How to Form a Minister's Library by J.O. Murray and Others

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The first dean of the faculty at Princeton was James Ormsbee Murray (1827-1899), who served as such from 1883 until his death. Dean Murray, in January/June 1890, authored a 2-part article for The Homiletic Review titled How to Form a Minister’s Library. In addition to his own recommendations for useful books, he included further lists of recommended titles by Caspar Wistar Hodge, Sr. on New Testament exegesis, William Henry Green in Old Testament, James McCosh (former President of Princeton) in philosophy, Francis Landey Patton (then-current President of Princeton) in ethics, George Park Fisher in history, and B.B. Warfield in Dogmatic Theology.

Although in the 21st century, many theological students and ministers have found digital books the economical way to build a library, and Log College Press is doing its best to assist with thousands of worthy titles available on this site, there is still wisdom to be gained from reviewing the recommendations and suggestions of notable late 19th century ministers, theologians and scholars, although the counsel found herein as to how to purchase quality books.

For one thing, the recommendations go beyond theology to the realm of general history (as well as ecclesiastical), science, poetry and even novels - Murray writes: “Is fiction to have any place in the minister's library? How can he have it, if he is going to preach against novel-reading? If he is to preach indiscriminately against all use of fiction, he by no means should use it himself. But he had better refrain from all such folly, and set an example of using the novel as not abusing it.” This wisdom could be applied to other genres of art and aspects of culture as well.

Moreover, many classic titles in theology and Biblical studies that were utilized by Princeton theologians in the 19th century have stood the test of time, if not the test of popularity, even though the century of more of scholarship that has been performed since this article was published should also not be neglected. Patrick Fairbairn on the Typology of Scripture, Alfred Edersheim’s The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah, George Smeaton on the Doctrine of the Holy Spirit - these are some of specific titles mentioned which have stood the test of time. Some of the titles given are by American authors, some by European; some are available today in digital format, others require a trip to a seminary library. But the modern minister or student of the ministry today can gain from a review of this 1890 article by Murray and the listed recommendations. Bookmark this article and take a few minutes to see what men like Warfield and other Princeton divines thought was important to have in a minister’s library.

John W. Pritchard's Covenanter Bookshelf

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In 1921, John Wagner Pritchard, author of Soldiers of the Church: The Story of What the Reformed Presbyterians (Covenanters) of North America, Canada, and the British Isles, Did to Win the World War of 1914-1918 (1919), and the editor of The Christian Nation, a weekly publication associated with the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America and the National Reform Association, which is published in New York City, conceived the idea of creating a catalog of Covenanter literature. He wrote on March 2: “We are going to try to compile a complete list of all the books written by Covenanters or written about Covenanters.”

Over the next several months, with suggestions contributed by readers in America and overseas, his ambitious goal resulted in a list that exceeded 250 titles. He wrote on June 8: “Columbus thought he had found a group of islands, and did not live long enough to learn that he had discovered a new continent. W'e started in search of sufficient books written by or about Covenanters to fill a shelf, and did not need to live but a few months to learn that there were enough of such books to fill a good sized room.”

Among the sources utilized in this research was James Calvin McFeeteter’s address at the First International Convention of Reformed Presbyterian Churches held in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1896 titled Reformed Presbyterian Literature (American) [available to read here]; and John C. Johnston’s marvelous compendium titled Treasury of the Scottish Covenant (1887), of such usefulness that it is listed twice (#195 and #259), which was unknown to Pritchard at the beginning of this endeavor.

Pritchard’s catalogue met with such success that the 1921 RP Synod ruled that “Authority was conferred to collect as far as possible one copy each of books, catalogued in the Covenanter Book Shelf, for College and Seminary.” The library at the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to this day is the great repository of Covenanter literature in America.

Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary.jpg

We have recently added Pritchard’s “Covenanter Book Shelf” to his page recently, and it is truly a valuable resources for Covenanters and students of the Covenanters on both sides of the Atlantic. One will find the names of Scottish Covenanters such as Cameron, Cargill, Gillespie, Guthrie, Knox, Melville, Rutherford, Peden, Symington and many others highlighted; as well as American Covenanters Dodds, George, Glasgow, Kennedy, McAllister, McFeeters, McLeod, McMaster, Scott, Sommerville, Sproull, Willson, Wylie and more. As we work our way through this catalogue, we hope to add more and more of the American titles listed to Log College Press. If you have an interest in Covenanter literature, be sure to check out Pritchard and McFeeters and you will benefit from their research.

John Watson Adams, D. D. (1796-1850)

From the 1884 Presbyterian Encyclopedia:

A son of the Rev. Roger Adams, John Watson Adams was born in Simsbury, Conn., December 6th, 1796. He graduated at Hamilton College in 1822, having during his collegiate course developed a character, both intellectual and moral, of rare excellence. On leaving college he became the teacher of a select school in Manlius, New York. At the close of this engagement, he went to the city of New York, and commenced his professional studies, availing himself of the instruction of Dr. Spring, and two or three other Presbyterian clergymen of the city. A short time afterward he joined the Middle Class in the Theological Seminary at Auburn, where he took the first rank for talents, and diligent and successful study. He was ordained and installed pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Syracuse, July 28th, 1826, and continued in this relation till the close of his life. In 1841 he was chosen a member of the Board of Overseers of Hamilton College, and continued to hold the office until his death, which occurred April 6th, 1850. “Dr. Adams,” says Dr. R. W. Condit, “was one of the most unambitious men whom I have ever known in the ministry; he was indeed ambitious to do good and promote the honor of his Master, but for the applause of men I never could see that he cared a rush. As a preacher, he had a deservedly high reputation. He could not be considered as eminently popular, but his sermons were always rich in evangelical truth, and written in a style of great perspicuity and precision, so that it was the fault of the hearer if he was not profited.” After Dr. Adams’ death there was published a duodecimo volume of his discourses, which is highly creditable, not only to his talents as a preacher, but to the American pulpit.

What does God ask of us? Daniel Dana answers

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From Prov. 23:26, Daniel Dana has given us an important lesson about what God asks of his children. “Give Me Thy Heart” is a tract which has great value today. As Christians, we are not called to half-hearted obedience but rather to “love the LORD thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might” (Deut. 6:5).

