<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
<div class="blockquot">
<p><span class="firstword">The</span> sermon in Scottish Kirks. Intruding animals in country
churches. The ‘collection.’ Church psalmody. Precentors
and organs. Small congregations in the Highlands. Parish
visitation. Survival of the influence of clerical teaching.
Religious mania.</p>
</div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">From</span> the time of the Reformation onwards
the sermon has taken a foremost place in the
service of the Church of Scotland. There
was a time when a preacher would continue
his discourse for five or six hours, and when
sometimes a succession of preachers would give
sermon after sermon and keep the congregation
continuously sitting for ten hours. These
days of perfervid oratory are past. But a
sermon of an hour’s duration or even more
may still be heard, and, when the preacher
is eloquent, will be listened to with deep
interest. This part of the service maintains
its early prominence. It is from his capacity
to preach that a man’s qualifications for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
ministry are mainly judged, not merely by the
church which licences him, but by the congregation
which chooses him as its pastor.
The half-yearly celebration of the sacrament,
which included a fast-day, services on two or
three week days, and a long ‘diet’ on Sunday,
was appropriately known as ‘The Preachings.’
The Fast-Day, when the shops were closed
and there were at least two services in the
churches, forenoon and afternoon, became in
the end a kind of public holiday in the large
towns. Attracted to the country, rather than
to the sermons, the people used to escape
from town, and railways carried an ever-increasing
number of excursionists away from
the services of the Church. The ecclesiastical
authorities at last, some years ago, put a stop
to this scandal, and the Fast-Day no longer
ranks as one of the public holidays of the
year.</p>
<div class="sidenote">HEADS OF SERMONS</div>
<p>Scottish sermons have always had a prevalent
doctrinal character and a markedly
logical treatment of their subject. It has
never been the habit north of the Tweed to
think that ‘dulness is sacred in a sound divine.’
The clergy have appealed as much to the
head as to the heart. In bygone generations
the doctrines evolved from the text were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
divided into numerous heads, and these into
subordinate sections and subsections, so that
the attention of those listeners who remained
awake was kept up as at a kind of intellectual
exercise. If anyone wishes to realise the
extent to which this practice of subdivision
could be carried by an eminent and successful
preacher, let him turn to the posthumous
sermons of Boston of Ettrick.<SPAN name="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</SPAN> Thus, in a
sermon on ‘Fear and Hope, objects of the
Divine Complacency,’ from the text, Psalms
cxlvii. 11, this famous divine, after an introduction
in four sections, deduced six doctrines,
each subdivided into from three to
eight heads; but the last doctrine required
another sermon, which contained ‘a practical
improvement of the whole,’ arranged under 86
heads. A sermon on Matthew xi. 28 was
subdivided into 76 heads. If it is not quite
easy to follow the printed sermon through
this maze of sub-division, it must have been
much more difficult to do so in the spoken
discourse. All the enthusiasm and fire of the
preacher must have been needed to rivet the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
attention and affect the hearts of his congregation.
It is still usual to treat the subject of
a text under different heads, but happily their
number has been reduced to more reasonable
proportions.</p>
<p>It was not given to every occupant of a
pulpit to rival the fecundity and ingenuity of
Boston of Ettrick in the elucidation of his
text. A subdivision of a simpler type was
made by the worthy old Highland divine who
preached from the verse, ‘The devil, as a
roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he
may devour.’ Following a Highland habit of
inserting an unnecessary pronoun after the
noun to which it refers, he began his discourse
thus: ‘Let us consider this passage,
my brethren, under four heads. Firstly, who
the Devil, he is; secondly, what the Devil,
he is like; thirdly, what the Devil, he doth;
and fourthly, who the Devil, he devoureth.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">NEW TEXT TO OLD SERMON</div>
<p>In many instances the sermons prepared
during the first few years of a ministry served
for all its subsequent continuance, with perhaps
some modifications or additions suggested by
the altered circumstances of the time. It used
to be said of some clergymen that they kept
their sermons in a barrel, which when emptied
was refilled again with the old MSS. Dr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
Hanna, the biographer of Chalmers, used to
tell of one such minister who had preached
the same short round of sermons for so many
years that at last the beadle was deputed by
one or two members of the congregation to
ask whether, if he could not prepare a new
sermon, he would at least give them a fresh
text. Next Sunday, to the astonishment of
the audience, the minister gave out a text
from which he had never before preached:
‘Genesis, first chapter, first verse, and first
clause of the verse.’ Every Bible was opened
at the place, and the listeners, nearly all of
whom were ignorant of the suggested arrangement,
leant back in their pews in eager
anticipation of the new sermon. With great
deliberation the preacher began: ‘“In the beginning
God created the heavens and the
earth.” Who this Nicodemus was, my brethren,
commentators are not agreed.’ And the
old story of Nicodemus was repeated, as it
had been so often before.</p>
<p>Sometimes the manuscript of a sermon was
by mistake left behind at the manse, and the
minister or the beadle had to set off to procure
it. On one of these occasions, the manse
being at some little distance from the church,
the minister, who had to go and find the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
document himself, gave out the 119th Psalm,
that the congregation might engage in singing
during his absence. When he returned with
his MS. he asked his man, who was waiting
for him anxiously at the door, how the congregation
was getting on. ‘O sir,’ said he,
‘they’ve got to the end of the 84th verse, and
they’re jist cheepin’ like mice.’</p>
<p>To interrupt the service by requesting the
congregation to sing a psalm or hymn is an
expedient which sometimes relieves a clergyman
when, from faintness or other cause, he
finds a difficulty in performing his duty in
the pulpit. Some years ago a young minister
had recourse to this mode of extrication. On
the conclusion of the service, one or two of
his friends came to him in the vestry to ascertain
what had ailed him. He told them that
he could with difficulty refrain from laughing,
and his only resource was to leave the pulpit.
‘Did you see,’ he asked, ‘a man with an
extraordinarily red head sitting in the front
of the gallery?’ ‘Yes, we noticed him, but he
appeared to be a quiet attentive listener.’ ‘So
he was, so he was; but did you see a small
boy sitting behind him? That young rascal
so fascinated me that, though I tried hard to
look elsewhere, I could not keep my eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
from sometimes turning to watch him. He
was holding up the forefinger of his left hand
behind the red head, as if he were heating
an iron bolt in a furnace, and he would then
thump it on the desk in front of him, as if he
were hammering the iron into shape. This
went on until I had to leave the pulpit, and
send the beadle up to the gallery to have the
young sinner cautioned or removed.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">A SERMON BELOW BEN NEVIS</div>
<p>The English sermon in Highland churches
was often a curious performance. As already
mentioned, there were, and still generally
are, two sermons—one in Gaelic as part of
the earlier service, and one in English in
the second part. Those of the congregation
who thought they understood both languages
might stay from the beginning to the end,
but the purely Gaelic-speaking population
generally thinned away after the Gaelic service.
In some cases, the preacher’s command
of English being rather limited, his evident
earnestness could hardly prevent a smile at
his solecisms in grammar and the oddity
of his expressions. Many years ago an
acquaintance told me he had been yachting
in Loch Eil, and on a Sunday of dreary
rain and storm went ashore not far from the
roots of Ben Nevis to attend the English<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
service, when he heard the following passage
from the lips of the preacher:</p>
<p>‘Ah, my friends, what causes have we for
gratitude; O yes, for the deepest gratitude!
