CHAPTER 2
The First Years of Ministry
1648-1649
After this I went to Mansfield, where was a
great meeting of professors and people. Here I was moved to pray;
and the Lord's power was so great that the house seemed to be
shaken. When I had done, some of the professors said it was now as
in the days of the apostles, when the house was shaken where they
were. After I had prayed, one of the professors would pray, which brought deadness and a veil over them; and others of the professors were grieved at him and told him it was a temptation upon him. Then he came to me, and desired that I would pray again; but I could not pray in man's will.
Soon after there was another great meeting of
professors, and a captain, whose name was Amor Stoddard, came in.
They were discoursing of the blood of Christ; and as they were
discoursing of it, I saw, through the immediate opening of the
invisible Spirit, the blood of Christ. And I cried out among them,
and said, "Do ye not see the blood of Christ? See it in your
hearts, to sprinkle your hearts and consciences from dead works, to
serve the living God"; for I saw it, the blood of the New Covenant,
how it came into the heart.
This startled the professors, who would have the
blood only without them, and not in them. But Captain Stoddard was
reached, and said, "Let the youth speak; hear the youth speak";
when he saw they endeavoured to bear me down with many words.
There was also a company of priests, that were
looked upon to be tender; one of their names was Kellett; and
several people that were tender went to hear them. I was moved to
go after them, and bid them mind the Lord's teaching in their
inward parts. That priest Kellett was against parsonages then; but
afterwards he got a great one, and turned a persecutor.
Now, after I had had some service in these parts, I
went through Derbyshire into my own county, Leicestershire, again,
and several tender people were convinced.
Passing thence, I met with a great company of
professors in Warwickshire, who were praying, and expounding the
Scriptures in the fields. They gave the Bible to me, and I opened
it on the fifth of Matthew, where Christ expounded the law; and I
opened the inward state to them, and the outward state; upon which
they fell into a fierce contention, and so parted; but the Lord's
power got ground.
Then I heard of a great meeting to be at Leicester,
for a dispute, wherein Presbyterians, Independents, Baptists and
Common-prayer-men were said to
be all concerned. The meeting was in a steeple-house; and thither I
was moved by the Lord God to go, and be amongst them. I heard their
discourse and reasonings, some being in pews, and the priest in the
pulpit; abundance of people being gathered together.
At last one woman asked a question out of Peter,
What that birth was, viz., a being born again of incorruptible
seed, by the Word of God, that liveth and abideth for ever? And the
priest said to her, "I permit not a woman to speak in the church";
though he had before given liberty for any to speak. Whereupon I
was wrapped up, as in a rapture, in the Lord's power; and I stepped
up and asked the priest, "Dost thou call this (the steeple-house) a
church? Or dost thou call this mixed multitude a church?" For the
woman asking a question, he ought to have answered it, having given
liberty for any to speak.
But, instead of answering me, he asked me what a
church was? I told him the church was the pillar and ground of
truth, made up of living stones, living members, a spiritual
household, which Christ was the head of; but he was not the head of
a mixed multitude, or of an old house made up of lime, stones and
wood.
This set them all on fire. The priest came down
from his pulpit, and others out of their pews, and the dispute
there was marred. I went to a great inn, and there disputed the
thing with the priests and professors, who were all on fire. But I
maintained the true church, and the true head thereof, over their
heads, till they all gave out and fled away. One man seemed loving,
and appeared for a while to join with me; but he soon turned
against me, and joined with a priest in pleading for
infant-baptism, though himself had been a Baptist before; so he
left me alone. Howbeit, there were several convinced that day; the
woman that asked the question was convinced, and her family; and
the Lord's power and glory shone over all.
After this I returned into Nottinghamshire again,
and went into the Vale of Beavor. As I went, I preached repentance to
the people. There were many convinced in the Vale of Beavor, in
many towns; for I stayed some weeks amongst them.
One morning, as I was sitting by the fire, a great
cloud came over me, and a temptation beset me; and I sat still. It
was said, "All things come by nature"; and the elements and stars
came over me, so that I was in a manner quite clouded with it. But
as I sat still and said nothing, the people of the house perceived
nothing. And as I sat still under it and let it alone, a living
hope and a true voice arose in me, which said, "There is a living
God who made all things." Immediately the cloud and
temptation vanished away, and life rose over it all; my heart was
glad, and I praised the living God.
After some time I met with some people who had a
notion that there was no God, but that all things come by nature. I
had a great dispute with them, and overturned them, and made some
of them confess that there is a living God. Then I saw that it was
good that I had gone through that exercise.We had great meetings in
those parts; for the power of the Lord broke through in that side
of the country.
Returning into Nottinghamshire, I found there a
company of shattered Baptists, and others. The Lord's power wrought
mightily, and gathered many of them. Afterwards I went to Mansfield
and thereaway, where the Lord's power was wonderfully manifested
both at Mansfield and other towns thereabouts.
In Derbyshire the mighty power of God wrought in a
wonderful manner. At Eton, a town near Derby, there was a meeting
of Friends, where
appeared such a mighty power of God that they were greatly shaken,
and many mouths were opened in the power of the Lord God. Many were
moved by the Lord to go to steeple-houses, to the priests and
people, to declare the everlasting truth unto them.
At a certain time, when I was at Mansfield, there
was a sitting of the justices about hiring of servants; and it was
upon me from the Lord to go and speak to the justices, that they
should not oppress the servants in their wages. So I walked towards
the inn where they sat; but finding a company of fiddlers there, I
did not go in, but thought to come in the morning, when I might
have a more serious opportunity to discourse with them.
But when I came in the morning, they were gone, and
I was struck even blind, that I could not see. I inquired of the
innkeeper where the justices were to sit that day; and he told me,
at a town eight miles off. My sight began to come to me again; and
I went and ran thitherward as fast as I could. When I was come to
the house where they were, and many servants with them, I exhorted
the justices not to oppress the servants in their wages, but to do
that which was right and just to them; and I exhorted the servants
to do their duties, and serve honestly. They all received my
exhortation kindly; for I was moved of the Lord therein.
Moreover, I was moved to go to several courts and
steeple-houses at Mansfield, and other places, to warn them to
leave off oppression and oaths, and to turn from deceit to the
Lord, and to do justly. Particularly at Mansfield, after I had been
at a court there, I was moved to go and speak to one of the most
wicked men in the country, one who was a common drunkard, a noted
whore-master, and a rhyme-maker; and I reproved him in the dread of
the mighty God, for his evil courses.
When I had done speaking, and left him, he came
after me, and told me that he was so smitten when I spoke to him,
that he had scarcely any strength left in him. So this man was
convinced, and turned from his wickedness, and remained an honest,
sober man, to the astonishment of the people who had known him
before.
Thus the work of the Lord went forward, and many
were turned from the darkness to the light, within the compass of
these three years, 1646, 1647 and 1648. Diverse meetings of
Friends, in several places, were then gathered to God's teaching,
by his light, Spirit, and power; for the Lord's power broke forth
more and more wonderfully.
Now I was come up in spirit through the flaming
sword, into the paradise of God. All things were new; and all the
creation gave unto me another smell than before, beyond what words
can utter. I knew nothing but pureness, and innocency, and
righteousness; being renewed into the image of God by Christ Jesus,
to the state of Adam, which he was in before he fell. The creation
was opened to me; and it was showed me how all things had their
names given them according to their nature and virtue.
I was at a stand in my mind whether I should
practise physic for the good of mankind, seeing the nature and
virtues of things were so opened to me by the Lord. But I was
immediately taken up in spirit to see into another or more
steadfast state than Adam's innocency, even into a state in Christ
Jesus that should never fall. And the Lord showed me that such as
were faithful to Him, in the power and light of Christ, should come
up into that state in which Adam was before he fell; in which the
admirable works of the creation, and the virtues thereof, may be
known, through the openings of that divine Word of wisdom and power
by which they were made.
Great things did the Lord lead me into, and
wonderful depths were opened unto me, beyond what can by words be
declared; but as people come into subjection to the Spirit of God,
and grow up in the image and power of the Almighty, they may
receive the Word of wisdom that opens all things, and come to know
the hidden unity in the Eternal Being.
Thus I travelled on in the Lord's service, as He
led me. When I came to Nottingham, the mighty power of God was
there among Friends. From thence I went to Clawson, in
Leicestershire, in the Vale of Beavor; and the mighty power of God
appeared there also, in several towns and villages where Friends
were gathered.
While I was there the Lord opened to me three
things relating to those three great professions in the world, --
law, physic, and divinity (so called). He showed me that the
physicians were out of the wisdom of God, by which the creatures
were made; and knew not the virtues of the creatures, because they
were out of the Word of wisdom, by which they were made. He showed
me that the priests were out of the true faith, of which Christ is
the author, -- the faith which purifies, gives victory and brings
people to have access to God, by which they please God; the mystery
of which faith is held in a pure conscience. He showed me also that
the lawyers were out of the equity, out of the true justice, and
out of the law of God, which went over the first transgression, and
over all sin, and answered the Spirit of God that was grieved and
transgressed in man; and that these three, -- the physicians, the
priests, and the lawyers, -- ruled the world out of the wisdom, out
of the faith, and out of the equity and law of God; one pretending
the cure of the body, another the cure of the soul, and the third
the protection of the property of the people. But I saw they were
all out of the wisdom, out of the faith, out of the equity and
perfect law of God.
And as the Lord opened these things unto me I felt
that His power went forth over all, by which all might be reformed
if they would receive and bow unto it. The priests might be
reformed and brought into the true faith, which is the gift of God.
The lawyers might be reformed and brought into the law of God,
which answers that [indwelling Spirit] of God which is [in every one, is]
transgressed in every one, and [which yet, if heeded] brings one to
love his neighbour as himself. This lets man see that if he wrongs
his neighbour, he wrongs himself; and teaches him to do unto others
as he would they should do unto him. The physicians might be
reformed and brought into the wisdom of God, by which all things
were made and created; that they might receive a right knowledge of
the creatures, and understand their virtues, which the Word of
wisdom, by which they were made and are upheld, hath given
them.
Abundance was opened concerning these things; how
all lay out of the wisdom of God, and out of the righteousness and
holiness that man at the first was made in. But as all believe in
the Light, and walk in the Light, -- that Light with which Christ
hath enlightened every man that cometh into the world, -- and
become children of the Light, and of the day of Christ, all things,
visible and invisible, are seen, by the divine Light of Christ, the
spiritual heavenly man, by whom all things were created.
Moreover, when I was brought up into His image in
righteousness and holiness, and into the paradise of God He let me
see how Adam was made a living soul; and also the stature of
Christ, the mystery that had been hid from ages and generations:
which things are hard to be uttered, and cannot be borne by many.
For of all the sects in Christendom (so called) that I discoursed
with, I found none who could bear to be told that any should come
to Adam's perfection, -- into that image of God, that righteousness
and holiness, that Adam was in before he fell; to be clean and
pure, without sin, as he was. Therefore how shall they be able to
bear being told that any shall grow up to the measure of the
stature of the fulness of Christ, when they cannot bear to hear
that any shall come, whilst upon earth, into the same power and
Spirit that the prophets and apostles were in? -- though it be a
certain truth that none can understand their writings aright
without the same Spirit by which they were written.
Now the Lord God opened to me by His invisible
power that every man was enlightened by the divine Light of
Christ, and I saw it
shine through all; and that they that believed in it came out of
condemnation to the Light of life, and became the children of it;
but they that hated it, and did not believe in it were condemned by
it, though they made a profession of Christ. This I saw in the pure
openings of the Light without the help of any man; neither did I
then know where to find it in the Scriptures; though afterwards,
searching the Scriptures, I found it. For I saw, in that Light and
Spirit which was before the Scriptures were given forth, and which
led the holy men of God to give them forth, that all, if they would
know God or Christ, or the Scriptures aright, must come to that
Spirit by which they that gave them forth were led and taught.
On a certain time, as I was walking in the fields,
the Lord said unto me, "Thy name is written in the Lamb's book of
life, which was before the foundation of the world": and as the
Lord spoke it, I believed, and saw in it the new birth. Some time
after the Lord commanded me to go abroad into the world, which was
like a briery, thorny wilderness. When I came in the Lord's mighty
power with the Word of life into the world, the world swelled and
made a noise like the great raging waves of the sea. Priests and
professors, magistrates and people, were all like a sea when I came
to proclaim the day of the Lord amongst them, and to preach
repentance to them.
I was sent to turn people from darkness to the
Light, that they might receive Christ Jesus; for to as many as
should receive Him in His Light, I saw He would give power to
become the sons of God; which power I had obtained by receiving
Christ. I was to direct people to the Spirit that gave forth the
Scriptures, by which they might be led into all truth, and up to
Christ and God, as those had been who gave them forth.
Yet I had no slight esteem of the holy Scriptures.
They were very precious to me; for I was in that Spirit by which
they were given forth; and what the Lord opened in me I afterwards
found was agreeable to them. I could speak much of these things,
and many volumes might be written upon them; but all would prove
too short to set forth the infinite love, wisdom, and power of God,
in preparing, fitting, and furnishing me for the service to which
He had appointed me; letting me see the depths of Satan on the one
hand, and opening to me, on the other hand, the divine mysteries of
His own everlasting kingdom.
When the Lord God and His Son Jesus Christ sent me
forth into the world to preach His everlasting gospel and kingdom,
I was glad that I was commanded to turn people to that inward
Light, Spirit, and Grace, by which all might know their salvation
and their way to God; even that Divine Spirit which would lead them
into all truth, and which I infallibly knew would never deceive
any.
But with and by this divine power and Spirit of
God, and the Light of Jesus, I was to bring people off from all
their own ways, to Christ, the new and living way; and from their
churches, which men had made and gathered, to the Church in God,
the general assembly written in heaven, of which Christ is the
head. And I was to bring them off from the world's teachers, made
by men, to learn of Christ, who is the Way, the Truth, and the
Life, of whom the Father said, "This is my beloved Son, hear ye
Him"; and off from all the world's worships, to know the Spirit of
Truth in the inward parts, and to be led thereby; that in it they
might worship the Father of spirits, who seeks such to worship Him.
And I saw that they that worshipped not in the Spirit of Truth,
knew not what they worshipped.
And I was to bring people off from all the world's
religions, which are vain, that they might know the pure religion;
might visit the fatherless, the widows, and the strangers, and keep
themselves from the spots of the world. Then there would not be so
many beggars, the sight of whom often grieved my heart, as it
denoted so much hard-heartedness amongst them that professed the
name of Christ.
I was to bring them off from all the world's
fellowships, and prayings, and singings, which stood in forms
without power; that their fellowship might be in the Holy Ghost,
and in the Eternal Spirit of God; that they might pray in the Holy
Ghost, and sing in the Spirit and with the grace that comes by
Jesus; making melody in their hearts to the Lord, who hath sent His
beloved Son to be their Saviour, and hath caused His heavenly sun
to shine upon all the world, and His heavenly rain to fall upon the
just and the unjust, as His outward rain doth fall, and His outward
sun doth shine on all.
I was to bring people off from Jewish ceremonies,
and from heathenish fables, and from men's inventions and
worldly doctrines, by which they blew the people about this way and
the other, from sect to sect; and from all their beggarly
rudiments, with their schools and colleges for making ministers of
Christ, -- who are indeed ministers of their own making, but not of
Christ's; and from all their images, and crosses, and sprinkling of
infants, with all their holy-days (so called), and all their vain
traditions, which they had instituted since the Apostles' days,
against all of which the Lord's power was set: in the dread and
authority of which power I was moved to declare against them all,
and against all that preached and not freely, as being such as had
not received freely from Christ.
Moreover, when the Lord sent me forth into the
world, He forbade me to put off my hat to any, high or low; and I
was required to Thee and Thou all men and women, without any
respect to rich or poor, great or small.17 And as I travelled up and
down I was not to bid people Good morrow, or Good evening; neither
might I bow or scrape with my leg to any one; and this made the
sects and professions to rage. But the Lord's power carried me over
all to His glory, and many came to be turned to God in a little
time; for the heavenly day of the Lord sprung from on high, and
broke forth apace, by the light of which many came to see where
they were.
Oh, the blows, punchings, beatings, and
imprisonments that we underwent for not putting off our hats to
men! Some had their hats violently plucked off and thrown away, so
that they quite lost them. The bad language and evil usage we
received on this account are hard to be expressed, besides the
danger we were sometimes in of losing our lives for this matter;
and that by the great professors of Christianity, who thereby
discovered they were not true believers.
And though it was but a small thing in the eye of
man, yet a wonderful confusion it brought among all professors and
priests; but, blessed be the Lord, many came to see the vanity of
that custom of putting off the hat to men, and felt the weight of
Truth's testimony18 against
it.
About this time I was sorely exercised in going to
their courts to cry for justice, in speaking and writing to judges
and justices to do justly; in warning such as kept public houses
for entertainment that they should not let people have more drink
than would do them good; in testifying against wakes, feasts,
May-games, sports, plays, and shows, which trained up people to
vanity and looseness, and led them from the fear of God; and the
days set forth for holidays were usually the times wherein they
most dishonoured God by these things.
In fairs, also, and in markets, I was made to
declare against their deceitful merchandise, cheating, and
cozening; warning all to deal justly, to speak the truth, to let
their yea be yea, and their nay be nay, and to do unto others as
they would have others do unto them; forewarning them of the great
and terrible day of the Lord, which would come upon them all.
I was moved, also, to cry against all sorts of
music, and against the mountebanks playing tricks on their stages;
for they burthened the pure life, and stirred up people's minds to
vanity. I was much exercised, too, with school-masters and
school-mistresses, warning them to teach children sobriety in the
fear of the Lord, that they might not be nursed and trained up in
lightness, vanity, and wantonness. I was made to warn masters and
mistresses, fathers and mothers in private families, to take care
that their children and servants might be trained up in the fear of
the Lord, and that themselves should be therein examples and
patterns of sobriety and virtue to them.
The earthly spirit of the priests wounded my life;
and when I heard the bell toll to call people together to the
steeple-house, it struck at my life; for it was just like a
market-bell, to gather people together, that the priest might set
forth his ware for sale. Oh, the vast sums of money that are gotten
by the trade they make of selling the Scriptures, and by their
preaching, from the highest bishop to the lowest priest! What one
trade else in the world is comparable to it? notwithstanding the
Scriptures were given forth freely, and Christ commanded His
ministers to preach freely, and the prophets and apostles denounced
judgment against all covetous hirelings and diviners for money.
But in this free Spirit of the Lord Jesus was I
sent forth to declare the Word of life and reconciliation freely,
that all might come to Christ, who gives freely, and who renews up
into the image of God, which man and woman were in before they
fell, that they might sit down in heavenly places in Christ
Jesus.