Hear what Dana says because his message is timeless one:

Solomon speaks, not so much in his own name, as in the name of the King of kings — the glorious JEHOVAH. It is He, the king and venerable Father of the great family of man, who here addresses every individual of his rational human offspring, in language such as this: "Ye creatures of my power; ye children of my family; objects of my constant care and compassion; remember your Creator, your Father, and your God. Expand your souls to the Supreme Good. Let your best and purest affections be mine. Choose me as your portion. Love me as your Friend. Delight in me as your happiness. Reverence my authority; adore my wisdom; trust my grace; lean upon my arm; resign yourselves, your all, to my service and disposal. And you especially, the younger members of my family, just rising into existence, give me your hearts. To your kind Parent, and your guardian God, devote the flower and prime of your affections, and your earliest obedience. In the fair morning of life choose my service as your business, and the enjoyment of me as your bliss." Such is the tender and gracious exhortation of the blessed God: an exhortation which most powerfully addresses the reason, the conscience, and the sensibilities of every human being.

This is an exhortation from a 19th century minister that speaks to what God asks of all believers in all times. Click here to read the full tract by Dana.

An American Andrew Melville

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Presbyterians who know their Covenanter history will remember what Andrew Melville once told King James I in 1596. His “Two-Kingdoms” speech was one for the ages, and it has resonated not only on the European side of the Atlantic, but also in America as well.

American Presbyterian Stuart Robinson had occasion once to utter Melville’s words to the chief magistrate in America, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, after Lincoln’s military issued an order in 1864 to suppress Robinson’s magazine, the True Presbyterian, under charges inciting rebellion. He wrote a letter to President Lincoln in December 1864 from Toronto, Canada, where he was living in exile, requesting a reversal of “the monstrous order of General Burbidge, of November 19, 1864, for the suppression of the True Presbyterian, a purely ecclesiastical journal, published at Louisville, Kentucky.”

With no response, Stuart followed up with an open letter to the President dated January 26, 1865, in which he elaborated at great length upon the argument that his concern was not political rebellion to the present U.S. administration, but rather the cause of Christ. And in this letter he quoted Andrew Melville to make his point.

The civil government, represented to us, primarily, by the constitution and laws, and secondarily by your administration, so long as its acts in accord with the constitution and laws, is undoubtedly an ordinance of God. And therefore by Divine authority you wield the power of the sword to coerce obedience. But another government, in itself distinct and complete, to which government has been committed the “power of the keys,” as to the “power of the sword.” As Andrew Melville had occasion to remind a tyrant Stuart — “God’s two kingdoms, one the Kingdom of Jesus Christ whose subject James is, and of whose kingdom he is neither a king nor a lord but only a member and they whom Christ hath called to govern his spiritual kingdom have a sufficient authority which no Christian king should control or discharge;” so I may remind you that, there are two Presidents and Commonwealths in these United States; the one President Lincoln and the other President Jesus Christ, in whose Commonwealth President Lincoln hath no sort of official function. And I may say this with still more force than Andrew Melville, seeing that beside the Ordinance of Christ in his revealed statute book, the founders of the American civil Commonwealth have, for the first time in history, acknowledged by civil enactments, the independence of the Church, which King James denied. And therefore all utterances and acts, either on the civil or ecclesiastical side, by which the secular intrudes into the spiritual, or the spiritual into the secular sphere are violations of the civil constitution of the country as well as of the statutes of Christ.

Only three months later President Lincoln was laid to rest after being struck down by an assassin’s bullet, and Robinson was able to return to his beloved Louisville a year after that momentous event, in April 1866. For a minister known for his staunch advocacy of the spirituality of the church, it is remarkable how much trouble Robinson got into with civil authority. His conflict with the civil magistrate echoes not only the conflict which led Andrew Melville to speak as he did to King James, but also led Peter to say “We ought to obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). For a much more detailed account of this story, see Preston D. Graham, Jr., A Kingdom Not of This World: Stuart Robinson’s Struggle to Distinguish the Sacred From the Secular During the Civil War (2002).

Ten-Year-Old A.A. Hodge's Letter to the Unsaved

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On June 23, 1833, as Princeton Seminary graduate James R. Eckard prepared to leave for a mission trip to Ceylon (Sri Lanka), he was handed a letter written by ten-year-old Archibald Alexander Hodge and his sister Mary Elizabeth to take to his destination. This letter has recently been added to Log College Press. It is important for 21st century readers to grasp the meaning of the word “heathen” as used in this letter. Easton’s Bible Dictionary says it well: “strangers to revealed religion.”

Dear Heathen: The Lord Jesus Christ hath promised that the time shall come when all the ends of the earth shall be His Kingdom. And God is not a man that He should lie nor the son of man that He should repent. And if this was promised by a Being who cannot lie, why do you not help it to come sooner by reading the Bible, and attending to the words of your teachers, and loving God, and, renouncing your idols, take Christianity into your temples? And soon there will not be a Nation, no, not a space of ground as large as a footstep, that will want a missionary. My sister and myself have, by small self-denials, procured two dollars which are enclosed in this letter to buy tracts and Bibles to teach you.

Archibald Alexander Hodge
Mary Eliz. Hodge,
Friends of the Heathen

The same boy who wrote this letter would go on to serve in Allahabad, India from 1847-1850 before illness forced him to return to the States, where A.A. Hodge served as pastor, professor and author, always seeking in his various capacities to serve the kingdom of God.

For more on the subject of raising children who love and support missions, see Thomas Smyth’s The Mission of Parenting: Raising Children Who Love the Mission of God at the link below.

"A Christless cross no refuge is for me" - Who said it?

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There is a verse of poetry that is often shared on social media and attributed to B.B. Warfield. It comes from “The Dogmatic Spirit,” an article which first appeared in The Presbyterian Journal, October 11, 1894, and was reprinted in Selected Shorter Writings of Benjamin B. Warfield, Vol. 2, p. 667.

A Christless cross no refuge is for me;
A Crossless Christ my Savior may not be;
But, O Christ crucified! I rest in thee.

Apart from the center alignment, perhaps, Warfield did not indicate whether this was his poetry or that of another, but this poem had in fact been published before 1894 under a different name. In this writer’s attempt to trace the poem’s origins, it appears to have been attributed to two poets before Warfield.