Look at the place of our habitation. How
grateful should we be that we do not leeve
in the far north! O no; amid the frost and the
snaw, and the cauld and the weet, O no; where
there’s a lang day tae half o’ the year, O yes;
and a lang, lang nicht the tither, ah yes; that
we do not depend upon the <em>auroary boreawlis</em>,
O no; that we do not gang shivering about
in skins, O no; snoking amang the snaw like
mowdiwarts, O no, no!</p>
<p>‘And how grateful should we be too that
we do not leeve in the far south, beneath the
equawtor and a sun aye burnin’, burnin’; where
the sky’s het, ah yes; and the earth’s het,
and the water’s het, and ye’re burnt black as
a smiddy, ah yes! where there’s teegers, O
yes; and lions, O yes; and crocodiles, O yes;
and fearsome beasts growlin’ and girnin’ at
ye amang the woods; where the very air is
a fever, like the burnin’ breath o’ a fiery
draigon. That we do not leeve in these places,
O <em>no!</em> <span class="allsmcap">NO!!</span> NO!!!</p>
<div class="sidenote">SLEEPING IN THE KIRK</div>
<p>‘But that we leeve in this <em>blēssed</em> island o’
ours, called Great Britain, O yes! yes! and in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
that pairt o’ it named Scotland, and in that
bit o’ auld Scotland that looks up at Ben
Naivis, O <em>yes!</em> <span class="allsmcap">YES!!</span> YES!!! where there’s
neither frost nor cauld, nor wind nor weet,
nor hail, nor rain, nor teegers, nor lions, nor
burnin’ suns, nor hurricanes, nor’—— At this
part of the discourse a fearful gust from Ben
Nevis aforesaid drove in the upper sash of the
window at the right hand of the pulpit, and
rudely interrupted the torrent of eloquence.<SPAN name="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</SPAN></p>
<p>When we remember the length and technicality
of the sermons, the bad ventilation of
the kirks, and the effects of six days of toil
on a large number of each congregation, we
can hardly wonder that somnolence should be
prevalent in Scotland. Many anecdotes on this
subject have long been in circulation. The
same tale may be recognized under various
guises, the preacher or sleeper being altered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
according to local circumstances. Perhaps no
series illustrates better how such stories continue
to float down through generation after
generation, and are always reappearing as
new, when they receive a fresh personal application.
Sleeping in church is such a natural
failing, and the reproof of it from the
pulpit is so obvious a consequence, that even
if no memory of the old incidents should survive,
the recurrence of similar circumstances
could hardly fail to give birth to similar anecdotes.
For example, a story is at present
in circulation to the effect that in a country
church one Sunday the preacher after service
walked through the kirkyard with one of the
neighbouring farmers, and took occasion to
remark to him, ‘Wasn’t it dreadful to hear
the Laird of Todholes snoring so loud through
the sermon?’ ‘Perfectly fearful,’ was the
answer, ‘he waukened us a’.’ Two or three
generations ago a similar incident was said to
have occurred at Govan, under the ministration
of the well-known Mr. Thom, who in
the midst of his sermon stopped and called
out, ‘Bailie Brown, ye mauna snore sae loud,
for ye’ll wauken the Provost.’ But more than
two centuries ago the following epigram <span class="locked">appeared:—</span></p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container pw25">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0">Old South, a witty Churchman reckoned,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Was preaching once to Charles the Second,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">But much too serious for a court,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Who at all preaching made a sport:</div>
<div class="verse indent0">He soon perceived his audience nod,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Deaf to the zealous man of God.</div>
<div class="verse indent0">The Doctor stopp’d; began to call,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">‘Pray wake the Earl of Lauderdale:</div>
<div class="verse indent0">My Lord! why, ’tis a monstrous thing,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">You snore so loud—you’ll wake the King.’</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">SABBATH SOMNOLENCE</div>
<p class="in0">Though this scene took place in the south of
England, it is interesting to note that the
snorer specially singled out for rebuke was a
Scottish nobleman.</p>
<p>Now and then a reproof from the pulpit
has drawn down on the minister a sarcastic
reply from the unfortunate sleeper, as in the
case of the somnolent farmer who was awakened
by the minister calling on him to rouse
himself by taking a pinch of snuff, and who
blurted out ‘Put the snuff in the sermon,
sir,’—an advice which found not a little sympathy
in the congregation.</p>
<p>In a parish church about the middle of
Ayrshire the central passage leading from the
entrance to the pulpit is paved with large
stone-flags. On the right side a worthy matron
had her family pew, wherein, overcome
with drowsiness, she used to fall asleep, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
her head resting on her large brass-clasped
Bible. She was an admirable housekeeper and
farmer, looking after all the details of management
herself. In her dreams in church her
thoughts would sometimes wander back to her
domestic concerns and show that she was not
‘mistress of herself, though china falls.’ One
Sunday, in the course of her slumbers, she
succeeded in pushing her massive Bible over
the edge of the pew. As it fell on the stone-floor,
its brass mountings made a loud noise,
at which she started up with the exclamation,
‘Hoot, ye stupid jaud, there’s anither bowl
broken.’</p>
<p>The genial Principal of Glasgow University,
in the course of a public speech a year or
two ago, told a story of an opposite kind.
