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Title: A Voice from the Fire - A Sermon occasioned by the public burning of the Bible at Kingstown, by the Redemptorist Fathers, on the 5th of November, 1855 Author: Wallace, Robert Language: English As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available. *** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "A Voice from the Fire - A Sermon occasioned by the public burning of the Bible at Kingstown, by the Redemptorist Fathers, on the 5th of November, 1855" *** Transcribed from the 1855 John Robertson edition by David Price. A VOICE FROM THE FIRE: A Sermon OCCASIONED BY THE PUBLIC BURNING OF THE BIBLE AT KINGSTOWN, BY THE REDEMPTORIST FATHERS, ON THE 5TH OF NOVEMBER, 1855. * * * * * PREACHED BY THE REV. ROBERT WALLACE. * * * * * DUBLIN: JOHN ROBERTSON, 3 GRAFTON-STREET. 1855. * * * * * DUBLIN: PRINTED BY WHITE, BROTHERS, 45 Fleet-street. A SERMON. “And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire: ye heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude; only ye heard a voice. And he declared unto you his covenant which he commanded you to perform, even ten commandments; and he wrote them upon two tables of stone. And the Lord commanded me at that time to teach you statutes and judgments, that ye might do them in the land whither ye go over to possess it. Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in Horeb, out of the midst of the fire, lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female.”—DEUT. iv. 12–17, _the passage on the outer page of the fragment taken out of the Fire_, _and given to the Preacher upon the spot_. “GOD who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, and by whom also he made the worlds. Therefore we ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard. For if they escaped not who refused him who spake on earth, much more shall not we escape if we turn away from him that speaketh from heaven.” Such are the solemn sanctions under which God has entrusted us with the Book of Life; nor can these sanctions be considered too weighty by any who rightly appreciate that gift. Next to the gift of God’s incarnate Son and of his Blessed Spirit, we rank the Book divine. We are thankful for the Church and its ordinances and means, and if we may distinguish between the Church and its ministers, we are thankful for them too; but we value the Sacred Volume above all institutions, however sacred, and above all men of whatever character. It is not our intention at this time to elaborate arguments for the necessity of a divine revelation; suffice to say, that without one we could have no certainty in matters of faith, and no authorised standard in matters of morality. That “the world by wisdom knew not God” is proved by the history of all nations, ancient and modern. The classic times of Greece and Rome were as destitute of correct knowledge of the true God as were the times most distant and barbaric, while the highest culture of arts and science did nothing whatever for pure morality; God, therefore, for his own glory and man’s good, condescended to speak from heaven, and give us a revelation of his will. It was necessary that this revelation should be a written one: for in matters of such importance no man could be satisfied with its transmission by tradition. Tradition never did and never can transmit any dictate of either God or man with certainty. What tradition can do as a medium of supplying knowledge from the past may be seen in the case of those nations which bordered the kingdom of Israel—whose fathers, descending from the patriarchs, must have had some knowledge of both God’s character and his claims; yet these nations had forgotten all, and lapsed into the most contemptible idolatry. It may be seen, in the case of the Israelites themselves. How simple and correct the views which Abraham their father entertained of God, and yet so completely did his descendants forget all this during their sojourn in Egypt that Moses found it necessary to ask the Lord by what name he should speak of him to them. The uncertainty of tradition may be further seen by a reference to the days of our Lord, when we find that by it the elders made void the law of God. Tradition is often at fault in its very origin. Look at one which rose among the disciples themselves. The Saviour, before ascending to heaven, informed Peter of the manner of his death, on which this Apostle was curious to know what should be the lot of John, who was coming up at the time. The Lord did not think it wise to satisfy that curiosity, and said, “If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee, follow thou me.” Then went this saying abroad among the brethren, that that disciple should not die; yet the sacred historian tells us, that for this tradition there was no foundation in fact. And who among us could tell in this day what were the doctrines of our own glorious Reformers, if their teachings had not been placed upon record? Whether, therefore, the dictum be inspired or uninspired, it cannot with any certainty and authority be transmitted through the medium of tradition. God, therefore, not only spoke from heaven, but commanded that the Scriptures should be “_written for our learning_.” But the passage before us not only speaks of a record of the teachings and commandments of God, it also informs us that in the absence or neglect of that record men will be not merely ignorant of God’s character, but corrupt themselves, and fall into idolatry. It therefore seems to teach with great force the tendency of our nature to some religious system, and to us it appears plain that whether we trace that tendency to traditions of the past, to some law of the mind, or to the “light which lighteneth every man that cometh into the world,” the fact itself is indisputable. Man every where seems to feel a need of something beyond himself to which to look, on which to lean—the object of his hope, or the object of his dread. And where is it that men do not realize the warning of the text, that without the Word of God they will corrupt themselves and set up images, the likeness of male or female, or some other thing. Perhaps, indeed, no age of the world, and no portion of the human race, could more fully verify the fact than the times in which we live, and the men whose conduct is the occasion of these remarks. They have not thought it needful to consult the Word of God to remember his TEN commandments, and have therefore forgotten that God is not represented by any similitudes, and have made to themselves images, the likeness of male and of