In He Giveth Songs: A Collection of Religious Lyrics (1881) by W.M.L Jay (pseud.), A.E. Hamilton and Others, this verse appears under the title “The Cross.” It is attributed to A.E. Hamilton, who is Anna Elizabeth Hamilton, Irish poet (1843-1875 or 1876). The second edition of this work — under the title At the Evening Time and Other Poems (1892) — also credits A.E. Hamilton for this poem. Likewise, it is attributed to Hamilton in Edward D. Boylston’s The Cross of Christ: A Poem (1882). In The Pilgrim’s Staff or Daily Steps Heavenward by The Pathway of Faith (1897) by Rose Porter, the same poem is attributed to C.M. Noel, who is Caroline Maria Noel, English poet (1817-1877). Noel was one of the poets included in He Giveth Songs. Therefore, the likely author of these verses appears to be Anna Elizabeth Hamilton.

The words as she appears to have written them are:

A CHRISTLESS cross no refuge were for me;
A crossless Christ my Saviour might not be;
But, O Christ crucified, I rest in Thee!

These beautiful lines fit Warfield’s Christocentric thought perfectly, and they are worthy to be remembered. It is clear, though, that this poem predates Warfield’s use of it in “The Dogmatic Spirit.” Warfield himself was an accomplished poet, as we have seen before. Many of his poems are available to read at Log College Press. So it is worth remembering who actually wrote these verses, and the poet appears to be Anna Elizabeth Hamilton. If further research leads to a different assessment, please feel free to comment and share any additional information. In the meantime, let us meditate on the message of the poem: rest in Christ alone!

The first book published in West Virginia

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It is remarkable how many books by Presbyterians were among the first to the published in this or that early American locale. We have shared some examples of this previously. Today’s query: what was the first book published in West Virginia?

Answer: The first book published in what is now West Virginia (which seceded from Virginia in 1863) is Moses Hoge’s Christian Panoply; Containing an Apology for the Bible in a Series of Letters Addressed to Thomas Paine (1797), and it was published in Shepherdstown. A tiny handful of pamphlets and broadsides were printed in 1791 and 1796, but Christian Panoply was the first book published in the territory of West Virginia.

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Christian Panoply is a response to Thomas Paine’s The Age of Reason. The work essentially consists of three parts: 1) Richard Watson’s letters titled Apology for the Bible and his Address to Scoffers at Religion; 2) William Paley’s The Authenticity of the Books of the New Testament (extracted from his A View of the Evidences of Christianity); and 3) Hoge’s The Sophist Unmasked (under Hoge’s pseudonym, Philobiblius).

We added this work to Log College Press last year, and it represents another Presbyterian landmark in the history of American literature. Students of church history can bookmark this West Virginia milestone for further study here.

A word of consolation from Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen

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Almost 300 years ago, a collection of sermons by the Dutch-American Reformed minister Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen was published. The timing of this publication (1721) predates the First Great Awakening, yet reflects very much its spirit and emphasis on experimental piety.

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Today’s post extracts an encouraging word from one those sermons: The Christian’s Encouragement in the Spiritual Conflict. Frelinghuysen took as his text Luke 22:31-32: “And the Lord said, Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat: But I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not: and when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.”

Remakkable and full of consolation for the children of God are the words of David: “Though the righteous fall he shall not be utterly cast down, for the Lord upholdeth him with his hand.” (Ps. 37 : 24.) A righteous or just person is not one who is perfect, for such an one is not to be found among the children of Adam, and perfection is the prerogative of the second Adam alone; but he is one who has fled for refuge to the grace of God, and is justified by the faith of Christ. All men still sin, even the righteous; "We all offend in many things,” is the inspired observation of James; "A just man falleth seven times," that is, frequently, is that of Solomon, Prov. 21 : 16; falleth into miseries and difficulties, or (as the pious also do) into sins and imperfections, 1 Cor. 10:11, 12: "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall." When the righteous falls either into misery or sin, he is not utterly cast down: "He riseth up again," said Solomon; by a new repentance he is raised up and helped out of his situation, "for the Lord upholdeth his hand;" he raises him up, and strengthens him after the inward man; so that he falls indeed, but does not fall away. Of this we have many instances, as that of David ; he fell and was not cast away, but arose again, Ps. 51, and of Peter, who fell grievously, but was not cast away; for the Lord upheld him, or which is the same, prayed for him, as is taught in the words of our text.

Do you struggle and fall, dear Christian? Then you are in good company with all of your fellow-believers and indeed the best known of all saints. Praise God that Christ is your refuge, and that, indeed, he prays for you, that your strength fail not. When we fall, Christ is He who lifts us up. Be encouraged then, dear saint, for He has promised never to leave or forsake you who put your trust in Him (Deut. 31:6).

Read the full sermon, and others, by Frelinghuysen here, or pick up a copy edited by Joel R. Beeke, titled Forerunner of the Great Awakening: Sermons by Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen (1691-1747) here. There is great encouragement to be found today in this message from a sermon that was preached three centuries ago.

Stuart Robinson on the 'Churchliness of Calvinism'

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Stuart Robinson is known for his position, characteristic of the Southern Presbyterian Church, that — as John Muether has written in reviewing The Church of God as an Essential Element of the Gospel — “‘divine right’ Presbyterianism sees the church as a spiritual institution with spiritual means to accomplish spiritual ends.” The place of the church in relation to the gospel is front and center in Robinson’s thinking as is shown also by an extract from an address which he gave to the First General Presbyterian Council at Edinburgh, Scotland in July 1877 titled The Churchliness of Calvinism: Presbytery Jure Divino Its Logical Outcome (1877).

The mission of Messiah to execute the covenant of eternity was not simply to be a teaching Prophet and an atoning Priest, but a ruling King as well. His work, beside making an atonement, was not, as a Socrates, merely to enunciate certain truths and found a school, but likewise, as the result of all and the reward of all, to be a Solon, founding a community, organising a government, and administering therein as a perpetual King. Hence, therefore, the Church of God, as organised and visible, is but the actual outworking of the purpose to redeem an organised body of sinners out of the fallen race. It is therefore an essential element of the gospel theology. The foundations of the structure are laid in the very depths of the scheme of redemption; and the development, in time, of that scheme to redeem not merely individual souls, but a body of sinners organised under the Mediator, as Head and King, must of necessity develop a Church, visible and organised, as a part of the revelation to man of the counsels of eternity.