An old couple in his country parish had taken
with them to church their stirring little grandson,
who behaved all through the service
with preternatural gravity. So much was the
preacher struck with the good conduct of so
young a listener, that, meeting the grandfather
at the close of the service, he congratulated
him upon the remarkably quiet composure
of the boy. ‘Ay,’ said the old man with a
twinkle in his eye, ‘Duncan’s weel threetened
afore he gangs in.’</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
<div class="sidenote">ANIMAL VISITORS TO THE KIRK</div>
<p>When an afternoon service is held, the attendance
is sometimes apt to be scanty. A
minister who was annoyed at a lukewarmness
of this kind on the part of his congregation,
remonstrated with them on the subject. ‘I
canna tell,’ he said, ‘how it may look to the
Almichtie that sae few o’ ye come to the
second diet o’ worship, but I maun say that
it’s showin’ unco little respect to mysel’.’</p>
<p>In summer weather, when the doors and
windows of churches are sometimes kept open
for air, occasional unwelcome intruders distract
the people and disturb the preacher. Butterflies
and small birds are the most frequent;
dogs are not uncommon, and in some districts
these calls are varied by the occasional appearance
of a goat. A dog is amenable to the
sight of the minister’s man approaching with
a stick, and bolts off without needing any
audible word of command, but a goat is a
much more refractory visitor. One of these
creatures entered a country church one Sunday
in the midst of the service and deliberately
marched down the central passage. Of
course every eye in the congregation was
turned upon it, and the luckless preacher found
much difficulty in proceeding with his discourse.
The beadle at last sprang from his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
seat and proceeded to meet the intruder. He
had no stick, however, and the goat showed
fight by charging him with its horns and making
him beat a retreat. A friendly umbrella
was thereupon passed out to him from one of
the pews, and he returned to the combat. By
spreading his arms and wielding the umbrella,
he prevented the animal from reaching the
pulpit stairs and succeeded in turning it. But
once or twice it wheeled round again, as if
to renew the fight. He contrived, however,
to press it onwards as far as the church
porch, when, lifting up his foot and dealing
the goat a kick which considerably quickened
its retreat, he gave vent to his feelings of
anger and indignation in an imprecation, distinctly
audible through half the church, ‘Out
o’ the house o’ God, ye brute.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">CHURCH COLLECTIONS</div>
<p>A characteristic feature of many churches in
Scotland is the ‘collection,’ that is, the gathering
of the contributions of the congregation
for the poor of the parish or other purpose.
In the Highlands where there are services
both in Gaelic and English, the performance
is repeated at the end of each. One or more
of the elders, attired in Sunday garb, and
looking as sad and solemn as if they were
at a funeral, take the ‘ladle’ or wooden box<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
at the end of a pole, and push it into each
pew. The alms as they are dropped into the
receptacle make a noise so distinctly audible
over the building that a practised ear can
make a shrewd guess as to the value of the
coin deposited. Nearly the whole contribution
is in coppers, only the larger farmers and
the laird’s families furnishing anything of
higher value. Hence such congregations have
been profanely valued at threepence a dozen.