female. There is, indeed, so striking a discrepancy between the text and the worship of images that it can surprise no one that those who practise the one should renounce the other. No one can be pleased with that which bears testimony against conduct he is not prepared to abandon. “_Every one that doeth evil hateth the light_, _neither cometh to the light_, _lest his deeds should be reproved_.” But since the right course is to abandon the practice, not to insult the witness, this discrepancy is not a mitigation but an aggravation of the conduct of which we complain. We need not say that we refer to the burning of the Holy Bible in open day, very near the place in which we are met, and under the eye of Roman Catholic and Protestant. We are aware that from policy or shame the deed has been denied, and, therefore, our first business will be to place before you the evidence upon which our charge rests. On Monday last, about half-past ten o’clock in the morning, having heard that Bibles were being burned in the yard of the Roman Catholic Chapel, we proceeded to the spot; there, at the lower end of the chapel, and in sight of every one that passed up or down the street, we saw a large heap of cinders from books or paper. Around the edges of the heap there were patches of flame. A number of persons, one of them a boy in the dress of an acholyte, stood round the fire. They were kicking books, that were evidently small pocket Bibles, into the fire. One of these persons turned round and said, “_We are burning Bibles_,” and asked, “Have you any more to bring?” And then, to leave no doubt upon our mind, took up a portion of one out of the fire before our eyes and placed it in our hands. This fragment you now behold, and from its first page we have selected the text. Can evidence like this be disputed or set aside? Our next duty will be to consider, the _wickedness_ of the deed. In doing this we wish you to observe, that God threatens with severe punishment those persons who merely do not receive the truth in the love of it; still more severely such as will not hear, who turn away the shoulder or stop the ear; but most of all the men who dare to treat his commandment with contempt. Now we say that the act complained of was one that treated the Word of God with the utmost contempt possible. The burning of a book is every where, and from time immemorial has been, looked upon as the worst brand that can be stamped upon its character. In the times of the Apostles we read of some who, when converted from their evil practices, brought their curious books of occult arts and burned them as evidence of their detestation of the books and the sincerity of their conversion. The burning has been sometimes conducted by the hands of the common executioner. With the knowledge of these facts, and that the deed should be regarded in this light, the Holy Book of God was, in this nineteenth century of the Christian Era, committed to the consuming flame by the authority of the Redemptorist Fathers. It must not be pleaded, as any mitigation of the daring impiety, that it was the Protestant version that was burned: for many Roman Catholics of high authority have admitted this version to be the Word of God, and the difference between it and the Douay version, in all essential matters, is not such as to allow any candid man of either creed to hesitate to confess that either is the Holy Bible. This deed was done under the most aggravating circumstances. It would have been great rebellion against God to have burned his Word alone in one’s own chamber; but in that case the insult would not have been so emphatic or so daring. It was done before the face of many Protestants, and under such circumstances that it must come to the knowledge of all Protestants in the town, if not throughout the kingdom. It was an act not merely calculated to insult their creed, but to provoke them in the highest degree. The Book of God was burned in revolting association. To increase the ignominy of our Lord’s crucifixion he was placed between two thieves; malefactors who, according to their own admission, suffered justly. “He was numbered with transgressors.” On the same principle, to make the odium cast upon the precious volume more complete, it was placed in the same heap with the worst productions of infidelity and licentiousness. This outrage upon Protestant feeling was committed at a time when it became all men who loved their country to unite in seeking its welfare. Amidst the hardships and dangers of war, and when we were looking forward with hope to see our country fully resuscitated from the dreadful consequences of pestilence and famine. Thus we find in every point of view, and by all its accompaniments, the deed was one of daring impiety and provocation. What judgments may be expected to follow. Can any one suppose that God will not visit for these things? that he will not be avenged for such a deed as this. “Because I called and ye refused; I will laugh at your calamities and mock when your fear cometh.” This seems specially to apply to individuals. “If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book; and if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book.” This seems to refer to the Church. “Because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved, God shall send them strong delusion—that they should believe a lie, that they all might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.” This evidently applies to such as knowingly turn from the true to a false system. What God will do unto the nation that turns away from and despises the holy Word of God may be seen in such threatenings as the following: “If thou wilt not observe to do all the words of this law that are written in this book, that thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name, The Lord Thy God, then the Lord will make thy plagues wonderful, and the plagues of thy seed, even great plagues, and of long continuance, and sore sickness, and of long continuance. And it shall come to pass that as the Lord rejoiced over you to do you good, and to multiply you, so the Lord will rejoice over you to destroy, and to bring you to nought.” All these judgments are threatened against the rejection of the Word—in fact, the mere neglect of it: public insult never seemed to be contemplated at all. The only instance upon record, in any wise resembling the deed we are speaking of, is that of Jehoiakim, who burned the roll containing the prophecy which God had commanded Jeremiah to utter against Jerusalem. And for this burning God threatened the king with early death; informed him he