See the rest of Robinson’s address here, along with many other works by him, including newly-added issues of the newspaper he edited in Louisville, Kentucky, the Free Christian Commonwealth. He is a Presbyterian worth getting to know, and this address is representative of his passionate conviction in the important place of the Church in relation to the redemptive purpose and work of Messiah.

Restoration of the William Tennent House

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Today’s post contains a message from Wendy Wirsch, President of the William Tennant House Association. Previously, we have written about the efforts of this organization to preserve and restore the home of the Founder of the original Log College. She has an update to report that we wanted to pass along to our readers.

Wendy Wirsch portrays Mrs. Catherine Tennent at the Log College Monument (courtesy of Wendy Wirsch).

Wendy Wirsch portrays Mrs. Catherine Tennent at the Log College Monument (courtesy of Wendy Wirsch).

The Rev. William Tennent, Sr. helped light the fires for revival at the beginning of the First Great Awakening. He lived on a hundred-acre plantation in Warminster, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Today what was once William Tennent’s property is now the children’s campus for Christ’s Home. Near his house he built a log cabin school for the training of Presbyterian ministers. This school became known as the Log College. All of his known graduates became revivalist preachers except for one who became a medical doctor. After William Tennent’s death on May 6, 1746, the Log College closed its doors. John 12:24 says, “Truly, truly I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies. It remains alone, but if it dies, it bears much fruit.” The death of this “grain of wheat” produced sixty-three colleges and universities. The first offshoot was Princeton University.

In 2011 the William Tennent House Association (WTHA) became a nonprofit 501 (c) 3 formed to restore the home commonly known as the William Tennent House. This house stands diagonally behind the Log College Monument which lists the sixty-three colleges and universities. The WTHA began working with the historic preservation department of AECOM. Currently the Association is working with Michael Cuba and Dale Emde, timber framers, and Jeffrey Marshall, President of the Heritage Conservancy.

Here’s an update on the efforts to restore the house.  The Historic Resource Survey Report compiled by AECOM’s historic preservation department was submitted to the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission for their review in order to get eligibility for the National Registry.  Unfortunately, the PHMC turned down our submission, but we’re not giving up.

During the summer of 2019 we began working with Michael Cuba and Dale Emde, timber framers along with advice from Jeffrey Marshall of the Heritage Conservancy in Doylestown, PA.  After thorough examination of the structure, Michael and Jeffrey tell us that this is a totally rebuilt house with materials from other structures.  The two stone ends where the fireplaces are located are probably original.  Also, the original house was a one or one-and-a-half story log home.  We don’t know why William Tennent advertised it as a two-story dwelling in the Pennsylvania Gazette.  We know from our research that this is the location of his house. 

Michael Cuba and Dale Emde took core samples of wood from the interior of the home for dendrochronology and sent them to the Oxford Dendrochronology Lab in Oxford, England.  Dendrochronology will help us date the structure.  The results should be in by March.

In the ceiling of the basement there are logs that look like they came from a log cabin structure.  I often wondered if they came from the Log College.  Unfortunately, we may never know.   When Michael took a core sample from one of the logs, he discovered the logs were chestnut.  In the 18th century a blight wiped out all of the chestnut trees so there is no sample we can compare it to. 

Currently the WTHA is raising money to stabilize the north wall and put a temporary roof over the existing roof.  We also need to raise money for ground penetrating radar to check the foundation and conduct an archaeological dig on the property.  Archaeology will tell the story of this house and who lived there. When we raise even more money, we will have Jeffrey Marshall resubmit a revised HRSF to the PHMC. 

This house has always been known as the William Tennent House. Inspired by William Tennent and the impact of the Log College our mission is to raise awareness of his lasting contributions to higher education in the American middle colonies, as well as Tennent’s spiritual influence on the founding of our nation. We envision the William Tennent House as a place where the community and school students will learn about the life of William Tennent and his important contribution to American history and spiritual renewal. The home will be open for tours to the public, and a library will be opened for anyone who wants to do research.

Any reader of this blog who wants to make a donation or become a member of the William Tennent House Association can visit our website at www.williamtennenthouse.org. We are also on Facebook at William Tennent House. I believe this house holds a secret, and I’m determined to find out what it is.

The William Tennent House (courtesy of Wendy Wirsch).

The William Tennent House (courtesy of Wendy Wirsch).

If you are interested in the mission of the William Tennent House Association, please visit their website to learn more. The former home of the founder of the Log College is an historical treasure. The preservation and restoration of the landmark of American Presbyterian history is a worthy aim, and if there are secrets to be unlocked, we hope that these efforts will be successful.

Schaff's Creeds of Christendom

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Honest and earnest controversy, conducted in a Christian and catholic spirit, promotes true and lasting union. Polemics looks to Irenics — the aim of war is peace. — Philip Schaff, Preface to The Creeds of Christendom, Vol. 1

Among the many invaluable resources available at Log College Press is the three-volume ‘symbolical library’ known as the The Creeds of Christendom (1877) by Philip Schaff. If this set is not on a shelf in your library, it can nevertheless easily be a useful part of your digital library (you can download it here).

The First Volume is “a doctrinal history of the Church, so far as it is embodied in public standards of faith.”

The Second Volume contains the Scripture Confessions, the ante-Nicene Rules of Faith, the Ecumenical, the Greek, and the Latin Creeds, from the Confession of Peter down to the Vatican Decrees. It includes also the best Russian Catechism and the recent Old Catholic Union Propositions of the Bonn Conferences.

The Third Volume is devoted to the Lutheran, Anglican, Calvinistic, and the later Protestant Confessions of Faith. The documents of the Third Part (pp. 707–876) have never been collected before.

The creeds and confessions are given in the original languages from the best editions, and are accompanied by translations for the convenience of the English reader.

The Reformation-era creeds and confessions are found in Volume 3. One might well compare this volume to the excellent four-volume set of Reformed Confessions of the 16th and 17th Centuries in Translation (2008-2014), edited by James T. Dennison, Jr. There is a great deal of overlap and yet there are differences in the scope of both works. Schaff’s historical study and collection of confessional documents throughout the centuries was ground-breaking in its day, and still worthy of study in the 21st century.

