| As the one primarily responsible
for the suggestion that this book should be translated and published I am
happy to write a word of introduction and recommendation.
The very fact that I have made the suggestion shows in itself the value
that I attach to it. I have long felt that those who cannot read and understand
the Welsh language should be given the opportunity of reaping some of the
benefits and blessings that I have enjoyed from reading this book.
Let me introduce its contents.
It is not a complete biography of Howell Harris. It concentrates in great
detail only upon the first three years of his spiritual history. There are
two or three full biographies of him in book form (out of print alas!) and
also articles on him in certain larger works on Welsh Calvinistic Methodism.
But the object of Richard Bennett, the original author, was to allow us
to see the working of God's Spirit in the soul of Howell Harris in the detailed
manner recorded in Harris's own Diaries, in these first formative and thrilling
years. Bennett therefore rightly felt that his own remarks should be reduced
to a minimum, and that all that was required of him was to supply the connecting
links in the story so as to enable the reader to understand the various
allusions to actual events. He does not attempt to comment upon, still less
to apply or to enforce, what is revealed in the extracts from Harris's Diaries.
He was too sensitive spiritually to do so, and probably felt the ground
was so holy that he could but take off the shoes from off his feet and be
silent in awe. I have always been most grateful to him for this.
No! Here we have Howell Harris himself making bare his soul and allowing
us to read of God's dealings with him. As spiritual autobiography it is
practically unrivalled. A more honest soul than Harris never lived. That
was the testimony of all his contemporaries to him. There is a sense in
which he was almost too honest and too sensitive. But who are we in this
decadent, superficial and glib age to say that?
At times we are privileged to look on at the struggles of a mighty soul
and made to feel something of its agony. At other times we listen to the
praises and thanksgiving of a soul virtually lifted up to the third heaven
and knowing such outpourings of the Holy Spirit and workings of the love
of God that he could scarce contain them.
Anyone who reads this book carefully will derive great spiritual benefit.
He will be troubled and uplifted, corrected and encouraged. Some may well
feel that they have never hitherto been Christians at all if this is really
what is possible to the Christian. Others in self defence and resisting
the Spirit, will feel that this is but "enthusiasm" and "ecstasy,"
the two things that a "moderate," formal, respectable, Laodicean
Christianity always abominates.
But read it for yourself!
Quite apart from these considerations which are the chief reason for reading
it, this book is quite invaluable from the historical standpoint. Howell
Harris was a intimate friend of Whitefield, the Wesleys and the other Leaders
of the evangelical awakening in England in the 18th century. He frequently
preached for Whitefleld in London and acted as his deputy while the latter
was in America.
As for the history of the same revival in Wales and the origin of what is
now known as the Presbyterian Church of Wales what is recorded here is crucial
and essential.
Ryle in his work, "The Religious Leaders of the 18th Century,"
did not include Harris because he never became an ordained clergyman. The
reasons for that are explained here and are of fascinating interest in and
of themselves.
Nothing is more profitable, after the reading of the Bible itself and books
that help us to understand it, than the reading of the biography or autobiography
of a great Christian man. Howell Harris was a great man and a genius in
a natural sense, a brilliant organiser and improvisor; a man who would have
succeeded in almost any walk in life. He had a complex and fascinating personality
which made him inevitably a prince and a leader amongst men. He takes his
place naturally and as an equal in the distinguished company to which I
have already referred.
He was not as great a preacher as Daniel Rowlands and George Whitefield,
but as an exhorter he was probably superior to both.
But what amazes us and humbles us and condemns us is his humility and his
utter submission to our Lord at all costs. This is why God used him in such
a mighty manner.
Would you know something of what is meant by the term "revival"?
Would you know the real meaning of, "the Spirit itself beareth witness
with our spirit that we are the children of God"? Would you know more
of "life in the Spirit," and "prayer in the Spirit,"
and something of "the powers of the world to come"? Then read
this book and remember that Howell Harris was but "a man of like passions
with ourselves" and that Jesus Christ is "the same yesterday,
today and forever."
The translation is faithful and clear. I pray that this book may be so blessed
and used as to cause many to cry out saying, "where is the Lord God
of Howell Harris?"
D. MARTYN LLOYD-JONES,
Westminster Chapel, London.
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