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[page 29]
William Davies King
Performing the Holy Ghost:
Revelations of the Reverend Edward Irving in 1830-31
Edward
Irving was a British Presbyterian minister who died in 1834 at the age
of 43. He was a powerful orator, a prolific writer, and a devout believer
in Christian deliverance from worldly concerns. He faced his own day
as a critical moment when all souls must be brought to Christ before
the imminent arrival of the end-time, and he sought to carry out his
role as evangelist to the last degree. He was not so strongly opinionated
about theatres as his more strongly Calvinistic brethren, who believed
that theatres were instruments of Satan, but he would surely resist
any analogy between his church services and theatrical performances.
Nevertheless, what happened in his church pressed the limits of performance
in a way that deserves analysis as theatre, as well as comparison to
public demonstrations of scientific phenomena. Seeking the larger context
in which these episodes should be understood involves asking how something
performed can undermine the power structure of the institution which
sponsors the performance, and particularly how a "dark" phenomenon,
such as an act which is thought to be driven by Satan, can expose the
insubstantiality of the enlightened institution which is aimed at eliminating
the possibility of such an act.
Around
1830, at just about the same time as the controversial Reform Bill of
1832 was being debated in Parliament, a parallel controversy was raging
in the Established Church of Scotland. The Reform Bill would greatly
increase the electorate and lessen the power of the nobility over the
state, thus taking a significant step in the direction of re-centering
the state's authority over the rights and duties of its citizens. Certain
elements within the Scottish Presbyterian church had been seeking for
nearly two centuries to reaffirm the church as the state religion by
reconciling differences with the Episcopal Church of England. The Church
of Scotland operated under the jurisdiction of the national courts until
1834, and the assignment of ministers to parishes was still done by
noble patronage. Dissenting elements within the Presbyterian church
agitated for Spiritual Independence, by which they meant a church that
[page 30] would have Christ alone
as its sovereign and judge. The area of sharpest controversy was ministerial
appointment.
The
Presbyterian Church operates by means of the Presbytery, the assemblies
and councils of elders who come from among the laity (the parishioners)
as well as the clergy and who represent the body at regional and national
meetings of the church. In contrast, the Catholic Church and the Church
of England operate with a prelacy, an ecclesiastical hierarchy headed
by the Pope (for Catholics) or the archbishop and a set of bishops for
the Anglicans. The Presbytery ordains the minister of the Presbyterian
Church. The bishops ordain the minister of the Episcopal Church. The
bishops are considered the nobility, whether they were born noble, (which
was still usually the case in this period,) or not, and who usually
answers the "call" of the parish. That is, when a position
becomes vacant, the presbyters seek a suitable minister, often from
within the parish.
However,
the heritage of most parish churches is that the sitting, i.e. manse
(or parish house), the glebe (the parish land, which might be revenue-producing),
and all the emoluments, might have been endowed by the local nobility
who at one time had authority to appoint a minister. That authority
was still reserved by the bishops of the Church of England and by the
House of Lords, i.e. central state authority and ministerial authority.
In some notable cases during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
the choice of the parish (the laity) conflicted with the choice that
came from the system of patronage. This led to considerable internal
tension within the church.
Church
and state were still deeply intertwined through this same period, and
it is impossible to separate disagreements about the order of the Presbyterian
Church from the political controversies of the day. Generally speaking,
the Presbyterian Church administered its affairs by means of its ministers
and presbyters, thus generally resembling the structure of government
that had emerged in England in the eighteenth century, a structure of
ministers and elected representatives. A modern scholar, Mehl, has characterized
the presbyterian synodal system as
democratic and anti-episcopalian. It is democratic in the sense that
it rests on the people, the members of the parishes, which originates
all delegations and mandates. But it originates them only, for to
the degree that a person rises in the hierarchy, the pressure from
the base is diminished and the highest officials have a [page
31] real independence vis-à-vis the parishes.
Furthermore and this is the anti-episcopalian principle
the presidents of the various executive councils are elected for terms,
and are presidents only in their councils, which is to say that they
do not have an intrinsic authority.(1)
Many of the political reforms of the
period following the French Revolution were aimed at diffusing the remnants
of noble patronage and royal prerogative within the government, and
the Reform Bill of 1834 was a culminating moment in this trend. The
Presbyterian Church was moderate among the Protestant sects in its understanding
of the principle of the universal priesthood of the faithful
that is, the initially Catholic idea that personal devotion to Christ
was the sole requirement for church membership and incorporation in
its body. Martin Luther had adopted this idea from medieval Catholic
doctrine and extended it to suggest that equal authority should be vested
in all believers. Priesthood among Lutherans was often little more than
an organizational convenience and principally conceived as the ministering
of the word of God by someone who was well-informed of the Scriptures
but of no special grace.
Among
Presbyterians in the eighteenth century, the ministerial office was
for many a similar convenience, the practical designation of one among
the devout who could preach, baptize, administer the sacraments, and
so on. For some the choice was a matter of the skills and moral character
of the designated one, who, after all, might be a choice imposed upon
the church by the patronage system. Given that the Biblical sense of
the word which is translated as "ministry," the diakonia,
meant "service," the association of the ministry with nobility
and privilege might have seemed especially paradoxical.(2) For a growing
segment of Presbyterians toward the end of the eighteenth century, and
even more so in the early nineteenth century, the indispensable requirement
for a minister was that he be a servant solely of Christ and filled
with the Holy Spirit.
The
ministry in the episcopal church derived its authority from the apostolic
succession, that is, the unbroken chain of discipleship linking a present-day
bishop to the original apostles. The image was of an inherited holiness,
and ordination was the passing on of that tradition. The Evangelical
Presbyterian minister, by contrast, derived his authority from the experience
of [page 32] being filled with the
power of the Holy Spirit and demonstrated that power by his words and
deeds, in accordance with the words and deeds of the original apostles.
Ordination was a certification of that power.
The
Presbyterian Evangelicals were largely inspired by the Great Awakening
and the revivalist movements of the eighteenth century, but even the
more extreme among them sought to retain the institutional strength
of the church. David Bebbington has made a persuasive case that the
values of the revivalists in the eighteenth century need not be seen
as antithetical to the values of the ideologues of the Enlightenment
and the Age of Reason. Though there were some among the latter who disparaged
the role of religion in an enlightened society and who questioned the
very existence of God, the Evangelicals themselves promoted their new
perspectives on religious experience in terms that were perfectly consistent
with Enlightenment values. For them, attaining faith was akin to acquiring
a new sense by which the world could be known. They framed this new
experience in terms of empiricism, an experiment in the workings of
God, and often directly in terms of light, progress, and liberation
from superstition. The goal was to bring order and balance out of chaos,
knowledge out of ignorance. In all these ways, the discourse of revivalism
is consistent with the Enlightenment.(3) The Scottish Presbyterian version
of this Evangelical impulse, during the eighteenth century, was still
more in line with the values of the Enlightenment than the Methodists
and Independents. For the Presbyterians, the minister ought to be a
man who had received a "call," who had personally experienced
a conversion to true faith, who took Christ as the essential agent of
salvation, who upheld the Bible as an absolute authority, and who sought
to spread the gospel throughout the earth. But the minister was also
an administrator, an officer of the church, and an upholder of its authority,
which included the subservient role of the laity. It is in this context
that Edward Irving came into the ministry.
Irving took strong interest in the role of the minister from his childhood
years in Annan, Scotland. As a boy he read Richard Hooker's formidable
classic of Anglican theology and apostolic practice, Of the Laws
of Ecclesiastical Polity. A sixteenth scholar, Hooker argues for
the reasonableness of the episcopacy based on apostolic succession,
but maintains that the church of [page 33]
the present day must respond to the needs and situation of the polity.
Shaw, a modern scholar, summarizes Hooker's opinion:
The Christian Society, the Church, has power to legislate for her
well-being and order and to appoint ceremonies, her authority being
final in this respect. All, therefore, who are born within the borders
of a State Church must give their obedience to her laws while they
operate, though they may be changed as circumstances may demand. .
