24 August 1662 A.D. The Great Ejection: New English Act Brings 2000 Ministerial Resignations
August 24: The Great Ejection (1662)
A New Act Brings Mass Resignations
Suppose
. . . just suppose now . . . that you as a minister, or your minister, had a
certain time period to decide to renounce the ordination vows made at
ordination, subscribe to a different set of doctrinal standards, promise to
arrange the worship according to a different standard of worship, agree to be
re-ordained by another ecclesiastical body, and do all this by a certain day,
or be deposed by the spiritual authorities which had the approval of the
government. Talk about change! And yet this was the way it was on this
day in Presbyterian history, August 24, 1662 in the British Isles.
It
was called officially The Act of Uniformity, 1662. Its longer title was “An Act
for the Uniformity of Public Prayers and Administration of Sacraments and other
Rites and Ceremonies and for the Establishing the Form of making, ordaining,
and consecrating Bishops, Priests, and Deacons in the Church of
England.” It was broken up into five actions; (1) to have a complete and
unqualified assent to the newly published book of Common Prayer of the Church
of England. (In passing, most preachers and people had not even seen this
newly published book.) (2) to subscribe to the Thirty-Nine articles of the
Church of England; (3) to renounce the Solemn League and Covenant; (4) To
renounce any attempt to alter the government of the church or state; (5) to
receive ordination at the hands of a bishop in the Church of England.
Combined
with other acts of this Church, it excluded anyone who was not in compliance
with the above from holding civil or military office. Students at
Cambridge or Oxford would not receive any degrees from such study, if they
refused this act.
And
all this was to take place before August 24, which date was the celebration of
St. Bartholomew Day. Students of church history remember, as they did
then, that this was the day of the massacre in France when Huguenots were
slaughtered by the Roman Catholics. So, this was a day remembered “Black”
St. Bartholomew”s Day.
It
is estimated that some 2000 ministers were ejected from their pulpits and
parishes, including their manses, with Anglican priests put in their
place. The majority were Presbyterian (1,816), Independents (194), and
Baptists (19). A similar procedure was enacted in Scotland, with 400 ministers
ejected from the pulpits and parishes. In future posts, we shall treat some of
these ministers who were ejected on that day.
Words to Live By:
Two years ago, in 2012, there was a ministry event of reconciliation by the
Church of England at the 350th anniversary of the Great Ejection. We might
be glad that such a meeting took place, but the real issue was, as Ian Murray
put it, the issue on the nature of true Christianity. Let’s face
it. True adherence to the gospel will require sacrifice. That is why
all of us as believing Presbyterians need to be more in prayer and watchfulness
for our respective Presbyterian denominations and local churches. What has
been faithful and true in the past may not be the case for the present and
future witness of your church, if church officers and members grow careless
about the faith once delivered unto the saints. As Paul put it, “the
things which you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust
these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” (2 Timothy 2:2
)
Sunday Sermon
Two volumes, Sermons of
The Great Ejection (Banner of Truth, 1962) and Farewell Sermons (Soli Deo
Gloria, 1992), provide some of the gathered sermons preached by these pastors
when torn from their congregations by the Act of Uniformity. The following
words are a portion of the sermon brought by the Rev. John Whitlock on
that fateful day. (time and space do not permit the full text)
REMEMBER, HOLD FAST, AND REPENT.
Remember
therefore how thou hast received and heard, and hold fast, and repent.—Rev. 3:3
.
Beloved,
when I entered on this verse in the course of my Friday Lecture, I little
thought that I had so short a time to preach among you. I hoped I should have
enjoyed some further opportunities for some few weeks, at least as long as the
Act of Uniformity allows. But it has pleased God by His wise and holy
providence to order it otherwise. I being suspended from preaching here from
this day forward, for nonconformity. How far rightly or legally on man’s part,
I shall not dispute, but leave to the righteous God to determine. I desire that
both you and I may not eye man, but God, in this dispensation. I did not think
to have preached my Farewell Sermon to you from these words, but having begun
this text, and finding the matter of it so seasonable and suitable to this sad
occasion, I shall by God’s assistance proceed in the handling of it.
Since
it is probable that I shall preach no more to you, I judge it very seasonable
to leave the exhortation in the text with you, to call upon you to remember
what and how you have received and heard, and to hold fast those wholesome
truths you have heard, and those precious ordinances (at least the remembrance,
impressions, and gracious effects of them) that you have enjoyed and been
privileged with. Also, to repent of those sins, which have provoked, and may
further provoke God to come on us as a thief, to take away many of His
ministers from among us. . .
.
. . The silence of ministers calls aloud on us all to humble ourselves under
the mighty hand of God. It bids us to repent of our sins, the causes of God’s
judgments. It calls on you to prize and improve ministers and ordinances,
better, if God shall continue, restore or further afford them to you. Yes,
ministers’ silence should cause people to speak the more and louder to God in
prayer for the continuance and restoring of ministers and ordinances to them.
When you do not hear so much and so often from God in preaching, let God hear
the more and oftener from you in prayer. Ply the throne of grace. Give God no
rest till He make Jerusalem a praise in the earth. And as our silence should
make you speak the more to God, so also the more and oftener one unto another
in holy conference, to provoke to love and to good works. And I beseech you,
brethren, pray for us. Whatever God may do with us, or whithersoever we may be
driven, we shall carry you in our hearts; and when and while we remember
ourselves to God, we shall never forget you, but present you and your souls’
concerns daily unto God at the throne of grace in our prayers. And we earnestly
beg this of you, as you would remember what we have spoken to you in the name
of the Lord, so you would remember us to God, and let us have a room and share
in your hearts and prayers. When you get into a corner to pour out your hearts
before God, carry us to God upon your hearts. Do not forget us, but lift up a
prayer to God for us, your (we hope we may say) faithful, though weak, unworthy
ministers, who have laboured among you in the Word and doctrine.
I
shall say no more, but conclude with these two Scriptures: ‘And now, brethren,
I commend you to God, and the word of His grace, which is able to build you up,
and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified,’ Acts 20.32
. The other Scripture is
that request of Paul to, and prayer for, the Hebrews in Chapter 13.18-21: ‘Pray
for us: for we trust we have a good conscience, in all things willing to live
honestly. But I beseech you the rather to do this, that I may be restored to
you the sooner. Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord
Jesus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting
covenant, make you perfect in every good work to do his will, working in you
that which is well pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ; to whom be
glory for ever and ever. Amen.’
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