No doubt many of my readers will be
specially interested in knowing something of my experience
and association with the brethren across the sea,
and it is my desire to give them as fair an understanding
of the situation as I can. There are five congregations
in Glasgow, having a membership of six hundred and
seventy-eight persons. The oldest one of these,
which formerly met in Brown Street and now meets in
Shawlands Hall, was formed in 1839, and has one hundred
and sixty-one members. The Coplaw Street congregation,
which branched from Brown Street, and is now the largest
of the five, dates back to 1878, and numbers two hundred
and nineteen. It was my privilege to attend one
of the mid-week services of this congregation and
speak to those present on that occasion. I also
met some of the brethren in Edinburgh, where two congregations
have a membership of two hundred and fifty-three.
At Kirkcaldy, the home of my worthy friend and brother,
Ivie Campbell, Jr., there is a congregation of one
hundred and seventy disciples, which I addressed one
Lord’s day morning. In the evening I went
out with Brother and Sister Campbell and another brother
to Coaltown of Balgonie, and addressed the little band
worshiping at that place.
My next association with the brethren
was at the annual meeting of “Churches of Christ
in Great Britain and Ireland,” convened at Wigan,
England, August second, third, and fourth. While
at Wigan I went out to Platt Bridge and spoke to the
brethren. There are ninety members in this congregation.
One night in Birmingham I met with the brethren in
Charles Henry Street, where the congregation, formed
in 1857, numbers two hundred and seventy-four, and
the next night I was with the Geach Street congregation,
which has been in existence since 1865, and numbers
two hundred and twenty-nine members. Bro.
Samuel Joynes, now of Philadelphia, was formerly connected
with this congregation. While I was in Bristol
it was my pleasure to meet with the Thrissell Street
church, composed of one hundred and thirty-one members.
I spoke once in their place of worship and once in
a meeting on the street. The last band of brethren
I was with while in England was the church at Twynholm,
London. This is the largest congregation of all,
and will receive consideration later in the chapter.
The next place that I broke bread was in a little
mission to the Jews in the Holy City. To complete
a report of my public speaking while away, I will
add that I preached in Mr. Thompson’s tabernacle
in Jerusalem, and spoke a few words on one or both
of the Lord’s days at the mission to which reference
has already been made. I also spoke in a mission
meeting conducted by Mr. Locke at Port Said, Egypt,
preached once on the ship as I was coming back across
the Atlantic, and took part in a little debate on
shipboard as I went out on the journey, and in an
entertainment the night before I got back to New York.
In this chapter I am taking my statistics
mainly from the Year Book containing the fifty-ninth
annual report of the churches in Great Britain and
Ireland co-operating for evangelistic purposes, embracing
almost all of the congregations of disciples in the
country. According to this report, there were
one hundred and eighty-three congregations on the
list, with a total membership of thirteen thousand
and sixty-three, at the time of the annual meeting
last year.
(Since writing this chapter, the sixtieth
annual report of these brethren across the sea has
come into my hands, and the items in this paragraph
are taken mainly from the address of Bro. John
Wyckliffe Black, as chairman of the annual meeting
which assembled in August of this year at Leeds.
The membership is now reported at thirteen thousand
eight hundred and forty-four, an increase of about
eight hundred members since the meeting held at Wigan
in 1904. In 1842 the British brotherhood numbered
thirteen hundred, and in 1862 it had more than doubled.
After the lapse of another period of twenty years,
the number had more than doubled again, standing at
six thousand six hundred and thirty-two. In 1902,
when twenty years more had passed, the membership had
almost doubled again, having grown to twelve thousand
five hundred and thirty-seven. In 1842 the average
number of members in each congregation was thirty-one;
in 1862 it was forty; in 1882 it had reached sixty-one;
and in 1902 it was seventy-two. The average number
in each congregation is now somewhat higher than it
was in 1902.)
Soon after the meeting was convened
on Tuesday, “the Conference recognised the presence
of Mrs. Hall and Miss Jean Hall, of Sydney, N.S.W.,
and Brother Don Carlos Janes, from Ohio, U.S.A., and
cordially gave them a Christian welcome.”
The address of welcome and the address of the chairman,
Brother James Anderson, of Fauldhouse, Scotland, came
early in the day. The meeting on Wednesday opened
with worship and a short address, followed by reports
from the General Sunday-school, Reference, General
Training, and Magazine Committees. One interesting
feature of the proceedings of this day was the conference
paper by Bro. T.J. Ainsworth on the subject
of “The Relation of Christianity to the Social
Questions of the Day.” Besides a discussion
of this paper, there was a preaching service at night.
Thursday, the last day of the meeting, was occupied,
after the morning worship and short address, with the
reports of committees and the appointment of committees.
At the social meeting at night several brethren, who
had been previously selected, spoke on such subjects
as seemed good to them. Bro. W.A. Kemp,
of Melbourne, Australia, and the writer were the only
speakers not residents of the British Isles.
At the close of the meeting the following beautiful
hymn was sung to the tune of “Auld Lang Syne”:
Hail, sweetest, dearest tie, that binds
Our glowing hearts in one;
Hail, sacred hope, that tunes our minds
To harmony divine.
It is the hope, the blissful hope
Which Jesus words afford
The hope, when days and years are past,
Of life with Christ the Lord.
What though the northern wintry blast
Shall howl around our cot?
What though beneath an eastern sun
Be cast our distant lot?
Yet still we share the blissful hope
His cheering words afford
The hope, when days and years are past,
Of glory with the Lord.
From Burmah’s shores, from Afric’s
strand,
From India’s burning
plain,
From Europe, from Columbia’s land,
We hope to meet again.
Oh, sweetest hope, oh, blissful hope,
Which His own truth affords
The hope, when days and years are past,
We still shall be the Lord’s.
No lingering look, no parting sigh,
Our future meeting knows;
There friendship beams from every eye,
And love immortal glows.
Oh, sacred hope, the blissful hope,
His love and truth afford
The hope, when days and years are past,
Of reigning with the Lord.
I am not willing to accept everything
done in the annual meeting, but the hearty good will
manifested and the pleasant and happy associations
enjoyed make it in those respects very commendable.
These brethren are very systematic and orderly in
their work. Some one, who has been designated
beforehand, takes charge of the meeting, and everything
moves along nicely. When a visiting brother comes
in, he is recognized and made use of, but they do
not turn the meeting over to him and depend upon him
to conduct it. The president of the Lord’s
day morning meeting and part or all of the officers
sit together on the platform. The following is
the order of procedure in one of the meetings which
I attended: After singing a hymn and offering
prayer, the brother presiding announced the reading
lessons from both Testaments, at the same time naming
two brethren who would read these scriptures.
After they had come forward and read the lessons before
the church, another hymn was sung, and certain definite
objects of prayer were mentioned before the congregation
again engaged in that part of the worship. Two
prayers were offered, followed by the announcements,
after which a brother delivered an address. Then
the president made mention of the visitors present,
and an old gentleman from the platform extended “the
right hand of fellowship” to some new members
before the contribution was taken and the Lord’s
supper observed, a hymn being sung between these two
items. A concluding hymn and prayer closed the
service, which had been well conducted, without discord
or confusion.
A brother in Wigan gave me a statement
of the work of one of the congregations there in the
winter season. On the Lord’s day they have
school at 9:20 A.M. and at 2 P.M.; breaking the bread
at 10:30 A.M., and preaching the gospel at 6:30 P.M.
At this evening meeting the Lord’s table is
again spread for the benefit of servants and others
who were not able to be at the morning service.
This is a common practice. The young people’s
social and improvement class meets on Monday evening,
a meeting for prayer and a short address is held on
Tuesday evening, and the Band of Hope, a temperance
organization for young people, meets on Wednesday
evening. The singing class uses Thursday night,
and the officers of the church sometimes have a meeting
on Friday night.
During the life of Bro. Timothy
Coop much money was spent in an effort to build up
along the lines adopted by the innovators here in America.
Bro. Coop visited this country, and was well pleased
with the operations of the congregations that had
adopted the modern methods, and he was instrumental
in having some American evangelists to go to England,
and a few churches were started. I was told that
there are about a dozen congregations of these disciples,
called “American brethren” by the other
English disciples, with a membership of about two thousand,
and that it is a waning cause.
The rank and file of these British
brethren are more conservative than the innovators
here at home, but they have moved forward somewhat
in advance of the churches here contending for apostolic
simplicity in certain particulars. A few of the
congregations use a musical instrument in gospel meetings
and Sunday-school services, and some have organizations
such as the Band of Hope and the Dorcas Society.
The organization of the annual meeting is said to
be only advisory. The following lines, a portion
of a resolution of the annual meeting of 1861 will
help the reader to form an idea of the purpose and
nature of the organization: “That this
Cooeperation shall embrace such of the Churches contending
for the primitive faith and order as shall willingly
be placed upon the list of Churches printed in its
Annual Report. That the Churches thus cooeperating
disavow any intention or desire to recognize themselves
as a denomination, or to limit their fellowship to
the Churches thus cooeperating; but, on the contrary,
they avow it both a duty and a pleasure to visit,
receive, and cooeperate with Christian Churches, without
reference to their taking part in the meetings and
efforts of this Cooeperation. Also, that this
Cooeperation has for its object evangelization only,
and disclaims all power to settle matters of discipline,
or differences between brethren or Churches; that if
in any instance it should see fit to refuse to insert
in or to remove from the List any Church or company
of persons claiming to be a Church, it shall do so
only in reference to this Cooeperation, leaving each
and every Church to judge for itself, and to recognize
and fellowship as it may understand the law of the
Lord to require.”
The question of delegate voting with
a view to making the action of the annual meeting
more weighty with the congregations was discussed at
the Wigan meeting, but was voted down, although it
had numerous advocates. One of the brethren,
in speaking of the use of instrumental music in the
singing, said they try not to use it when they worship
the Lord, but I consider the use they make of it is
unscriptural, and it puts the church in great danger
of having the innovation thrust into all the services
at some future time. All of these churches could
learn a valuable lesson from some of our home congregations
that have been rent asunder by the unholy advocacy
of innovations.
But there are some very commendable
things about these brethren. I noticed careful
attention being given to the public reading of the
Scriptures, and the congregation joins heartily in
the singing. I am informed that every member
takes part in the contribution without exception.
They do not take contributions from visitors and children
who are not disciples. The talent in the congregation
is well developed. In this they are far ahead
of us. While there are not many giving their
whole time to evangelistic work, there are many who
are acceptable speakers. One brother said they
probably have a preacher for each twenty-five members.
Men heavily involved in business take time to attend
the meetings. For instance, one brother, who is
at the head of a factory employing about a thousand
people, and is interested in mining and in the manufacture
of brick besides, is an active member of the congregation
with which he worships. The brethren in general
are faithful in the matter of being present at the
breaking of bread. When visiting brethren come
in, they are given a public welcome, and are sometimes
pointed out to the congregation. Also, when brethren
return from a vacation or other prolonged absence,
they are given a welcome.
They pray much. The week-night
meeting for prayer and study of the Bible is largely
taken up with prayer. I like the way they point
out definite objects of prayer. For instance,
two sisters are leaving for Canada; some one is out
of employment, and some have lost friends by death.
These matters are mentioned, and some one is called
on to lead the prayer, and these points are included
in his petition to the Lord. Sometimes but one
brother is asked to lead in prayer; sometimes more
than one are designated, and at other times they leave
it open for some one to volunteer. The following
hymn was sung in one of these meetings which I attended:
LET US PRAY.
Come, let us pray; ’tis sweet to
feel
That God himself is near;
That, while we at his footstool kneel,
His mercy deigns to hear;
Though sorrows crowd life’s dreary
way,
This is our solace let us pray.
Come, let us pray; the burning brow,
The heart oppressed with care,
And all the woes that throng us now,
May be relieved by prayer;
Jesus can smile our griefs away;
Oh, glorious thought! come, let us pray.
Come, let us pray; the mercy-seat
Invites the fervent prayer,
And Jesus ready stands to greet
The contrite spirit there;
Oh, loiter not, nor longer stay
From him who loves us; let us pray.