An amusing incident in one of these collections
took place at a parish church in the west of
Cowal. A family whom I used to visit there
had come to their seat in the gallery while
the earlier service was still going on, and
when the Gaelic ladle came round they put
into it their contributions. After the ladle had
traversed the church at the end of the second
service and was being brought back to the
foot of the pulpit, the minister, who noticed
that it had not been taken up to the laird’s
seat, beckoned vigorously to the man who
was approaching with the money and pointed
to the gallery. In response he received only
a knowing shake of the head from the collector,
who at last, impatient at the ministerial
gesticulations, exclaimed aloud, ‘Na, na, sir,
its a’ richt, I wass takin’ the laird’s money at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
the Gaelic.’ In this same kirk on another
occasion, after the whole contributions of the
congregation had been collected, the box came
up to the gallery, but unluckily was carried
violently against the corner of a pew, the
bottom came out, and the accumulated coppers
rattled noisily to the floor.</p>
<p>Another part of the church service which
cannot but strike a stranger, especially in the
Highlands, is the singing. In the more remote
and primitive parishes the precentor, standing
in a lower desk directly under the minister,
reads out one, now more usually two lines of
the psalm, and then strikes up the tune. At
the end of the first two lines, he reads out
the second two, which he proceeds to sing
as before. The congregation usually joins
heartily in the music, which is the only
part of the service wherein it can actively
participate.</p>
<div class="sidenote">HIGHLAND PRECENTORS</div>
<p>It is not always easy to secure a precentor.
He must, in the first place, be a man of tried
good character, and in the second place, he
must of course be able to distinguish the
metres of the psalms, and have voice and
ear enough to raise at least three or four
psalm-tunes. His repertoire is seldom much
more extensive. Occasionally he begins a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
tune that will not suit the metre of the psalm,
or he loses himself altogether. A precentor
in the north Highlands to whom this happened,
suddenly stopped and exclaimed, ‘Och, bless
me, I’m aff the tune again.’ Another more
sedate worthy struck up the tune three times,
but always lost it at the second line. He
paused, looked round the congregation, and
after solemnly saying ‘Hoots, toots, toots,’
went at it the fourth time successfully. When
the precentor at Peebles had failed twice in
his efforts, the old minister looked over the
pulpit and said aloud to him, ‘Archie, try it
again, and if ye canna manage it, tak’ anither
tune.’</p>
<p>A precentor is naturally jealous of any
more practised and clearer voice than his
own, which, he rightly thinks, ought to predominate.
In the little Free Church of
Raasay Island, the precentor had it all his
own way until the minister’s sister came.
She sat at the far end of the church, and,
having some knowledge of music and a good
voice, she made herself well heard as she
sang in much quicker time than the slow
drawl to which the people had been accustomed.
Before the precentor had done a line
she was ready to begin the next, and the half<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
of the congregation nearest to her followed
her excellent lead. This was too much for the
precentor. He raised his voice till it almost
cracked with the strain, and for a few notes
drowned the rival performer at the other end.
But he could not keep it up, and as his notes
dropped, the clear sweet voice of the lady
came out as before. Sitting about the middle
of the church, I was able to appreciate the
strange see-saw in the psalmody.</p>
<p>The most remarkable change which has
taken place within living memory in the services
of the Scottish Church is unquestionably
the introduction of instrumental music.
In most of the large congregations of the
chief towns, the precentor has given way to
an organ, which leads the choir, as the choir
leads the congregation. Had any one in the
earlier half of last century been audacious
enough to predict that in a couple of generations
the ‘kist o’ whistles,’ which had been
long banished as a sign and symbol of black
popery, would be reintroduced and welcomed
before the end of the century, he would have
been laughed to scorn, or branded as himself
a limb of the prelatic Satan. Of course, there
has been much searching of heart over this
innovation, and many have been the head-shakings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
and even open denunciations of such
manifest backsliding. But the cause of enlightenment
has steadily gained ground in the
Lowlands, and a few generations hence it may
not improbably prevail even over the Highlands.
Meanwhile in most Highland parishes,
the first notes of an organ in the church would
probably drive the majority of the congregation
out of doors, and lead to years of angry
controversy.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A CHURCH-STOVE AND POPERY</div>
<p>The horror of anything savouring of what
is thought to be popery shows itself sometimes
in determined opposition to even the most
innocent and useful changes. Sir Lauder
Brunton has told me that in a Roxburghshire
parish with which he is well acquainted,
the church being excessively cold in winter,
a proposal was mooted to introduce a stove
for the purpose of heating it. This innovation,
however, met with a strong resistance,
especially from one member of the congregation,
who said that a stove had a pipe
like an organ, and he would have nothing
savouring of popery in the Kirk of Scotland.
