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Open-Air Preaching
A Sketch of its history and remarks thereon
Some customs cannot be defended except by
saying that they are very old. In such cases
antiquity is of no more value than
the rust upon a counterfeit coin. It is, however, a happy circumstance when the usage of ages can be pleaded for a really good and scriptural practice,
for it infuses it with a halo of reverence. Now, it can be argued, with
little fear of refutation, that open-air
preaching is as old as preaching
itself. We are at full liberty to believe that when Enoch, the seventh from Adam, prophesied, he asked for no
better pulpit than the hillside, and that Noah, as a preacher of
righteousness, was willing to reason with
his contemporaries in the shipyard
in which his marvelous ark was built.
Certainly Moses and
Joshua found their most convenient place for addressing vast assemblies
beneath the unpillared arch of heaven.
Samuel closed a sermon in the field of Gilgal amid thunder and rain, by which
the Lord rebuked the people and drove them to their knees. Elijah stood
on Carmel and challenged the vacillating
nation with, "How long halt ye between two opinions?" (1 Kings 18:21).
Jonah, whose spirit was somewhat similar,
lifted up his cry of warning in the streets of Nineveh, and in all her gathering places gave forth the warning utterance, "Yet
forty days, and Nineveh shall
be overthrown" (Jonah 3:4).
To hear Ezra and Nehemiah, "all
the people gathered themselves together as one man into the street that was before the water
gate" (Nehemiah 8:1). Indeed,
we find examples of open-air preaching everywhere in the records of the Old Testament.
It may satisfy us,
however, to go back as far as the origin of our own holy faith, and there we hear
the forerunner of the Savior crying in the wilderness and lifting up his voice
from the river's bank. Our Lord Himself, who is even more our pattern, delivered
the larger portion of His sermons on the mountain's side, or by the seashore,
or in the streets. Our Lord was, for all
intents and purposes, an open-air preacher. He did not remain silent in the synagogue, but He
was equally at home in the field. We have no record of His discourse in
the royal chapel, but we have the Sermon on the Mount and the Sermon in the Plain—so the very earliest and
most divine kind of preaching was practiced outdoors by Him who spoke as never any other man spoke.
There were gatherings of His disciples
within walls after His decease, especially the one in the Upper Room; but the
preaching even then was most frequently in the court of the temple or in such
other open spaces as were available. The notion
of holy places and consecrated meetinghouses had not occurred to them as
Christians; they preached in the temple, or in such other open spaces as
were available, but with equal earnestness "in
every house, they ceased not to teach and preach Jesus Christ" (Acts 5:42).
It would be very easy
to prove that revivals of religion have usually been accompanied, if not caused, by
a considerable amount of outdoor preaching or preaching in unusual places. The first avowed preaching of Protestant doctrine
was almost necessarily in the open
air, or in buildings that were not dedicated to worship, for these were
in the hands of the Catholic Church. True,
Wycliffe for awhile preached the Gospel in the church at Lutterworth,
and Huss, Jerome, and Savonarola for a time delivered semi-Gospel addresses in
connection with the ecclesiastical arrangements around them; but when they began more fully to know and proclaim the Gospel,
they were driven to find other platforms.
The Reformation, when
yet a babe, was like the newborn Christ, and had "not where to lay [its]
head" (Matthew 8:20; Luke 9:58); but a company of men comparable to
the heavenly host proclaimed it under the open heavens, where shepherds and
common people heard them gladly. Throughout England,
we have several trees remaining called "gospel oaks." There is
one spot on the other side of the Thames known by the name of "Gospel
Oak," and I have myself preached at Addlestone, in Surrey, under the
far-spreading boughs of an ancient oak
beneath which John Knox is said to have proclaimed the Gospel during
his sojourn in England. Many wild moors and lonely hillsides and secret spots
in the forest have been consecrated in the
same fashion, and traditions still linger
over caves and dells and hilltops where, in old times, the bands of the faithful met to hear the Word of the
Lord.
