air at other points—and to turn his female class into
an evangelistic service in the church.- It is not easy even to recount
his labours from this date. And instead of being worried or hackneyed,
his soul, like Gideon’s fleece, was drenched with dew, and his preaching
was never marked by greater depth, variety, and freshness. It was the
culminating point of his work in Edinburgh. The church was overflowing.
The word was sharper than a two-edged sword. There was a Bethel-like
fear over the congregation. Every head was bowed. It was felt that ‘the
living God was in the place.’ Some who had entertained prejudices
against the preacher were ashamed when they found that solidity and
impressiveness were the leading characteristics of his teaching. At the
spring communion two hundred joined from other congregations. In his
young communicants’ classes he met continually with deeply interesting
cases of persons recently awakened, and heard of others. At the close of
a Monday prayer-meeting some remained behind, who seemed to be under ‘a
divine convincing work;’ and as they went away, one of the elders said
with sparkling eyes, ‘That’s the Lord’s work beginning.’ And so it was.
The day alone will declare the fruits of that winter’s work. If the
Spirit did not come down as a rushing mighty wind, yet the promise was
fulfilled in abundant measure, ‘I will be as the dew unto Israel.’ What
the old chronicler said of the effects of Richard Cameron’s preaching,
might be said of Mr. Burns’ preaching on not a few of those Sabbaths in
St. Luke’s: ‘The people fell into a state of calm weeping.’
“I have said nothing of his Sabbath-evening services in the Queen’s
Park, or of the solemn meetings he addressed at the end of the old
Tolbooth Church in the High Street, where there were manifest tokens of
the divine presence, and where beyond doubt fruit was gathered unto life
eternal. I have said nothing of his quick eye in seizing opportunities
of dropping a word in season, in the house and in the street, on coach
or track-boat, to any one whom the thousand eddies and swirls of daily
life threw in his way. I have said nothing of four evangelistic tours
which he made in the midst of his Edinburgh work—one in April, 1842, to
Milnathort, Bridge of Earn, Perth, Burrel-ton, Collace, Abernyte,
Dundee; another in June, to Dundee, Kilspindie, Anstruther, Logie, Cupar-Fife,
and Falkland; and two in August and September to the Highlands of
Perthshire. One recalls it with amazement. Here was a man who crowded
the work of years into months— of months into weeks—of weeks into days.
The work of many a lifetime was compressed into this single winter in
Edinburgh. He often spoke as if he had a presentiment that his
exhausting labours would soon wear out the earthly tabernacle, and he
hasted to do the work of Him that sent him.
“My space is done, else I could give fragments of his 1 Meditations ’
which I still vividly remember—morsels of living bread which the Master
had blessed and broken. In digging in the field of the Word he threw up
now and again great nuggets, which formed part of one’s spiritual wealth
ever after. A mind of keen insight and power—he was given to study
subjects rather than texts, so that if he studied one text he sometimes
preached from another —and always longing to resume those habits of
close and consecutive study which he pursued until he was carried away
by the tide. He was a great puzzle to students— his work, his
circumstances, and his methods were so exceptional; but those who were
so minded could learn from him the greatest lesson of all for the work
of the ministry—the omnipotence of faith and prayer.
“For reasons which I suppress, I had the privilege of seeing him often
in private—generally twice a week. Little notes, too, he used to send
me; and although I have lost them, their contents are written ‘as if in
star-fire’ on my heart. Here is one. He had asked me to breakfast, but
was unexpectedly called from home. He left a note expressing his regret,
and adding, ‘We are often disappointed in our meetings with man, but
never in our meetings with God at a throne of grace, where we are ever
welcome in the blood of Jesus.’ In another, written from Dublin, he
says—‘May the Lord carry on his own great work within and around us, and
may we be enabled to glorify him in life and in death! ’ The very last
words, I think, I ever heard from him—standing at his father’s door one
night in 1854, under cold November skies—were, ‘We must run!’”
Allusion has been made to those rapid excursions to other fields which
occasionally interrupted the more even tenor of his labours at St.
Luke’s. Of the incessant and exhausting toil which such excursions
involved no one acquainted only with the ordinary scenes of evangelistic
work can easily form a conception. A single specimen, therefore, we must
give, and we do so all the more readily that it will carry us back for a
moment amid the scenes of his former labours in Breadalbane and
Strathtay:—“To one with an exact knowledge of the geography of
Perthshire,” says the same eye-witness, to whom I am indebted for the
above notices, “his labours during the week from Sabbath the 14th
August, 1842, to Sabbath the 21st inclusive, furnish one of the most
extraordinary episodes even in his life. There were no railroads then in
Perthshire, but he had an interesting fellow-labourer in the shape of a
fine fast trotter, as worthy of the name of ‘Church Extension’ as Mr.
M‘Cheyne’s pony. He was a famous rider, and sat his horse like a knight.
On Sabbath the 14th he preached at Blair-Athole (1) for five hours iji
the churchyard to an assembly of at least 4000 persons, and (2) in the
evening in the church for three hours to an audience that would have
remained till daybreak. On Monday evening he rode to Moulin, and
preached (3) to a deeply affected audience. On Tuesday he rode to
Kinloch-Rannoch (20 miles), and preached (4) in a park at the south end
of the bridge, from two to five o’clock, to an interesting congregation
of shepherds, gamekeepers, foresters, graziers, cattle-dealers, &c.,
gathered from both sides of Loch Rannoch. After a hurried dinner he
struck across the west shoulder of Schiehallion, one of the most
trackless and difficult passes in the Highlands—taking a guide part of
the way, to Fortingall (18 miles); rode six miles farther to Lawers,
crossed Loch Tay to Ardeonaig—preached (5) there on Wednesday at twelve,
and recrossing the lake preached (6) at Lawers the same evening. On
Thursday he rode down to Grandtully (17 miles), and (7) preached with
great power in the churchyard to a dense crowd from Hebrews xii. 18-25.
On Friday he rode up to Fortingall (12 miles), where he preached (8) in
the open air from two to nearly six p.m., a sermon (Hebrews ix. 27, 28),
which made a deep impression, many of the audience being in tears; and
returned to Grandtully the same evening. On Saturday morning he started
at six for Balnaguard, preached (9) there at seven o’clock to a large
company, many of whom had got saving good under his ministry
previously—caught the mail-cart at half-past eight, reached Edinburgh in
the evening, and preached thrice (10, n, 12) in St. Luke’s on the
following day.
“The congregation at Blair-Athole on the 14th,” continues our informant,
“was a most imposing sight. Most of them were men, and the ground being
a dead level, and inconvenient for sitting, most of them stood. The
thirst to hear was so intense, and the blessing which had crowned his
previous visits so wide-spread, that almost the whole population, not
only from the vale of Athole, but from Straloch, Strathardle,
Kirkmichael, Glenerochy, Dalnacarcloch, Foss, Glenfincastle, Strathtay,
and Strath-tummel, flocked to hear the great preacher of repentance. As
he read the opening Psalm. Ps xxii. 27-31—
‘All ends of th’ earth remember shall,
And turn the Lord unto,’ &c.,
and during the first prayer, you felt as if the light of the other world
struck on his face. His text was John xviii. 11, ‘The cup which my
Father,’ &c.: and as he proceeded to explain the emblem, ‘the cup,’ he
said, ‘Wine is the strength or essence of the grape. God’s wrath is his
whole being as directed against sin. He looks upon sin as infinitely
base and vile, and therefore he is indignant: and the wine of his holy
anger is poured out in all its strength into the cup of his indignation.
This wine was not diluted when the cup was put into the hand of the Son
of God. Look at the anguish sin has wrought. The tears of mankind have
never ceased to flow since it entered the world. No sooner do they dry
on one cheek than they begin to run down the other: no sooner does one
widow lay aside her weeds, than another begins the wail: and yet one
diluted drop of God’s wrath has done it all. What anguish, then, must
have been in the cup which the Father gave his Son to drink!’ Words like
these cut deep into many a heart that day. I saw a white-haired old man
in the gate weeping bitterly, and saying, ‘Oh! it’s his prayers: I canna
stand his prayers!’
“Those who could hardly speak a word of English understood him. An old
person who literally did not know one word, and always sat on the pulpit
stair when he preached, was asked, what was the use of her hearing Mr.
Burns? ‘Oh,’ she replied, ‘I can understand the Holy Ghost’s English!”
Between the scenes now described and those to which we have next to
refer, great and startling events had taken place. The ancient and
venerable Church of Scotland, of which Mr. Bums had been an attached and
faithful member, had been broken in pieces, and from its ruins had
arisen a new and powerful society with which a large proportion of her
most devoted sons had cast in their lot. With the movement which led to
that remarkable revolution, and with the principles which lay at the
foundation of it, he most thoroughly sympathized; and when the critical
day of exodus arrived we find him hurrying away from the busy scenes of
his evangelistic work in Fife, that he might witness that signal and
illustrious act of faith, and share the inspiration and the triumph of
that solemn hour:—“Tuesday,” he writes in his journal, “to Edinburgh per
steam through a great storm on the way to the Assembly. Thursday, I was
honoured to join in the solemn procession of ministers, &c., from St.
Andrew’s Church to the Free Assembly Hall, Canonmills, walking between
my father on the one side and Uncle George of Tweedsmuir on the other.
This was a scene of which I know not what to say! The opening of the
Free Assembly was graciously solemn. Surely the Lord was there.” But the
scenes which immediately after followed, though deeply important and
spirit-stirring, were not perhaps peculiarly favourable to the quiet
prosecution of his special work. The country was all astir and filled
with the din of ecclesiastical reconstruction and organization, and
though this enthusiasm of church life and church work was itself of most
wholesome influence on the general interests of religion in the country,
and indeed, as it is believed, lent an impulse to the spiritual life of
many, never to be forgotten, it was scarcely in unison with the peculiar
mission of one whose one exclusive theme was that of repentance and the
second birth. While therefore he still unweariedly prosecuted his
appointed work wherever the divine Master seemed to point the way, he
yet felt that the auspicious season for such work had in a great
measure, at least for the present, passed. It was a time not so much for
the awakening of life, as for the exercising and turning to good account
of the life already awakened—a birth-time rather for the collective
church than for individual souls. There was, indeed, abundant and most
momentous work to be done, but work not precisely of that kind for which
he felt himself especially fitted, and to which he believed himself to
have been by the irresistible call of God specially devoted. It was his
part not to rear, or even materially to assist in rearing, the outward
fabric of the house of God, but to help by God’s grace in gathering the
living stones of which it was to be reared. He was the more willing
accordingly to listen to calls which were coming to him, with increasing
frequency and urgency, from fields that lay beyond the sphere of the
existing movement, and among these from Dublin, where he found himself
on Saturday, April 6th, 1844, under the hospitable roof of his valued
friend the Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick, one of the ministers of Mary’s Abbey
Church. The following graphic and deeply interesting narrative, for
which I am indebted to his kind host, will give some idea of the nature
of his labours, and his manner of life in this new and untried field:—
“I had seen your brother in Perth, and had invited him to my house in
Dublin. He accepted my invitation; and after he had finished his
immediate engagements in Scotland he suddenly appeared at my door, with
a small bundle in his hand, containing the whole of his travelling
apparatus. His principal object in coming to Dublin was to find
opportunities, if possible, of making known to Roman Catholics the
message of the gospel. Accordingly, he selected as the place of his
public labours a suitable piece of ground in front of the custom-house;
a place in which Father Matthew had administered the temperance pledge,
and where he could address his audience without obstructing the ordinary
thoroughfare. This area was surrounded by a low chain fence, inside of
which he stood on a chair, and spoke to the people, who occupied the
space between him and the building. Here he took his position evening
after evening, and amidst innumerable annoyances and interruptions he
sought to bring before his ignorant and prejudiced hearers the word of
eternal life. It requires no small amount of courage, and tact, and
temper, as every one knows who has made the trial, to address an
unsympathizing or hostile Irish mob. Mr. Burns was exposed to many
opprobrious salutations, derisive questionings, vehement denials of the
statements which he made; sometimes the uproar was so loud and
long-continued that he was obliged to desist altogether; often his
clothes were torn; not seldom the chair on which he stood was broken;
but he never was impatient, nor ever for a moment lost his self-command.
