I
was surprised on reading the biography of George H. C. MacGregor to
discover that one of the best-known and much appreciated of the early Keswick
speakers was born in the Free Church of Scotland manse in
Ferintosh in 1864.
His
father was Malcolm MacGregor and he succeeded as minister of Ferintosh Free
Church the famous Apostle of the North, Dr. John MacDonald. Malcolm was
minister there from 1850 to 1888 (the year in which he died). He was born in
Lochtayside in 1820.
His
younger brother Duncan (1824-91) was better known: he was a minister in
Stornoway, Glasgow and Dundee, as well as being the author of several books.
Like his brother Malcolm, Duncan was also the minister of a church with a
famous predecessor – he was minister in St Peter's Dundee (1864-1876), the
church of Robert Murray McCheyne. Indeed Duncan went there in the same year
that his nephew George was born.
The
author of the biography was Duncan’s son, also called Duncan. He was two years
older than his cousin George, but like him he was a Free Church minister (in
Elie) who moved to a London Presbyterian congregation (Wimbledon). This means
that the biography is also a family portrait.
No
doubt the biography can be approached from many angles. What interests me at
the moment is how a son of a conservative Highland manse made the journey from
there to his involvement in the deeper life spirituality connected to the early
Keswick conferences.
His Childhood and Education
Having
an upbringing in the Ferintosh manse enabled George to participate in the
large communion gathering that amassed there each summer. It was unusual for
young people to profess faith publicly at that time in the Highlands, but
George’s father did not prevent members of his family from doing so and
apparently they would be the only young people at the Lord’s Table in
Ferintosh. While the author correctly points out that the lack of young
communicants was a defect found in Highland Protestantism at that time, he also
observes that ‘nowhere have the majesty and glory of God, the completeness of
Christ’s substitutionary work, and the dignity and grandeur of life in the
Spirit, been more powerfully set forth than in the Highlands.’ It is not known
when George first believed he had an interest in Christ, but it was probably
during his years as a schoolboy in Inverness.
George
attended the local Free Church school for four years (5 to 9), and then went to
the Academy in Inverness for five years. He entered Edinburgh University in
1878 when he was fourteen and there his favourite subject was mathematics. Yet
his intellectual abilities struggled at times with what he was taught and
he lost belief in the verbal inspiration of the Bible. When he completed his
degree in 1883, he won prizes in most of his classes. Yet he knew what to do
with his degree, as revealed in his diary entry of April 20: ‘The degree sought
for has been obtained with not one slip. Oh, how thankful I should be to
God for His great goodness! The degree sits lightly upon me. I hope I have
already laid it at the Master’s feet; it will do little good if not given to
Him.’
Theological training
George
had resolved to be a minister. Instead of going immediately to one of the
Free Church’s Theological Colleges, he went home for a year. This year was
spent tutoring the sons of a nearby laird, furthering his own reading, and
preaching at various churches and other meetings in the area. His father was
approaching sixty and not well in health, so no doubt was glad of his son’s
help. It soon became obvious that George’s preaching was attractive and a
weekly Bible class he started soon had over 100 young people.
Yet
at least two unusual features are seen here: one was connected to the
church practice of that time which did not allow a prospective student to
preach until he had been licensed by a presbytery at the end of his theological
training (George had not even started his); the other was that an individual
with doubts about the verbal inspiration of the Bible was given access to
several pulpits in the area (of course, he may have kept these doubts to
himself).
In
1884, George went to New College in Edinburgh and was there until 1888. His
mathematical bent helped him in his Hebrew studies and such was his ability in
that language that he functioned as assistant lecturer in Hebrew during his
final year. Given his interest in Hebrew, perhaps it is not surprising that he
was an enthusiastic appreciator of A. B. Davidson (the professor of Old
Testament), and regarded him as a seeker for the truth contained in God’s
revelation in the Old Testament (despite Davidson’s acceptance of higher
critical theories). Davidson, according to George, had strengthened his belief
in the inspiration of the Bible ten-fold, although it was not belief in the
verbal inspiration of the Bible that he had been taught in his youth.
Nevertheless he left New College ‘deeply versed in the Bible. He had read the
Old Testament through in Hebrew. The Greek New Testament he knew intimately,
and great portions of the English Bible he could literally repeat by heart.’
His biographer observes of such attainment, that ‘For a minister there is no
learning equal in value to this.’