It would be an interesting task to prepare
a volume of notable facts connected with
open-air preaching or, better still, a
consecutive history of it. I have no time for even a complete outline, but will simply ask you, where would the
Reformation have been if its great preachers had confined themselves to
churches and cathedrals? How would the common people have become indoctrinated with the Gospel had it not been for those
far-wandering evangelists, the missionaries, and those daring innovators who found a pulpit on every heap of stones and an audience chamber in every open space near
the abodes of men?
All through the Puritan times, there were
gatherings in all sorts of out-of-the-way
places, for fear of persecutors. "We took," said Archbishop
Laud, in a letter dated Fulham, June, 1632, "another meeting of
separatists in Newington Woods, in the very land where the king's stag was to
be lodged, for his hunting next
morning." A hollow or gravel pit on Hounslow Heath sometimes served as a meeting place, and
there is a dell near Hitchin where John Bunyan was wont to preach in perilous times. All over Scotland, the dells and vales
and hillsides are full of
covenanting memories to this day. You will not fail to meet with rock pulpits in which the stern
fathers of the Presbyterian Church thundered forth their denunciations
of Erastianism and pleaded the claims of the King of Kings. Cargill and Cameron and their fellows found pleasant
scenes for their brave ministries
amid the mountains' lone rifts and ravines.
What the world would have been if there had
not been preaching outside of walls and beneath a more glorious roof than these
rafters of fir, I am sure I cannot guess. It was a brave day for England when
Whitefield began field preaching. When
Wesley stood and preached a sermon on his father's grave at Epworth
because the parish priest would not allow him
admission within the (so-called) sacred edifice, Mr. Wesley wrote, "I am well assured that I did far
more good to my Lincolnshire parishioners by preaching three days on my
father's tomb than I did by preaching three years in his pulpit."
Wesley wrote in his
journal,
Saturday, 31 March, 1731. In the evening I
reached Bristol, and met Mr. Whitefield there. I could scarce reconcile myself at first to this strange way of
preaching in the fields, of which he gave me an example on Sunday;
having been all my life (until very lately) so concerned with every point
relating to decency and order, that I would have thought the saving of souls
almost a sin, if it had not been done in a church." Such were the feelings of a man who later became
one of the greatest open-air
preachers who ever lived!
Once it began, the fruitful agency of
field-preaching was not allowed to cease. Amid jeering crowds and showers of
rotten eggs and filth, the immediate followers of the two great
Methodists continued to storm village after village and town after town. They
had various adventures, but their success
was generally great. One often smiles when reading incidents in their
labors. A string of pack horses was so driven to break up a congregation, and a
fire engine was brought out and played over the throng to achieve the same
purpose. Hand bells, old kettles, trumpets, drums, and entire bands of music were engaged to drown the preachers'
voices.
In one case, the parish bull was let loose,
and in others, dogs were set to fight. The
preachers needed to have faces set like flints (see Isaiah 50:7), and so indeed
they had. John Furz said,
“As soon as I began to preach, a man came
straight forward and presented a gun at my face, swearing that he would blow my
brains out if I spoke another word. However,
I continued speaking, and he continued swearing, sometimes putting the
muzzle of the gun to my mouth, sometimes against my ear. While we were singing
the last hymn, he got behind me, fired the
gun, and burned off part of my hair.”
After this, my friends, we should never
speak of petty interruptions or annoyances. The proximity of a firearm in the hands of a "son of Belial" (1
Samuel 25:17) is not very conducive
to collected thought and clear utterance, but the experience of Furz was probably no worse than that of
John Nelson, who coolly said:
“But when I was in the middle of my
discourse, one at the outside of the
congregation threw a stone, which cut me on the head. However, that made
the people give greater attention, especially when they saw the blood run down my face, so that all was quiet until I was done and was singing a hymn.”
I have no time further
to illustrate my subject by descriptions of the work of Christmas Evans and
others in Wales, or of the Haldane’s in Scotland, or even of Rowland Hill and
his group in England. If you wish to pursue the subject, these names may serve
as hints for discovering abundant material; and I may add to the list The
Life of Dr. Guthrie, in which he recorded notable open-air assemblies at
the time of the Disruption, when as yet
the Free Church had no places of worship
built with human hands.