Amidst the most noisy and turbulent scenes, his countenance was beaming
with joy, insomuch that some of his persecutors were constrained to say,
* He is a good man; we cannot make him angry.’ The ringleaders of the
mob occasionally joined hands, and rushed down upon him for the purpose
of driving him from the chair, or of throwing him down upon the street;
but he was always protected from the danger of these assaults by a
body-guard of three young men, members of my congregation, who were
never absent from these meetings; and who, standing behind him, caught
him in their arms till the wave had passed by and spent its force; and
then, having set him on the chair again, he proceeded in his address
with as much quietude of manner as if no interruption had taken place.
The questions interjected by the crowd from time to time, while he was
perhaps in the middle of a sentence, were sufficient to perplex a
speaker of less experience and of less self-control than Mr. Burns. Let
me give some specimens of the style of interrogation to which he was
subjected in the course of his addresses:— ‘What book is that which you
hold in your hands?’—‘It is the Word of God.’ ‘How do you know? can you
prove that it is the Word of God?’—‘I shall prove that it is if you deny
it; but if we both of us admit it to be from God, why need I stop to
prove it?’ ‘What is your commission?’—‘I shall read it to you, my
friends, ‘Let him that heareth say, Come.’ Eleven years have now passed
since I heard the Lord speaking to my heart, and saying ‘Come,’ and ever
since I have been saying ‘Come’ to as many sinners as were willing to
listen to me.’ ‘You may go, we don’t want you here.’—‘My friends, it is
to those who don’t want me that I am always most anxious to go; for I
find that they are the people who have most need of me.’ ‘Bravo!’
shouted some one in the crowd, pleased with the readiness and
appropriateness of the reply. ‘From what country do you come?’—‘From
Scotland.’ ‘Have you no sinners there?’—‘Yes.’ ‘Have you not much
drunkenness in Scotland?’—‘Yes, a good deal.’ ‘Why did you not stay at
home to convert the drunkards before you came over to teach us?’—‘ For
this reason, in Scotland the drunkards know that they are sinners, and
do not attempt to justify themselves in their sins. But here I see
people who curse, and drink, and tell lies, who say, nevertheless, that
theirs is the true religion. Now these people must be labouring under a
great mistake, and I have come to set them right in this matter.’ ‘But
our church is the true church, and we have our priests to teach us and
to keep us right.’—‘My friends, your saying that you are members of the
true church does not prove that you really belong to it. Let me read you
a passage from the Word of God. John viii. 39, 44: ‘They answered and
said unto him, Abraham is our father. Jesus said unto them, If ye were
Abraham’s children, ye would do the works of Abraham. Ye are of your
father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do.’ This passage
fell upon them like a thunderbolt, and silenced them for a season, while
the speaker in the meantime pursued his address. The scenes described in
the Gospels under the preaching of the word were thus vividly
illustrated, and to some extent re-enacted, under the ministry of Mr.
Burns.
“On one occasion he proposed to vary the commencement of his open-air
service by the singing of a psalm. I endeavoured to dissuade him from
his purpose, by representing to him, that as his audience knew nothing
of our metrical psalms, nor of our psalmody, his attempt to sing would
serve but to increase and embitter the spirit of opposition. He was
anxious, however, to make the experiment, and announced the 62d Psalm.
After reading a portion of the psalm, he commenced to sing the 5th
verse,
‘My soul, wait thou with patience
Upon thy God alone.’
The crowd, taken by surprise, listened to the first line in mute
astonishment; then burst into a laugh of derision; then forming
themselves into a compact phalanx, they rushed down upon Mr. Burns just
as he had completed the first two words of the second line. The three
friends, who were ever near, drew him aside till the crowd swept by, and
after a considerable interval placed him once more upon the chair; and
he then with his usual composure resumed the tune at the part of the
line, ‘thy God alone/ which he had reached before he was interrupted.
“One evening, when he was obliged to stop short in his discourse in
consequence of his chair being broken, he went down along the quay on
the other side of the river, for the purpose of addressing himself to
the coal-porters. It was in vain that his friends represented the danger
to which he would be inevitably exposed; he replied, that ‘he had never
known fear.’ His courage was soon put to the test. Whenever he commenced
to speak, an angry mob quickly assembled, and loud and threatening
shouts drowned all his efforts to be heard. The police came to his
assistance, and kindly but firmly required him to cease. Still he was
unwilling to give up the attempt, but after several ineffectual efforts,
the mob becoming larger and more ferocious, the police peremptorily
insisted that he should be silent and cross the river in the ferry-boat,
‘for if you attempt to go back along the quay,’ they said, ‘we will not
be answerable for your life.’ ‘But I cannot pay for the ferry-boat.’ ‘It
will cost you only a halfpenny.’ ‘But I have no halfpenny,’ he replied.
