Memoirs of the Puritans
George Gillespie
The life and death of Mr. George
Gillespie.
GEORGE GILLESPIE
MR. GILLESPIE, the son
of John Gillespie, for some time minister of Kirkaldy, in the county of
Fife, received his education at the university of St. Andrew's, where,
by his genius and industry, lie surpassed most of his fellow students.
Some years prior to 1638 he was licensed to preach; but in consequence
of the power of the Prelatical party, and his own Presbyterian
predilections, could find no admission into any parish church; he
therefore became chaplain in the family of the earl of Cassils. Before
he was twenty-five years of age he wrote that elaborate work, entitled,
A Dispute against the English Popish Ceremonies; which so confounded and
enraged the bishops, that, in 1637, it was prohibited by proclamation.
He was also for some time chaplain to viscount Kenmure. In 1638 Mr.
Gillespie was ordained minister of Wemyss, and had the honor of being
the first, who, at that period, was admitted by a presbytery, and
ordained by the imposition of hands, without the permission or
acknowledgment of the bishops, whose power was now greatly on the wane.
During this remarkable year, he signed the national covenant as minister
of Wemyss; and, at the eleventh session of the general assembly, which
was held at Glasgow the same year, he preached a very learned and
judicious sermon from these words, “The king's heart is in the hand of
the Lord,” etc. The earl of Argyle, who was present, conceiving that Mr.
Gillespie had pressed too close to the king's prerogative, gravely
admonished the assembly to consider the delicacy of the subject, and let
the prerogative alone. Which admonition was taken in good part by all
the members, and supported in a beautiful speech by the moderator.
At the general
assembly, held at Edinburgh in 1641, a call for Mr. Gillespie was tabled
by the town of Aberdeen; which, from his regard to his flock at Wemyss,
he was unwilling to accept; but, in this instance, the king's
commissioner and himself pled his cause so effectually, that no
translation took place, till the general assembly, in 1642, appointed
him to be transported to the city of Edinburgh, where, it appears, he
remained till' his death, about six years after. He was one of the four
commissioners sent by the church of Scotland to the Westminster assembly
in 1643; and though but a young man, he reasoned and conducted himself
with all the prudence of age and long experience. Equally acute and
learned, with a ready and charming elocution, no speaker in that
assembly expressed himself to better purpose, or was listened to with
more attention and regard. Nor was he deficient in fortitude, he even
dared to contend with the famous Shelden and Lightfoot, the redoubted
champions of the Erastian party in the assembly, men truly formidable
from their extraordinary acquaintance with Jewish antiquities and
rabbinical learning. Those men having asserted, that Jesus Christ had
appointed no specific mode of government in his church, but had left it
to the management of the civil magistrate, who is empowered to make,
alter, or amend the regulations of the church, so as it may be found
most conducive to the peace and prosperity of the community. In support
of this proposition, they urged the laws and regulations of the Jewish
church, and asserted, that the civil and ecclesiastical laws of the Jews
were one and the same thing: That the laws of the state were, at the
same time, the laws of the church; and that the laws of the church were,
to all intents and purposes, the laws of the state. In opposition to
this doctrine, Mr. Gillespie quoted Deut. xvii. 12. “The man who will do
presumptuously, and will not hearken unto the priest who standeth to
minister there before the Lord, or unto the Judge, even that man shall
die.” “Which passage (said Mr. Gillespie) evidently points out two
different courts, the one superior to the other, for the obvious purpose
of appeal; for it is not said, the man who will not hearken to the
priest shall suffer death; No—he has his appeal to a superior court,
where the judge, but not the priest, is empowered to pronounce the final
sentence of the law.” Mr. Baillie, one of his colleagues in that
assembly, who had every opportunity of being fully acquainted with his
learning and abilities, when speaking of the transactions of this
assembly, says, “The many learned debates we have had in twelve or
thirteen sessions, from nine in the morning till half past one, it were
tedious to relate; but none in the assembly took a larger share of the
discussion, or reasoned more pertinently, than Mr. Gillespie. He is an
excellent youth, my heart blesses God in his behalf. When Acts xiv. 23.
was brought forward in proof of the power of ordination, and when, after
much debating, the question was on the point of being brought to the
vote, says Mr. Baillie, the very learned and acute Mr. Gillespie, a
singular ornament of our church, than whom none speaks to better
purpose, or with better acceptance, opposed the Episcopal translation,
and showed the assembly, that the Greek word, by them turned into
ordination, was, in reality, choosing, and imported the suffrages of the
people in electing their own office bearers. On which a warm debate
ensued, which occupied two whole sessions, and was terminated at last by
an overture of Mr. Henderson's.” On another occasion, the same author
says, “In our assembly debates we are well assisted by my lord
Warriston, an occasional commissioner; but by none more than that noble
youth Mr. Gillespie. I admire his gifts, and bless God, as for all my
colleagues, so for him in particular, as equal in these to the first men
in the assembly.” In a letter to Mr. Robert Blair, dated March 26th,
1644, the same writer says, “Though I have long had an high opinion of
Mr. Gillespie's gifts, yet I confess he has much deceived me. Of a
truth, there is no man, whose parts, in a public dispute, I so much
admire, lie has studied so accurately all the points that ever yet came
before the assembly, he has got so ready, so .assured, so solid a method
of public debating, that though there are in the assembly divers
excellent men, yet, in my poor judgment, there is not one who speaks
more to the point, or with greater propriety, than that brave youth has
ever done; so that his absence would be prejudicial to our whole cause,
and unpleasant to all who wish it well in this place.”
