It is not the purpose of this Preface to anticipate the biography of Dr. Whyte, now being prepared by Dr. G. Freeland Barbour, or to provide a considered estimate of the great preacher's work as a whole. But it may be well briefly to explain the appearance of the present volume, and to take it, so far as it goes, as a mirror of the man. The desire has been expressed in various quarters that this sequence of sermons on prayer should appear by itself. Possibly it may be followed at a later date by a representative volume of discourses, taken from different points in Dr. Whyte's long ministry. It is a curious fact that he who was by general consent the greatest Scottish preacher of his day published during his lifetime no volume of Sunday morning sermons, though his successive series of character studies, given as evening lectures, were numerous and widely known.
At the close of the winter season, 1894-95, Dr. Whyte had brought to a conclusion a lengthy series of pulpit studies in the teaching of our Lord. It was evident that our Lord's teaching about prayer had greatly fascinated him: more than one sermon
Nobody else could have preached these sermons,
-- after much reading and re-reading of them that
remains the most vivid impression: there can be
few more strongly personal documents in the whole
literature of the pulpit. Of course, his favourites
appear--Dante and Pascal, Butler and Andrewes,
Bunyan and Edwards: they contribute their
gift of illustration or enforcement, and fade away.
But these pages are Alexander Whyte: the glow
and radiance of them came out of that flaming
heart. Those who knew and loved him will welcome the
autobiographic touches: In one of the
1. One is his wonderful gift of Imagination. It is characteristic of him that, in his treatment of his chosen theme, he should give one whole discourse to the use of the imagination in prayer. But there is scarcely a sermon which does not at some point illustrate the theme of that discourse. Here was a soul "full of eyes." He had the gift of calling up before himself that of which he spoke; and, speaking with his eye on the object, as he loved to put it, he made his hearers see it too with a vividness which
often startled them and occasionally amused them.
2. Along with this goes a strongly dramatic instinct. This
provides some words and phrases in the following pages, which might
not stand the test of a cold or pedantic criticism. A strict editorship
might have cut them out: Dr. Whyte himself might have done so, had he
revised these pages for the press. But they have been allowed to stand
because they now enshrine a memory: even after twenty-five years or more,
they will bring back to some hearers the moments when the preacher's eyes
were lifted off his manuscript, when his hand
You all do know this mantle: I rememberIt was a daring experiment--did ever any other preacher link these two passages together?--but in Dr. Whyte's hands extraordinarily moving. The sermon closed with a great shout, "Now let it
The first time Caesar ever put it on.
3. It was Dr. Whyte's own wish that he should be
known as a specialist in the study of sin: he was
willing to leave other distinctions to other men.
No reader of these pages will be surprised to discover
that, in the place of prayer which this preacher
builds, the Miserere and the De Profundis are among
the most haunting strains. The question has often
been asked--Did Dr. Whyte paint the world and
human nature too black? Even if he did, two
things perhaps may be said. The first is that there
are so few specialists now in this line of teaching,
that we can afford occasionally to listen to one who
made it his deliberate business. And the second
is that the clouds which this prophet saw lying
over the lives of other men were no blacker than
those which he honestly believed to haunt his own
soul. That sense of sin goes with him all the way
and enters into every message. If he overhears
Habakkuk praying about the Chaldeans, the
Chaldeans turn immediately into a parable of the
power which enslaves our sinful lives. Assyria,
Babylonia, anything cruel, tyrannous, aggressive,
is but a finger-post pointing to that inward and
ultimate bondage out of which all other tyrannies
Heaving the earth to take in air.So these sermons become a tremendous rallying call to our moral energies, that we may overcome our handicap, and shake off our load of dust, and do our best with our exhilarating opportunity. Here the sermon on "The Costliness of Prayer" is typical: there is small chance of success in the spiritual life unless we are willing to take time and thought and trouble,--unless we are willing to sacrifice and crucify our listless, slothful, self-indulgent habits. This is a Stoicism, a small injection of which might put iron
4. For the total and final effect of such preaching
is not depressing: it is full of stimulus and
encouragement mainly because the vision of sin and
the vision of difficulty are never far removed from
the vision of Grace. Dr. Whyte's preaching, stern
as the precipitous sides of a great mountain, was
also like a great mountain in this, that it had many
clefts and hollows, with sweet springs and healing
plants. One of his most devoted elders wrote of him:
"No preacher has so often or so completely dashed
me to the ground as has Dr. Whyte; but no man
has more immediately or more tenderly picked me
up and set me on my feet again." Perhaps there
was no phrase more characteristic of him, either in
preaching or in prayer, than the prophet's cry, "Who
is a God like unto Thee?" And when at his bidding,--with
an imagination which is but faith under
another name, we ourselves become the leper at
Christ's feet, or the prodigal returning home, or
Peter in the porch, or Lazarus in his grave, and find
in Christ the answer to all our personal need,--we
begin to feel how real the Grace of God, the God of
Grace, was to the preacher, and how real He may be
to us also. This volume is full of the burdens of the
saints, the struggles of their souls, and the stains upon
their raiment. But it is no accident that it ends
When all is said, there is something here that
defies analysis,--something titanic, something
colossal, which makes ordinary preaching seem to
lie a long way below such heights as gave the vision
in these words, such forces as shaped their appeal.
We are driven back on the mystery of a great soul,
dealt with in God's secret ways and given more
than the ordinary measure of endowment and
grace. His hearers have often wondered at his
sustained intensity; as Dr. Joseph Parker once
wrote of him: "many would have announced the
chaining of Satan for a thousand years with less
expenditure of vital force" than Dr. Whyte gave
to the mere announcing of a hymn. That intensity
was itself the expression of a burning sincerity:
like his own Bunyan, he spoke what he "smartingly
did feel." And, though his own hand would very
quickly have best raised to check any such testimony
while he was alive, it may be said, now that he is
gone; that he lived intensely what he so intensely
spoke. In that majestic ministry, stretching over
so long a time, many would have said that the
personal example was even a greater thing than the
burning words,--and not least the personal example
in the matter of which this book treats,--the life
of prayer; ordered, methodical, deliberate, unwearied
1 The sermons on Jacob and the Man who knocked at midnight are parallel to the extent of a few sentences, and that on Elijah to the extent of a paragraph or two, with studies previously published in the Bible Characters. But they are so characteristic of the preacher, and so vital to the series that it has been deemed wise to give them, even though they are slightly reminiscent of matter which has before appeared.