. . The Church of England was one aspect of the State which, in virtue
of this establishment, gave its acknowledgment of God; and just as
one born within the realm is a subject of the king, so he is by birth
a member of the church.(4)
The Presbyterian Church was born in dissent
against the Established Church of England, and so these ideas posed
a challenge to the young Edward Irving. He proposed that the Presbyterian
Church was itself an adaptation of the ancient order to the fresh circumstances
of the present. He took to heart Hooker's declaration that the priest
is the person who receives God's power, which "translateth out
of darkness into glory".(5) Thus, by means of the evangelical experience,
the Presbyterian minister receives the apostolic succession and by the
power of his ministry passes it along. Irving, too, like Hooker, maintains
the political authority of the church, in this case the Presbyterian
Church, and its power to maintain order by means of laws. The apostolic
succession which gave rise to the Episcopal Church was, in his view,
a corruption of the tradition. What was needed to maintain the holiness
of the church was not bishops but ministers of God, which Irving took
to mean men who had been filled with the Holy Spirit as the original
apostles had been on the day of Pentecost.
Irving studied the role of minister as a young man, rehearsed it in
a country parish, understudied with the time's eminent Dr. Chalmers
in Glasgow, then played it in full in London, until controversy and
then death brought his performance to an end. He applied himself with
ferocious energy, executing his parish duties with unfailing diligence,
and preaching and writing with passion. Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
Thomas Carlyle both considered him one of the remarkable men of the
age, a genius, a hero, and (without using the term) a romantic actor.
[page 34] Carlyle, whose wife, Jane,
had once been the object of Irving's passion, (although Irving ultimately
married another woman,) addressed the theatricality of Irving's performance:
We enjoyed the broad potency of his delineations, exhortations, and
free flowing eloquences. . . . From the first Irving read his discourses,
but not in a servile manner; of attitude, gesture, elocution there
was no neglect. His voice was very fine; melodious depth, strength,
clearness, its chief characteristics. . . . He affected the Miltonic
or old English Puritan style, and strove visibly to imitate it more
and more till almost the end of his career, when indeed it had become
his own, and was the language he used in utmost heat of business for
expressing his meaning. At this time and for years afterwards there
was something of preconceived intention visible in it, in fact of
real affectation.(6)
Coleridge considered Irving more of an
embodiment of the spirit of Luther and the Reformers than any man living,
"yea, than any man of this and the last century. I see in Edward
Irving, a minister of Christ after the order of Paul".(7) Chalmers
observed that between Irving and Coleridge lay a "secret and, to
me, unintelligible communion of spirit . . . on the ground of a certain
German mystical and transcendental poetry".(8) These unusual powers
brought Irving in from the provinces at an early age, and his influence
came to a climax in a new church in Regent Square in 1827. His performance
as a preacher was frequently compared to that of a leading player, such
as in the following excerpt from a satirical poem from 1823, initially
published in the Times:
The Chapel's like a playhouse quite,
When thronged on Mr. Liston's night;
The boxes, gall'ries, bursting tight,
[page
35] Besides a very full pit.
And there they crowd to hear their DOOM
From one who talks like DOCTOR HUME,
And works and jerks like LAWYER BROUGHAM,
Exalted
in a pulpit.(9)
During these years he was devoting himself
to exposition of the prophetic literature in the Bible and adopting
the prophetic voice in his preaching. An attorney named Robert Baxter,
who will figure large in this essay, described Irving's preaching in
terms that echo the conservative reaction to romantic acting:
His mind
is so imaginative as almost to scorn precision of ideas, and his views
will thus continuously vary, without himself being aware of it. His
energy and activity, swelling into impetuosity, leave him peculiarly
open to error, in all subjects which require deep thought and patient
and continued investigation.
With the
brightest talents, no man was ever perhaps less qualified to investigate
and unfold the deeper mysteries of religion, which not only require
precision of thought, but a continued watchfulness and patient correction
of terms in their statement.(10)
These quotations show that a minister's
performance was evaluated in terms of truth or authenticity, based on
degrees of effectiveness which could be analyzed in material terms
gesture, voice, carriage exactly like a stage actor, except that
in the minister's case the performer stands in for the word of God.
The tension between the material and the spiritual was heightened in
Irving's case because his performance carried (for most) such authority,
held such power, that audiences at time lost sight of his merely human
quality. The theological substance of his preaching only increased this
stress.
