The online Bible teaching ministry of John Brand

This Day in HIS-story: January 1

1519

The Swiss Reformation begins when Huldrych Zwingli assumes his duties as priest of Zurich and begins preaching through the Bible.

1826

HT: Dan Graves

David Nasmith‘s heart was broken. 19th-century Scotland was rich in Industry. But when the 27-year-old man looked around his native Glasgow, it was not industrial wealth he saw, but spiritual poverty:

“Although this city is highly favored with religious privileges yet there are thousands who know as little of the Gospel as if it never had been preached in their land… they are living as careless as if they were never to be called to account. There are thousands of families where the name of God is never mentioned except when it is taken in vain … a vast number of the poor have never been taught to read.”

The churches of Glasgow sat right there in the middle of poorest neighborhoods, but might as well have been located on Mars for all the impact they had.

David was no idle talker. Since the age of fourteen, he’d been trying to do something about the problem–that’s when he began distributing Bibles to people too poor to buy their own. In 1824, he made another stab at the problem, founding a “Young Men’s Society for Religious Improvement.” That only led him to picture an even bigger assault on ignorance and sin.

What if all Glasgow’s churches, all its helping agencies, and any other Christians who cared to were to band together to challenge Satan’s stranglehold on the city?

On this day, January 1, 1826 David Nasmith opened the Protestant world’s first city mission in Glasgow, Scotland. This was also the first parachurch agency in the world that aimed at taking the gospel to all of the citizens in its area of operation. Nasmith’s organization didn’t just preach at people. Sure, it handed out gospel literature and held services. But it also got medical care to the poor and provided public health services that governments did not yet offer. The mission workers opened schools, visited prisoners and stood in court with those who ran afoul of the law.

Nasmith’s idea appealed to Christians around the world. City missions sprang up in diverse places. Nasmith himself founded several in Britain, France, Ireland, and the USA.

Thirteen years after he made his great innovation, David Nasmith died. It was Christmas day. He was just forty and as poor as a church mouse. But he left a rich legacy that now amounts to hundreds of city missions worldwide.

1893

HT: Christian History Institute

January 1, 1893 fell on a Sunday. One of England’s notable preachers, Charles Spurgeon, based a sermon written for that day on the common practice of making a New Year’s resolution.

Taking Psalm 115 as his text, he urged his listeners to worship the living God in a living manner and to “bless the Lord from this time forth and forevermore.”

“Begin to praise Him in the tone of your spirit. May God the blessed Comforter help you to do it by a calm, equable frame of mind, by a Divine placidity of temper, by a complete subjection of the will to Him so that you shall not feel it to be subjection, but find it to be your delight that the Lord should do with you whatever pleases Him! It is bliss to praise God so that our very thoughts praise Him, not by effort, but as flowers pour out their perfume, so that our inmost soul praises Him, just as the birds sing, not as if it were a task, but because it cannot help it! Was it not made to sing?”

1937

Death of J. Gresham Machen, a gifted Presbyterian scholar and defender of the Christian faith in the United States. Concerned with a rising tide of liberalism among Presbyterians, he had helped found the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.

0 Comments

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *