The State of Religion Before the Revival In the Presbyterian Church
That there had been a lamentable declension in religion both in Great
Britain and in this country, is universally acknowledged by the writers of this
period. The Rev. Samuel Blair, speaking of the state of religion in Pennsylvania
at that time, says : "I doubt not but there were some sincerely religious
persons up and down: and there were, I believe, a considerable number in several
congregations pretty exact, according to their education, in the observance of
the external forms of religion, not only as to attendance upon public ordinances
on the Sabbath, but also as to the practice of family worship, and perhaps
secret prayer too; but with those things, the most part seemed, to all
appearance, to rest contented, and to satisfy their conscience with a dead
formality in religion. A very lamentable ignorance of the essentials of true
practical religion, and of the doctrines relating thereto, very generally
prevailed. The nature and necessity of the new‑birth were little known or
thought of; the necessity of a conviction of sin and misery, by the holy Spirit
opening and applying the law to the conscience, in order to a saving closure
with Christ, was hardly known at all to most. The necessity of being first in
Christ by a vital union and in
a justified state, before our religious services can be well pleasing or
acceptable to God, was very little understood or thought of; but the common
notion seemed to be, that if people were aiming to be in the way of duty as well
as they could, as they imagined, there was no reason to be much afraid." In
consequence of this ignorance of the nature of practical religion, there were,
he adds, great carelessness and indifference about the things of eternity ;
great coldness and unconcern in public worship; a disregard of the Sabbath, and
prevalence of worldly amusements and follies.
In
1734, the Synod of Philadelphia found it necessary to issue a
serious admonition to the presbyteries to examine candidates for the ministry
and for admission to the Lord's supper, "as to their experience of a work
of sanctifying grace in their hearts ; and to inquire regularly into the life,
conversation, and ministerial diligence of their members, especially as to
whether they preached in an evangelical and fervent manner ?" This
admonition shows that there was a defect as to all these points, on the part of
at least some of the members of the Synod.
In
1740, Messrs. Gilbert Tennent and Samuel Blair presented two representations,
complaining of "many defects in our ministry," that are, say the
Synod, "matter of the greatest lamentation, if chargeable upon our members.
The Synod do therefore solemnly admonish all the ministers within our bounds,
seriously to consider the weight of their charge, and, as they will answer it at
the great day of Christ, to take care to approve themselves to God, in the
instances complained of. And the Synod do recommend it to the several
presbyteries to take came of their several members in these particulars.
In
these papers, which will be noticed more at length in the following chapter,
complaint is made of the want of fidelity and zeal in preaching the gospel, and
in the discharge of other ministerial duties; and the strong conviction is
expressed that many of the members of the Synod were in an unconverted state. It
is true indeed that such general complaints might be uttered now, or at almost
any period of the church, and that of themselves they give us but little
definite information of the character of the clergy. When or where might it not
be said, that many of the preachers of the Gospel were too worldly in their
conversation, too little urgent, discriminating, and faithful in their
preaching? That these faults, however, prevailed at the period under
consideration, to a greater extent than usual, there is little reason to doubt.
Mr. Thompson, in his answer to these charges, says, with respect to the
complaint, " concerning the low state of religion and experimental
godliness, and the influence which the negligence and remissness of ministers in
the duties of their office have upon the same, I acknowledge that I believe
there is too much ground for it, and that it is just, matter of mourning and
lamentation to all who have the welfare of Zion and the prosperity of souls at
heart; yea., I am firmly persuaded that our barrenness and fruitlessness under
the means of grace, the decay of vital godliness in both ministers and people,
our too great contentedness with a lifeless lukewarm orthodoxy of profession, is
one principal evil whereby our God hath been provoked against us, to suffer us
to fall into such divisions and confusions as we are visibly involved in."
He makes the same acknowledgment with regard to some of the more specific
charges. In reference to that respecting their talking to the people more about
secular matters than about religion, he says: " I may charge myself in
particular with being guilty of misimproving many a precious opportunity that
might have been improved to much better purpose for edification of myself and
others. Yet I hope the generality of us are not degenerate to that desperate
degree in this matter as to prove us altogether graceless; or to give our
hearers just ground to believe that we do not desire them to be deeply and
heartily concerned about their eternal estate." As to the more serious
charge of "endeavouring to prejudice people against the work of God's power
and grace in the conviction and conversion of sinners," he pronounces it
to be, as far as he knows, "a downright calumny." "It is
true," he adds, " there are some things in our brethren's conduct
which we cannot but condemn, and have condemned and spoken against both in
public and private; and some things also which are the frequent effects of their
preaching on many of their hearers which we cannot esteem so highly of, as both
they and their admirers do." He then refers to their censoriousness, to
their endeavours to prejudice their people against them as unconverted, their
intruding into other men's congregations against their will, and the
extravagances which they allowed and encouraged in public worship. He also
denies the charge, that they insisted on external duties to the "neglect of
vital religion and the necessity of regeneration ;" and the assertion
that they "seldom or never preached on the nature and necessity of
conversion," he declares to be another slander taken up from prejudiced
persons.
It
is worthy of remark that neither Mr. Tennent nor Mr. Blair, when professedly
bringing forward grounds of complaint against their brethren, mentions either
the denial of any of the leading doctrines of the Bible, or open immorality. It
is not to be doubted, that had error or immoral conduct prevailed, or been
tolerated among the clergy, it would have been prominently presented. We know,
however, from other sources, that there was no prevalent defection from the
truth among the ministers of our church. The complaint against the
old‑side was, that they adhered too rigidly to the Westminster Confession
; and the theology of every leading man on the new‑side, is known from his
writings, to have been thoroughly Calvinistic. There is not a single minister of
that age in connection with our church, whose name has come down to us under the
suspicion of Arminianism. False doctrine, therefore, was not the evil under
which the church then suffered. It was rather a coldness and sluggishness with
regard to religion. There was, undoubtedly, before the revival, a general
indifference and lukewarmness among the clergy and people; and there is too much
reason to fear, that in some cases the ministers, though orthodox, knew nothing
of experimental religion. These cases were indeed not so numerous as the
representations of Tennent would lead us to expect, as he himself afterwards
freely acknowledged.
The
State of Religion Before the Revival in New England, Scotland, and England
As far, then, as the Presbyterian Church is concerned, the
state of religion was very low
before the commencement of the great revival. As that work extended over the
whole country, and was perhaps more general and powerful in New England than any
where else, in order to have any just idea of its character, our attention mint
be directed to the congregational churches, as well as to those of our own
denomination. After the first generation of Puritans had passed away, religion
seems to have declined very rapidly, so that the writings of those who had seen
what the churches in New England were at the beginning, are filled with
lamentations over their subsequent condition, and with gloomy prognostications
as to the future. As early as 1678, Dr. Increase blather says, " The body
of the rising generation is a poor, perishing, unconverted, and (unless the Lord
pour down his Spirit) an undone generation. Many are profane, drunkards,
swearers, lascivious, scoffers at the power of godliness, despisers of those
that are good, disobedient. Others are only civil and outwardly conformed to
good order by reason of their education, but never knew what the new birth
means." In 1721, he writes thus: "I am now in the eightythird year
of my age ; and having had an opportunity to converse with the first planters of
this country, and having been for sixtyfive years a preacher of the Gospel, I
cannot but be in the disposition of those ancient men, who had seen the
foundation of the first house, and wept to see the change the work of the temple
had upon it. I wish it were no other than the weakness of Horace's old man, the laudator
temporis acti, when I complain there is a grievous decay of piety in the
land, and a leaving of her first love ; and that the beauties of holiness are
not to be seen as once they were ; a fruitful Christian grown too rare a
spectacle ; yea, too many are given to change, and leave that order of the
Gospel to set up and uphold which, was the very design of these colonies; and
the very interest of New England seems to be changed from a religious to a
worldly one. "We must, however, be on our guard against drawing false
conclusions from such statements. We should remember how high was the standard
of piety which such writers had in view, and how peculiarly flourishing was the
original condition of those churches whose declension is here spoken of. There
may have been, and doubtless was much even in that age, over which we, in these
less religious days, would heartily rejoice. What was decay to them, would be
revival to us. The declension, however, did not stop at this stage. The
generation which succeeded that over which Increase blather mourned, departed
still further from the doctrines and spirit of their pious ancestors. "The
third and fourth generations," says Trumbull, "became still more generally
inattentive to their spiritual concerns, and manifested a greater declension
from the purity and zeal of their ancestors. Though the preaching of the Gospel
was not altogether without success, and though there were tolerable peace and
order in the churches; yet there was too generally a great decay as to the life
and power of godliness. There was a general ease and security in sin. Abundant
were the lamentations of pious ministers and good people poured out before God,
on this account." As a single example of such lamentations, we may quote
the account of the state of religion in Taunton, in 1740, as given by the Rev.
Mr. Crocker. "The church was but small, considering the number of
inhabitants; and deadness, dullness, formality, and security prevailed among
them. Any who were wise virgins (and I trust there were a few such) appeared to
be slumbering and sleeping with the foolish ; and sinners appeared to be at
ease in Zion. In a word, it is to be feared there was but little of the life or
power of godliness among them, and irreligion and immorality of one kind or
another seemed awfully to increase."
The
defection from sound doctrine was also very extensive at this period; an evil
which the revival but partially arrested, and that only for a few years. Edwards
speaks of Arminianism as making a great noise in the land in 1734, and his
biographer says, there was a prevailing tendency to that system, at that time,
not only in the county of Hampshire, but throughout the province. This tendency
was not confined to Massachusetts ; it was as great, if not greater, in
Connecticut. President Clapp, though himself a Calvinist, was elected to the
presidency of Vale College in 1739, "by a board of trustees exclusively
Arminian, and all his associates in office held the same tenets." We know
not on what authority this specific statement rests, but it is rendered credible
by other facts ; such, for example, as the ordination of Mr. Whittlesey at
Milford, notwithstanding the strenuous opposition of a large majority of people,
founded on the belief "that he was not sound in the faith, but had imbibed
the opinions of Arminius ;" in which matter the ordaining council were
fully sustained by the Association of New Haven.
In
Scotland there had been a general decay in the power of religion from the
revolution in 1688 to the time of which we are now speaking. In 1712 Halyburton
complained, upon his death‑bed, of the indifference to the peculiarities
of the gospel and to the power of godliness which prevailed among a great
portion of the clergy. There had indeed been no general defection from the
truth; though the lenity with which the Assembly treated the errors of Professor
Simson of Glasgow, and Professor Campbell of Aberdeen, is appealed to by the
Seceders, in their Act and Testimony of 1736, with too much reason, in proof of
a criminal indifference to the doctrines of the church. Though there had been
extensive revivals in the West of Scotland in 1725, and a most remarkable
effusion of the Spirit at the kirk of Shotts in 1730, as well as in other parts
of the kingdom, the general state of religion was low, and upon the decline.
In
England the case was far worse. From the accession of Charles II. in 1660 and
the exclusion of the non‑conformists, true religion seems to have declined
rapidly in the established church. Bishop Butler says, in his Introduction to
his Analogy, that in his day Christianity itself seemed to be regarded as a
fable "among all persons of discernment;" and in his first charge to
the clergy
of the diocess of Durham he laments over "the general decay of religion in the nation," the influence of which, he says, seems to be wearing out the minds of men. Before the rise of the Methodists, says John Newton, " the doctrines of grace were seldom heard from the pulpit, and the life and power of religion were little known."
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