Two issues came to dominate Irving's preaching during his sudden rise
to fame in the early 1820s. First, he sought to resolve some of the
questions surrounding Christ's incarnation. [page
36] To what degree had He taken on the reality of human nature?
In particular, to what degree had he known or incorporated the original
sin to which humans are subject? To this question he would return repeatedly
over the next decade. Second, he became convinced that the world had
already experienced virtually all that the Bible foretold in its prophetic
literature, and that therefore the apocalypse must be imminent. The
lack of faith in the modern world necessitated its doom as a second
Babylon. Since the world was facing its end, the "signs and wonders"
foretold by the Bible must also be nigh, all manifestations of the "outpouring
of the Holy Spirit." Many had interpreted the rise of Napoleon
in terms of the appearance of the Antichrist, and millennial predictions
were frequently voiced, though less commonly among the Presbyterian
clergy. Many religious leaders, including Irving, felt a sense of urgency
at this moment (a time of surging imperialism) to spread the Gospel
to as many people as possible throughout the world and bring them to
salvation before the end-time.
In
1828, Irving went on a speaking tour of Scotland and there sparked controversy
by his preaching on the subject of Christ's incarnation, at once expressing
an opinion more Calvinistic than most Presbyterians of the day in its
emphasis on sin, but also more hopeful than most Calvinists in that
he suggested that one could become purified in the flesh by the power
of God. Certain theologians, including officers of the Church of Scotland
declared heretical Irving's opinions about the presence of sin in the
incarnated Christ, and Irving replied in the pulpit and in print. Over
the next few years this controversy would lead to trial and conviction.
In the meanwhile, however, Irving found himself fascinated by the case
of a beautiful but sickly young Scottish woman, Mary Campbell, the sister
of a saintly woman who had died recently of tuberculosis. Irving visited
the Campbell house and found young Mary to be an inspiring, ecstatic
figure, deeply enthusiastic about communicating the word of God to the
heathen. Irving himself had just a few years earlier lost a child and
had become convinced that disease signified the presence of Satan, and
only by faith could health be restored. By the force of her own holy
determination, Mary Campbell became convinced that she herself could
be healed and would soon receive the apostolic gifts, including the
gifts of prophecy and speaking in tongues. It seemed obvious to the
young woman that the gift of tongues would resolve the problem faced
by the would-be missionaries, namely how to communicate with the heathen.
Early in 1830, when Irving was back in London, Mary Campbell did feel
the Holy Ghost come upon her and compel her to speak in a foreign language,
which she subsequently declared was the language of the [page
37] Pelew Islanders. Later she claimed to have added Turkish
and Chinese. Irving's first comprehensive biographer, Mrs. Oliphant,
analyzes the "dubious cradle" of circumstances from which
came this astonishing event:
The first speaker with tongues was precisely
the individual whom, under the supposition that they were no more
supernatural than other utterances of passion or fervour, one would
naturally fix upon as the probable initiator of such a system. An
amount of genius and singular adaptability which seems to have fitted
her for taking a place in society far above that to which she had
been accustomed; a faculty of representing her own proceedings so
as, whether wrong or right, to exculpate herself, and interest even
those who were opposed to her; a conviction, founded perhaps upon
her sister's well-known character, and the prominent position she
herself was consequently placed in, that something notable was expected
from her; and the joint stimulus of admiration and scoffing
all mingled with a sincere desire to serve God and advance His glory,
were powerful agencies in one young, enthusiastic, and inexperienced
spirit. And when to all these kindling elements came that fire of
suggestion, at first rejected, afterwards warmly received, and blazing
forth at last in so wonderfully literal an answer, it is impossible
to feel how many earthly predisposing causes there were which corresponded
with, even if they did not actually produce, the result.(11)
Mrs. Oliphant cannot help but admire
this humble young woman's seizure of the rare opportunity to become
the focal point of discussion, a figure of wonderful power. Word spread
of this remarkable event, and soon there were other cases of healing
and speaking in tongues. The very report of one of these incidents led
Mary Campbell to rise up from her sickbed and declare herself healed.
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