Luther H. Wilson on the Charter of the Church

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Presbyterians love catechizing so much that besides the Westminster and Heidelberg catechisms, among others, they have developed ecclesiastical catechisms. These teach the principles of church government (worship and polity) that Presbyterians believe the Bible sets forth, as well as the history of Presbyterianism.

We have highlighted the ecclesiastical catechisms of Alexander McLeod and Thomas Smyth previously, as well as another by Mrs. M.W. Pratt. Today’s post concerns one by a Southern Presbyterian, Luther Halsey Wilson (1837-1914), titled The Pattern of the House: or, A Catechism upon the Constitution, Government, Discipline and Worship of the Presbyterian Church (1893). This work was added to Log College Press last year through the kind assistance of Wayne Sparkman, Director of the PCA Historical Center.

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In pages 11-13, we find instruction concerning what Wilson calls “the charter of the church.” He is speaking of the church’s origin on earth to which Presbyterianism traces its beginning.

Q. 12. Has God always had a people upon earth from the first who were called by his name and were devoted to his service?
A. He has. [Gen. 4:26; Ps. 83:3; Is. 48:1]

Q. 13. When did this people, so far as we know, first receive its separate and distinct organization from the world?
A. In the days of Abraham.

Q. 14. When and where did Abraham live?
A. About two thousand years before the coming of Christ, and in the land of Canaan.

Q. 15. What transaction took place in Abraham’s day confirming and establishing this separation from the world?
A. God made a covenant with Abraham, bestowing certain rights and privileges upon him and his household, and upon certain conditions. [Gen. 17:1]

Q. 16. How is this covenant usually regarded by the church?
A. As the charter of the church.

Q. 17. What is a charter?
A. Any official writing or document, properly sealed and confirmed, which bestows certain rights and privileges.

Q. 18. By what other name is this covenant with Abraham sometimes known?
A. As “the household covenant.”

Q. 19. Why is it so called?
A. Because the promises and blessings of the covenant included the household as well as the believing parent.

Q. 20. Were these blessings there promised spiritual or temporal?
A. They were both spiritual and temporal.

Q. 21. How was this covenant with Abraham confirmed?
A. By the seal of circumcision.

Q. 22. What did circumcision denote?
A. The cutting off of the body of sin, and the renewing of the inward nature of man. [Deut. 10:16; Rom. 2:28-29]

Q. 23. Has this covenant ever been repealed or changed?
A. It has not.

Q. 24. Did God declare that it would ever be repealed, altered, or set aside?
A. On the contrary, he declared that it was to be an “everlasting” covenant. [Gen. 17:17; Gal. 3:17]

Q. 25. Was this covenant not repealed or changed at Mount Sinai?
A. It was not. [Gal. 3:7]

Q. 26. Nor at the coming of Christ?
A. Instead of this, it was “confirmed of God in Christ.” [Gal. 3:17]

Q. 27. Is that Abrahamic covenant, therefore, still in force, and the church now living under it?
A. Yes, it is still in force, and the church is now living under it.

Q. 28. Why, then, does not circumcision continue to be administered in the church now, as it was before the coming of Christ?
A. Because, while the same covenant is still in force, it is, nevertheless, a New Dispensation under which the church now lives, and is accompanied by a new seal.

The Abrahamic covenant of grace, of which Wilson speaks, is truly “the charter of the church,” the fundamental transaction between God and his people, which endures in the Christian era, and thus is “the Pattern of the House,” as it were.

This extract from Wilson’s catechism may whet the appetite for further reading. His treatment of where the Presbyterian church was in the pre-Reformation era is also particularly valuable, among other aspects of this fascinating work. Visit his page here and download his book to learn more.

Benjamin Rice Lacy, Jr. - the "Fighting Parson"

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The “Great War” (World War I) was a time of death but also a time of great courage. We have previously highlighted the Covenanter soldiers who served as detailed by John Wagner Pritchard (1851-1924) in Soldiers of the Church: The Story of What the Reformed Presbyterians (Covenanters) of North America, Canada, and the British Isles, Did to Win the World War of 1914-1918. Barry Waugh has edited a fascinating volume containing the correspondence of J.G. Machen titled Letters from the Front: J. Gresham Machen's Correspondence from World War 1 (2012), available here. Today’s post concerns a North Carolina-born Presbyterian who would go on to become President of Union Seminary in Richmond, Virginia and also wrote the notable work Revivals in the Midst of the Years (1943, 1968): Benjamin Rice Lacy, Jr. (1886-1981).

Lacy served in WWI as a chaplain, but the nickname he earned, the “Fighting Parson,” reveals something of his character. After having graduated from Davidson College, North Carolina, and having studied as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford, England, at the time of America’s entrance into the War Lacy was serving as a chaplain in the North Carolina National Guard. He was inducted into active federal military service in July 1917. After basic training was completed at Camp Sevier, South Carolina, Lacy was sent overseas from Long Island, New York to England in May 1918. He preached for the men on his ship, and led them in the singing of hymns as well.

Lacy’s World War I service card (courtesy of the State Archives of North Carolina).

Lacy’s World War I service card (courtesy of the State Archives of North Carolina).

He and his brother Thomas A. Lacy were eventually stationed in France. He preached on the Lord’s Day, ministered to the sick and injured, helped to provide entertainment for the soldiers, and presided at funerals. Matthew M. Peek writes:

Although he stated that he would not trade his job with a man in the regular Army on the front lines, Lacy became known as the “Fighting Parson” because of his heroism in aiding the wounded before the German lines in France. On one occasion, a deserted German battery with guns and ammunition was found, but it could not be turned against the enemy because all of the instructions were in German. Chaplain Lacy — who was read German and was able to decipher the tables and symbols — took charge, and for two hours joined in operating the guns in well-directed fire.

Benjamin Lacy Jr. received the Silver Star citation for his bravery on September 26, 1918, for the following actions:

 “By direction of the President, under the provisions of the act of Congress approved July 9, 1918 (Bul. No. 43, W.D., 1918), First Lieutenant (Chaplain) Benjamin R. Lacy, Jr., United States Army, is cited by the Commanding General, American Expeditionary Forces, for gallantry in action and a silver star may be placed upon the ribbon of the Victory Medals awarded him. Chaplain Lacy distinguished himself by gallantry in action while serving with the 113th Field Artillery, American Expeditionary Forces, in action in Bois de Avocourt, France, 26 September 1918, in rendering aid to the wounded under heavy enemy fire.”