He actually delayed the reform for a time.</p>
<p>In the same county, where it had been the
custom from time immemorial to winnow the
corn with the help of the wind, a farmer, alive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
to the value of modern improvements, procured
and began to use a machine which
created an artificial and always available current
of air. He was at once rebuked for an
impious defiance of the ways of Providence.</p>
<p>A proposal to put a stove into a Fifeshire
parish met with the opposition of one of the
heritors, who, when the minister came to him
for a subscription towards the warming of
the kirk, indignantly refused, asking, ‘D’ye
think John Knox asked for a stove, even for
the cauldest kirk he ever preached in? Na,
na, sir, warm the folk wi’ your preachin’, and
they’ll never think about the cauld.’</p>
<p>At the time of the Disruption of the
Church of Scotland in 1843 the congregations
were apt to side with their minister, if he
were an able and efficient pastor to whom
they were attached. Thus in Skye, as I have
above mentioned, so powerful was the influence
of John Mackinnon among his people
that he kept them with him in the pale of
the Establishment. But in most Highland
parishes the Free Church early took ground,
and in a large number it has been so predominant
that the congregation of the Parish
Church sometimes consists of little more than
the clergyman and his family. In such cases<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
the position of the adherents of the ‘Auld
Kirk’ may sometimes be rather trying. More
especially is it felt by the ‘minister’s man,’
who is sometimes placed in sad straits in
his endeavour to put the best face on the
situation and conceal the feebleness of his
flock. Without knowing his official position,
or to which of the churches he belonged, I
once met one of these worthies in the west
of Ross-shire, and, with a friend who accompanied
me, had some talk with him about
the parish.</p>
<div class="sidenote">A MINISTER’S MAN</div>
<p>‘How does the Established Church get on
here?’ we asked.</p>
<p>‘O fine, fine, sirs.’</p>
<p>‘Has the minister been here a long time?’</p>
<p>‘Ow ay, it’ll be a long time noo, I’m
sure.’</p>
<p>‘And has he a large congregation?’</p>
<p>‘Ow ay, it’s a fery goot congregation, whatefer.’</p>
<p>‘Is it as big as the Free Kirk?’</p>
<p>‘Weel, I’ll no say that it will be just as big
as the Free Kirk.’</p>
<p>‘How many do you think there may be in
church on Sunday?’</p>
<p>‘Weel, ye see, there’ll be sometimes more
and sometimes fewer.’</p>
<p>‘But have you no idea how many they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
may be?’</p>
<p>‘Weel, sir, I dinna think I wass ever counting
them.’</p>
<p>‘You go to the parish church yourself, I
think?’</p>
<div class="sidenote">PARISH VISITING</div>
<p>‘O, to be sure, I do: where wad ye think
I wad be goin’ else?’</p>
<p>It was quite clear that our interlocutor
must be a staunch adherent of the Auld
Kirk, and probably had some scantiness of
the congregation to conceal; but we had no
idea then of what we learnt soon afterwards,
that he was no less a personage than the
‘minister’s man,’ and that, saving the family
from the manse and an occasional stranger,
he was himself the whole congregation.</p>
<p>It has been made a matter of reproach
to the clergy of the Scottish Church that,
though they spend more time over the preparation
of their sermons and place these on
a higher intellectual level than is common
in the English communion, they fall short
of their brethren south of the Tweed in the
assiduity of their visitation of their people.
Where a parish extends over an area of
many square miles, it must obviously be
difficult for the minister to move freely and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
constantly among his parishioners, so as to
be in close touch with all of them in their
mundane as well as their spiritual affairs. In
such cases, he finds it necessary to arrange
the times of his visits, which are thus apt to
become somewhat formal ceremonies, announced
beforehand, and prepared for by
those to whom notice is given. An example
of this kind is related of a minister who had
recently been appointed to the parish of
Lesmahagow, and who made known from
the pulpit one Sunday that he would visit
next day a certain hilly district of the parish.