What
were the developments that helped shape George’s spiritual attitudes as he
prepared for the ministry? No doubt he was affected by the religious life
of his family and community of his childhood and he stated that he was helped
by Dr. Black, a Free Church minister in Inverness during his years of education.
The
ministers whose churches he attended in Edinburgh were those of Alexander Whyte
and James Hood Wilson. They would not have been the ministers one would have
expected a minister’s son from Ross-shire to attend in Edinburgh. But it is
possible to trace how strongly they influenced MacGregor.
Alexander
Whyte seems to have been the minister George listened to during the period when
he had his intellectual crisis over the verbal inspiration of the Bible. Whyte
was well-known for a type of preaching that stressed human sin and engaged in
probing analysis of it. At the same time, he was tolerant of higher critics and
defended their investigations. How did George get relief from his problem
concerning verbal inspiration? It came initially through realising that the
Bible dealt with sin, and then by appreciating that God was involved in the
compositions by its various authors. George’s opinion now was ‘that the
inspiration of the Bible did not lie in its being a miraculously accurate book,
as in its being a book written from God’s point of view.’ While George does not
state that it was Whyte’s teaching that helped him, it is noticeable that he
had similar emphases to Whyte regarding (1) inner sinfulness and (2) the
opinions of higher critics.
A
second influence was opportunities to preach, firstly in Edinburgh during his
university years, and then during the year he spent at home in
Ferintosh before moving on to theological studies in New College. Despite
his rejection of verbal inspiration, his preaching was accepted by all who
heard him, even in the theologically conservative Black Isle. The year that he
spent at home was one in which claimed to have experienced deep personal
revival. Further his involvement with young people through his Bible Class was
effective as he explained to them the Christian life, with one of his textbooks
being Pilgrim’s Progress by
Bunyan (the use of Bunyan’s classic may indicate another influence of Whyte on
George). And he preached a message which was very evangelistic. During one
college break, he went to a small community in Nova Scotia for four months as
pulpit supply. While there, his preaching was so influential that church
attendance tripled, and it is not surprising to note that the congregation
wanted to call him once he finished his studies.
George
also had an interest in foreign mission, which had been stimulated by the
missionary emphasis that was predominant in Wilson’s church. Indeed,
Macgregor was approached by the relevant church committee to replace
Ion Keith-Falconer, who had died at a young age while serving Christ in Aden.
(His story is told in the volume They Were Pilgrims by Marcus
Loane). George was willing to go, he had his father’s blessing, but a medical
examination indicated his health would not allow him. So he would have to find
a place in Britain.
MacGregor
was an ardent reader of the Bible. For example, during a period of illness in
1886 he wrote: ‘My illness broke off my other studies and sent me to my Bible,
and there I have had many a rare feast. I have read and marked very carefully
Matthew, Luke, Romans, Galatians, Ephesians, Colossians, 2 Timothy, 1 Peter, 1
John and 1 Corinthians. Some of them are glorious.’ I suppose he could say to
me, ‘Do you as an upholder of verbal inspiration spend as much time reading the
Bible and enjoying it as I did?’
There
are also hints that he was being influenced by ideas similar to the
Keswick message. He writes in his diary in February 1825: ‘How often we strive
and struggle after holiness, say after likeness to Christ, as if it were a
thing to be given as a reward for our striving. I don’t think it is so.
Salvation, by faith, I believe, means not only justification by faith, but
sanctification by faith too. Oh, to what might we not attain, if we were to
surrender ourselves entirely to Christ, and trust him by his Spirit to work out
his likeness in us!’
What
is striking about MacGregor is the type of spiritual character and level of
service that he attained while, at the same time, denying verbal inspiration of
the Bible. Of course, it is well-known that this type of Christian living was
common in the second half of the nineteenth century as various denominations
responded to the advance of higher criticism. What is not so well-known is that
it could be lived out in the Highlands, that an articulate and passionate
exponent of this outlook could preach undetected by orthodox office-bearers and
listeners in very conservative congregations. I suppose his earnestness of
character and orthodoxy in other doctrines prevented his view of inspiration
being noticed.
Becomes a minister in Aberdeen
In
February 1888, George MacGregor was asked to preach in Aberdeen East Free
Church and made such an impression that a congregational meeting was
immediately arranged and a decision made to call him as the colleague of the
current minister who was in declining health. Among his predecessors as
minister was James S. Candlish (son of Robert) who had been appointed
Professor of Divinity in the Free Church College, Glasgow, in 1872. William
Robertson Smith had been one of its elders, and one of the elders who welcomed
George was William Alexander, the editor of Aberdeen Free Press. The involvement of
James Candlish and Robertson Smith indicates the outlook of the congregation,
and explains why it had no difficulty calling a person who did not belief in
the verbal inspiration of the Bible.
