Donald Cargill

Donald Cargill was born about the year 1610 in the parish of Rattray, in Perthshire. His father was desirous of providing for his son a good education, and was resolved to make him a minister of the Gospel. Actuated by much love for Christ , his father entreated him to give the matter serious consideration. Donald set apart a day for seeking , by fasting and prayer, direction from on high as to his future course. As he pondered and prayed, the words of the man on the sapphire throne to the prophet Ezekiel made a deep impression on him, " Son of Man , eat this roll , and go speak unto the house of Israel." He felt that he could no longer forbear to comply with his father's request and set about making preparations to become an ambassador for Christ . These very words were the text assigned young Cargill by the presbytery before ordination . This singular fact would confirm him in the resolution to which he had come , and stimulate him to make a close acquaintance with the Scriptures that he might speak with power to the House of Israel.
Cargill was called to the Barony Church of Glasgow. In consequence of the universal religious indifference of the people , he was resolved not to accept the call. He felt he could have little satisfaction in labouring in that vineyard. The simple and earnest reproof of a woman was the means of leading him to a change of mind. He was settled in the Barony, and there , till the restoration of Charles in 1660, he laboured for the salvation of souls with piety, zeal, and success.On the anniversary of that restoration - the day of the week on which he always delivered a discourse- thinking that Cargill would speak in laudatory terms of that event, large numbers flocked to hear him. The preacher , immediately on entering the pulpit ,dissipated the delusion under which the people had assembled. " We are not come here ,"he said, " to keep the day on the account for which others keep it . We thought once to have blessed the day wherein the King came home again, but now we think we have reason to curse it , and if any of you come here in order to the solemnizing of the day, we desire you to remove." And in the course of the sermon, which was from the text ," Rejoice not, O Israel, for joy as other people," he spoke out still more plainly :-" The King will be the woefullest sight that ever the poor Church of Scotland saw. Woe! woe! woe! unto him , his name shall stink while the world stands, for treachery , tyranny , and lechery."
No minister who in those times, used language like this could long discharge his pastorate without interruption. The wrath of the malignants was aroused against Cargill. He had to betake himself to private places for safety, and travel only under cover of the night. The act of 1662 rendered it impossible for him any longer to retain his charge. A party of soldiers came to apprehend him , and went off bearing the keys of his church. he was soon thereafter declared an outlaw , and was banished to the north of the Tay, under the penalty of being imprisoned and prosecuted as a mover of sedition. He had many most miraculous escapes from the enemy who was now constantly in search of him, and on two occasions was actually liberated when he had fallen into their hands. On one of these occasions he was released after being examined by the Council, and on the other he was let go after being taken at the battle of Bothwell Bridge. These ,and others were more wonderful escapes than the Apostle's :- "The governor kept the city with a garrison, desirous to apprehend me:and through a window, in a basket was I let down by the wall, and escaped their hands." Donald Cargill was immortal till his work was done.
Frequently was Cargill engaged in preaching in the fields. Many a noble testimony against public defection did he utter, and many a stirring appeal to men to take the side of the Son of Jesse did he deliver at those conventicles. His voice was as the voice of one crying in the wilderness, "Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight." Cargill's was the honour to blow the first blast of the trumpet which was to proclaim the overthrow of the Stuarts. In the hours of his solitude , as he mourned over the hopeless state of his country and meditated on the means of deliverance, he prepared the document known as the Queensferry Paper, in which the authority of the king and his counsellors is rejected, " They having altered and destroyed the Lord's established religion , overturned the fundamental and established laws of the kingdom, taken away altogether Christ's Church Government, and changed the civil Government of the land, which was by a king and free parliament, unto tyranny." And at the close of the paper :-" We bind and oblige ourselves and one another in our worshipping of God , and in our natural , civil, and divine rights and liberties, till we shall overcome, or, at any rate send them down under debate to posterity, that they may begin where we end."
In company with Richard Cameron and others, Cargill was occupied in the preparation of the Sanquhar Declaration . Great was his sorrow to learn the fate of Cameron at the contest of Ayresmoss. But his courage was not daunted; he was spurred to the task that lay near before him, and prepared for the sufferings he was destined to endure. In September 1660,m a few months after the Declaration of Sanquhar, at a conventicle at Torwood , near Stirling, Cargill, "Being a minister of Jesus Christ , and having authority and power from Him, in His name and by His Spirit," excommunicated, "cast out of the true church, and delivered up to Satan," the king and several of the more prominent of his associates in the work of persecution. But with the sternness of that day's work he mingled drops of mercy, for in the evening of the same day he preached from the words, "For the Lord will not cast off forever."
Donald Cargill cannot now be allowed to escape.. Five thousand merks are offered for his apprehension. Ay Dunsyre Common he preached his last sermon. The text was ,"Come , my people, enter into thy chambers , and shut the doors about thee." Thence he goes to Covington Mill, Lanarkshire, where he is fallen upon suddenly and seized by Bonshaw , who exclaimed , "Blessed Bonshaw , and blessed day that ever I was born, that i found such a prize- 5000 merks for apprehending Cargill this morning!" It was the price of blood. Bonshaw was run through with a sword some time after , and died in remorse , crying out , "Evil shall haunt the violent man."
Cargill was hurried to Glasgow , thence to Edinburgh. His indictment was prepared under the direction of the bloody MacKenzie, and the form of punishment - death by the gallows- was decided upon by the casting vote of the infamous Chancellor, Lord Rothes. "This is a weary sound ," said he , as the trumpet proclaimed his doom, " but the sound of the last trumpet will be a joyful sound to me , and to all that will be found leaning upon Christ's righteousness." Come to the scaffold , the aged saint of God conducts himself right royally. He sings a few verses of the close of the 118th Psalm :-
Thou art my God, I'll thee exalt;
My God , I will thee praise.
Give thanks to God for he is good;
His mercy lasts always."
He addresses the motley throng that press near around him. He tells them of his own interest in the everlasting covenant and his certainty of that interest ; he affirms his belief that Christ will return again gloriously to Scotland; he entreats them not to be discouraged at the way of Christ and the cause for which he was about to lay down his life; and in the words of jubilant expectation he triumphs in glory so near at hand:- " The Lord knows ,"as he set his foot on the ladder, "I go on this ladder with less fear and perturbation of mind than ever I entered the pulpit to preach." Lifting up the napkin , he uttered the last words :- Farewell all friends and relatives in Christ ; farewell acquaintances and earthly enjoyments ; farewell reading and preaching ; praying and believing, wanderings ,reproach, and sufferings . Welcome ,Father, Son, and Holy Ghost , into thy hands I commit my spirit."
"Servant of God , well done , rest from thy lov'd employ,
The battle's fought , the victory's won , enter thy Master's joy ."
" And one of the elders answered , saying unto me , What are these that are arrayed in white robes .?and whence came they ? And I said unto him, Sir , thou knowest . And he said unto me , These are they that came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes , and made them white in the blood of the Lamb."
Times of persecution in Scotland.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Church discipline