They do not publish as many papers
as we do, but have one weekly journal, the Bible
Advocate, edited by Bro. L. Oliver, of Birmingham,
which has a general circulation, reaching almost four
thousand copies. One feature of the paper last
summer was the publication of the Life of Elder John
Smith as a serial. The colored covers of the Bible
Advocate contain a long list of the hours and
places of worship of congregations in different parts
of the country, and even outside of the British Isles
in some cases. In some instances the local congregation
publishes a paper of its own, affording a good medium
through which to advertise the meetings and to keep
distant brethren informed of the work that is being
done, as well as to teach the truth of God.
A book room is maintained in Birmingham,
where the British and American publications may be
purchased. They were using a hymn-book (words
only) of their own and a tune-book published by others,
but a new hymnbook was under consideration when I
was among them last year. A list of isolated
members is kept, and persons elected by the annual
meeting conduct a correspondence with these brethren.
The following are extracts from some of the letters
received in reply to those that had been sent out:
“I am hoping that the day will come when I can
leave this district and get to one where I can have
the fellowship of my brethren; but meanwhile I am
glad and thankful to be held in remembrance of my brethren
and to be on your list, and I pray God to help your
work, for I have still hope in Him, and know He has
not given me up.” Another brother says:
“Though I can not say that I have anything important
or cheering to write, yet I can say that I am rejoicing
in the salvation of God, which is in Christ Jesus
our Lord. My isolation from regular church fellowship
has been so long that I have almost given up the hope
of enjoying it again in Arbroath; but still my prayer
is that the Lord would raise up some here or send
some here who know the truth, and who love the Lord
with their whole heart, and would be able and willing
to declare unto the people the whole counsel of God
concerning the way of salvation.” A Sisters’
Conference was held in connection with the annual meeting,
and a Temperance Conference and Meeting was held on
Monday before the annual meeting opened.
Missionary work is being carried on
in Burmah, Siam, and South Africa. In Burmah
some attention has been given to translating and publishing
a part of the Psalms in one of the languages of that
country. “Much time has been spent in the
villages by systematic visitation, by the distribution
of literature, and by seizing upon any and every opportunity
of speaking to the people. Street meetings have
been constantly held, visitors received on the boat,
the gospel preached from the Mission-boat to the people
sitting on the banks of the river, and also proclaimed
to the people in their homes, in the villages, and
in the fields, and on the fishing stations. Although
there were but two baptisms during the year the congregation
numbers fifty-one.” The brethren in Siam
were working where the rivers, numerous canals, and
creeks form the chief roadways. The Year Book
contains the following concerning the medical missionary
in this field: “His chief work during the
year has been rendering such help as his short medical
training has fitted him to give. For a time twelve
to twenty patients a day came to him for treatment.
After a while the numbers fell off, he thought because
all the sick in the neighborhood had been cured.”
“The little church in Nakon Choom now
consists of two Karens, one Burman, one Mon, two Chinamen,
and two Englishmen. As several of these do not
understand the others’ language, the gift of
tongues would seem not undesirable.” In
South Africa there are congregations at Johannesburg,
Pretoria, Bulawayo, Cape Town, and Carolina. The
church in Bulawayo numbers about fifty members, nearly
all of whom are natives “who are eager learners.”
I saw more of the workings of the
church at Twynholm than any other congregation visited,
as I stayed at Twynholm House while in London both
on the outward trip and as I returned home. Of
the seven congregations in this city, Twynholm is
the largest, and is the largest in the British brotherhood,
having a membership of above five hundred. This
church was established in 1894 with twenty-five members,
and has had a good growth. They open the baptistery
every Lord’s day night, and very frequently
have occasion to use it. There were fifty-three
baptisms last year, and twenty-one others were added
to the membership of the church. At the close
of a recent church year the Band of Hope numbered five
hundred and fifteen, and the Lord’s day school
had twelve hundred and fifty pupils and one hundred
and two teachers. I think it was one hundred and
sixty little tots I saw in one room, and down in this
basement there were about fifty more. I was told
that there were more children attending than they
had accommodation for, but they disliked to turn any
of them away. The Woman’s Meeting had one
hundred and sixteen members; the Total Abstinence
Society, one hundred and fifty; and the membership
of the Youths’ Institute and Bible Students’
Class were not given. Five thousand copies of Joyful Tidings, an eight-page paper, are given
away each month. The following announcement from
the first page of this paper will indicate something
of the activities of this congregation:
CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Twynholm Assembly Hall,
Fulham Cross, S.W.
