Few people in British history have so combined intellectual,
organisational and rhetorical talents as Thomas Chalmers, born on St Patrick’s
Day in 1780. Mathematician, political economist and theologian, it was his
passionate commitment to the freedom of the church and of the believer under
the Lordship of Christ that led him to oppose the effective control that the
state, and rich patrons, had over local churches in Scotland. He observed that
where local churches cannot have any say in the choosing of their ministers,
and where the choice belongs to the moneyed and the powerful, the effect on the
gospel will always be a watering down and the question will always be bigger
than a matter of local, ecclesiastical organisation.
The struggle over this issue in the Church of Scotland came
to be known as the Disruption; it resulted in 470 ministers seceding from the established
church and forming the Free Church, a body whose ministers were funded purely
through the contributions of its members, and whose appointments could be
vetoed by the local congregation. Ultimately, these principles were
incorporated into the Church of Scotland itself, although to this day the C of S
faces great challenges in terms of its relationship to the court of public
opinion, if no longer the state per se.
What drove Chalmers through a very turbulent battle was his
passion for the gospel and for gospel-driven transformation of society. He saw
the urban poor of Glasgow as being desperately neglected by a church run in
effect by distant politicians, and he worked for their social and educational well-being
as well as for spiritual transformation through evangelism and the planting of
new congregations. More widely, he was a key figure in the Bible Society and the
great missionary movement of the time, and passionate about Christian unity, as
a founder of the Evangelical Alliance (though that title was not his choice!). The quote I have chosen could be read in isolation as part of a gospel of do-goodery; nothing could be further from the truth. The man who could write of practical religion in such a way was the man who could also say, "Not till we come to a simple reliance on the blood and mediation of the Saviour, shall we know what it is either to have trust in God, or know what it is to walk before Him without fear, in righteousness and true holiness." This is Christ-driven, evangelical piety.
I am not a Scot, and poorly qualified to write on Chalmers,
but feel that he is a figure who has much to teach us today, North or South of
the border. What I have written I have gleaned from my memory of the story,
bolstered by sites which are readily available. Much more is available on Chalmers
as a mathematician and professor, as a pastor and theologian, and as a
preacher. I found this article particularly helpful. He is arguably, in terms
of gospel passion and importance, the greatest evangelical Scotsman after
Patrick.
* *
* * *
* * *
* * *
* * *
* * *
*
He who pays the piper, calls the tune. Wherever a church
gains a proportion of its income from the state, or from the contributions of
members of the public who are not necessarily committed to the rule of Christ
or to the message of the gospel, the pressure will be on to soft-pedal those
elements of the message and of discipleship which grate on the sensibilities of any
given age. Thomas Chalmers has much to say to the Salvation Army today.
No comments:
Post a Comment