|
At
this time, the controversy over Irving's opinions about Christ's incarnation
was coming to a head in the ecclesiastical courts where also several
other manifestations of the evangelical movement were being addressed.
Irving began to meet daily with his staunchest supporters in an early
morning prayer meeting, which was a means of consolidating his power
within the church but which also had the effect of emphasizing the schism.
The crowds drawn [page 38] to these
meetings and all of his services were very large, indeed frequently
overflowing the church, but numerous, too, were his opponents. Mrs.
Oliphant emphasizes that at this time Irving's preaching had gone out
of fashion with his noble and influential congregants, but in their
place came a popular audience who were swept away by the intensity of
Irving's preaching and the overwhelming sense of holiness in the atmosphere.(12)
It was on the basis of these swelling numbers that Irving founded his
hope that Christianity was on the verge of becoming, once again, a living
force in society and not a mere form. And yet, the growing reaction
to what was coming to be called Irvingism could hardly be ignored, and
by the late 1820s even his old friend Carlyle had come to regard Irving
as dangerously outside the spectrum of enlightened opinion and aware
of his failure:
The thought that the Christian religion was again
to dominate all minds, and the world to become an Eden by [Irving's]
thrice-blessed means, was fatally declaring itself to have been
a dream; and he would not consent to believe it such: never he!
That was the secret of his inward quasi-desperate resolutions; out
into the wild struggles and clutchings toward the unattainable,
the unregainable, which were more and more conspicuous in the sequel.(13)
The
fact that Irving was losing the confidence of more noble and distinguished
figures in London society might be seen as an anti-democratic reaction,
or it might be seen as a reaction against the authority and prestige
which Irving wielded as a leader, his exertion of power over an unthinking
mob. Carlyle recalled that Irving "objected clearly to my Reform
Bill notions, found Democracy a thing forbidden, leading down
to outer darkness; I, a thing inevitable, and obliged to lead whithersoever
it could".(14) And yet, in this instance, Irving faced the question
of literally how to place the power of the Holy Ghost, channeled through
these humble parishioners within the power structure of the church.
[page 39] In his morning meetings
Irving called upon God to elevate "the present low state of the
Church" and specifically to bring
apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and
teachers, anointed with the Holy Ghost . . . . and the Lord was
not long in answering our prayers. He sealed first one, and then
another, and then another, and then another; and gave them first
enlargement of spirit in their own devotions, when their souls were
lifted up to God and they closed with him in nearness; He then lifted
them up to pray in a tongue which the apostle Paul says he did more
than they all. . . . I say as it was with Paul at the proper time,
at the fit time, namely, in their private devotions, when they were
rapt up nearest to God, the Spirit took them and made them speak
in a tongue, sometimes singing in a tongue, sometimes speaking words
in a tongue; and by degrees, according as they sought more and more
unto God, this gift was perfected until they were moved to speak
in a tongue, even in the presence of others. But while it was in
this stage I suffered it not in the church, acting according to
the canon of the apostle; and even in private, in my own presence,
I permitted it not; but I heard that it had been done. I would not
have rebuked it, I would have sympathized tenderly with the person
who was carried in the Spirit and lifted up; but in the church I
would not have permitted it. Then, in process of time, perhaps at
the end of a fortnight, the gift perfected itself, so that they
were made to speak in a tongue and to prophesy: that is, to set
forth in English words for exhortation, for edification, and comfort,
for that is the proper definition of prophesying, as was testified
by one of the witnesses. Now, when we had received this into the
church in answer to our prayers, it became me, as the minister of
the church, to try that which we had received.(15)
Having witnessed the extraordinary signs
and wonders, and having found them to be, in his judgment, evidences
of the power of the Holy Ghost working through these parishioners, Irving
pondered this displacement of ministerial power. Canon law makes it
clear that the role of the laity was strictly limited in the service.