Accordingly, on Monday morning he set out,
and, after a walk of some seven or eight
miles, arrived at a farm-house, where he
meant to begin. After knocking for some
time and getting no reply, he hailed a boy
outside, when the following conversation
ensued:</p>
<p>‘Is Mr. Smith at home?’</p>
<p>‘Na.’</p>
<p>‘Is Mrs. Smith here?’</p>
<p>‘Na.’</p>
<p>‘Are you their son?’</p>
<p>‘Ay.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I have walked a long way, and I
would like to sit and rest for a little. May<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
I go in?’ (answering the question by entering).
‘And did your father and mother not
expect me?’</p>
<p>‘Na, they didna think ye wad begin up
here; sae they’re awa’ doon to the roup o’
Ritchie’s farm.’</p>
<p>‘Well, now, my man, are these all the
books that your father has in the house?’</p>
<p>‘Ay.’</p>
<p>‘Now tell me which of them does he use
oftenest?’</p>
<p>‘That ane,’ pointing to a large leather-covered
family Bible.</p>
<p>‘O, the Bible; that’s right: I am pleased
to know that; and when does he use it?’</p>
<p>‘On Sabbath mornin’s.’</p>
<p>‘Only once a week! Well, how does he
do? Does he read it aloud to you all?’</p>
<p>‘Na, he shairps his raazors on’t.’</p>
<p>I once had quarters at South Queensferry
in a house through the centre of which ran
the boundary between that burgh and the
adjacent parish of Dalmeny. I asked my
landlady how she arranged about the claims
of the clergy. ‘Well, ye see, I go to the
Burgh Kirk, and my minister comes to see
me frae time to time. And Mr Muir of
Dalmeny, he visits me too, but I try to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
quite fair to them both. The parlour here
is in the burgh, so I take my ain minister
in there, and, as the other half of the house
is in Dalmeny, I put the other minister in
the kitchen, which belongs to his parish.’</p>
<p>In the striking delineation which Wordsworth
has given of the early surroundings of
his ‘Wanderer,’ and the circumstances that
moulded his character, special stress is laid on
the clerical influence which from infancy had
guarded this son of the Braes of Athol.</p>
<div class="poetry-container pw25">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indent0">The Scottish Church, both on himself and those</div>
<div class="verse indent0">With whom from childhood he grew up, had held</div>
<div class="verse indent0">The strong hand of her purity; and still</div>
<div class="verse indent0">Had watched him with an unrelenting eye.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class="sidenote">MORAL INFLUENCE OF THE CLERGY</div>
<p>It is to be feared, however, that the result of
such continual guardianship is to be recognised
rather in the theological bent of the people
than in their moral behaviour. The high standard
of conduct held up in the pulpit, and
generally followed by the clergy themselves,
has not prevented the statistics of drunkenness
and illegitimacy from attaining an unenviable
notoriety. Yet no one can turn over the pages
of the records of kirk-sessions and presbyteries
without obtaining a deep impression of
the untiring earnestness and devotion with
which the Church has struggled against these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
two great national sins. If in the heyday of
her power she could not eradicate the evils,
her task must now be tenfold more onerous,
when the ‘strong hand’ can no longer reach
large masses of the population, and when the
‘unrelenting eye,’ though as keenly watchful as
ever, can only note the decadence which the
hand is powerless to reclaim. Unhappily a
spirit of heathen ignorance, or of pagan indifference,
has largely replaced the unquestioning
faith of an older time, especially among the
artisans of the large towns and the miners
in the great coal-fields. It is mainly in the
country districts, where social changes advance
more slowly, that the religious instruction given
at school and in church still continues to colour
the outlook of the people on life here and hereafter.</p>
<p>If indeed we could judge from expressions
that have survived from older generations,
we might infer that many of the articles of
the Christian faith retain a firm hold on minds
which, if questioned on the subject, would
probably express doubt or denial of them, such
as the doctrine of a material heaven and hell,
of a system of future rewards and punishments,
of a personal devil intent on man’s ruin, and of
the sinfulness of Sunday work.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span></p>
<div class="sidenote">FORECASTING OF THE FUTURE</div>