REGULAR SERVICES AND GATHERINGS.
LORD'S DAY.
9:45
A.M.Bible Students' Class.
11:00 A.M.Divine Worship and "The Breaking of
Bread".
(Acts 2:42, etc.)
2:45 P.M.Lord's Day Schools.
3:00 P.M.Young Men's Institute.
4:00 P.M.Teachers' Prayer Meeting
(first Lord's day in the
month).
6:30 P.M.Evangelistic
Service.
7:45 P.M.Believers' Immersion (usually).
8:10 P.M."The
Breaking of Bread" (Continued).
MONDAY.
2:30 P.M.Woman's Own Meeting.
7:00
P.M.Band of Hope.
8:30 P.M.Social Gathering for Young People (over
fourteen).
8:30 P.M.Total Abstinence Society (last Monday night in the
month).
THURSDAY.
8:00 P.M.Mid-week Service for Prayer,
Praise, and Public
Exposition of the Word.
9:00
P.M.Singing Practice.
FRIDAY.
8:00 P.M.Teachers' Preparation Class and
Devotional Meeting.
(Open to all).
Seat all Free and Unappropriated.
No Public Collections.
Hymn-books provided for Visitors.
This Church of Christ earnestly pleads
for the complete restoration of the primitive Christianity
of the New Testament, for the cultivation of personal
piety, and benevolence, and for loving service for
Jesus the Christ.
Twynholm is the name given to a piece
of property, originally intended for a hotel, situated
in the western part of London, at the intersection
of four streets in Fulham Cross. These streets
make it a place easily reached, and the numerous saloons
make the necessity for such an influence as emanates
from a church of God very great. There is a good,
commodious audience-room at the rear, and several smaller
rooms about the premises. The front part is owned
and controlled by a brother who has a family of Christians
to live there and run the restaurant on the first
floor and the lodging rooms on the two upper floors,
where there are accommodations for a few young men.
Here I had a desirable room, and was well cared for
by the brother and sister who manage the house.
The restaurant is not run for profit, but to afford
the people a place to eat cheaply and to spend time
without going where intoxicants are sold. The
patrons are allowed to sit at the tables and play such
games as dominoes, the aim being to counteract the
evil influences of that part of the city as far as
possible. One night I attended a meeting of the
Band of Hope in a big basement room at Twynholm, where
a large number of small children were being taught
to pray, and were receiving good instruction along
the line of temperance. Several older persons
were on duty to preserve order among these children,
many of whom had doubtless come from homes where little
about order and good behavior is ever taught.
Soon after this meeting I went up on the street, and
there, near a saloon with six visible entrances, a
street musician was playing his organ, while small
girls, perhaps not yet in their teens, were being
encouraged to dance.
At Twynholm I also attended the Social
Hour meeting, which was an enjoyable affair.
A program of recitations, songs, etc., was rendered.
This also, I suppose, is to offset some of the evil
agencies of the great city and keep the young people
under good influences. The Woman’s Meeting
convenes on Monday afternoon. The leaders of the
meeting are ladies of the church, who are laboring
for the betterment of an inferior class of London
women. I spoke before this meeting, by request,
and was, so far as I now recollect, the only male
person present. It is the custom to use the instrument
in connection with the singing in this meeting, but
I asked them to refrain on this occasion. An orphans’
home is also conducted, having members of this congregation
as its managers. It is a very busy church, and
for being busy and diligent it is to be commended,
but I believe there is too much organization.
But here, as elsewhere in Britain, there are many
very commendable things about the brethren. I
have already spoken of system in their proceedings.
They outline their work for a given period of time,
specifying the Scriptures to be read, the leaders
of the meetings, and who is to preach on each Lord’s
day night. Then, for the sake of convenience,
these schedules are printed, and they are carefully
followed. This is far ahead of the haphazard
method, or lack of method, at home, where brethren
sometimes come together neither knowing what the lesson
will be nor who will conduct the meeting.