should have the burial of an ass; should have no man to sit upon his throne, and that the nation he ruled over should be visited with wasting desolation. Now, to all these judgments is the nation liable that can be guilty of a crime like this. All who approve of the deed, or who do not protest against it, must be in danger of God’s displeasure; and we remember that Bible burning was practised just before the judgments of 1846. Let us, then, address a few observations on this solemn subject to all classes in the land. And, first, to Roman Catholics themselves, at least, to such as have any moderation and candour. Surely there must be many among them who do not approve the deed. We would ask the men of intelligence, and rank, and property—men who are anxious for the welfare of their country, and who especially desire the social amelioration of the poorer classes. What do these men expect from the burning of that book which more than any other teaches the principles of industry, and leads, under God, to the exercise of self-reliance? What do those men hope from the deed, who have publicly acknowledged that the difference between Ulster and other parts of Ireland in these respects is traceable to the circulation of the Bible alone? We ask such Romanists as have any interest in literature, what they think of the burning of a book that has done more for the advancement of true learning than all others put together? We ask the men of that creed who profess liberal principles, what they think of the burning of a book which is the Magna Charta of our privileges—the palladium of our civil and religious liberty? Above all, we ask those who have any interest in piety or morality, do they consent to ignore a book which is the source of the one and standard of the other? Now, it will not do for such Roman Catholics as these to say, they did not do the deed, and were not cognizant of it. It was done under the direction of their clergy; and, until they protest against the deed, they must be held answerable for its results. Suppose the deed to have been done—if I may venture upon such a supposition—by a minister of any Protestant community, would not every minister and every man of that community throughout the kingdom be held accountable for the outrage? And we do not hesitate to tell the Roman Catholics that their Protestant fellow countrymen can place no confidence in any profession of moderation or liberality till they wash their hands of an enormity such as this. We have been informed that during the visit of these men many persons from the different Protestant bodies have joined the Church of Rome. Whether this be so or not, we have no means to determine, and God forbid that we should interfere with the fullest exercise of the understanding or liberty of conscience, but if there have been any who, from levity of disposition or sinister motives, have forsaken the teaching of the Scriptures, and have aided in this deed or given it their countenance, we dare not address to them other language than that of this holy book: “For if we sin wilfully, after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin; but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries.” Lastly, we address ourselves to Protestants: and what duties devolve on them in this case? We hope no one will be so foolish as to say—none. The persons concerned in this act are our fellow-subjects—our next-door neighbours—and with whom we are brought into contact every day in the duties of life; it is therefore impossible to consider ourselves mere disinterested hearers or spectators of the deed. As citizens, as Christians—and, above all, as lovers of the Bible, we are deeply concerned therein. Let us, then, first of all, thoroughly appreciate its real character. There must be no blinking the question or softening it down; there could be no real charity or generosity in this, but a mere extenuation of a dreadful crime. We must apprehend the danger of living in contact with a system that could sanction it, and rouse ourselves to action. We must not, indeed, transfer the hatred we bear to the act to those who committed it. This may be hard; but the Gospel requires it. There must be no anger, malice, or revenge—nothing inconsistent with the utmost charity, the love of God and man. But while we must think nothing, feel nothing, do nothing, which charity forbids; all that charity allows, all that it demands, is expected from us now. The love of country—the love of learning—of liberty, religion, and of God—calls us to wake to action. All that we can do by prayer, by personal effort, by the multiplication of evangelical agencies, is forced upon us now. Especially, what a lecture does this read us on union among ourselves, union among all evangelical denominations. In view of transactions like this what are our differences—can they be worthy one unbrotherly thought. Let us love our several systems much, but our Saviour more; let us wish well to our party, but long more eagerly for the salvation of our country. Let us unite to press upon all men more fully the great doctrine of the Reformation and of the Bible—justification by faith alone. Let us agree to declare throughout the length and breadth of the land that he that hath the Son hath life. He that hath the Son as the foundation of his faith—he that hath the Son within him as the hope of glory—that hath the Son before him as the pattern of his life—he, whatever his creed or his party, hath life; he lives “by the faith of the Son of God” on earth, and is passing to the fuller life in heaven. “But,” on the other hand, “he that hath not the Son hath not life;” he that hath not the Son in these respects, with whatever church he stands connected—whatever opinions he subscribes—whatever forms he practises—hath no real life on earth, and can have none in heaven. Should God of his infinite mercy, as the result of these doings, give us that grace, that will unite us more closely among ourselves, give us more singleness of eye in our efforts, and supply us with greater zeal for the salvation of our fellow-countrymen—what was intended by the Redemptorist Fathers as the laying of the topstone of their triumph may turn out the loosening of a stone in the mystic building, and accelerate the period when heaven and earth will unite in the cry—“BABYLON THE GREAT IS FALLEN!” *** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "A Voice from the Fire - A Sermon occasioned by the public burning of the Bible at Kingstown, by the Redemptorist Fathers, on the 5th of November, 1855" *** Copyright 2023 LibraryBlog. All rights reserved.