24 July 1858 A.D. A Pastor’s Farewell to his Study
July 24: A Pastor’s Farewell to his
Study
A few years back, an alert ruling elder
at the Hixson Presbyterian Church spotted an old copy of The Central
Presbyterian at a local sale. Purchasing the old newspaper, he then graciously
donated it to the PCA Historical Center. Reproduced here is one of the articles
from that July
24, 1858 issue.
The language reflects the era, and the piece is obviously sentimental in
nature, but interesting nonetheless —
A
Pastor’s Farewell to his Study.
Providence
has assigned me another location, and I must leave, among other places greatly
endeared, that upper chamber, called the study. It is now more than
twenty years since I first took possession of it. It seemed an
interesting locality then; but how much has occurred since to give
the place a deeper hold upon my mind.
Sermons have been studied
out here, with long and earnest thought. And there they lie on that
shelf, piles of them. They have had their day. The simple author
thought quite highly of, now and then, of one of them, when in the glow and
excitement of effort he finished the last sentence. But the mist in which
they loomed up so auspiciously, has passed away and their glory has drooped
sadly. He does not exactly know how much light they gave at first; but he
has tried some of them lately, and he has the comfort of saying, they ignite
freely, and give a cheerful radiance in the place of the ordinary kinds of
in-door illumination.
[Above right: A drawing of Charles Hodge's study, where he met
his classes from 1833 to 1836, when he suffered from lameness.]
There
are ranges of books. Old men are there—fathers and ancients. And
young men are there; some of them wiser than their fathers—others less
so. They have stood there through slowly rolling years. They
disagree, some of them, with each other. And the words of some of them
are like those of a fierce hussar in anger with his fellow. But they have
not broken the peace of the study, standing quietly side by side.
There
is a book. As I look at it in its place upon the shelf, it awakens
interesting trains of thought. I will take it down and read the
inscription on the fly-leaf. The hand is fair, and the heart was warm
that dictated the utterance made by that pen. But they use no such things
where the writer has gone. It is a good book—a good man gave it, who has
gone to be with the good. And good the work did me. It will outlive
me, and do good to others. I love to pray for those who may yet use those
books. They will soon be scattered. Let them go. They have
been my pleasant and profitable companions in the study; may they go and do
good, yet greater good to others.
I
look round about the study. That map of the world, how often I have gazed
upon it, as I looked to see where moral darkness yet reigns unbroken and again
to see where the kingdom of Christ has come in the place of Satan’s
kingdom. That map has been a powerful preacher. Silently it
revealed to me those works of God, the continents, the islands, the oceans, the
kingdoms. That map has hung long against the wall. Often as I
rested from driving the pen, and looked up, it caught my eye. There was
the world—light and shadow—civilization and barbarism—delusions hoary with age,
fortified as by mountains and rocks, in the depravity of the heart, and there
was Christianity, a little cloud in the vast horizon, but bright and growing
brighter, and hastening to fill all lands with its brightness. I am much
obliged to that map. It has made many valuable moral impressions upon my
mind.
Another
book arrests my eye. A note, in a fair hand, is pasted on a fly-leaf, and
it reads, “Presented to our pastor by his Bible Class: a small token of their
gratitude for his labors for their good.” The writer was one of the
liveliest of youthful saints, and long since went to the presence of that other
Teacher, who leads his friends to living fountains of waters.
I
muse on. In this room have been numbers of anxious inquirers. “Hit
of the archer,” they came in here, sore wounded, and would fain know how they
might be healed. Some were healed while here, for the Great Physician was
present; and many more, following counsels here given, went away and soon
after, “touching the hem of his garment, were made whole.” They will
never forget this room.
Here
have been those—their number is great—who came here to ask, if Zion’s gates
were open to them, for, hoping in the Saviour’s mercy, they would fain confess
him before men. They told us, who watched at Zion’s gates, why they
wished to come. And most touching tales have here been told of the
anguish of conscious guilt, and of the terrible gloom of a soul that had no
God, of conflict and struggle and temptation, of light dawning upon darkness,
of the calm that followed the storm, of a Saviour found, trusted, loved,
enjoyed. Ornaments they became of Zion below, though not a few of them have
gone up higher.
Sons
and daughters of sorrow have come in here. It would relieve them to tell
their griefs, even to so poor a representative of “the Man of Sorrows,” as the
pastor. Some of them sorrowed as does the world, and groped after
comfort, and found it not because of their unbelief. Others were children
of the Highest, passing under the rod, and through the fire. They came to
see if they could not pick up a crumb that had fallen from the Master’s table,
to see if sorrow’s solace could not be found in what they might hear of Him
“who carried our griefs.” In cases not a few, the weary found rest, and
sorrow’s tears were wiped away, and the retiring mourner could say, “Return
unto thy rest, O my soul, for the Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee.”
Little
children have been here in the pastor’s study. He welcomed them, seeing
the Great Shepherd’s example, and was interested in their childish wonder at so
many books, and pleased their curiosity by such pictures as a place so lean of
that material as the study, could furnish. Those loved little ones!
Childish things have dropped from their hands, for years and years are
gone. They are scattered—some to distant regions of this land, and some
to the farthest realms of the earth; though some in childhood fell asleep, and
others later fell asleep,—
“That
sleep
From which none ever wake to weep.”
But
I must leave the study. Much it has to do with time, more
with eternity—a place of wearisome toil though often of joyful
labor; a place of anxiety and care, mingled with gleams of light from the
celestial land; a place where God was sought for the anxious pastor’s own
soul—oftener for the souls of others; a place, a humble Pisgah, where glimpses
were caught, at times, of the Delectable Mountains and the Celestial City!
My
study! Others will look out of those windows on the pleasant scenery—on
the verdant hills and meadows here, and on the glorious ocean yonder.
Other voices will be heard within these walls. Others will be here, who
have never known what joys and sorrows have been here before them. May it
still be a hallowed place, honored by the occupancy of Pilgrims to nobler
mansions above; a place where others shall try the power of prayer, and know
the sweetness of submission, the strength of faith, the joy of hope, and all
the sacred pleasures which flow from communion with God, the Infinite One, and
the invisible world.
-
H.B.H.
[excerpted
from The Central Presbyterian, vol. 3, no .30 (24 July 1858), pg.
1, and originally published in The Boston Recorder.]
Words to Live By:
We seem to be designed for places. Whether our home, our study, or our church,
we place a special value on these places and derive an earthly comfort from
them unlike any other. But this world is passing, and God has designed us to
have an eye on our eternal home, that we might walk before God in the light of
the living. As we seek His mercy and grace, may our surpassing comfort be found
in Christ alone. As we grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior,
may we be made ready to worship God in sweet fellowship, through all eternity.
For a day in your courts is better
than a thousand elsewhere.
I would rather be a doorkeeper
in the house of my God
than dwell in the tents of
wickedness.
(Psalm 84:10, ESV)
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