Irving himself did not at this time, or ever, to his dismay, speak in
tongues or experience supernatural power except perhaps in the performance
[page 40] of his ministerial duties.
He could preach for two straight hours or more, with impressive power,
but after all there was no miracle in that, merely a remarkable effort.
But here, before him, were living exemplars of the prophetic and apostolic
tradition.
On
Sunday, October 16, 1831, one of the inspired, Miss Hall, was unable
to restrain herself and burst forth with her utterances during the service.
Soon another did the same. Irving then demanded that the empowered speakers
leave, and spontaneously changed his sermon to an exposition of the
fourteenth chapter of Corinthians, which describes the Pentecostal events.
During the service, though, Miss Hall walked into the vestry and, after
erupting first in an unknown tongue, shouted, "How dare ye suppress
the voice of the Lord?"(16) Irving keenly felt the contradiction
between his call for increased holiness among the people and his restraint
of these inspired expostulations. A newspaper account of a service in
which a man "commenced a violent harangue in the unknown tongue"
reports that the whole congregation of more than 2000 rose to its feet
in fear, ladies screamed.(17) The disorderly scene continued for some
minutes: "Many were so alarmed, and others so disgusted, that they
did not return again into the church, and discussed the propriety of
the reverend gentleman suffering the exhibition, and altogether a sensation
was produced which will not be soon forgotten by those who were present".(18)
Thus, the ones who valued the orderliness and hierarchy of the church
resented Irving for not restraining the unruly elements, and the prophets
resented him for the fact that he did not empower them more. Mrs. Oliphant
interprets this moment as a tragic turning point for Irving:
He foresaw, looking steadfastly forward into that
gloom which he was about to enter, that now, at last, this bond of
loyal love [from a united congregation of loyal followers] was about
to be broken, this last guard dispersed from about his heart. He saw
it with anguish and prophetic desolation, his last link to the old
world of hereditary faith and dutiful affection. But though his heart
broke, he [page 41] could not
choose. The warning and reproving voices which interrupted his prayers
and exhortations in private meetings, had by this time risen to their
full mastery over the heart which, entirely believing that they came
from God, had no choice left but to obey them.(19)
So he declared that everyone who had
received the gift of the Holy Ghost should have liberty to speak in
the church, and at this announcement certain of the prophets spoke words
which expressed the sanction of God for this decision.
The Times soon fomented the controversy,
charging Irving with a violation of the church laws and encouraging
the disaffected congregants:
The great body of Mr Irving's adherents would
probably have remained by him if, in his headlong course of enthusiasm,
he could have found a resting-place. They might pardon his nonsense
about the time and circumstances of the millennium. They might smile
at unintelligible disquisitions about 'heads' and 'horns,' and 'trumpets,'
and 'candlesticks,' and 'white and black horses,' in Revelations.
These things might offend the judgment, but did not affect the nerves.
But have we the same excuse for the recent exhibitions with which
the metropolis has been scandalized? Are we to listen to the screaming
of hysterical women, and the ravings of frantic men? Is bawling
to be added to absurdity, and the disturber of a congregation to
escape the police and treadmill, because the person who occupies
the pulpit vouches for his inspiration?(20)
More than merely vouching for their inspiration,
Irving fervently believed the prophets to be operating in the power
of the Holy Ghost, speaking the word of God as true apostles, while
he, a mere minister who could not attest to that power himself, merely
gave them the opportunity. Virtually all the elders of the church walked
out on these demonstrations. When one of them asked to be allowed to
read from the Scriptures a passage giving his reason for leaving the
church, never to return, Irving refused permission. The conflict mounted
to a civil war, with the Presbyterian orthodoxy, proper churchmen, generally
standing in opposition while, taking their place in the still constantly
overflowing services, a group of ever more enthusiastic [page
42] believers exulted in the overthrow of the old institution.
Carlyle characterized the latter as "the rearward of mankind"
and "the crazed and weakliest of [Irving's] wholly rather dim and
weakly flock".(21) Repeatedly, Irving's critics denounced the inspired
ones because of their low class, limited education, and weakness. Another
highly critical contemporary observer, William Jones, emphasized that
Irving had been "prostrating his masculine understanding before
the gabble of two silly women".(22) The image lurking behind all
of this is of an insurrection against a patriarchally defined power
structure, and Irving, who came to prominence as an expression of the
latter, was seen as one who now turned traitor and enabled the rebels.
An obituary of Irving, published in 1835, traced the downward course
of his leadership:
By a fatal chance, Fashion cast her eye on him,
as on some impersonation of Novel-Cameronianism [referring to a
radical splinter group in the early history of Presbyterianism],
some wild product of nature from the wild mountains; Fashion crowded
round him, with her meteor lights and Bacchic dances; breathed her
foul incense on him; intoxicating, poisoning. One may say, it was
his own nobleness that forwarded such ruin: the excess of his sociability
and sympathy, of his value for the suffrages and sympathies of men.
Syren songs, as of a new Moral Reformation . . . sound in the inexperienced
ear and heart. Most seductive, most delusive!(23)
The
spectacle of the upstarts overthrowing the stale forms of yesterday's
church was indeed a remarkable one, especially for those who did not
have much experience of the contemporary theatre and the Romantic actor.
Irving himself had often been described in terms that evoked the heroic
actor, seen in his voice, his demeanor, his purity. William Hazlitt
had in 1825 accounted Irving an exemplar of The Spirit of the Age,
a patchwork of sacred and profane, radical and quaint ideas dressed
up in extravagant fashion, a theatrical figure comparable to [page
43] Kean.(24) As the Romantic actor was seen often to perform
in ways offensive to people of ordinary sensibility, and to bring forward
dark material into the enlightened world, so Irving was widely regarded
as one who had exceeded the bounds of good taste and rationality and
who had touched a deep chord of spirituality, but one that might be
confused with cant or dissimulation. William Jones could not but acknowledge
the remarkable "command of human sympathy" wielded by Irving,
by which he "rivetted the affections of his audience".(25)
However, Jones also observed: "to act the indecorous part and give
it stage effect, it would be difficult to find a person better qualified".(26)
However
theatrical Irving might have seemed, the inspired ones presented a still
more astonishing aspect and stood in contrast to Irving, as different
as Kean and Kemble. The sound of the speaking in tongues during this
period (and at many other times, too) has been repeatedly described
as otherworldly, indeed sublime, and also a little mad. The terms that
are used to describe the divinely inspired utterances consistently parallel
those used to comprehend the work of the stage actor, as in the following
account: "It is the result of the working of the indwelling Spirit,
impelling the subject of it, not without his consciousness, but without
any intention or plan of his own, to utter words which may be for the
edifying of the Church. It seems to proceed from the Spirit working
deeper than a person's own consciousness, and [page
44] bringing forth that which is in him, using him at the
same time according to his own nature, so that peculiarities of expression,
of idiom, and of pronunciation are preserved".(27) Thus, the inspired
words of the Playwright or Character (in this case, God) are spoken
by the actor, or through the actor, but in such a way that the materiality
of the performer, or even the style, would be preserved. Mrs. Oliphant
recalls: "To some, the ecstatic exclamations, with their rolling
syllables and mighty voice, were imposing and awful; to others it was
merely gibberish shouted from stentorian lungs; to others an uneasy
wonder, which it was a relief to find passing into English, even though
the height and strain of sound was undiminished".(28) As an example
of "the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" (Wordsworth's
definition of good poetry), these inspired performances typified a certain
sort of Romantic expression. Irving was himself deeply impressed by
the power and artfulness of these performances:
The
whole utterance, from the beginning to the ending of it, is with a
power, and strength, and fulness, and sometimes rapidity of voice,
altogether different from that of the person's ordinary utterance