‘Here is one for you' said a good-natured policeman. Accordingly Mr.
Burns stepped down into the boat, and holding up the halfpenny, he cried
out to the people on shore, ‘See this, my friends, I have got a free
passage. In like manner you may have a free gospel, a free forgiveness
of all your sins, a free passage to the kingdom of heaven. Without
money, and without price.’ And thus he proceeded to deliver a message to
the persons who were crossing with him in the boat.
“It is not to be concluded from these details, that his labours in this
arduous field were wholly unsuccessful. One Sabbath morning; his
audience at the custom-house were more quiet than usual. His subject was
regeneration, ‘Except a man be born again/ &c. At the close of his
sermon a man who had been listening attentively said, ‘Well, sir, if
what you have said be true, you had much need to come from Scotland to
tell it to us, for we never heard of this doctrine before.’ After Mr.
Burns left Dublin, several Roman Catholics came to inquire about him,
speaking respectfully of his labours, and of the loving and genial
spirit in which they were conducted.
“During his stay in Dublin we had prayer-meetings in the church of
Mary’s Abbey almost every day. The prayers of Mr. Burns were very
striking—distinguished by deep acquaintance with Scripture, by intense
fervour, of him, with absolute truth, during this period, in which, in
the matter of temporal provision, he so simply walked by faith, that
“when he had gathered much he had nothing over, and when he had gathered
least he had no lack.” He had never too much for himself and for the
poor, and never too little for himself. and by strong faith. He truly
pleaded with God, and occasionally seemed to get near access to his
presence. But his addresses to our Presbyterian people failed to produce
much visible impression. His failure in this respect disappointed and
grieved me very much. The congregation looked forward to his promised
visit with much interest; having been largely informed of the wonderful
success which God had vouchsafed to him in many districts of Scotland,
they expected to hear from him a fuller exposition, and a more specific
application of scriptural truth, than he was wont to give; and they were
somewhat dissatisfied to observe that his discourses appeared to be
wholly extemporaneous. I tried to induce him to give some time to
special preparation, but without success, and regarding his course of
procedure as beyond the range of ordinary men, I forbore to press my
objections. I continued, however, to think that he was mistaken in
expecting that his word would be with power when he did not beforehand
consider how to divide and to apply it; and that he was also mistaken in
attributing his want of success, as he was at that time accustomed to
do, solely and exclusively to the hardness of the hearts of the people.
His views on these points, I think I have since learned, subsequently
underwent considerable change; and I am sure that he was prepared to
adopt any means which appeared to him most directly and effectively to
bear on the advancement of the kingdom of God. This great object alone
engrossed him. Political or even ecclesiastical affairs had no
attraction for him. He was bent earnestly and ever on the salvation of
souls.
This grand concern occupied and absorbed his daily prayers, his social
converse, his public addresses, the whole course of his thoughts, the
whole business of his life. Why are there not more of us like him? The
need of such men is as urgent as ever; and we know that the grace of God
is not less rich, nor his promises in Christ less sure, nor his gifts
less varied or less rich. ‘Lord, we believe, help thou our unbelief.’
The following brief snatch of reminiscence by a respected minister of
the Free Church of Scotland,1 gives another vivid touch to the picture,
and affords a pregnant hint as to the unseen results of those despised
and self-denying labours: —
“I only saw him once in Dublin. I was then a student in Trinity College,
and I remember well, passing along by the custom-house I came upon a
crowd, which as I drew near appeared greatly excited. I stopped to
listen, and I found that William Burns (as I afterwards came to know)
was addressing them. I think I see him still: with what a strange
calmness he spoke! with what meekness he met all their taunts! He was
hooted, pelted, insulted, but quite unmoved he held open his Bible, and
answered every onset by saying, ‘ But hear me, hear what God says to us
in his blessed Word.’ I remember he was speaking from John x. concerning
the good Shepherd and the door of the sheepfold. At times the crowd were
quieted down to listen, and one at least of the hearers walked away,
forgetting for the time Greek iambics and mathematical deductions, but
filled with the thought, ‘That stranger has a peace and a life of which
I know nothing.’ Next time we met was at the Duchess of Gordon’s, Huntly
Lodge, on his return on a visit from China; and I have never forgotten
that happy season, or his last words, as, entering the railway-carriage,
he said, ‘Now for China!”’