Whatever may be the faults of these
disciples in the old country, it must be said to their
credit that they are kind and hospitable to strangers,
and make a visiting brother welcome. The talent
in their congregations is better developed than it
is here, and their meetings are conducted in a more
orderly and systematic manner. They are more
faithful in the observance of the Lord’s supper
than many in this land. The percentage of preachers
giving their whole time to the work is less than it
is here, but the number who can and do take part in
the public work of the church is proportionately larger
than it is here.
I will now close this chapter and
this volume with the address of Brother Anderson,
chairman of the annual meeting held last year at Wigan:
DEAR BRETHREN : In accepting
the responsible and honorable position in which you
have placed me, I do so conscious of a defect that
I hope you will do your best to help and bear with.
Please speak as distinctly as possible, so that I
may hear what is said. There may be other defects
that I might have helped, but please do your best to
help me in this respect.
I heartily thank you for the honor
conferred upon me. Whether I deserve it or not,
I know that it is well meant on your part. We
prefer honor to dishonor; but what one may count a
great honor, another may lightly esteem. The
point of view is almost everything in these matters;
but if positions of honor in the kingdoms of the earth
are lightly esteemed, positions of honor in the kingdom
of God have a right to be esteemed more highly.
We are met in conference as subjects
of the kingdom of God, as heirs of everlasting glory,
having a hope greater than the world can give, and
a peace that the world can neither give nor take away.
To preside over such a gathering, met to consider
the best means of spreading the Gospel of Christ among
men, is a token of respect upon which I place a very
high value. The fact that it came unexpectedly
does not lessen the pleasure.
I know that you have not placed me
here on account of my tact and business ability to
manage this conference well. Had I possessed these
qualities in a marked degree, you would no doubt have
taken notice of them before this time. I know
that you only wish to pay a token of respect to a
plain old soldier before he lays aside his harness,
and, brethren, I thank you for that.
For forty-four years I have enjoyed
sweet and uninterrupted fellowship in this brotherhood.
For over forty years my voice has been heard in the
preaching of the Gospel of the Grace of God. For
close on thirty years all my time has been given to
the proclamation and defense of New Testament truth
as held by us as a people. Every year has added
strength to the conviction that God has led me to
take my stand among the people who of all the people
on the earth are making the best and most consistent
effort to get back to the religion established by Christ
and his apostles. I therefore bless the day that
I became one of you.
Had our position been wrong, I have
given myself every opportunity of knowing it.
Circumstances have compelled me to examine our foundations
again and again. I have been called upon to defend
our faith, when attacked, times not a few. Whatever
may be the effect that I have had upon others, my
own confidence has been increased at every turn.
To-day I am certain that if the New Testament is right,
we can not be far wrong; and if the New Testament
can not be trusted, there is an end to the whole matter.
But the claims of Christ and the truth of the New
Testament are matters upon which a doubt never rises.
As years roll on, it becomes more easy to believe
and harder to doubt. Knowledge, reason, and experience
now supply such varied yet harmonious and converging
lines of evidence that a doubt seems impossible.
Difficulties we may have, and perhaps must have, as
long as we live, but we can certainly rise above the
fog land of doubt. Considering all this, it gives
me more pleasure to preside over this gathering than
over any other voluntary gathering on earth.
It is a voluntary gathering. We do not profess
to be here by Divine appointment. It is a meeting
of heaven’s freemen to consider the best means
of advancing the will of God among men. While
met, may we all act in a manner worthy of the great
object which brings us together.
Faith, forbearance and watchfulness
will be required as long as we live, if we wish to
keep the unity of the faith in the bond of peace.
All those who set out for a complete return to Jerusalem
have not held on their way; some have gone a long
way back and others are going. What has happened
in other lands may happen here, unless we watch and
are faithful. The more carefully we look into
matters, we shall be the less inclined to move.
Putting all God’s arrangements faithfully and
earnestly to the test, and comparing them with others,
increases our faith in them. Faithfulness increases
faith. This keeps growing upon you till you become
certain that only God’s means will accomplish
God’s ends. Sectarianism, tested by experience,
is a failure.
The time was when our danger in departing
from our simple plea of returning to the Bible alone
lay in our being moved by clerical and sectarian influences.