He would be twice cited for meritorious service during WWI. Lacy Jr. was involved in the following military campaigns: Saint-Mihiel offensive; Meuse-Argonne offensive; and the Lorraine offensive. He left France and arrived back in the United States on March 21, 1919, at Camp Stuart, Virginia. Lacy Jr. was honorably discharged from active military service on April 15, 1919, at Camp Jackson, S.C.

At Log College Press, we have recently added a batch of his correspondence to family and loved ones which covers the time period of June - November 1918. He shares with the folks back home a full and lively account of his experiences. In a letter dated October 7, 1918, he recounts the engagement alluded to above, although the reader would not surmise that the writer would be awarded a Silver Star for his brave actions under fire. He does make this poignant remark near the end:

Too long a letter you will say. How I do wish I could write more often. Letters to bereave parents will be the order of the day tomorrow. Don’t measure my love by the number of letters I write. I took my breeches off for the first time in two weeks last night. I’ve tried to do my work, and it takes most of my time. I’ll try to write as often as I can.

Lacy ended up living a long and productive life, serving as pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church in Atlanta, George, and as Moderator of the Synod of North Carolina and of the Presbyterian Church in the United States (PCUS). He died peacefully over 60 years after his return from the battlefields of France, and his legacy is fondly remembered today. His letters provide a snapshot of a chapter in his life which was not peaceful, but which helps us to know the man and his experiences in the midst of a great war more deeply.

When the plague comes - pastoral compassion in centuries past

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Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:…I was sick, and ye visited me:… (Matthew 25:34-36)

As cases of Coronavirus appear in China and the epidemic begins to spread around the world, concerns arise about not only physical health but also how to minister to those in need. It is an age-old question. Ministers have often asked themselves whether it is better to flee to safety or risk exposure to contagion for the spiritual well-being of those who are suffering.

There have been many plagues, many epidemics in human history, and there are many stories of compassion to the suffering. The 1665-1666 Great (bubonic) Plague of London, which killed an estimated 100,000 people in a period of 18 months, is one striking example. The event which inspired English Presbyterian Daniel Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year (1722) also inspired the ministry of English Presbyterian Thomas Vincent, highlighted in the 1993 play by Anthony Clarvoe The Living, in which Vincent was a main character and his compassion for the sick, with whom he stayed at great risk to himself (seven members of his own household died during the epidemic). Vincent later wrote God’s Terrible Voice in the City (1667), as a call for men to turn to God in repentance. Vincent’s The True Christian’s Love to the Unseen Christ (1677) also contains a description of the plague and his ministry during the pestilence. It was for the love of Christ and Christ’s flock that he stayed during the plague ministered to those in need.

I Preach'd, as never sure to Preach again,
And as a dying man to dying Men!
— Richard Baxter, Poetical Fragments Heart-Imployment with God and it Self

Jonathan Edwards, among his first acts as President of the College of New Jersey (Princeton), preached a New Year’s Sermon in 1758 on Jer. 28:16 ("This year thou shalt die"), while Princeton, New Jersey was in the midst of a smallpox epidemic. He later received an inoculation, which led to his death two months later. (His predecessor, Aaron Burr, Sr., and successor, Samuel Davies, and his own son, Jonathan Edwards, Jr. all preached on the same text in the same year in which they died.)

…time ought to be esteemed by us very precious, because we are uncertain of its continuance. We know that it is very short, but we know not how short. — Jonathan Edwards, “The Preciousness of Time and the Importance of Redeeming It”

Ashbel Green, who wrote the heartfelt A Pastoral Letter, From a Minister in the Country, To Those of His Flock of Who Remained in the City of Philadelphia During the Pestilence of 1798 (1799), encouraged his flock during a yellow fever epidemic not to assemble for public worship. He lost a dear friend to the disease, John Blair Smith, in 1799, and his concern was to protect his flock as a shepherd. The pestilence visited Philadelphia several times while he ministered there and in surrounding parts. His diary entry for November 6, 1802, records this joyful note: “Thanks to God who has preserved us all from the pestilence, shown us many favours, and returned us again to our home. O let us live to his praise; I hope this day I have had some freedom at the throne of grace.”

If ever I preached with fervour, like a dying man to a dying man, it was during the time of this calamity. — Ashbel Green’s autobiography, p. 280

George Dodd Armstrong, author of The Summer of the Pestilence: A History of the Ravages of the Yellow Fever in Norfolk, Virginia (1856), made the decision to stay and serve his suffering flock during the 1855 epidemic. Barry Waugh writes:

The first cases of yellow fever occurred about mid July 1855 in Portsmouth and the source of the contagion was believed to be a steamer from the island of St. Thomas. The citizens of Norfolk were concerned that the fever would be transmitted across the Elizabeth River to infect its citizens. Their fears were confirmed in short order when cases were diagnosed in Norfolk. As the severity of the epidemic in both cities unfolded, Rev. Armstrong struggled with whether or not a minister should remain in the city or flee with the others seeking safety. He decided to stay with his family and he would pay a price for his decision. However, his decision to stay rested upon the providence and sovereignty of God.

For myself, I can say that, in the prospect of the possible spread of the fever throughout our city, I have no anxious thought. The pestilence, when raging in its most terrible violence, and when man stands appalled before it, is yet ever under God’s control, and can claim no victims but such as are given it (p. 29).

Another pastor who confronted the challenges of a yellow fever epidemic was Benjamin Morgan Palmer in New Orleans. Douglas Kelly writes in Preachers With Power: Four Stalwarts of the South, pp. 99-100:

This central motivation of Palmer’s life [a desire “to see the healing hand of the Good Shepherd laid upon the multitudes for whom he felt responsible”] is illustrated in self-sacrificial actions during perilous circumstances in both New Orleans and Columbia. In 1858 the pestilence of yellow fever struck New Orleans, and large numbers of people left the city. While this included many pastors who abandoned their flock, Dr Palmer remained in order to visit the sick and dying, and in the words of his biographer, ‘to offer the consolation of the Gospel, and any other service which it was in his power to give…’ During that year, some 4,858 people in that city died of the fever and Palmer not only visited his own people, but others, particularly those who had no pastor. Indeed, it was his custom, while on his beneficent rounds, ministering to his own people, to enter every house on the way which displayed the sign of fever within; to make his way quietly to the sick room, utter a prayer, offer the consolation of the Gospel, and any other service which it was in his power to give, and then as quietly to leave.’