One or two characteristic extracts from his own journal will carry us
still deeper into the heart of the combat and of the combatant.
“A £34- Wellington Street, Dublin, Rev. W. B. Kirkpatrick's. Monday,
April 7th.— ... On Saturday, after being here an hour or two, I thought
of going to preach in the open air, but on going through the streets
thought it better to wait a little until my way should open more
gradually. Yesterday I preached for Mr. Kirkpatrick at twelve, on ‘Go ye
into all the world,’ &c., and in the evening in Adelaide Road Church, on
John iii.: regeneration. I had assistance on both occasions, and in
coming home at night spoke to numbers. I found them a very engaging
people, very open and frank, and accessible to kindness. O that Jesus
may be glorified among them! . . . This evening I felt the hand of the
Lord laid upon me so powerfully that I could not but go forth to attempt
entering fairly on his work. I went down to the quay to look out for a
suitable place to preach, and having found one I tried to begin, urged
by his word, ‘ Preach the word,’ &c. The enmity which even the attempt
to open my mouth provoked showed what I may look for if I do the Lord’s
will. When I asked some sailors if they would attend they seemed
disposed, but shrunk away, saying, ‘This is a bad part of the world, for
there are too many on the other side of the house.’ In coming away to
the meeting in the chapel I asked the Lord to direct me to some true
child of God—not a minister—who might go with me when I next attempt
this work, and as soon as I got to the church I was introduced to one of
the elders, who seems the very person. After the meeting, again I met
with another, who seems equally desirable. The meeting was very sweet. I
spoke a little on the account of Hagar and her son, Genesis xxi.,
prayed, and was followed by Mr. K. in prayer. He is a man of genuine
piety and very considerable power.
“Tuesday Evening.—During this day my path has opened a little, or rather
not a little, farther. During the former part of the day I wrote letters
to Scotland. Was alone with the Lord, and also traversed the city that I
might get a full view of its character, naturally and morally, which is
always most easily done before you become known. I conversed with Mr.
Drysdale, the elder to whom I alluded above as a man of God. ... I spent
an hour with him in his workshop alone. He gave me an awful account of
the difficulties of out-door preaching in Dublin; but after much
converse I felt that I must make the attempt. He would gladly have gone
with me, but was engaged this evening at the great meeting in connection
with the Presbyterian marriage question, and thus I was left quite
alone. However I went, looking to the Lord, and took up my position on
the open ground to the west of the custom-house, laid my hat on the
ground, and standing a few paces from the footpath began to read, ‘ It
is appointed unto men once to die,’ &c. I had soon a large and most
interesting assembly, but, as usual, the Romanists introduced their
questions, and when the answers came too near them they began to make a
rush with the view of putting me down. A police-officer also came and
advised me to remove. I said I believed that I was trespassing no
law—that that was the ground where Father Matthew spoke —and that I
would not remove unless he had authority to stop me. He seemed to be a
Romanist, and was evidently set on putting me down, so that after
throwing the responsibility on him, and telling the people where I would
preach to-morrow, I came away with a disburdened conscience. Dear
people! they seemed intent on hearing, and followed me far on my way
home despite of all I could do.
“Friday, April 12th.—Half-past one o’clock this morning I awoke under a
powerful assault of despondency and unbelief—tempted to say, Let me sit
still and take things in the ordinary way. However, at worship, the
fifth chapter of Hebrews, read by Mr. K., particularly the words, ‘Be
followers of them who through faith and patience are now inheriting the
promises/ quickened me again. We had some interesting conversation on
the need of perseverance, and of in this taking a lesson from O’Connell;
and at half-past nine I went down in the name of Jesus to the scene of
last night’s meeting. I asked one captain to give me his ship to preach
in, but he refused. I was then standing in doubt to what ship to go to
next when I saw some poor Romanists—emigrants, I suppose—on board
another vessel, who seemed to know me, and were mocking. I asked them
how they were so unwilling to hear the Word of God; they said they loved
it, but not from me—that I could not preach it, &c. This opened the way.
