The communion
was to take
place at one
sitting. Three
long tables,
formed of rough
deals laid upon
trestles, and
covered with
snow-white
linen, lent by
farmers' wives,
stood on the
level in front
of the tent. The
communion cups
and plates were
sent by people
in the south,
who subscribed
liberally for
supplying the
passing needs of
country
congregations,
by several sets
of these
necessaries,
which circulated
from place to
place. The
benches which
ran by the sides
of the tables
were occupied
from the
beginning of the
service by
intending
communicants.
The general
order and
solemnity not
only were
impressive, but
seemed almost to
be oppressive.
To Mr Logie, as
the
representative
of the
newly-formed
Free Kirk
Presbytery of
the bounds, the
duty of "fencing" and
"serving" was
assigned.
Mention has
already been
made of Mr
Logie's weakness
for comparisons.
This occasion
afforded
stimulus and
scope for his
peculiar talent,
and before
speaking for
many minutes he
took the
opportunity of
comparing the
Free Church to a
supernatural
pipe stretching
up to Heaven,
through which
the waters of
the fountain of
everlasting life
copiously flowed
down to faithful
people; and he
likened the Old
Kirk to a sink
pipe, through
which earth's
polluted water
percolated to a
horrible
cesspool in the
region below. It
is not to be
supposed that Mr
Logie ever read
Sweden-borg's
"Heaven and
Hell"—the very
name of that
visionary
heresiarch would
have put him in
a rage—but yet,
in his best
moods, that is
when he was not
worrying his
soul about his
own and other
people's
salvation, he
would say, like
Swedenborg—" Let
us always keep
our fa.es to the
light, and turn
our backs upon
the darkness.
God is the
light, and as
long as we look
to Him His grace
will be
sufficient for
us, and change
us into his
likeness." In
his weakness for
comparisons he
also appeared to
be groping
darkly
aftertheSwedenborgeandoctrineof
Correspondences;
but he certainly
knew it not.
Sometimes, too,
in his best
moods, his
devotional
spirit appeared
to be saturated
with the
longings and
ideas of " De
Imitatione
Christi,"
although it is
very unlikely
that he had read
it, or any other
book which
belonged to what
he would call "
Papistical
times." He was
always
dreadfully in
earnest to be
sincere towards
God and man, and
always mortally
afraid of
unwatchfulness
of his
conscience and
the weakness of
his nature. He
counted his
personal
sacrifice at the
Disruption—which
was a very real
one—a thing of
small account.
He was ready to
burn or to be
burned for the
truth's sake;
but sometimes he
did not seem to
feel quite sure
as to any
absolute
perception of
truth, beyond a
dreadful
implicit faith
in the doctrine
of reprobatory
predestination.
Duncan Ban used
to say that "Mr Logie was a good
man, who, in
trying to be too
good, would make
earth a groaning
place, and
Heaven itself
little better
than a Black
Hole of
Calcutta." Mr
Logie was a
square-set man,
with a sunless
elongated face,
which looked
almost always
duskily eclipsed
by the woes of
unsatisfactory
introspection.
He was full of
compassion for
human woe and
suffering, and
kinder to the
worst of sinners
than to himself.
His nature—the
poor
unregenerated
part of it—was a
great deal more
charitable than
his creed. He
cut up and
pounded a text
without the
slightest regard
for its simple
meaning ; but,
except when he
followed a
comparison to
absurdity, he
was always
impressive,
sometimes
awfully so. He
came from the
far North, and
belonged to the
good, but
intolerantly
fanatical, small
sect there, of
whom Cook of
Daviot, and Rory
of Snizorc, were
noted
representatives.
Professedly,
these men were
extreme
Protestants, as
well as mystics
who believed in
signs and
warnings, and
words of
prophecies. But
their
ultra-Protestant
view of
communion—they
called it "the
sacrament," par
excellence—closely
approached the
Roman Catholic
doctrine of the
Mass, and in
some respects
went beyond it.
