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Robert Murray McCheyne
1813 - 1843
"I am deeply persuaded that there will be no full, soul-filling,
heart-ravishing, heart-satisfying outpouring of the Spirit of God till
there be more praise and thanking the Lord. Let me stir up your hearts to
praise."
Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1813, Robert Murray McCheyne was one of God's blessings given to Scotland
in the early part of the 19th century.
Robert displayed outstanding intellectual skills as a child: at the age
of four, he taught himself to name and to write the Greek alphabet, while
recovering from an illness. He later used a remarkable memory to memorize
long passages of Scripture.
Attending the University
of Edinburgh, he
was greatly influenced by Thomas Chalmers. He graduated in 1830.
Having
been licensed to preach when he was 22, McCheyne
was ordained a year later and began pastoring
in Dundee, Scotland.
For six years he was pastor of St. Peter's Church (of the Church of
Scotland), which grew to over one thousand members.
In 1839 he visited Palestine
concerning future evangelization of the Jewish people. While there, he
prayed fervently for his congregation back home. Upon his return he found
that a spiritual awakening was in progress. His preaching consequently
made a significant contribution to the revival and helped it spread
across Scotland to
northern England.
He used his intellectual ability to design sermons that had a tremendous
persuasion upon the unconverted. He was only 30 when he died in 1843,
reportedly of typhoid fever.
Few men have had the impact in a long lifetime that Robert Murray McCheyne had in his 30 years. Though his ministry
lasted only seven years, he is recognized as one of the great spiritual
leaders of his day. His was a daily walk with God, and it was perhaps his
Christ-like dependence upon God's Spirit that left such a deep impression
on men's lives.
After hearing him preach, one Scottish evangelist reportedly said,
"He preached with eternity stamped upon his brow. I trembled, and
never felt God so near."
McCheyne's life undoubtedly exemplified the
words he so often repeated: "Live so as to be missed."
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