in any mood; and I would say, both in its form and in its effects
upon a simple mind, quite supernatural. There is a power in the voice
to thrill the heart and overawe the spirit after a manner which I
have never felt. There is a march, and a majesty, and a sustained
grandeur in the voice, especially of those who prophesy, which I have
never heard even a resemblance to, except now and then in the sublimest
and most impassioned moods of Mrs Siddons and Miss O'Neil. It is a
mere abandonment of all truth to call it screaming or crying; it is
the most majestic and divine utterance which I have ever heard, some
parts of which I have never heard equalled, and no part of it surpassed,
by the finest execution of genius and art exhibited at the oratorios
in the concerts of ancient music. . . . So far from being unmeaning
gibberish, as the thoughtless and heedless sons of Belial have said,
it is regularly formed, well-proportioned, deeply-felt discourse,
which evidently wanteth 'only the ear of him whose native tongue it
is,' to make it a very masterpiece of [page
45] powerful speech.(29)
Of course, whereas the Romantic's transcendence
often comes from a sense of connection to an organic wholeness, the
apostle's transcendence derives from a mystical connection. Indeed,
the process was a direct forerunner of spiritualistic mediumship, though
in this case the channeled voice was God's, as the following account
attests:
These persons, while uttering the unknown sounds,
as also while speaking in the Spirit in their own language, have
every appearance of being under supernatural direction. The manner
and voice are (speaking generally) different from what they are
at other times, and on ordinary occasions. This difference does
not consist merely in the peculiar solemnity and fervour of manner
(which they possess), but their whole deportment gives an impression,
not to be conveyed in words, that their organs are made use of by
supernatural power. In addition to the outward appearances, their
own declarations, as the declarations of honest, pious, and sober
individuals, may with propriety be taken in evidence. They declare
that their organs of speech are made use of by the Spirit of God;
and that they utter that which is given to them, and not the expressions
of their own conceptions, or their own intention.(30)
Once Irving had accepted these utterances
into his services, he became again the minister, interpreting the words
as an elaboration of Scripture and offering his guidance in the interpretation,
but the apostolic effects were quite apart from the powers he proclaimed.
He provided the authority and tranquility to translate their inspiration
into poetry. His decision to give priority to this spoken "Scripture"
and in the process defer his own preordained authority to speak on behalf
of the written Scripture might be deconstructed as an attempt to re-found
representation upon presence at a moment when Being itself seemed at
an end with the imminent arrival of the end-time.
An
astonishing and, for the present purposes, crucial account of this situation
comes from Robert Baxter's Narrative of Facts, Characterizing the
Supernatural Manifestations in Members of Mr. Irving's Congregation,
and Other Individuals in England, Scotland, and Formerly in the Writer
[page 46] Himself, published
in 1833. Baxter was a senior partner in a prominent law firm, a well-educated
man with an inquiring mind, who paid close attention to questions of
Presbyterian church doctrine. He recalls his feelings of awe and reverence
as he listened to two of the inspired speakers at one of the prayer-meetings
and his perfect amazement when he felt himself seized by the power.
Suddenly he heard issuing from his own mouth a voice rebuking him for
not prophesying that the second coming of Christ was near and that the
messengers of the Lord should go immediately to the ends of the earth,
testifying to the power of God. Baxter owns that he had earlier felt
guilt for not declaring these ideas, which had lurked within his thoughts
but had been repressed. At once, the inspired ones declared the truth
and holiness of what he had said. Baxter soon became a leading figure
among the apostles, speaking mostly prophetically, once for over two
hours, declaring such things as the coming of baptism by fire and the
imminence of the moment in 1260 days when the saints would
be taken up to Heaven, as prophesied in Revelations 11. His report of
the experience of speaking prophetically was without will or pretext,
an embodiment of presence: "The things I was made to utter, flashed
in upon my mind without forethought, without expectation, and without
any plan or arrangement: all was the work of the moment, and I was the
passive instrument of the power which used me".(31)
|