Alexander Whyte: Lessons to
Learn
By Macleod, William
What do we make of Alexander Whyte? His books, unlike those of many of his
liberal contemporaries, are still in print and are popular with Christians
all over the world. Christian Focus publish his famous Bible Characters.
Other books of his in print include: Lord Teach Us to Pray, Samuel
Rutherford and some of his correspondents, Bunyan Characters and An
Exposition of the Shorter Catechism. He was a prolific writer and was widely
regarded as the greatest Scottish preacher of his day. And yet there is
something troubling about him. And it is to be found in his books.
I first heard of Alexander Whyte from my childhood minister in Stornoway,
the Rev Kenneth MacRae. He warned us against using Whyte’s Exposition of the
Shorter Catechism which provides what is in many ways a helpful explanation
of the Westminster Shorter Catechism. I have used it myself along with other
books in preaching through the Catechism. Recently I read The Life of
Alexander Whyte by G F Barbour which was first published in 1923 shortly
after Whyte’s death. To me it was a fascinating and yet shocking and
disturbing book. There was so much that was good in the life of Whyte but at
the same time there was so much confusion, lack of discernment and dangerous
false teaching. It now became clear why Whyte repeatedly and approvingly
quoted liberal and Roman Catholic writers in his Exposition of the Shorter
Catechism.
Whyte’s long active life (1836-1921) spans the second half of the nineteenth
century and beginning of the twentieth. It was a time of great change,
tremendous confidence in man’s intellectual and technological abilities, and
optimism in the advance of civilization and the church within it. This was
the period when the theory of Evolution was published and became popular and
when the Higher Critics undermined the authority of Scripture within the
mainline churches and yet evangelicals like Whyte seemed totally
unconcerned. It was also the time of the rise again in this country of the
Roman Catholic Church following the Roman Catholic Relief Act of 1829. The
Tractarians or Oxford Movement within the Church of England developed into
Anglo-Catholicism. In 1845 their great leader John Henry Newman converted to
the Church of Rome. And then there was the beginning of the Ecumenical
Movement with the World Missionary Conference in Edinburgh in 1910 which is
universally regarded as the beginning of the World Council of Churches (WCC).
Whyte’s Life is interesting from the perspective that it gives on the
changes taking place at that time in the church and society, in Scotland and
beyond.
Youth and Training
Whyte was born in Kirriemuir to a single mother, Janet Thomson. Though his
father John Whyte wished to marry Janet she refused, feeling that two wrongs
wouldn’t make a right, and he then left for America where he married and
spent his life. Janet had to work hard to bring up her son and he grew up in
relative poverty with few advantages. She appears to have become a devout
Christian and adhered to the Free Church in 1843. In his student days
Alexander made contact with his father and received some financial help.
They met up and later John Whyte’s only daughter Elizabeth came to keep
house for Alexander who was a bachelor in his first charge. She married one
of his ministerial colleagues, Rev Thomas Macadam.
Alexander at the age of twelve, to please his mother, began to serve his
trade as a cobbler. However from an early age he had felt that his calling
was to be a preacher and no sooner had he trained as a cobbler than he
sought means to enter Aberdeen University. He had a great love for books and
learning. While employed in shoemaking he would have a book open on the
bench in front of him. Having completed his arts training he went to New
College in Edinburgh and graduated in 1866. He became an assistant to Dr
John Roxburgh and shortly afterwards was ordained a colleague. In 1870 he
was called to be colleague to Dr Robert S Candlish in Free St George’s,
Edinburgh.
Minister of Free St George’s
Candlish was already suffering from ill-health and passed away in 1873. His
deathbed is fascinating. He had been very keen on hymns and eventually got
them introduced to Free St George’s. Interestingly on his deathbed he said
to Whyte, ‘Oh, man! I wish I had learned all the Psalms by heart’. God’s
words were the real comfort not the words of man. Whyte describes the final
scene:
The dying Principal sent for me to bid me farewell, and I found Dr Rainy
already at Dr Candlish’s bedside. I had no sooner entered the room than the
dying man put out his hand to me and said: ‘Good-bye. I had hoped to be
spared to help you a little longer but it was not to be. Good-bye’. Then he
motioned to Dr Rainy to kneel down at his bedside, when he threw his
withered arms around Rainy’s neck and kissed him and said: ‘I leave the
congregation to Whyte and I leave the New College and the Assembly to you’.