If the bread and
wine were not
transubstantiated
or consubstantiated,
still, for Mr
Logie and his
sect, the final
effect was much
the same. The
Lord Jesus was
present, not as
the loving
Redeemer, but as
the terrible
Judge. Communion
was not a
fellowship
commemorative of
Christ's
passion, of
which all who
humbly believed
in Him as their
Saviour were
entitled to
participate. On
the contrary, it
was a test of
separation, by
which the wheat
and the tares
were divided
before the
harvest—a little
effective ordeal
by which the
great ordeal of
the Day of
Judgment was
anticipated.
Every "fencing," or
driving away
warning, at the burnside—of
which there was
a long crescendo
series, like an
auctioneer's
catalogue—was
clenched with St
Paul's words in
an exaggerated
sense, "For he
that eateth and
drinketh
unworthily,
eateth and
drinketh
damnation to
himself, not
discerning the
Lord's body."
The warnings
themselves,
however, were
not St Paul's,
but Mr Logie's,
and the upshot
of the whole "fencing," as
done by him,
amounted to
this, that
nobody who had
not gone through a
particular
process, which
by many
comharran and
signs he
minutely
specified, and
received a
supernatural
assurance of
personal
redemption and
justification,
could be a true
Christian; and
that all others
who called
themselves
Christians, and
lived as such,
trusting in the
Lord, could only
approach the
Lord's Table
with the
certainty, in
the strictest or
widest sense, of
eating and
drinking
damnation to
themselves.
Mr Logie's
particular
spiritual
fathers and
brethren in the
North, in trying
to make the
younger people
among their
parishioners
Christians above
measure, simply
turned them into
heathens, who
were not only
frightened away
from communion
but from holding
their children
to be baptised.
Mr Logie was on
the wrong side
of the hills for
doing all that.
The baptising of
children in his
own parish went
on as regularly
as before, but
he certainly
caused a good
many of his
younger people
from becoming
communicants
till a different
man succeeded.
The burnside
communicants,
especially the
elderly
ones—whom Ealag
called the Grey
Egyptians — were
not frightened
by Mr Logie.
They remembered
how in days gone
by they were
themselves
trained by
ministers who
faithfully
performed the
work allotted to
them, and who
died in assured
hope ; and how
those old
trusted teachers
of their youth,
after careful
instruction in
Catechism and
Bible knowledge,
gathered them
into full Church
membership,
telling them it
was their duty
thus openly to
profess their
faith in the
Lord and their
reliance on his
grace. So Mr
Logie's
"fencing"
sounded like a
buzz of
emptiness in the
porches of their
ears, and in
spite of all
creeds,
confessions, and
screeds of
doctrines, they
calm!}-
continued in the
belief that the
Lord spread a
table which was
longer and wider
than could be
measured by Mr
Logie's tape or
that of any
other man.
Although a poor
scholar, Mr
Logie very
graphically
described the
military
organisation of
the Roman
Empire, and
showed how the
soldiers swore a
sacred oath to
be true to their
colours, and how
the breaking of
this Sacramentum
involved the
greatest
possible
disgrace and the
worst
punishment. In
itself this
explanation was
nothing new to
the Old
Egyptians. They
had heard it
many a time
before. They
were well aware
that it was
their bounden
duty to be
always as
faithful
soldiers of the
Lord, as poor
human nature,
mercifully
helped, would
permit. They
confessed in
their hearts
that they were
poor soldiers
and unprofitable
servants, and
prayed that they
might be guided
and helped more
and more even to
the end of the
battle, which
for most of them
could not now,
in the course of
nature, be far
off. But Mr
Logie on this
occasion closed
in upon them
with a new
Sacramental Vow,
or a new reading
of the old one,
which made many
of them look
across the burn
to the deserted
church with a
sigh of regret.
Mr Logie used
language they
had never heard
before. It was
his business to
swear them in as
Secessionists to
be ever faithful
to their new
banner. He
consecrated the
new Church by
banning the old.