The
days between Monday April 30 and Friday May 4 were very significant for George.
On the Monday his father died, on the Tuesday he was licensed by
the Edinburgh Presbytery, on the Thursday his father was buried, and on
the Friday Aberdeen Free East elected him as their choice of minister. He was
ordained on Thursday 28 June, but had another sore bereavement before then when
his brother died at the age of 26. George himself was 24.
The
congregation had been declining in numbers for several years, although it is a
reminder of how church attendance in Scotland has changed when it is realised
that the congregation numbered about 500. MacGregor set about recovering the
church and engaged in earnest evangelistic preaching. Soon numbers increased:
over 120 joined in his first year and by the time he left in 1894 the
membership had doubled. George delighted in evangelistic work and was a strong
supporter of the missions of D. L. Moody who came to Aberdeen during that
period.
George
married the daughter of one of his elders in 1891. Two other details are
highlighted by his biographer as of importance and they indicate the outlook of
MacGregor. The first was his initial attendance at the Keswick Convention in
1889 and the other was the death of William Robertson Smith in 1894. A tribute
to Smith by George indicates that he accepted Smith’s higher critical ideas.
Returning to 1889, George longed for fresh experience of the power of the Holy
Spirit and taking the advice of several ministerial colleagues he went to the
Keswick Convention. His visit to the Convention was a turning point in his life
as he understood in a new way the place of faith in sanctification, the
significance of union with Christ, and the power of the Holy Spirit. The
biggest change in his character as a result of what happened to him was the
suppression of a bad temper, a feature of his character from childhood.
Apparently, it seldom revealed itself after this convention experience.
MacGregor
became a conference speaker during his Aberdeen ministry. His next visit to
Keswick was in 1892, but he went back as a speaker and did so each year until
1900. In 1892 he published So Great Salvation, which had a preface
by fellow Keswick speaker, Handley Moule, and which went through three
editions.
George
MacGregor has come a long way from the Ferintosh manse. Still denying the
verbal inspiration of the Bible and commending the life of one of those who
introduced such notions into the nineteenth-century Free Church (Robertson
Smith), George has become an effective evangelist, a revitaliser (to use a
modern concept) of a moribund church, an author, and a regular speaker at one
of the biggest annual conferences in worldwide evangelicalism. This has
all happened before he was thirty. It is not surprising that vacant
congregations elsewhere are interested in calling him away from Aberdeen.
But
what is happening in his denomination during his years in Aberdeen from 1888 to
1894? Conservative ministers and elders are trying to prevent doctrinal
decline, and among them are the ministers of Ferintosh (Angus Galbraith
who was there from 1890 to 1893 and Donald Munro who was inducted in
1894). I wonder what they thought of the journey taken by the son of their
predecessor in the Ferintosh manse?
Moves to London
Inevitably,
since his star was rising, George MacGregor was approached by large
congregations looking for a pastor, including churches in London and Melbourne.
A church in Toronto and the church in Chicago associated with D. L. Moody (he
was personally invited to come by Moody and later written to by R. A. Torrey)
expressed great interest in him. The church that was successful in calling him
was Trinity Presbyterian Church in Notting Hill, London; its first minister
had been the well-known Jewish convert, Adolph Saphir, who had been
called there thirty years before. Saphir had been unable to build a strong
congregation and he resigned after a few years. Decline continued under
Saphir’s successor, so by the time MacGregor was called, the church only
numbered about 200. He took several months to make up his mind, but eventually
he accepted the call to London.
The
reasons George gives for accepting the call are interesting. First, he said
that he only wanted to be where he could use the abilities God had given
him in the place God had chosen for him. Second, the pastoral demands of the
Aberdeen church had become too great for him. Third, demands of the work in
Aberdeen had prevented him from developing his reading and he was afraid that
this would weaken his work as a preacher. Fourth, he had delivered the special
message that God had sent him to deliver to the Aberdeen congregation. Fifth,
he was attracted by the difficulties of the London situation because London for
years had weighed heavily on his heart.
George
began his ministry there in May, 1894. He saw growth, but not on the scale he
had seen in Aberdeen. His biographer suggests that George’s work lay not only
in enlarging, but also in deepening. His conference work also continued, and
his biographer notes that George ‘respected his audience; he took care to have
something to say.’ One very positive outcome was an increased interest in his
congregation in world mission and several of his congregation became foreign
missionaries. His congregation had two monthly prayer meetings for missions.
George also participated in the congregation’s open-air outreach because it
gave him the opportunity of ‘carrying to the audience outside the church the
message he had presented to the congregation within’. He also was involved in
the work of the YMCA because it attempted to win the young men of London for
Christ.
Inevitably,
the many demands made of him limited his time for pastoral work in his
congregation. He compensated for this by being available for personal
conversation after each service and spoke with many by this means. He also
engaged in an extensive writing ministry with members of his congregation,
sending them notes of encouragement.
While
he persisted in denying the verbal inspiration of the Bible, George continued
to accept doctrines that others found difficult. Divine election was
defended by him; he stated that ‘it is an awful blasphemy to think that
men will be worse off when their fate depends on the Will of God than when it
depends on anything in themselves.’ Regarding eternal punishment he wrote that
‘If we saw sin as God sees it, we would not wonder at what is said of the
punishment due to it.’
One
of MacGregor’s favourite authors was John Owen. In 1893 James Stalker advised
him to read the works of Owen and Thomas Goodwin on the Holy Spirit (Stalker
was concerned about some suggestions of perfectionism that appeared in
George’s sermons). The advice was taken, and he wrote a book called Praying
in the Holy Ghost, which he said was based on Owen.
Yet
despite his defence of difficult doctrines and his preferences in theological
reading, George was adamant that the conclusions of higher criticism were
valid. His biographer hits the nail on the head when he says that George
‘remained all his days Professor Davidson’s pupil’. The light caused by George
MacGregor’s many fine attainments and activities was permanently clouded by the
influence of one unorthodox professor. The question is not, ‘What did MacGregor
attain through Davidson’s influence?’ but ‘What did MacGregor, a man with great
talents and notable successes, also fail to achieve through Davidson’s
influence?’ Because it is impossible to build something lasting in the
Christian church and in one’s Christian life if it is not built on an inerrant
Bible.
George
Macgregor died suddenly in May 1900 after a fortnight's illness brought on
by meningitis. His biographer paints an almost idyllic deathbed scene with
George passing away in full assurance of faith. The news of his illness had led
to much prayer for his recovery, and for a while it looked as if he would
recover. But it was not to be.
His
funeral service in London was led by leading evangelicals of the day,
including F. B. Meyer (who gave the address) and Campbell Morgan (just
recovered from a serious illness). Next day, another service was held in his
old church in Aberdeen, after which he was buried in Allenvale Cemetery in
that city, in a layer chosen by him when he was minister there.
Some reflections
From
one perspective his life was like a meteor, shining brightly for a short time
before disappearing from the scene. From another perspective, his life was sad
because it was cut off so soon. Inevitably his early death led to
comparisons with McCheyne (which the author does several times in the
biography). He also links Macgregor with Andrew Bonar and Alexander Moody
Stuart, which seems to me to be an attempt to link Macgregor with
their party in the Free Church. There may have been a few similarities in the way
they preached, but neither of these men would have understood Macgregor's
willingness to accept higher critical notions.
If
a reader was unaware of church life during the years of
Macgregor's ministry, he might assume that his ministerial career was
unique and that he was more successful than others in revitalising churches and
having a widespread preaching and conference circuit. Yet these features were
quite common during the decades preceding and following 1900. Many preachers
could be classified as Reformed in doctrine, evangelistic in practice, and
approving of higher critical treatment of the Bible. Their churches were full
of listeners and it seemed as if their kind of church life would enjoy great
success in the twentieth century. Of course, looking back we know this did not
happen. The church life that was prominent was unable to cope with the trauma
created by world wars, great human suffering, and the existence of other
religions.
We
can compare their legacy (very few have heard of them today) with those of
other Christian periods such as the Puritans (whose writings help many
Christians today). Will future generations of Christians turn to the men of
Macgregor's circle for spiritual help? I doubt it.
Of
course, our journey began at the Ferintosh manse, which was a few miles
away from the manse of John Kennedy in Dingwall, the leader of the
Reformed Church in the Highlands. Kennedy spent much effort defending the
inerrancy of the Bible. I wonder did he realise that even from within his own
geographical sphere of influence, there were those who did not follow his
example, even from the manse which once was the home of the man he much
admired, John Macdonald of Ferintosh.
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