Annabel and I have just returned from a lovely weekend on the Blessed Isles – Lewis and Harris – where I was speaking at the Harris Bible Conference, along with Roger Simpson the Anglican evangelist (now in York but better known to Scots as the former pastor of St P’s and G’s in Edinburgh). We really did have a wonderful weekend – encouraging and sobering at the same time. Let’s begin with the encouragements.
The Encouraging Fellowship of the Lord’s People
But what makes this conference is the people. If there are a more hospitable and warm people in the world I have yet to meet them. This island has experienced many tragedies and hard times, but the kindness and hospitality is a continuing legacy of the impact of the Gospel. I saw that warmth and kindness in the faces of many who were at the conference.
Speaking of the spirituality of the people sounds a bit like a new age cliche – one that my friend Alastair McIntosh would use! But it is nonetheless true. My fellow speaker Roger Simpson commented on the depth of some of the prayers. Annabel was deeply moved by a simple but profound prayer at worship on the Sunday morning, which brought us into the presence of Christ in such a real and tangible way. For me the Gaelic singing, as always, has an incredible capacity to move the heart and stir the spirit. Here is a wee sample….to some it sounds just like an incoherent noise…but for those who have ears to hear it is the sound of heaven!
The other thing that so impressed was the energy and humour. After three long sessions each day – people still wanted more fellowship and worship at 10pm! Where did they get the energy?! They easily outpaced us!
I was also greatly encouraged with the 25 young people at the Free Church Presbytery camp who came to the services and the fellowship on the Lord’s Day. There is hope for the Church when it has young people of such quality. I was also encouraged by the few young people who actually came to the conference – it would do both them and the conference good if more came next year
The Church in Lewis and Harris is in deep trouble.
There is no way round this. The Free Church is the largest denomination on the island, and as it is also the denomination of which I am a minister, so I will refrain from commenting on the difficulties that other denominations are having. I will leave others to speak about their own. However it is clear that each denomination is struggling with coming to terms with an increasingly secular society and a decline in spirituality. Forces, external and internal are threatening to sink the church.
The Free Church has particular issues to face. The tragic death of Iain D. Campbell and the ongoing police investigation of a Free Church minister for ‘inappropriate’ conduct are the elephants in the room that have had an enormous impact on a small community. The hurt, pain and confusion are palpable. In some ways though these are just outer manifestations and symptoms of underlying issues. The Gates of Hell are always seeking to destroy the Church. They will never prevail, but they can give us an enormous buffeting and be used by the Lord to humble us and drive us to our knees.
In the 1990’s I did a small investigation into some numbers in the Free Church. One thing that astounded me was that between 1990 and 1994 the Free Church in Lewis lost 25% of its Sunday school attendance. That was a sign then that all was not well and that trouble was coming within the next couple of decades. I don’t think that the Church was prepared to face up to that trouble. We sometimes prefer to live off the glories of the past (‘the last stronghold of the pure Gospel’) or retreat into a narrow traditional ecclesiology, which on the surface appears biblical but in reality is primarily cultural. This leads to a lack of spiritual discernment and theological depth – which in turns exposes the church to the dangers of heresies both in practice and theology.
When faced with external cultural pressures and internal spiritual troubles, there is a temptation (especially amongst younger ministers) to either throw out the baby with the bath water and leave the good from the traditions of the past; or to attempt to return ‘to the ways of our Fathers’ – without knowing what those ways were and forgetting that at their best the ways of our Fathers’ were the ways of the Lord. We need to be asking the Lord what his way is for the Church today – not seeking to recreate for ourselves the culture and church of the past. Wearing the outer clothes of a bygone generation without having their heart just begets hypocrisy.
The bottom line is that if the Free Church in Lewis retreats into ever decreasing ‘strongholds’; if it adopts the ‘remnant’ mentality and circles the wagons – it will die. And that is heartbreaking. The people I met this weekend deserve better. Those of us who are shepherds, ministers and elders, need to care for the sheep, not look to the sheep to bolster our fragile egos! ( The word of the Lord came to me: 2 “Son of man, prophesy against the shepherds of Israel; prophesy and say to them: ‘This is what the Sovereign Lord says: Woe to you shepherds of Israel who only take care of yourselves! Should not shepherds take care of the flock? – Ezekiel 34 – read the whole chapter – its a sobering wake up call to me!).
There are questions of leadership, communication, vision, evangelism, discipleship and purpose that need to be both asked and answered.
Lessons from a Shipwreck and a Distillery
The Stornoway Sabbath – Relic from a Bygone Age?
Songs of Praise, the Island of Lewis, Donald Trump and the Religion of the BBC