15 November 1794 A.D. Rev. John Witherspoon Passes—Scots Presbyterian,
Signer of Declaration of Independence, President of Princeton College, & Educator of Early Colonial Leaders
November 15: Rev. John Witherspoon
The Preacher and Politician Meets His
Savior
These
days, we don’t meet many preachers or politicians who have accomplished as
much in the realms of both church and state as the Rev. John Witherspoon did in
his seventy-one years of life—and those accomplishments spanned two nations, as
well! And that is the reason why we have dealt with this man and his ministry
on five separate dates, this one included. (From earlier year’s here on
TDPH, see also February 5, May 17,August
7, and October 20). He had a well-deserved
reputation as one who was faithful to his Savior, to the saints of God, and to
the average citizens of this great republic. He would go to be with his Lord
and King on November 15,
1794.
Born
in Scotland and raised to an effective ministry for the kingdom of God there in
that “mother country,” Witherspoon answered the call to come to the
American colonies. John and Elizabeth Witherspoon, along with their five
children, traveled here by ship in 1768. Taking the presidency of the
College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), he brought stability to
that educational facility in their instruction, library, and financial
matters. In the twenty-six years in which he was president, preaching in the
nearby Princeton Presbyterian Church known as Nassau Presbyterian, which he
founded, and teaching six courses of college level instruction, he taught a
president of the United States (James Madison), a Vice-president, nine cabinet
members, twenty-one senators, thirty-nine congressmen, three justices of the
Supreme Court of the United States, twelve state governors, five members of the
Constitutional Convention in 1787, and fifty-two delegates out of one
hundred and eighty-eight teaching and ruling elders of the first General
Assembly in 1789 of the Presbyterian Church in America. Talk about a vital
presence in both the church and the state!
We
have all heard of John Witherspoon being the only clergyman who signed the
Declaration of Independence, present on that occasion as one of four delegates
from the State of New Jersey. But how many of us are aware of the fact
that he was to serve on one hundred of the committees working to set up the new
nation? He helped draft the Acts of Confederation and supported the
adoption of the United States Constitution.
Despite
the importance of this civil side of John Witherspoon, he never forgot that
first and foremost, he was a herald of the gospel. Consider his words in a
sermon he preached in 1758:
“I
shall now conclude my discourse by preaching this Savior to all who hear
me, and entreating you to believe in Jesus Christ, for there is no salvation in
any other. If you are not reconciled to God through Jesus Christ, if you are
not clothed with the spotless robe of His righteousness, you must forever
perish.”
Witherspoon
understood that, as his precious Savior put it in the gospels, you
could possess the whole world but lose your own soul outside of Jesus Christ.
There was and is no profit in that sad situation.
John
Witherspoon would become blind two years before his death at
seventy-one years of age. He is buried in the Princeton Cemetery with
an inscription on his tombstone of 239 words, all in Latin!
Words to live by: It is
rare to find someone in history who accomplished so much for church and
state. Usually, when we find someone who has been known for his work in
government, it is at the impoverishment of his Christian testimony. But in John
Witherspoon’s faith and life, he simply believed strongly that his faith should
impact every area of life, including that of the national affairs of his
new country. This culture mandate is no different from what is demanded
of all believers today. We must enter into every sphere of life with the
changeless message of the gospel, seeking to influence those spheres in which
God has placed us for His glory and the good of the people found there.
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