An Old School Presbyterian Ministers in both North and South
William Swan Plumer was not a name which I had recognized until someone gave me a commentary written by him. It was filled with the rich meat of the Word of God, and I wanted to know more of his spiritual gifts.
He was the preeminent pastor and teacher of the church. He evidently had a voice which stopped people in their tracks to pause and listen. He was a soul-winner par excellence as soul after soul met the Redeemer and were converted. He was a pastor’s pastor as well, and met the needs of his congregations with pathos and sympathy, when that was needed.
As a church pastor, William S. Plumer also watched the movements away from the faith once delivered unto the saints. At the 1837 General Assembly, he powerfully made the distinction between the Old School Presbyterians and the New School Presbyterians clear and plain. There was a call to come out and be separate from the entangling alliances which the New School Presbyterians had with the Congregationalists. Thus when the Assembly voted to stop their compromising union, Rev. Plumer had a large part in preserving the Calvinistic convictions of the General Assembly, to say nothing of the biblical basis of Presbyterianism.
Words to live by: It is often a case where the people in the pew only recognize the emoluments of a person if he has a string of degrees behind his name and is recognized in the leading organizations of the church. Then a man by the name of William Plumer comes along and we hear and see the Spirit of God residing in a pastor and teacher, and our minds are overcome with what God can do through a mere man. The only qualification which God recognizes in His servants, for loving and obedient service to Him, is faithfulness. Let us be faithful to the Word of God in the places where He has put us.
Tags: Central Presbyterian, General Assembly, New School Presbyterians, William Plumer
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