I must linger a moment over Robert
Flockhart of Edinburgh, who, though a
lesser light, was a constant one and a fit example to the bulk of Christ's street witnesses. Every evening, in
all weathers and amid many persecutions, this brave man continued to speak in
the street for forty-three years. Think of that, and never be discouraged. When
he was tottering to the grave, the old soldier was still at his post.
"Compassion to the souls of men drove me to the streets and lanes of my native city," he said, "to plead with
sinners and persuade them to come to
Jesus. The love of Christ constrained me."
Neither the hostility of the police, nor
the insults of the crowd could move him; he
rebuked error in the plainest terms and preached salvation by grace with all
his might. Edinburgh remembers him still. There is room for such in all
our cities and towns and need for hundreds of his noble order in this huge nation of London—can I call it less?
No sort of defense is needed for preaching outdoors, but it would take a very strong argument to prove
that a man who has never preached beyond the walls of his meetinghouse had done his duty.
A defense is required rather for services within buildings rather than for worship
outside of them.
Apologies are
certainly wanted for architects who pile up brick and stone into the skies when
there is so much need for preaching rooms among poor sinners down below. Defense is greatly needed for forests of stone pillars, which prevent the
preacher from being seen and his voice from being heard; for
high-pitched Gothic roofs in which all sound is lost, and men are killed by
being compelled to shout until they burst their blood vessels; and also for the willful creation of echoes by
exposing hard, sound-refracting surfaces to satisfy the demands of art
to the total overlooking of the comfort of
both audience and speaker.
Surely also some decent excuse is badly
wanted for those childish people who waste money by placing hobgoblins and
monsters on the outside of their preaching houses, and must have other ridiculous statues stuck up, both
inside and outside, to deface rather than to adorn their churches and
chapels. But no defense whatever is needed
for using the heavenly Father's vast
audience chamber, which is in every way so well fitted for the
proclamation of a Gospel so free, so full, so expansive, so sublime.
The great benefit of open-air preaching is
that we get so many newcomers to hear the
Gospel who otherwise would never hear
it. The Gospel command is, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature" (Mark 16:15), but it is so little obeyed
that one would imagine that it ran thus, "Go into your own place of
worship and preach the Gospel to the few creatures
who will come inside." The verse, "Go out into the highways and hedges, and compel them to come in" (Luke 14:23), although it constitutes part of a parable, is worthy of being
taken very literally; doing so, its
meaning will be carried out best.
We should actually go into the streets and
lanes and highways, for there are lurkers in the hedges, tramps on the highways, streetwalkers, and lane-haunter, whom we
will never reach unless we pursue
them into their own domains. Sportsmen must not stop at home and wait for the birds to come and be shot at; neither must fishermen throw their nets inside
their boats and hope to take many
fish. Traders go to the markets; they follow their customers and go out after
business if it will not come to them.
And so must we. Some of our preachers are droning on and on to empty pews and musty hassocks while
they might be conferring lasting benefit upon hundreds by quitting the
old walls for a while and seeking living
stones for Jesus.
I am quite sure, too,
that if we could persuade our friends in the country to come out a good many
times in the year and hold services in a meadow or in a shady grove or on the
hillside or in a garden or on a common, it would be all the
better for
the usual hearers. The mere novelty of the place would freshen their interest
and wake them up. The slight change of scene would have a wonderful effect upon
the ones who are likely to sleep. See how
mechanically they move into their usual place of worship, and how
mechanically they go out again. They fall into their seats as if at last they
had found a resting place, they rise to sing with an amazing effort, and then
they drop down before you have time for the doxology at the close of the hymn
because they did not notice it was coming.
What logs some regular hearers are! Many of
them are asleep with their eyes open. After sitting a certain number of years
in the same old spot, where the pews, pulpit, galleries, and all things are
always the same—except that they get a little
dirtier and dingier every week—where everybody occupies the same position forever and forevermore,
and the minister's face, voice, and
tone are much the same from January to December,
you get to feel the holy quiet of the scene and listen to what is going
on as though it were addressed to "the dull cold ear of death."