On one occasion, when
both the parliament and assembly were met together, and a long,
elaborate, and Erastian speech, delivered by one of the members, to
which none seemed ready to reply— being urged by the Scottish
commissioners, Mr. Gillespie repeated the substance of the whole
discourse, refuting it as he went along, to the astonishment of all
present. But what was the most surprising, though it was customary for
the members to take notes of the speeches delivered in the assembly for
the help of their memory, and Mr. Gillespie seemed to be so .employed
during the delivery of the foresaid discourse, those who sat next him,
on looking into his notebook, declared they found nothing written but
these pious ejaculations, “Lord, send light; Lord, give assistance;
Lord, defend thine .own cause,” etc.
After returning from
the assembly at Westminster, he was much engaged in the public concerns
of the church; and having been greatly distinguished for learning,
prudence, and a strong attachment to the cause of truth, he was chosen
moderator of the general assembly that met at Edinburgh in the year
1648. In this assembly several famous acts were ratified in favor of the
reformation, particularly that regarding .the unlawful engagement
against England, entered into by the duke of Hamilton, and those of the
malignant faction. He was also one of those divines nominated by this
assembly to prosecute the purposes of the solemn league and covenant
with the Westminster divines. But soon after this he was seized with
sickness, from which he never recovered, but died soon after. When on
his deathbed, Mr. Samuel Rutherford wrote him a letter, dated St.
Andrew's, September 27th, 1648, wherein he says, “I can say nothing
'against this divine dispensation. I hope to follow quickly. The heirs
of the kingdom, who are not there .before you, are fast posting after,
and none shall take your lodgings over your head, or get the possession
of your crown. Be not heavy, the work of faith is now particularly
called for—doing was never reckoned in your accounts. Though Christ in
you, and by you, hath done more than by twenty, nay, an hundred
gray-haired and godly pastors, believing is now your proper employment.
Look to that word, Gal. ii. 20. 'Nevertheless I live; yet not I, but
Christ that liveth in me.' You must leave your wife to a more choice
Husband, and your children to a better Father; and if you leave any
testimony to the Lord's work and covenant, against both malignants and
sectarians, which I suppose may be needful at this time, let it be under
your own hand, and subscribed before faithful witnesses'.”
Mr. Gillespie was a
staunch defender of Presbyterian church government, and the covenanted
reformation of the kirk of Scotland; in behalf of which, he signalized
himself on every occasion wherein he was called to exercise his talents
in her defense, particularly against Prelatical usurpation and Erastian
supremacy, which he combated with fearless intrepidity while living, and
left a faithful warning behind him of the sin and danger of backsliding,
which he perceived to be springing up both in church and state.
In a letter, addressed
to the commission of the general assembly, dated Kirkaldy, September
8th, 1648, and only three months before his death, he says, “Although
the Lord's hand prevents me from attending your meetings, so long as I
can either speak or write, I dare not conceal my thoughts of any sinful
and dangerous course in the public proceedings; and having heard of some
motions towards a compliance with those who have been so deeply engaged
in a war, at once destructive to religion and the liberty of these
kingdoms, I must discharge my conscience in testifying against all such
compliances. I know, and am persuaded, that all the faithful, who
testified against the late engagement, as contrary to, and destructive
of, the covenant, will also testify against all compliance with those
who have been active in that most sinful and unlawful engagement. I am
not able to enumerate the evils of such a compliance, they are so many;
sure I am, it would harden the malignant party, wound the hearts of the
godly, and do an infinite wrong to those, who, from their affection to
the cause and covenant of God, have appeared for, and befriended them,
at the hazard of their lives. It would prove a scandal to our brethren
in England, who, having been strengthened and encouraged by bearing of
our zeal and integrity in opposing the engagement, would be equally
scandalized to hear of our compliance with these fiery serpents who have
stung us so severely heretofore. God justly punished us, by making them
thorns and scourges, whom we had, by a sinful and disgraceful
compliance, admitted as friends, without any real evidence of their
sincerity and repentance. Alas! shall we split twice upon the same rock;
yea, run upon it, when God has set up a beacon to point out the danger
of the course? Shall we be so demented, as to fall back into the
selfsame sin, on which God has engraven his indignation, in large
letters, in. his late judgments? Alas! will neither judgments nor
deliverances make us wise? And, in the words of Ezra, after all this has
come upon us for our evil deeds, and our great trespasses, seeing that
thou our God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve, and hast
given us such a deliverance as this, should we again break thy
commandments, and join in affinity with the people of these
abominations? Wouldst thou not be angry with us till thou hadst consumed
us; so that there should be no remnant nor escaping? O happy Scotland,
if thou canst now improve aright this golden opportunity! But if thou
wilt confederate with the ungodly, and join hands with the enemies of
Christ and his gospel, wrath upon wrath, and woe upon woe, shall be your
portion from God in the day of his just indignation.”
“This testimony of a
dying man, who expects shortly to stand before the tribunal of Christ, I
leave with you, my reverend brethren, being confident, through the Lord,
that you will be no otherwise minded; but as men of God, moved by godly
zeal, you will freely discharge your consciences against every thing you
see lifting up itself against the kingdom of the Lord Jesus.
In his latter will, he
thus expresses himself: “Being, through much weakness and sickness, in
expectation of my last change, I have thought good, by this my latter
will, under my hand, to declare, first of all, that the prospect of
death, which is apparently near, does not shake my faith in the truths
of Christ which I have professed and preached; neither have I any
doubts, but this so much opposed covenant and reformation of the three
kingdoms, is of God, and will be productive of happy consequences. It
hath pleased God, who chooseth the foolish things of the world to
confound the wise, and things that are not, to confound the things that
are, to choose me, the unfittest and the most unworthy amongst many
thousands, in advancing and promoting that glorious work; and now that
my labors seem to be terminated, I repent not of any forwardness or zeal
I have shewn, or exertions I have made therein; and dare promise, to as
many as will be faithful and zealous in the cause of God, that it shall
be no grief of heart, but matter of consolation and peace to them
hereafter, as I find it this day. But if there be a compliance with
malignant and ungodly men, then I expect nothing but wrath and
indignation from the Lord, till there be no remedy. O that there were
such a spirit, at least in our nobility who stand up for the truth, that
they would take more of the counsel of God, and lean less on their own
reason and understanding. As for dangers from the sectaries, I have
been, and am still, of the opinion, that they are to be prevented by all
lawful means; but that the danger from malignant* is much nearer, and
exceedingly more formidable in this kingdom, and at this time.
“Sic. sub. GEORGE
GILLESPIE.
“Kirkddy, Sept. 4,th,
1648.”
“Seeing, to all
appearance, the time of my dissolution is now very near, notwithstanding
that I have in my latter will declared my mind upon public affairs, I
have thought good to add this further testimony: That I consider the
malignant party, in these kingdoms, the seed of the serpent, whatever
they may pretend to the contrary—a generation who have not set God, nor
the laws of God, before them. With them are to be ranked, the profane,
the scandalous, and heretical; from all which I trust the Lord is about
to purge his churches. I have often, and still do comfort myself, with
the hopes that the Lord will yet purge this polluted land. Surely, as he
hath begun, so he will carry on that great work of mercy. I know there
will always be a hypocritical mixture in the church—tares will grow up
with the wheat; but this cannot excuse the conniving at gross and
scandalous sinners. This purging work, which the Lord is about, has been
greatly opposed by many, who say, by their deeds, we will not be purged
nor refined, but will mix ourselves with those whom the ministers preach
against as the malignant enemies of God and his cause. But he that is
filthy, let him be filthy still, and let wisdom be justified of her
children. I recommend it to all them that fear God, seriously to
consider, that the Holy Scriptures clearly shew, 1st, That to aid and
encourage the enemies of God, or join hands and associate with wicked
men, opposers of the truth, are sins highly displeasing in his sight.
2d, That this sin ordinarily ensnares the people of God into the
commission of divers other sins. 3d, That it hath been punished by God
with grievous judgments. And, 4th, That utter destruction is to be
apprehended, when a people, after having received signal punishments,
and merciful deliverances, relapse into the same sin. Ezra ix. 13, 14.
“Upon these, and the
like grounds, for my own exoneration, that so necessary a truth may not
want the testimony of a dying witness of Christ, though the unworthiest
among thousands, and that light may be held forth, and warning given in
this critical time, I cannot be silent, but must speak by my pen, when I
cannot by my tongue, yea, even by the pen of another, when I cannot now
by mine own, seriously, in the name of Jesus Christ, exhorting and
obtesting all who fear God, and make conscience of their ways, to be
very tender and circumspect, to watch and pray, that they be not
ensnared into that great and dangerous sin of conjunction or compliance
with malignant or profane enemies of the truth, under whatever
prudential considerations it may be varnished; the which, if men will
conscientiously do, they shall not only have no cause to repent, but, to
the unspeakable joy and peace of God's people, they shall see his work
go on, and prosper gloriously.
GEORGE GILLESPIE |
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