<p>The way in which the acceptance of a material
heaven and hell shows itself in ordinary
conversation, might be illustrated by many
anecdotes. One or two examples may here
suffice. About forty years ago a well-known
wealthy iron-master gave a dinner-party at his
country house. Among his guests was an old
friend of mine, from whom he had purchased a
portion of his estate. The conversation turned
on the great changes that had taken place in
the district within the memory of those present,—the
dying out of old families and the incoming
of new, the making of railways, the laying out
of roads, the growth of villages, and so forth,—when
my friend remarked, ‘Ah, me! I dare say
I would see just as much change again if I were
to come down sixty years hence.’ Whereupon
the host instantly ejaculated from the other end
of the room, ‘What’s that ye say? Come
down! Tak’ care ye haena to come up.’</p>
<p>Of similar character is another Ayrshire
story which has been told of a man who built
a large and ostentatious tomb for himself and
family, of which he was so proud that he
boasted to the gravedigger that it would last
till the day of judgment, when they might
have some trouble to get up out of it. As the
man’s reputation was none of the highest, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
gravedigger replied, ‘I’m thinkin’ ye needna
be wonderin’ how ye’re to come up, for if they
knock the bottom out o’t ye’ll aiblins gang
doun.’</p>
<p>A country doctor, who was attending a
laird, had instructed the butler of the house in
the art of taking and recording his master’s
temperature with a thermometer. On repairing
to the house one morning he was met by
the butler, to whom he said: ‘Well, John,
I hope the laird’s temperature is not any higher
to-day?’ The man looked puzzled for a
moment, and then replied: ‘Weel, I was just
wonderin’ that mysell. Ye see he deed at
twal’ o’clock.’</p>
<p>A clergyman’s son had taken to drink, and
had given great trouble and pain to his worthy
father. On one occasion, after a debauch of
several days, he returned to the manse in the
evening, and found that there had been a
presbytery dinner in the house, and that the
reverend fathers who had dined were now
engaged over their toddy and talk in the study.
He made for the room, and was immediately
welcomed by his father, who tried to put the
best face he could on the situation. He asked
the young man where he had been. ‘In hell,’
was the answer. ‘Ah, and what did you find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
there?’ ‘Much the same as I find here: I
couldna see the fire for ministers.’</p>
<div class="sidenote">‘IT MICHT HAE BEEN WAUR’</div>
<p>In a country parish in the West of Scotland
the minister’s man was a noted pessimist,
whose only consolation to his friends in any
calamity consisted in the remark, ‘It micht
hae been waur.’ One morning he was met by
the minister, who told him he had had such a
terrible dream that he had not yet been able
to shake off the effects of it. ‘I dreamt I was
in hell, and experienced the torments of the
lost. I never suffered such agony in my life,
and even now I shudder when I think of it.’
The beadle’s usual consolatory remark came
out, ‘It micht hae been waur.’ ‘O John,
John, I tell you it was the greatest mental distress
I ever suffered in my life. How could it
have been worse?’ ‘It micht hae been true,’
was the reply.</p>
<p>Cases of religious mania have been common
enough in Scotland, where questions of theology
have for centuries been keenly debated
among all classes of the community. It has
been said that ‘the worst of madmen is a saint
run mad.’ Whether this dictum be true or not
there would appear to have been always cases
where brooding upon some one doctrine of
the Christian faith has led to mental aberration<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
more or less serious. An instance of this kind
occurred in the north of Ayrshire, where a man,
who had lost his wits over theological speculation,
would sometimes accost a stranger on a
quiet country road, and taking him by the
button-hole would abruptly ask him, ‘What
do you think of effectual calling? Isn’t it a
damned shame? Good day to you.’ And off
the poor fellow marched, ready to propound
the same or some similar problem to the next
passenger he would meet.</p>
<p>A less pronounced case of the same tendency
was that of a countryman who felt much
aggrieved by the story of the fall of man as
told in the Book of Genesis. ‘And it comes
specially hard on me,’ he would complain, ‘for
I never could byde apples raw or cooked a’ my
days.’</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />