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GOD'S GIFT TO A NATION
J.
Elwyn Davies
The task of attempting so soon after his passing a brief assessment of Dr.
Lloyd-Jones' ministry, and in particular of his influence on church life in
Wales, is well-nigh an impossible one. The impact of his life and ministry,
extending over more than half a century, has been so profound that one is truly
at a loss to know where to begin. The words of the Welsh hymn, sung with such
fervour by the company of relatives and friends who were gathered around his
grave at Newcastle Emlyn, say it all. It is from the vantage point of 'heavenly
Jerusalem's towers' alone that we shall be able with any measure of certainty to
trace the path along which we have been led through 'the desert' of this life.
To attempt to do this is incumbent upon us, however, if only to enable us to
return thanks to God for all that He achieved through the ministry of His
servant.
And we would be doing a gross injustice to that story if we failed to start
with his remarkable period of ministry at Sandfields, Aberavon. In a very real
sense the eleven years he spent there served to shape and to determine his
lifelong convictions. His subsequent ministry at Westminster Chapel with its
world - wide ramifications - through the publication of his sermons and the many
thousands of foreign students and others who worshipped there over the years -
could so easily dazzle our eyes to the remarkable years of his first period of
ministry. Most certainly, no account of his impact and influence on the Welsh
religious scene could ignore this formative period in his life.
No one who knew Dr. Lloyd-Jones would be left in any uncertainty as to his
love for Wales and for its people. Thus, when he felt called to leave the field
of medicine and to devote his life to the work of the ministry, it seemed right
to him that he should offer his services to the Forward Movement of the
Presbyterian Church of Wales. But there was a further reason why he chose to do
this. In a television interview with the late Aneurin Talfan Davies he once
explained that his father's radical views and his concern for the poor and
underprivileged had had a profound effect upon him. This was why he was
particularly anxious to minister in the kind of areas that were then being
served by the Forward Movement.
That the hand of God was upon him, inclining him in the direction that was
eventually to bring him to the church at Sandfields, Aberavon, was made evident
by the many tokens of blessing and favour that attended his labours there. From
the working - class community of that town and neighbourhood, through his
anointed labours, God called and redeemed many remarkable trophies of grace.
Soon a sizeable congregation of men was to gather regularly on a Saturday
evening to attend the Doctor's 'brotherhood discussion session'. And before he
left, eleven years later, the congregation had grown to such proportions that an
annexe had to be built alongside the church building, enabling the overflowing
numbers to follow the services through the open windows of the chapel.
News of Dr. Lloyd-Jones' call to the ministry and the fame of his preaching
spread far and wide, and it was from that town, so strategically placed in South
Wales, that God sent His servant, in what became a regular mid-week ministry,
bearing the message of salvation to all parts of Wales and beyond. It may be
difficult for us today to imagine what it was like. Those were days when, in
Wales at least, the chapels were full, and the entire population, it seemed, was
in membership in some chapel or other. To a young lad in his early teens at the
time it also seemed as though everyone went to hear the Doctor, wherever he
preached.
Looking back over those years, Dr. Lloyd-Jones was well aware that there were
Christians in Wales at that time who were disappointed that he had felt unable
to identify himself wholeheartedly with their testimony. And it is true to say
that the Doctor himself could not fully explain at the time why it was that he
could not bring himself to be associated with, for example, some of the
pentecostal and Keswick traditions which had emerged in Wales following the
'04-'05 Revival.
These were the years when he was possessed with one consuming passion - to
tell men that in and through the Lord Jesus Christ they could know God. They
were also the years when for the first time, following upon his distinguished
medical career, he was able to give himself avidly to the study of theology and
Christian doctrine. There is the famous story of how he was challenged at the
close of a service in Bridgend by a minister who commented provocatively, 'I
cannot make up my mind what you are. I cannot decide whether you are a hyper -
Calvinist or a Quaker.' On being asked why the comment was being made, he was
told, 'You talk of God's action and God's sovereignty like a hyper-Calvinist and
of spiritual experience like a Quaker, but the Cross and the work of Christ have
very little place in your preaching.' Assuring him that he was not a
hyper-Calvinist, the Doctor's response was to ask the Rev. Vernon Lewis - later
to be made Principal of the Memorial (Congregational) College at Brecon when he
called the following Monday morning, what he could read on the Atonement. He was
referred to the works of P. T. Forsyth, R. W. Dale's The Atonement, and
Denney's The Death of Christ - such was the dearth of truly evangelical
literature at the time.
Commenting on this incident in later years, the Doctor explained that in his
early preaching he was like Whitefield. First and foremost he preached
regeneration: man's own efforts were useless; he needed power from outside
himself. 'I assumed the Atonement but did not distinctly preach it or
Justification by faith.'
A little later, in a second-hand bookshop in Cardiff he came across the
two-volume edition of the works of Jonathan Edwards, and later still to his
great delight on a visit to the United States, the entire works of Warfield.
Years afterwards the Doctor was to explain that what kept him from identifying
himself with the traditions to which we have referred was his knowledge of what
God had done in the past through men like Daniel Rowland of Llangeitho, Howel
Harris and others. He was looking for those who shared their view of doctrine,
but, more, their view of experimental religion and of revival.
And such people were at a premium in the denomination to which he was
attached, as they had been. To us today it seems so regrettable that Dr.
Lloyd-Jones was ordained a minister of the Presbyterian Church of Wales when it
was too late even for a person of his gifts and convictions to influence the
issue of whether the denomination should adopt a Shorter Confession, and thus to
all intents and purposes relegate the old Confession of Faith to the status of
an historical document. Such was the case, however, and even though at one time
Dr. Lloyd-Jones had reason to hope that the common people, in response to his
preaching, would reject the arrogant views of the vast majority of liberal and
modernist preachers who by then were occupying the pulpits of our land, this was
not to be.
With his grandson Christopher in front of the Daniel
Rowland statue,
Llangeitho, 1957
On one occasion he was given what seemed to him a most promising portent for
good. He had been invited to preach in the same Association meeting as the Rev.
Tom Nefyn Williams, probably the most radical of all the liberal preachers of
the day, a man of considerable talent and charm. The Doctor would recount the
story of how he came down to breakfast on that occasion, only to sense as soon
as he entered the room that an uncomfortable silence had fallen upon all those
who were at the tables. Upon making discreet enquiry, he was asked chidingly,
'Don't you know what's happening? They are all debating who will get the bigger
congregation, Tom Nefyn or yourself.' At the first of the two services at which
they were to preach, each man's congregation had been more or less equal. But at
this first service Dr. Lloyd-Jones was given remarkable liberty in preaching, so
that by the second service his meeting was full to overflowing, while the Rev.
Tom Nefyn's congregation had been considerably reduced.
But it was not to be. A few years later Dr. Lloyd-Jones was given
incontrovertible proof that if the common people were prepared to hear him
gladly, a good number of the religious leaders of his denomination had been
considerably irked by his uncompromising adherence evangelical faith. They were
to the prepared to resist quite openly a proposal which, if accepted, could have
meant his sphere of influence within the denomination being very considerably
enhanced. After eleven years of intensive work at Port Talbot it was suggested
that he be appointed, in a year's time, to the staff of the Theological College
of the Presbyterian Church of Wales at Bala, under the Rev. David Phillips as
Principal. Although the proposal was favoured by the Associations in the South
and East, the North Wales Association kept deferring a decision - a deliberate
ploy, on the part of some of the leaders at least, to avoid the opprobrium of an
outright rejection, whilst at the same time making it obvious to the Doctor and
others that his services were not welcome.
In the meantime, while his own heart was very much inclined towards the Bala
vacancy, Dr. Lloyd-Jones had been invited to assist Dr. Campbell Morgan at
Westminster Chapel. Within six weeks of going there he had been invited to
continue on a permanent basis. But from October 1938 until after Easter 1939 he
refused to commit himself, still waiting for a firm invitation to the College at
Bala - an invitation which never came. The Doctor had persuaded the friends at
Westminster Chapel to await the decision of the North Wales Association's
meetings to be held at Chester. Three ministers had fully intended going to
those meetings and pressing for a favourable response, but for different reasons
all three were unable to be present, and the matter was once again left on the
table. The Doctor had no alternative but to accept the invitation to become
co-pastor with Dr. Campbell Morgan and thus to commence his 35 years of ministry
at Westminster Chapel.
As is so often said on such occasions, 'Wales's loss was surely England's
gain.' In the hindsight of close on half a century we now know that that step,
which to some might have seemed so regrettable at the time, proved to be
possibly the most far-reaching and consequential development this century in the
history of the evangelical cause in Britain, if not throughout the world.
However influential the Doctor's ministry might have been in a finishing college
devoted primarily to pastoralia, how can one begin to compute the influence for
good of this prince among preachers, this wise counsellor and spiritual leader,
through his pulpit ministry, his Friday evening lectures, his meetings for
ministers, the Westminster Conferences, his wider preaching ministry, his
availability at all times for counsel and advice - a ministry which is to
continue through his printed works and through the kind providence that has
enabled his spoken word to be preserved, so that to an uncanny degree we are
able to hear the Doctor as though he were yet with us? All these things, we now
know, hinged upon his ministry at Westminster Chapel. We can only say with the
Apostle, 'How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!'
(Romans 11:33).
It proved to be 'Wales' gain also, despite the fact that after the 1939-45
war, when it was evident that Nonconformity was losing its grip on the people,
Dr. Lloyd-Jones would occasionally be criticised for forsaking Wales in its hour
of need. One writer even suggested that he had done so for a more lucrative and
Comfortable ministry in a big church in London! Nothing, of course, could be
further from the truth. He never lost touch with the situation in Wales, nor did
he ever show any sign of rancour or bitterness as a result of what had happened.
He continued to preach to vast congregations in many centres in Wales. In 1977,
for example, he celebrated his fiftieth consecutive annual visit to preach at
Carmarthen. There were many similar instances. His sermons too had a wide
circulation.
But it was in the years after the war that his links with Wales assumed a
completely different role and significance. Prior to this, his ministry had been
that of a visiting preacher, preaching to vast congregations. Now it assumed
more that of a friend and counsellor to a body of young men whose labours were
eventually to lead to the emergence of faithful evangelical ministries in
churches of all denominations in Wales; to the emergence also of what became
known - on the Doctor's own suggestion at the Annual Welsh Conference held in
Denbigh in 1955 - as 'The Evangelical Movement of Wales', and, later, to the
establishing of avowedly evangelical causes free of all denominational
entanglement.
The Doctor's interest was first alerted to a movement of the Spirit that
occurred in the Colleges of Wales in the years 1945-50. It seemed to have two
focal points one in the South, which because of a strong Presbyterian background
was more doctrinal in its thrust, and one in the North which had a more
experimental emphasis. In the providence of God, Dr. Lloyd-Jones was brought
into close touch with both streams at the very outset and, in ways which today
we can see were graciously ordained of God, was able to assert from the
beginning a most salutary, formative and unifying influence.
As a consequence of his remarkable preaching ministry at Westminster Chapel,
he had by now been greatly used by the UCCF (or the IVF as it was then known).
In his own words, 'I became the theologian of the IVF.' When it was suggested
that the work in the recently reinvigorated Welsh Christian Unions would benefit
from meeting together in an annual conference, Dr. Lloyd-Jones was the obvious
choice as speaker. For the first three years he took the main conference
addresses, each year taking one major tenet of the Christian faith as his theme.
His ministry had a profound effect on the students. One student, who later
succeeded to his pulpit at Sandfields, Aberavon - the late Rev. J. B. E. Thomas
would often remark that he had learned more of Christian theology in those
conference addresses than in all the lectures he had ever attended at his
Theological College.
No sooner had the blessing broken out in the North than Dr. Lloyd-Jones was
to speak at a student mission at the University College, Bangor. There he
learned with immense satisfaction of the spontaneous work of the Spirit among
the students. Later he was to give his full endorsement to an experience of a
further enduement of the Spirit which some of the students had known - an
endorsement which coincided with his own renewed interest in the subject of the
sealing of the Spirit and revival.
When some of these students came to realise a little later that there was not
a single publication in the Welsh language committed to the evangelical faith,
Dr. Lloyd-Jones was asked to write in the first issue of a new Welsh - language
magazine which they published. When, later, they decided to invite the
readership of the magazine to a conference, his daughter Elizabeth attended the
first, held at Bala in 1951, and Dr. Lloyd-Jones was the main speaker at the
second, held at Caernarfon the following year. When, a little later, the need
was felt for an equivalent provision in English, Dr. Lloyd-Jones was once again
the main speaker, returning to the delight of his many friends, to his pulpit at
Sandfields, Aberavon. When some of the students from both North and South Wales
were to attend the National Eisteddfod for the first time to sell the new Welsh
- language magazine and to witness to their people, Dr. Lloyd- Jones met them
twice and addressed a late - evening gathering in one of the local churches.
Finally, when some of those students had themselves become ministers, Dr.
Lloyd-Jones was able to offer invaluable advice which led to the emergence both
of the Ministers' Fellowships associated with the Evangelical Movement of Wales
and also of its Annual Ministers' Conference. Barring periods of ill-health, the
Doctor attended that conference without fail, and every year would lead the two
discussion sessions and deliver his memorable closing addresses. Had Dr.
Lloyd-Jones not been with us at that time, there is little doubt that the work
of the gospel in Wales would have taken a very different form.
Some of the evangelical ministers in South Wales were anxious to meet in a
monthly ministers' fellowship restricted to brethren of a reformed persuasion.
They were anxious to invite the Doctor to the first of what would become an
annual gathering of ministers of the same persuasion from all parts of Wales.
Dr. Lloyd-Jones agreed to be present on condition that they widened the basis of
their fellowship - a step which was to lead to incalculable gain and benefit to
the cause of the gospel in Wales, and of the reformed faith in particular.

With Mrs. Lloyd-Jones at Llangeitho, 1968
And so the story continued. Throughout the 30 years that followed, the
Doctor's interest and support were unfailingly available to all who sought his
counsel; his presence and ministry were a source of strength and encouragement
to all who knew him. Indeed, so intimately involved was he in the ongoing
situation in Wales that for many months, if not years, it will be extremely
difficult to accept the fact that he is no longer with us.
Our comfort is surely that of the pastor's wife who, as she glanced at the
congregation that sang the hymn at his graveside on March 6th, suddenly noticed
how many ministers were present. Dr. Lloyd-Jones had been pastor and friend to
them all. With the support and constant encouragement of his dear wife and
partner Mrs. Lloyd-Jones, he had while physical strength remained preached in
their pulpits and attended all their conferences. In him the words of our Lord
had been gloriously fulfilled: 'Whosoever will be great among you, let him be
your minister; and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant.'
In many things he excelled, but in this most of all.
Wales had never lost one of its ablest sons. Allowed to function freely in a
church unfettered by any element of compromise or apostasy, he had continued to
serve his people. And now, taken to be with the Lord on St. David's Day, 1981,
he had come home again, to rest awhile - till He come.
The author is General Secretary of the Evangelical
Movement of Wales.
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