To the young in particular in the present day that
can hardly be called our greatest danger. The
influences at work to produce doubt in regard to the
truth of the Bible were never so great as they are
now. This used to be the particular work of professed
infidels; now it is more largely the work of professed
Christian scholars. If you wish to pass for a
“scholar,” you must not profess to believe
the Old Testament. You must not say too much
against the truth of that book, or you may be called
in question, but you can go a good long way before
there is much danger.
Jesus believed that old book to be
the word of God. But he was not a “scholar.”
He was the son of a country joiner, and you must not
expect him to rise too far above his environment.
It surprises me that the “scholars” have
not called more attention to the ignorance of Jesus
in this respect. They will no doubt pay more
attention to this later on; for as Christian
“scholars” it becomes them to be consistent,
and I have no doubt that they will shortly, in this
respect, make up for lost time.
To expect that none of our young people
will be influenced by this parade of scholarship is
to expect too much. But faith in Christ should
keep them from rushing rashly out against a book that
Christ professed to live up to and came to fulfill.
This battle of the scholars over the truth of the
Bible is only being fought. We have no wish that
it should not be fought. Everything has a right
to be tested with caution and fairness, and when the
battle is lost, it will be time enough for us to pass
over to the side of the enemy. This question as
to the truth of the Old Testament will be settled,
and as sure as Christ is the Son of God, and has all
power in heaven and on earth, it will be settled upon
the lines of the attitude which he took up towards
that book, and it will be settled to the disgrace
of those who professed to believe in Jesus, but deserted
his position before full examination was made.
That no transcriber ever made a slip, or that no translator
ever made a mistake, is not held by any one.
But the day that it is proved that the Old Testament
is not substantially true, faith in Christ and Christianity
will get a shake from which it will never recover.
We have not lost faith in the Bible.
There is no need for doing so. The word of the
Lord will endure forever. But meantime, brethren,
let us be faithful, prayerful, and cautious, and be
not easily moved from the rock of God’s word
by the pretensions of “scholars” or of
science, falsely so called.
I do not know that there is any necessary
connection between the two, but a belief in evolution
and scholarly doubts about large portions of the Old
Testament, as a rule, go together. You must not
profess to know anything of science in many quarters
if you doubt evolution. In the bulk of even religious
books it is referred to as a matter that science has
settled beyond dispute. To expect that many of
our young people will not be so far carried along
by this current is to expect too much. Many of
them will be carried so far; it is a question of how
many and how far.
There perhaps never was a theory before
believed by as many educated people without proof
as the theory of evolution. It is an unproved
theory; there is not a fact beneath it. That you
have low forms of life, and forms rising higher and
higher till you get to man, is fact. But that
a higher species ever came from a lower is without
proof. Let those who doubt this say when and
where such a thing took place, and name the witnesses.
Not only are there no facts in proof of it, but it
flies in the face of facts without number. If
like from like is not established, then nothing can
be established by observation and experience.
What other theory do we believe which contradicts
all that we know to be true in regard to the subject
to which it refers?
Not only does it contradict fact and
experience, it contradicts reason. If you listen
to the voice of reason, you can no more believe that
the greater came from the less than you can believe
that something came from nothing. We are intuitively
bound to believe that an effect can not be greater
than its cause. But the theory of evolution contradicts
this at every step along the whole line.
I am anxious to find the truth in
regard to anything that has a bearing upon my belief
in God or religion. But in trying to find the
truth, I have never regretted being true to myself.
To slavishly follow others is, to say the least of
it, unmanly. I do not believe in evolution because
God has so made me that I can not. Wherever man
came from, he sprang not from anything beneath him.
When a man asks me to believe a thing that has not
facts, but only theory to support it, said
theory contradicting fact, experience and reason, he
asks me more than I can grant. The thing is absurd,
and must one day die.
I am agreeably surprised that we,
as a people, have suffered so little as yet from the
sources of error referred to. Still they are all
living dangers, and if we would hold fast the faith
once for all delivered to the saints, we must see
to our own standing, and as God has given us opportunity
let us be helpful to others. Our ground is God-given
and well tested. The fellowship with God and
with each other that it has brought to us has given
us much happiness here. Let us be faithful and
earnest the few years that we have to remain here,
and our happiness will be increased when the Lord
comes to reward us all according to our works.