Twenty years later, in 1878, Palmer was equally faithful and active in visiting those who were once again struck down by another outbreak of yellow fever. Increasing age had not affected his activity in the least. He wrote to his sister, Mrs Edgeworth Byrd, the following report on his pastoral work at that time: ‘You will form some idea of the trial, when I state that during three months, I paid each day from thirty to fifty visits, praying at the bedside of the sick, comforting the bereaved, and burying the dead; and that, too, without intermitting the worship of the Sabbath or even the prayer meeting in the week.’ Such actions prompted a famous Jewish rabbi of New Orleans to observe, ‘It was thus that Palmer got the heart as well as the ear of New Orleans. Men could not resist one who gave himself to such ministry as this.’

In the Selected Writings of Benjamin Morgan Palmer, edited by C.N. Wilborn with selections made by Caleb Cangelosi (who suggested the very topic of today’s blog post), there is an article which he published in the Southwestern Presbyterian (April 1, 1869) titled “Never Too Late,” which gives a sample of his ministerial endeavors during the epidemic of 1867. A man on his death-bed was converted by means of the prayers and earnest supplications of Palmer thus affirming an old maxim found in Matthew Henry’s commentary: “While there is life there is hope.”

In all of these scenes of pastoral ministry, the love of Christ constrained these men to do what they could to help those in need, often at great risk to themselves. We are not all called to such circumstances, but we are all called to such love. And we are called further to pray for the suffering around the world. May these examples from history stir us up to greater compassion for the sake of Christ.

A word on legalism from R.B. Kuiper

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Following up on a memorable quote concerning legalism by another Dutch-American Presbyterian, Geerhardus Vos, which we shared previously, today’s post is extracted from an article by R.B. Kuiper titled “God’s Will and God’s Word,” which appeared in The Presbyterian Guardian 5:63-66.

May we ever be on guard against those who in the name of religion would add to God´s law. To be stricter than God is no evidence of piety but, contrariwise, of abominable presumption. To add to God's law is just as heinous a sin as to subtract from it. He who does either puts himself in God's place.

Therefore it is not at all strange that he who today forbids what God allows will tomorrow allow what God forbids. That is precisely what one may expect of him who sets himself up as Lawgiver in God's stead. He is sure to topple from the cliff of rigid moralism into the abyss of reeking immorality.

The deep waters of affliction, per John H. Aughey

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A 19th century Presbyterian from the South with Union sympathies — self-described as “a refugee from Mississippi” in his autobiographical account, The Iron Furnace: or, Slavery and Secession (1863) — John Hill Aughey (1828-1911) lived a remarkable life and has ensured that his name will escape oblivion, having, as he says, 1) been a parent, 2) planted a tree, 3) built a house, and 4) written a book. He served pastorates in Mississippi (6), Indiana (6), Ohio (3), Missouri (2), Iowa (1) and as a missionary for eight years in the Oklahoma and Indian Territories, before retiring to New Jersey, where he is buried. One of the several books which he wrote during his career as both pastor and author is Spiritual Gems of the Ages (1886), a compilation of nuggets of wisdom from the literature of many centuries. In some instances, attribution is given to the sources, but not in all cases. Yet, the author describes his aim in this work thus:

This volume bears the impress of every diversity of individual character. More than three thousand saints, philosophers and sages, whose lives have extended through a period of four thousand years of the world's history, have contributed, each his quota, to the formation of this volume. Thus have been secured variety, spirituality and the highest order of intellectual thought and diction. Not a single inferior or common place thought or sentiment has been suffered to enter; and if any has surreptitiously found a place, upon discovery it will be unceremoniously ejected. It is a book suited to all ages and all nations ; to all classes of men, and all states of society; for all capacities of intellect, and all necessities of the soul. It sets forth the most heavenly truths in a manner clear and convincing, and makes them comprehensible by all. All abstruse speculation is avoided. The King's highway of holiness — the way of salvation — is pointed out as with a beam of light, so that the convicted sinner needs not doubt as to what he must do to be saved. By the blessing of the Holy Spirit, the impenitent reader may be convicted of sin and led to put implicit trust in that Savior of whose ability and willingness to save he will find in this volume a complete revelation. The reader will rise from its perusal with elevated thoughts and feelings, with more ardent love of virtue, with increase of spiritual information, and with intense desire to serve more faithfully as a laborer in his Master's vineyard. This volume is unique; it is a desideratum in religious literature, and it will doubtless become the vade-mecum of many a Christian.

One of the un-sourced quotes, widely credited to Aughey on the internet today, found in this remarkable volume is as follows:

God brings men into deep waters, not to drown them, but to cleanse them.

From this writer’s research, the quote appears to originate from a sermon preached by an English Presbyterian Westminster Divine of French Huguenot descent, Edmund Calamy the Elder (1600-1666). He published a set of sermons under the title The Godly Man’s Ark in 1658. It was in the first of those sermons in which he said:

God brings his children low, not to trample upon them, but to make them low in their own eyes, and to humble them for sin, Deut. 8. 2. God brings them into the deep waters, not to drown them, but to wash and cleanse them, Isa. 27. 9. 

Calamy, the Elder, Edmund photo.jpg

Having extracted this quote from Calamy, Aughey has highlighted a bit of wisdom that has given readers comfort from the 17th century to the present day. There are many other such nuggets of great worth to be found in Aughey’s compilation. Take time to study this volume and to treasure its wisdom of the centuries.

There are no mileposts among the stars - Maltbie D. Babcock

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There are no mile posts among the stars. Light and space quite sweep away our little measurements. So some day will our years be caught up in the Eternity to which we belong. How glorious to be forever the Lord's! — Maltbie D. Babcock

When the pastor of the Brick Presbyterian Church in New York City, Maltbie D. Babcock, traveled to the Holy Land by ship in February 1901, he took the occasion to jot down bits of wisdom that are preserved for us in Thoughts for Every-Day Living from the Spoken and Written Words of Maltbie Davenport Babcock (1901), pp. 121-134. There are so many nuggets of wisdom in these pages that we wish to highlight a few and encourage our readers to read them all here. They are all the more profound when we remember that he left this mortal realm in May 1901.