Rainy shared Candlish’s desire for the union of the Free Church with the
United Presbyterian Church and he was the leader in accomplishing this after
having watered down the Confession of Faith by the notorious Declaratory Act
of 1892.
So at the age of 34 Whyte found himself sole minister in charge of possibly
the most influential congregation in the Free Church. His congregation had
over 1000 members amongst whom were to be found many professors, doctors,
lawyers and scientists. For years he held a young men’s class on Sabbath
evening after church which was attended by 500 students and young
professionals and a similar meeting for around 500 young women on a
Wednesday afternoon. He was in constant demand as a preacher and became
Principal of New College, the most prestigious of the divinity colleges of
the Free Church (by then the United Free Church), in 1909 and continued in
that position until 1918. So here was a man in an ideal situation from which
to be a huge influence for good in the Free Church and later in the United
Free Church, but sadly the Church he left behind when he died was rapidly
becoming more and more liberal and he seems to have done nothing to stem the
tide. Nor did he even seem able to see that there was a problem.
What would he say today if he were to survey the scene? The union he longed
for with the Church of Scotland took place in 1929 and the united Church is
only a fraction of the size of the two individual Churches in 1921 when he
died. He felt burdened to preach on sin and the need of repentance but how
few Church of Scotland congregations herald that message now. Sadly
ministers who live in open immorality are free to continue in the ministry.
The congregation of St George’s West which his church eventually became
ended up with a liberal minister and a handful of a congregation. It was
amalgamated with St Andrews and St George’s recently, and the massive,
beautiful building was sold to Charlotte Chapel whose building had become
too small for its congregation. Hopefully the gospel will soon be heard
again within this building.
Liberal Theology
Many of Alexander Whyte’s closest friends were liberal theologians and they
had as one would expect a huge influence upon him. He met Marcus Dods at New
College and for the next forty-six years they were bosom buddies and
normally, when possible, met on Saturdays and went for walks discussing
theology together along with a small group of others who shared the same
outlook. Whyte along with Dods edited Clark’s Handbooks for Bible Classes
series. Though Dods completed his training for the ministry in 1858 he had
to wait six years till he received a call. Whyte could not understand why
congregations would not call this clever, gifted minister, but God’s people,
at the time, showed more discernment than Whyte did. Dods had accepted the
Higher Critical theories which destroyed the authority of the Scriptures. In
1864 Dods became minister of Renfield Free Church, Glasgow, where he worked
for twenty-five years. In 1889 he was appointed professor of New Testament
Exegesis in the New College, Edinburgh, of which he became Principal in
succession to Robert Rainy in 1907. His writings, and particularly a sermon
on Inspiration published in 1877, rightly incurred the charge of heresy, and
shortly before his election to the Edinburgh professorship he was summoned
before the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland, but the charge
was dropped by a large majority showing how the whole church had become
infected with liberalism. Other liberal friends belonging to the same inner
circle were J Sutherland Black who edited the higher critical Encyclopaedia
Biblica along with T K Cheyne. When William Robertson Smith was charged with
heresy for his article on the ‘Bible’ in the Encyclopedia Britannica and
forced from his chair, Alexander Whyte was his chief defender and dissented
against the motion of Principal Rainy that he be removed from his chair.
Whyte sought another heretic, George Adam Smith, to be his assistant
minister and was very disappointed at his refusal. His biographer assures us
that even in his last years he welcomed the writings of H A A Kennedy and
James Moffatt which we would describe as liberal trash — treating the Bible
simply as man’s thoughts about God rather than God’s authoritative
revelation to man.
Why was Whyte so supportive of liberal theologians? He was greatly enamoured
with learning and when he was a youth he read everything he could lay his
hands on. He had a tremendous admiration for science. His own theology was
pietistic and lacked the clear Reformed character which the first generation
Free Church Theologians of 1843 had, e.g. Chalmers, Cunningham, Bannerman,
Duncan and Smeaton. He believed in Christ and his atoning work and
justification by faith alone in his own soul and heart, and saw this as the
way of salvation for his people, but he was at the same time in awe of the
academics and wanted them to have freedom to pursue their studies and
investigations without interference from church courts.
Cardinal Newman and the RCs
Another strange influence in Whyte’s life was Cardinal Newman who began as a
Church of England minister and later became a Roman Catholic. Whyte loved a
beautiful style of English and Newman’s writings had that. He liked the way
Newman put things and so quotes him extensively in his writings. He and some
of his friends paid a visit to Newman and he had a signed portrait of Newman
hung in his study. He was a voracious reader himself and often passed on
books to students and young ministers, and Newman’s works were frequently
among the first to be sent. Later in his life he came across Santa Teresa, a
sixteenth century Spanish nun and would often quote her and pass on her
writings. She taught that people should strive for the ‘devotion of union, a
supernatural but an essentially ecstatic state — there is also an absorption
of the reason in God, and only the memory and imagination are left to
ramble’. He was attracted to mystics such as her. Latterly when on holiday
on the Continent he would attend Roman Catholic mass with great
appreciation.
Ecumenical Wooliness
Whyte became an ecumenist. He was very enthusiastic for the union of the
Free Church with the United Presbyterian Church. He went to London to hear
first hand the House of Lords Judgment of 1904 and was deeply shocked by it
and scathing towards those judges who supported the original Free Church
(Continuing). Later he was a great advocate for the union of the United Free
Church with the Church of Scotland. But he went even further than that,
seeking the union of all churches. He stated in one of his sermons which was
printed and published:
The first step in a real union of Christendom will be taken when we come to
admit and to realize that the Greek Church (Greek Orthodox) was the original
mother of us all; that the Latin Church (RC) was her first child; and that
through both these Churches we ourselves have our religious existence;
through them we have the universal foundations of our Creeds and Confessions
and Catechisms; our public worship also; our Christian character and our
Christian civilization; and everything indeed that is essential to salvation
. . . When we humble ourselves to admit that some other Churches have things
of no small moment to teach us and to share with us, and things it will
greatly enrich us to receive and assimilate; when we have a Christian mind
enough to admit and even to welcome thoughts and feelings like these — then
the day of a reconstructed Christendom will have begun to dawn at least for
ourselves.
He told his wife that he hoped for ‘the recovery of the Christian year
(Christmas, Easter, etc), an optional Liturgy, the simplification of the
Standards (a reduced Contession of Faith), Superintendents who will have all
the virtues and none of the faults of Bishops’. What confusion and denial of
the ‘faith once delivered to the saints’!
He was an enthusiastic supporter of the World Missionary Conference, the
precursor of the World Council of Churches. He actually received the leader
of the Bahais, Abdul Baha Abbas into his home and had him address a meeting
in his home. Whyte’s introductory words were: ‘Dear and honoured Sir, I have
had many meetings in this house, but never have I seen such a meeting. It
reminds me of what Paul said, “God hath made of one blood all nations of
men” and of what our Lord said, “They shall come from the East and the West,
from the North and from the South, and shall sit down in the kingdom of
God”.’ What happened to ‘Ye must be born again’ (John 3:7) and ‘I am the
way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me’
(John 14:6)?
Lack of Discernment
The lack of discernment of Alexander Whyte is shocking and especially from
one who had purchased a set of Thomas Goodwin (the Puritan, Works in 12
Volumes) in 1861 and read and reread them making them his constant
companions, one who had experienced the 1859-60 revival and had been used of
God in it, one who delighted to preach on sin, on Christ and on the
atonement. Whyte is a strange mixture and must be read with care. His lack
of appreciation of the destructive nature of Higher Criticism, his
ecumenicity, his appreciation for the writings of Roman Catholics and
Eastern Orthodox theologians, and his confusion of mysticism with holiness
and biblical spirituality should leave us very cautious in our handling of
his books. But there is surely a warning in all this to us too. Take care of
your friends and your books! Those who are your close associates will affect
your life and beliefs.
Notes
Taken with permission from the Free Church Witness, October 2013, written by
the editor.
See also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Whyte
and
The life of Alexander Whyte, p. p., by G. F. Barbour
and List of his books on the
Internet Archive
From a visitor to Electric
Scotland:
"Just finished reading Seen from My Pulpit, the last book I have by Malcolm
James MacLeod. I've read them all now but the one I can't find anywhere. It
was written as he left his ministry at St. Nicholas in NYC in 1935. A
beautiful book, some old material, some new, very touching and inspiring. In
it, toward the end he talks about his love of reading biographies of famous
people, and one which profoundly moved him was of Alexander Whyte, DD, after
reading which he said he wanted to throw all his books in the fire, and a
friend of his said that no one who ever read it felt they were fit for
living because of his goodness. I thought you might like to know about it as
I don't see it on Electric Scotland."
Electric Scotland reply
We can't find a copy of this book as it doesn't appear to be in the public
domain. If you or someone out there that has the book you might consider
scanning it into a pdf file and sent it to us and we'd be more than happy to
add it to the site. |