These two martyrs
suffered together in Scotland in the year 1539. When they were brought
before the archbishop, the courage of Kennedy, who was but eighteen
years old, failed him, and he would nave recanted; but while thus
faltering, the Spirit of God began to work wonderfully in him, his face
was lighted up with a heavenly glow, and falling upon his knees, he
exclaimed with a holy joy, “O eternal God, how wondrous is that love and
mercy that thou bearest unto mankind, and unto me the most vile and
miserable wretch above all others; for even now, when I would have
denied thee and thy Son, the Lord Jesus Christ my Saviour, and so have
cast myself into everlasting damnation, thou by thy own hand hast pulled
me from the very bottom of hell, and makest me to feel that heavenly
comfort, which takes from me that ungodly fear, wherewith before I was
oppressed. Now I defy death. Do what YOU please. I praise God I am
ready.” When Russell was reviled by the lookers on, he said, “ This is
your hour and the power of darkness; now sit ya as judges, we stand
wrongfulhr accused, and more wrongfully to be condemned; but the day
shall come, when our innocence shall appear, and that ye shall see our
own blindness, to your everlasting confusion ; go forward and fulfil the
measure of your iniquity.”
The archbishop seems fora moment to have relented and he said, “I think
it better to spare these men and not put them to death.” But his
associates urged him on, and he condemned them to die.
Russell comforted his weaker brother, saying, “Brother, fear not; more
powerful is He that is in us, than he that is in the world; the pain
that we shall suffer is short, and shall be light, but our joy and
consolation shall never have end; and therefore let us contend to enter
in unto our Master and Saviour, by the same strait way which he has trod
before us. Death cannot destroy us, for it is already destroyed by Him
for whose sake we suffer.” And thus they constantly triumphed over death
and Satan even in the midst of the flames. |