Written on Shipboard, February, 1901.

No one can do anything to-morrow. If I live until to-morrow and do anything, it will have been done to-day; then, if it is right, do it to-day. To-morrow may not come. Fly your flag to-day for Jesus Christ, if you have given yourself to Him. You will be stronger to fight a good fight and keep the faith to-morrow, if to-morrow ever becomes to-day.

God has promised to satisfy — but He did not promise when. God has time enough, and so have you. God has boundless resources, and His resources are yours. Can you not trust him? Trust and wait. He knows what is best for you. He has reasons for denying you now, but in the end He will satisfy.

Life is what we are alive to. It is not length, but breadth. To be alive only to appetite, pleasure, pride, money-making, and not to goodness and kindness, purity and love, history, poetry, music, flowers, stars, God and eternal hopes, it is to be all but dead.

The deeper men go into life, the deeper is their conviction that this life is not all. It is an “unfinished symphony.” A day may round out an insect’s life, and a bird or a beast needs no tomorrow. Not so with him who knows that he is related to God and has felt “the power of an endless life.”

There is no better way to show our trust than to busy ourselves with the things He asks us to do. Trusting Him to take care of his share leaves us, “at leisure from ourselves” to do our share of the “Father’s business.”

Do not let the good things of life rob you of the best things.

Evening meditation is less important than morning preparation. “Well begun is half done.”

If we show the Lord’s death at Communion, we must show the Lord’s life in the world. If it is a Eucharist on Sunday, it must prove on Monday that it was also a Sacrament.

Salvation is going to Jesus for what he can give us — adoption, forgiveness, strength — and then going into the world with what he gives, to life his life and do his work.

If you do fall, if you are overcome, He is faithful and just to forgive, and to cleanse every day from all unrighteousness.

When I want to speak let me think first, Is it true? Is it kind? Is it necessary? If not, let it be left unsaid.

We are like children learning to walk. We fall again and again. Sometimes we cry out; sometimes we look up and try to smile ; but we do get up again and try to go on.

Size is not strength. Reputation is not character. Outward success is not God's gauge.

What have you done to-day that nobody but a Christian would do?

Live with the light of God's love shining into your common day. Take old gifts and joys continued as though they were fresh gifts. So we can sing a new song unto the Lord every day.

On the Birth of a Son to Samuel Davies

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This writer was blessed yesterday by the birth of a son. Mother and baby are doing very well, by the grace of God. The happy occasion brought to mind an extract from a poem by Samuel Davies, which is found in the third volume of his sermons. To God be the glory for blessing families with sweet covenant children!

ON THE BIRTH OF JOHN ROGERS DAVIES,*
The Author’s Third Son

THOU little wond'rous miniature of man,
Form'd by unerring Wisdom's perfect plan;
Thou little stranger, from eternal night
Emerging into life's immortal light;
Thou heir of worlds unknown, thou candidate
For an important everlasting state,
Where this young embryo shall its pow'rs expand,
Enlarging, rip'ning still, and never stand.
This glimm'ring spark of being, just now struck
From nothing by the all-creating Rock,
To immortality shall flame and burn,
When suns and stars to native darkness turn;
Thou shalt the ruins of the worlds survive,
And through the rounds of endless ages live.
Now thou art born into an anxious state
Of dubious trial for thy future fate:
Now thou art listed in the war of life,
The prize immense, and O! severe the strife.

Another birth awaits thee, when the hour
Arrives that lands thee on th' eternal shore;
(And O! 'tis near, with winged haste 'twill come,
Thy cradle rocks toward the neighb'ring tomb);
Then shall immortals fay, "A son is born,"
While thee as dead mistaken mortals mourn;
From glory then to glory thou shalt rise,


A being now begun, but ne'er to end,
What boding fears a Father's heart torment,
Trembling and anxious for the grand event,
Lest thy young soul so late by Heav'n bestovr'd,
Forget her Father, and forget her God!

From Psalm 139:

14 I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works; and that my soul knoweth right well.

15 My substance was not hid from thee, when I was made in secret, and curiously wrought in the lowest parts of the earth.

16 Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being unperfect; and in thy book all my members were written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was none of them.

17 How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God! how great is the sum of them!

* John Rogers Davies was born in 1752 and was named for Davies’ close friend, John Rodgers.

Boyd McCullough's Cheerful Cottage

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Boyd McCullough (1825-1899) was an Irish-American minister who served in the Reformed Presbyterian Church of North America (RPCNA) and the United Presbyterian Church of North America (UPCNA). He traveled extensively, serving pastorates in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin; and he spent time with the Covenanters in England, Ireland and Scotland. He was a poet as well, publishing in 1882, The Shamrock; or, Erin Set Free: A Poem on the Conversion of the Irish From Paganism (not yet available on Log College Press). Appended to this remarkable epic poem are other prose and poetic compositions. They speak of not only his native Ireland, but also experiences from places such as Kansas and Canada, as well as on the sea.

Photo credit: R. Andrew Myers

Photo credit: R. Andrew Myers

The following poem is selected for today’s consideration because it represents the appreciation he had, as one who traveled extensively, for the virtues of family, home, hospitality and hearth. One can imagine Rev. McCullough traveling through the prairie on his horse and stopping at a home for some hospitality along the way.

The Cheerful Cottage

While wandering through the lonely West,
Till man and beast were weary,
I found a soothing spot of rest,
Which female hands made cheery.
A fasting ride of twenty miles
Made every dish a dainty;
And then where cordial welcome smiles
A crust can serve for plenty.

Her table-cloth might snow surpass,
The bread was almost whiter,
The butter smelled of fragrant grass,
No gold was ever brighter.
Her notes in softest accents fell,
The ear with rapture filling,
As ancient songs, with skillful swell,
Upon her tongue were trilling.

The rustic bed allured to sleep,
Dispersing care and cumber,
Till dreams of friends beyond the deep
Made paradise of slumber.
Next morn when passing o’er the plain,
Or threading through the valley,
Or watching geese, a noisy train,
From out the marshes sally,

I mused upon that pleasant spot
That graced the western prairies,
And many a tale to mind it brought
Of cave-adorning fairies.
Let magic halls the fancy stir
With all the fire of Byron;
A simple housewife I prefer
To mermaid, fay or siren.