John Newton's Letters
The call to the ministry
March 7, 1765.
Dear Sir,
Your letter of February 19th came to me yesterday. I have read it with
attention, and very willingly sit down to offer you my thoughts. Your case
reminds me of my own—my first desires towards the ministry were
attended with great uncertainties and difficulties, and the perplexity of my
own mind was heightened by the various and opposite judgments of my friends.
The advice I have to offer is the result of painful experience and exercise,
and for this reason perhaps may not be unacceptable to you. I pray our
gracious Lord to make it useful.
I was long distressed, as you are, about what was or was
not a proper call to the ministry. It now seems to me an easy point
to solve—but perhaps will not be so to you until the Lord shall make it
clear to yourself in your own case. I have not room to say so much as I
could. in brief, I think it principally includes three things:
1. A warm and earnest desire to be employed in this
service. I apprehend, the man who is once moved by the Spirit of
God to this work, will prefer it, if attainable, to thousands of gold and
silver; so that, though he is at times intimidated by a sense of its
importance and difficulty, compared with his own great
insufficiency (for it is to be presumed a call of this sort, if indeed
from God, will be accompanied with humility and self-abasement),
yet he cannot give it up. I hold it a good rule to inquire in this
point—whether the desire to preach is most fervent in our most lively and
spiritual frames, and when we are most laid in the dust before the Lord? If
so, it is a good sign. But if, as is sometimes the case, a person is very
earnest to be a preacher to others, when he finds but little hungering and
thirstiness after grace in his own soul—it is then to be feared his zeal
springs rather from a selfish principle—than from the Spirit of God.
2. Besides this affectionate desire and
readiness to preach, there must in due season
appear some competent sufficiency as to gifts, knowledge, and utterance.
Surely, if the Lord sends a man to teach others—he will furnish him with the
means. I believe many have intended well in becoming
preachers, who yet went beyond or before their call in so doing. The main
difference between a minister and a private Christian seems to
consist in these ministerial gifts, which are imparted to him, not
for his own sake—but for the edification of others. But then I say, these
are to appear in due season. They are not to be expected instantaneously—but
gradually, in the use of proper means. They are necessary for the discharge
of the ministry; but not necessary as pre-requisites to warrant our desires
after it. In your case, you are young, and have time before you. Therefore,
I think you need not as yet perplex yourself with inquiring if you have
these gifts already. It is sufficient if your desire is fixed, and
you are willing, in the way of prayer and diligence, to wait upon the Lord
for them—as yet you need them not.
3. That which finally evidences a proper call—is a
correspondent opening in Providence , by a gradual train of
circumstances pointing out the means, the time, the place—of actually
entering upon the work of the ministry. And until this concurrence arrives,
you must not expect to be always clear from hesitation in your own mind. The
principal caution on this head is, not to be too hasty in catching at first
appearances. If it be the Lord's will to bring you into his ministry—he has
already appointed your place and service; and though you know it not at
present—you shall at a proper time. If you had the talents of an angel—you
could do no good with them until his hour has come—and until he leads
you to the people whom he has determined to bless by your means.
It is very difficult to restrain ourselves within the
bounds of prudence here, when our zeal is warm, a sense of the love of
Christ upon our hearts, and a tender compassion for perishing sinners is
ready to prompt us to break out too soon—but "he who believes shall not make
haste". I was about five years under this constraint. Sometimes I thought I
must preach, though it was in the streets. I listened to everything that
seemed plausible, and to many things that were not so. But the Lord
graciously, and as it were insensibly, hedged up my way with thorns;
otherwise, if I had been left to my own spirit, I would have put it quite
out of my power to have been brought into such a sphere of usefulness, as he
in his good time has been pleased to lead me to. And I can now see clearly,
that at the time I would first have gone out, though my intention was, I
hope, good in the main—yet I overrated myself, and had not that spiritual
judgment and experience which are requisite for so great a service.
I wish you therefore to take time; and if you have a
desire to enter into the Established Church, endeavor to keep your
zeal within moderate bounds, and avoid everything that might unnecessarily
clog your admission with difficulties. I would not have you hide your
profession, or to be backward to speak for God; but avoid what looks like
preaching, and be content with being a learner in the school of
Christ for some years. The delay will not be lost time; you
will be so much the more acquainted with the Gospel, with your own
heart, and with human nature. The last is a necessary branch of a
minister's knowledge, and can only be acquired by comparing what passes
within us, and around us—with what we read in the Word of God.
I am glad to find you have a distaste both for
Arminian and Antinomian doctrines—but let not the mistakes of
others sit too heavy upon you. Be thankful for the grace which has made you
to differ; be ready to give a reason of the hope that is in you with
meekness and fear; but beware of engaging in theological disputes,
without evident necessity, and some probable hope of usefulness. They tend
to eat out the life and savor of religion, and to make the soul lean and
dry. Where God has begun a real work of grace, incidental mistakes
will be lessened by time and experience; where he has not, it is of little
signification what sentiments people hold, or whether they call themselves
Arminians or Calvinists.
I agree with you, that there is time enough for you to
think of Oxford yet; and that if your purpose is fixed, and all
circumstances render it prudent and proper to devote yourself to the
ministry, you will do well to spend a year or two in private studies. It
would be further helpful, in this view, to place yourself where there is
Gospel preaching, and a spiritual people. If your favorable opinion of our
church should induce you to come here, I shall be very ready to give you
every assistance in my power. As I have trod exactly the path you seem to be
setting out in, I might so far perhaps be more serviceable than those who
are in other respects much better qualified to assist you. I doubt not but
in this, and every other step, you will entreat the Lord's direction; and I
hope you will not forget to pray for me.
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