As a miller hears his
wheels as though he did not hear them or a stoker scarcely notices the clatter
of his engine after enduring it for a little time or as a
dweller in London never notices the ceaseless grind
of the traffic, so do many members of our congregations become
insensible to the most earnest addresses and accept them as a
matter of course. The preaching and the rest of it get to be
so usual that they might as well not be given at all. Hence,
a change of place might be useful; it might prevent monotony,
shake up indifference, suggest thought, and, in a thousand ways, promote
attention and give new hope of doing good. A great fire that
would burn some of our chapels to the ground might not be the greatest calamity
that has ever occurred
if it only woke some of those people who rival the seven sleepers of Ephesus and will never be moved as long as the old house and the old pews hold together.
Besides, fresh air and
plenty of it is a grand thing for every mortal man, woman,
and child. I preached in Scotland twice on a Sabbath day at Blairmore, on a little
height by the side of the sea, and after discoursing with all my might to large
congregations, numbered in the thousands, I
did not feel all as exhausted as I often am when addressing a few
hundred in some horrible "black hole of Calcutta" called a chapel. I
trace my freshness and freedom from
lethargy at Blairmore to the fact
that the windows could not be shut down by people afraid of drafts and that the roof was as high as the
heavens are above the earth. My conviction is that a man could preach
three or four times on a Sabbath outdoors with less fatigue than he would occasion with one discourse delivered in
an impure atmosphere, heated and
poisoned by human breath, and carefully
preserved from every refreshing infusion of natural air.
I once preached a sermon in the open air in
haying time during a violent storm of rain.
The text was, "He shall come down like rain upon the mown grass: as showers that water the
earth" (Psalm 72:6), and
surely we had the blessing as well as the inconvenience. I was sufficiently wet, and my congregation must have been
drenched, but they stood it out, and I never heard that anybody was the worse in health—though, I thank God, I have heard of souls who were brought to Jesus under
that discourse. Once in a while, and
under strong excitement, such things do no one any harm, but we are not to expect miracles, nor wantonly venture upon a course of procedure that
might kill the sickly and lay the
foundations of disease in the strong.
Do not try to preach against the wind, for
it is an idle attempt. You may hurl your
voice a short distance by an amazing
effort, but you cannot be well heard even by the few. I do not often advise you to consider which way the
wind blows, but on this occasion I
urge you to do it or else you will labor in vain. Preach so that the
wind carries your voice toward the people
and does not blow it down your throat, or else you will have to eat your own words.
There is no telling
how far a man may be heard with the wind. In certain atmospheres and climates,
as for instance in that
of Palestine, persons might be heard for several miles; and single sentences of well-known speech may in England be recognized a long way off, but I should gravely
doubt a man if he asserted that he
understood a new sentence beyond the distance
of a mile. Whitefield is reported to have been heard a mile, and I have been myself assured that I was
heard for that distance, but I am
somewhat skeptical. Half a mile is surely enough, even with the wind, but you must make sure of that to be heard at all.
Heroes of the Cross—here is a field for you
more glorious than the Cid ever beheld. "Who
will bring me into the strong city?
Who will lead me into Edom?" (Psalm
60:9; 108:10). Who will enable us to
win these slums and dens for Jesus? Who can do it but the Lord? Soldiers of Christ who venture into these regions must expect a revival of the practices of
the good old times as far as
brickbats are concerned—and I have known a flowerpot to fall
"accidentally" from an upper window in a remarkably slanting
direction. Still, if we are born to be drowned,
we will not be killed by flowerpots.
Under such treatment it may be refreshing
to read what Christopher Hopper wrote under similar conditions more than a hundred years ago.
I did not much regard a little dirt, a few
rotten eggs, the sound of a cow's horn, the
noise of bells, or a few snowballs in
their season; but sometimes I was saluted with blows, stones, bricks, and
bludgeons. These I did not like well; they
were not pleasing to flesh and blood. I sometimes lost a little skin, and once
a little blood, which was drawn from my forehead with a sharp stone. I wore a patch for a few days and
was not ashamed; I gloried in the
Cross. And when my small sufferings
abounded for the sake of Christ, my comfort abounded much more. I never was more happy in my own soul or blessed in my labors.