But if Mr Logie
imposed a new
vow on the
burnside
communicants, he
was now willing
to absolve them
from all the
anathema of the
"fencing." On
imposing the new
vow he spoke in
almost direct
contradiction to
all he had said
before. Now, all
who abandoned
the "Residuary
Kirk " seemed to
be, in his
opinion, ipso
facto redeemed—
conversion or
no—and he was
doubly sure
those who did
not come out
were hanging by
threads over the
abyss of Hell.
In regard to the
Kirk of his
baptism and
ordination
vows—the mother
Kirk of all
present—an angel
from heaven,
according to Mr Logie, cried
mightily with a
strong voice on
the 18th of May
:—"Babylon the
great is fallen,
and is become
the habitation
of devils, and
the hold of
every foul
spirit, and a
cage of every
unclean and
hateful bird."
Necessarily,
therefore, those
that remain in
the ruined city,
ministering to
and associating
with foul
spirits and
hateful
birds—"shall
drink of the
wine of the
wrath of God,
which is poured
out without
mixture in the
cup of his
indignation, and
they shall be
tormented with
fire and
brimstone in the
presence of the
holy angel, and
in the presence
of the Lamb; and
the smoke of
their torment
ascendeth up for
ever and ever."
As soon as the
communion part
of the services
were over, the
old people and
servants who had
to look after
animals, left
the field. But
after a short
break-up
interval, the
great majority
of the audience
resettled on the
mounds to hear
the concluding
sermon.
They
had already
heard two men,
who were both of
them deeply
religious and
earnest, but of
extremely
different types.
Mr Macphadrig
represented the
Universal Church
perhaps more
truly, if with
less ability,
than even Dr
Chalmers
himself. The
Highland
minister quietly
sacrificed his
comfortable
position by
going out of the
Church, but he
never became a
sectarian,
because it was
not in his
nature to get by
any means a
narrow idea of
the All-Father's
love and care
for all His
creatures. Mr
Logie
represented the
holy fanaticism
and mystical
longings of the
Protestant
Ultramontanism
of the North.
The Disruption
disturbed his
mental
equilibrium,
which was never
particularly
strong. His
mystical
tendencies
hardened into
fierce
intolerance,
assuming airs of
prophecy and
inspiration. Had
he been left to
his quiet
meditations, and
to his revival
efforts, Mr
Logie would have
been in his
proper vocation,
and his life
would have been
as happy as his
gloomy views of
it possibly
permitted. The
Disruption swept
him from his
moorings, and he
never afterwards
settled down,
nor soared
aloft, but was a
voice crying
from tents and
pulpits—"Woe!
woe! woe and
wrath to black
Moderates and
all the children
of the Devil !"
Before his death
he became
convinced that
only a remnant
of his own
communion could
be saved, and
that the Free
Kirk, as a body,
was on the
broad, easy way
to perdition.
The young man
with freckled
face and sandy
hair who
preached the
concluding
sermon at the
burnside
communion
represented the
effective
partisanship
party, which
were destined to
be the future
masters of the
Free Kirk.
Already this
young man's
enthusiasm was
not religious,.
but political
and personal.
His name was—let
us say—Mr
Macbeth, and he
had been brought
up at the feet
of "Ten Years'
Conflict" Gamaliels. He
could appeal to
the bigotry of
others, and make
use of it, while
anything but a
bigot himself.
In her
foundation
deeds, the Free
Church, fresh
from the bitter
Voluntary
controversy,
abjured the
Voluntary
principle and
reaffirmed the
principle of the
union of Church
and
State—circumstances
permitting. But
it soon became
manifest that
the younger men
of the 18th of
May would not to
the end of their
days abide by
the principles
on which the
Free Church was
founded. There
were many among
them who loved
to figure on
public platforms
and to win the
applause of
political
meetings. Mr
Macbeth was one
of this sort. He
possessed
immense talking
power,. but if
he ever
possessed good
preaching gifts,
he lost them
almost entirely
when working as
perambulating
agitator before
and after the
Disruption. So
diligently had
he studied the
political
history of
Presbyterianism
that it rubbed
off all the
divinity varnish
with which he
first courted
notice. His mind
was too shallow
for the strong
convictions
which only grow
where the roots
can strike far
down. His
boundless
ambition stood
for him in the
place of genius
and inspiration.