With all their confidence they mingled many oaths, which I told them
certainly showed that they were not on the right way. A crowd gathered,
and I had the best hour among them that I have had in Dublin. I was
greatly aided in gaining their confidence. They threatened to throw me
into the river at first, but I told them I did not mind that—they
treated my Master worse. One asked me for my commission; I pointed to ‘
Let him that heareth say, Come.’ One said something vile; I said, ‘You
know that when you go to confession you must confess that as a sin.’
Another, hearing of confession, and thinking that I was speaking against
it, said, ‘What do you know about confession ?’ &c.; I said, ‘Not much;
but I am saying no more than I know,’ and repeated what he had said. He
was pleased. One said, ‘You must be saved by prayer and fasting;’ I
affirmed it, but showed the infinitely higher place of the blood of
Jesus. One pressed me to prove that the Bible was the Word of God,
wishing to bring me under church authority; I said I would do so if he
denied it, but that as we both admitted this, why should I prove it, and
so we got to more practical and personal matters. I was so full of God’s
joy in all this that I could not but smile, or rather laugh, in speaking
to them; they wondered at this, and said, £He is a good man, we cannot
make him angry.’ I told them I would come back again at the dinner-hour
and speak again; and so we parted. This was a good beginning. At twelve
we had a very good prayer-meeting; and all that seems needful is faith,
and patience, and prayer. I am just about to return again to the field;
but ah! I must go deeper this time, and be prepared for the worst that
the enemy can devise or execute. £ They overcame him by the blood of the
Lamb and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives
unto^ the death? Oh! to be enabled thus to fight and overcome!
“Evening.—The public duty of the day is now over, and I have abundant
cause to sing of mercy. At the dinner-hour I got a good many to hear,
and had increasing assistance. In the evening I got free of all
controversies, and spoke with divine relish on the love of God: ‘ God
commendeth his love toward us,’ &c. We met with some opposition; among
other things, some one threw a pailful of water at me from a ship’s
side, but it did not harm me. The impression was greater than before,
and though the policeman who first put me down came near, he did not
interfere. They are a very interesting people, and if I be faithful to
the Lord’s call I doubt not to see some or many of them obeying the
gospel. It is now near to the end of my first week in Ireland, and I
have indeed cause to thank the Lord that so soon I should be within
sight of so full and blessed a work.
“Saturday, April 13th.—. . . This day I have kept as a day of rest, with
the exception of having a prayer-meeting at twelve o’clock, at which I
read Isaiah xliii., and felt something of his presence. This day has
been wet, so that I have had less unwillingness to defer my public
engagements until to-morrow. During the chief part of this evening
I have been led to look afresh at the dark side of my prospects, and so
have felt as if nothing could be done; but again I am revived by God’s
own perfect words. I have just come to my room from family worship,
where Hebrews vii. 18 to the end was read. I saw something of his glory
as a priest, and had some nearness and fulness of heart in prayer, and
have again a renewal of hope regarding this poor city. I found to-day
also that hope and expectation is springing up in the hearts of some of
God’s children who at first despaired of anything being done. Last night
I told those who disturbed us that I knew well that ‘ the tongue can no
man tame; it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison,’ but that we
would specially pray for them, and that God would fulfil his word, ‘ He
stilleth the tumult of the people.’ They seemed struck at this; I added,
I will get you all very quiet yet before I leave you. Nothing gives one
so great an opening as joy, and love, and peace; and I find these poured
into my heart when among these poor outcasts in an uncommon measure.
Many of the emigrants who in the morning cursed me hung upon my lips in
the evening. One poor woman said, 'Ah! I see the tear of mercy in his
eye.’ When they made any commotion I said, ‘Now, the policeman will stop
us;’ and they became as quiet as the river beside us.”
He returned to Scotland on May ioth, and after three months of
evangelistic work, chiefly in Paisley, Port-Glasgow, Renfrew, and other
neighbouring places, proceeded to the British dominions of North
America, where we shall have in the next chapter to trace his footsteps.
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