I am somewhat pleased
when I occasionally hear of a brother being locked up by the
police, for it does him good, and it does the people good also.
It is a fine sight to see the minister of the Gospel marched
off by the servant of the law! It excites sympathy for him,
and the next step is sympathy for his message. Many who felt no interest in him
before are eager to hear him when he is ordered to quit, and
still more so when he is taken to the station. The vilest
of mankind respect a man who gets into trouble in order to
do them good; and if they see unfair opposition excited, they grow quite
zealous in the man's defense.
As to style in
preaching outdoors, we learned from Wesley that it should
certainly differ from much of what prevails indoors: "Perhaps
if a speaker were to acquire a style fully adapted to a street
audience, he would be wise to bring it indoors with him. A great
deal of sermonizing may be defined as saying nothing at extreme
length; but outdoors verbosity is not admired. You must say something and have
done with it and go on to say something more, or your hearers will let you
know....It is very unpleasant to find your
congregation dispersing, but it is also a very plain suggestion that your
ideas are also much dispersed."
In the street, a man must keep himself
lively, use many illustrations and anecdotes, and sprinkle a quaint remark,
here and there. It will never do to dwell for a long time on a single point.
Reasoning must be brief and clear. The discourse
must not be labored or involved, and the second point must not depend
upon the first, for the audience is a changing
one. Each point must be complete in itself...Come to the point at once, and come there with all your
might.”
Short sentences of words and short passages
of thought are needed for the outdoors. Long paragraphs and long arguments had better be reserved for other
occasions. In quiet country crowds
there is much force in an eloquent silence, now and then interjected; it
gives people time to breathe, and also to
reflect. Do not, however, attempt this in a London street; you must go ahead, or someone else may run off with
your congregation. In a regular
field sermon pauses are very effective and are useful in several ways, both to speaker and listeners, but to a passing company that is not inclined for anything
like worship, a quick, short, sharp
address is most appropriate.
In the streets a man must be intense from
beginning to end, and for that very reason he must be condensed and concentrated in his thought and utterance. If you
give your listeners chaff, they will cheerfully return it into your own
bosom. Good measure, pressed down and
running over will they mete out to you. (See Luke 6:38.) Shams and shows
will have no mercy from a street gathering.
Have something to say, look them in the
face, say what you mean, put it plainly, boldly, earnestly, courteously, and they will hear you. Never speak against time or
for the sake of hearing your own voice, or you will obtain some
information about your personal appearance or manner of oratory which will
probably be more true than pleasing.
It will be very
desirable to speak so as to be heard, but there is no use in incessant yelling. The
best street preaching is not what is done at
the top of your voice, for it is impossible to lay the proper emphasis upon key
passages when you are shouting with all your might the entire time. When
there are no hearers near you and people are standing on the other side of the
road to listen, would it not be advisable to
cross over and save a little of the strength that is wasted as you try to be
heard?
A quiet, penetrating, conversational style
seems to be the most effective. Men do not yell when they are pleading in
deepest earnestness; generally, at such times they have generally less wind
and a little more rain: that is, less rant and a few more tears. You will weary everybody and wear out yourself
if you go on and on and on in one monotonous shout. Be wise now, therefore, you
who wish to succeed in declaring your Master's message among the multitude. Use
your voices as common sense would dictate.
In a tract
published by that excellent society "The Open-Air Mission," I
notice the following:
Qualifications
for Open Air Preachers
ü A
good voice.
ü Naturalness
of manner.
ü Self-possession.
ü A
good knowledge of Scripture and common things.
ü Ability
to adapt himself to any congregation.
ü Good
illustrative powers.
ü Zeal,
prudence, and common sense.
ü A
large, loving heart.
ü Sincere
belief in all he says.
ü Entire
dependence on the Holy Spirit for success.
ü A
close walk with God by prayer.
ü A
consistent walk before men by a holy life.
If any man has all these qualifications,
the Queen had better make a bishop of him
at once, yet none of these qualities can
be dispensed of.
Related Articles:
Definite Directions for Open
Air preaching
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