In the pulpit
his eloquence
was much like
unto wind-bag
gusts driven out
of high-pressure
bellows ; but on
the platform,
when tinselled
with prepared
jokes, it passed
very well, and
elicited rounds
of applause. The
narrow bounds of
the Highlands
did not suffice
for the
wing-spreading
of Mr Macbeth's
ambition. He
ardently wished
to be at the
centre of Free
Church gravity,
and to have a
hand in
developing and
directing the
political
capabilities of
the best
organised
Protestant
Dissenting body
in the United
Kingdom. He had
already
connected his
angling lines
with the leaders
by whom the Free
Church was
governed, and
his desire to be
translated
southward was
about to be
gratified.
Mr
Macbeth took for
his text the
15th verse of
the 15th chapter
of the Second
Book of
Chronicles:—"And all Judah
rejoiced at the
oath; for they
had sworn with
all their
hearts, and
sought Him with
their whole
desire, and He
was found of
them; and the
Lord gave them
rest round
about." Mr
Macbeth
explained, in
his
political-lecture
manner, how Azariah the
prophet was sent
to Asa, and how
king and people,
awakening from
spiritual
lethargy, and
seeing that
Israel had for a
long time been
without the true
God, and without
a teaching
priest, and
without law,
gathered
together at
Jerusalem, and
entered into a
covenant to seek
the God of their
fathers with all
their heart and
with all their
soul. Why did he
not read the
chapter, and let
it speak for
itself? Probably
because, as a
politician, he
recoiled from
the dreadful
earnestness of
the whole
affair, and
particularly
from the
punitive clause
of the covenant,
in which Judah
and Benjamin and
the strangers
from the
dispersed
tribes, swore
that, "Whosoever should
not seek the
Lord God of
Israel should be
put to death,
whether small or
great, whether
man or woman."
Mr Macbeth was
not, like Mr Logie, ready to
burn or be
burned for what
he held to be
God's cause. He
chose his text
with an eye to
effect, and the
then state of
feeling in the
Free Church, and
not for the
extreme doctrine
of persecution
which the
foresaid clause
seemed to
justify. His
sermon, in
truth, was a
somewhat
inflammatory
political
address, which
hanged very
loosely to the
selected text.
He had
dexterously
slipped long,
neatly-written
notes between
the leaves of
the Bible, which
he ever and anon
surreptitiously
consulted. He
was loud and
emphatic enough,
but he probably
felt he was not
so eloquent as
could be wished,
because his
lecture was
written in
English, and he
was not, like
his two older
colleagues, so
completely
master of the
mountain tongue
that he could
off-hand,
without hitches
and
constructional
collapses,
change his
high-flown
English into
high-flown
Gaelic. The gist
of his discourse
was that
Scotland for a
long time was
forgetful of its
covenant
obligations—of
the oath
sworn by the
fathers—and that
at last the "Ten Years'
Conflict" awoke
it to a sense of
duty. He
maintained that,
on the 18th of
May, the true
representatives
of the Scotch
Kirk and nation
did at Edinburgh
what the people
of Judah and
Benjamin, with
the strangers
from the
dispersed
tribes, did at
Jerusalem 2790
years before.
They cast off
the yoke of
sinful
oppression,
recovered
spiritual
freedom, and
established a
pure Church. He
reminded the
Glen people that
they entered
that day into a
new covenant
with the Lord,
and became the
sworn upholders
of the Free
Church. Let them
ever strive
faithfully to
fulfil their
covenant
obligations, for
what said the
Lord in regard
to the
covenant-breakers?—"Therefore, saith the Lord
God, as I live,
surely mine oath
that he hath
despised, and My
covenant that he
hath broken,
even it will I
recompense upon
his head." |