The time now came for the modern apostles to be put to the test. They had not only studied and conferred together in the pleasant retreat of Albury, but had elaborated “the Great Testimony” to the patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, and others in places of chief rule over the church of Christ throughout the earth, and to the emperors, kings, sovereign princes, and chief governors over the nations of the baptized. This pretentious document forms an Appendix of not less than ninety closely-printed pages at the end of Mr. Miller's vol. i., to which the reader is referred who desires to consider frilly what the entire college of these apostles, supplemented by such aid as they called in, had to say to those addressed. A smaller testimony, for which Mr. Perceval was responsible, had been delivered by him and Mr. Drummond to King William IV. and the Privy Councilors in 1836, as was another under Mr. Cardale's charge delivered to the Anglican hierarchy and many of the clergy, two apostles waiting on the Archbishop of Canterbury and several bishops. These may be examined though not quite in extenso in an Appendix to Mr. M.'s vol. ii.
Furnished with the larger instrument, and each of them choosing as his subordinate companions a prophet, an evangelist, and a pastor, to act as heads each over his own province of ministry, the apostles went forth early in 1838, with the injunction to return before the year ran out. Mr. Cardale, as the senior to whom England was assigned, staid at home, as apparently Mr. Tudor also for aright that appears of any visit to Poland or India then recorded. As Scotland and Ireland were at hand, Messrs Drummond and Armstrong were within easy call.
According to the “Narrative” (of authority within the society) three tasks were imposed on each corps of missionaries lst, to spy out the land; 2nd, to dig for gold; and 3rd, to seek gates of entrance. A vivid contrast with the true apostles! Not so did Peter visit all parts of the land, or open the kingdom of heaven to the Gentiles. Not so did Paul and Barnabas fulfill the work for which they were called and separated by the Holy Spirit. They knew that wherever they went, it was the valley of deep darkness, but that they carried the true light, yea were seen as lights in the world, holding forth the word of life. They had the treasure in earthen vessels, which they sought to communicate, instead of digging for gold; and they looked to the Lord for an opened door. Nor was it in vain; for they were blessed in every way, quite as much in their sufferings, as in what men call sacrifices. Why the modern apostles and their helps were admonished to be “as learners and observers rather than teachers” is passing strange. If it is pleaded that it was now a question of Christendom, rather than of Jews and Gentiles as of old, can we forget to what their own party had long borne witness? That Christendom consists, said they, of the various streets of Babylon fore-doomed of God, and, more loudly than anything ever did, demanding the cry, Come out of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues; for her sins have reached unto heaven and God hath remembered her iniquities. Babylon, the great confusion and corruption of the truth, and a persecutor more cruel than Jew or heathen, seems at this time to have risen into no small honor in Irvingite eyes.
To the initiated three dignitaries in particular became the object of the “Great Testimony “: the Pope; the Emperor (i.e., of Austria), the then supposed heir of the western power; and the King of the French, as the real continental representative at that epoch of constitutional monarchy. So the “Narrative” informs us. But the modern apostles found others to be no less adepts in ceremony than themselves, and had to content themselves with placing their document in intermediate hands. Some kings and bishops it did reach, perhaps all who were aimed at. Whether in that visit or since, they soon learned that Romanist countries are uncongenial soil, and where the Greek church prevails, little better. Lutherans and Reformed were more open to their appeal.
It is certain that these envoys carried themselves everywhere as inoffensive gentlemen. They may have been more abundant in labors than their records imply; but of prison, stripes, deaths, none can speak, nor of any approach to such distresses for Christ's sake. Perils of all kinds they studiously and prudently avoided. They knew nothing, as far as one has heard, of toil and travails, of watchings, of hunger and thirst, of cold and nakedness. One apostle of old, ashamed to tell us of himself, was compelled nevertheless through the wrong of others to say how he labored and suffered, aye, immeasurably more than these all together. This seems peculiar, if they were veritable apostles (weigh 1 Cor. 4:9-13).
The effect of their mission appears to have been disastrous to themselves. Their Judaizing tendency, already marked, received immense impulse and material from their spying out the lands; they brought home “gold” as they thought, for circulation. It was really what God's word denounces as the basest of beggarly elements (Gal. 4). On their return the development of Ritual and Liturgy became their passion. In this of course the Eucharist and its offering took up the central place, and, one might say, idolatrous honor.
But dissensions at home hurried them back, though it was agreed at length to meet not earlier than June, 1840. It was owing to the preponderance of “the prophets” in the absence of “the apostles,” who harped on the fourfold ministry (Eph. 4) to the danger, as Mr. Cardale and his fellows thought, of the supreme place due to the apostolate. It was contended, on the one hand, that the council, where all could act in their measure together, ought to govern as the last resort. For the apostles, on the one hand, to be reduced to an executive was resented, as not only derogatory, but suicidal. The absent envoys were therefore recalled to stem the adverse current; especially as “the angels” (or bishops of the party) sympathized with “the prophets” in their jealousy of “the apostles.” It seems likely that the lack of apostolic signs, and of the expected “baptism of fire,” as well as comparative failure abroad, may have strengthened the revolt.
The assembled twelve at once sought to hear all grievances, as well as every opposing view about the ministry, themselves included. After mature consideration they set forth their unanimous judgment that the new proposals were incompatible with divine order, and could issue only in that disunion and ruin which had overspread the church, till the modern twelve were restored according to prophecy. Their apostolic position was not of their seeking, but owned by all as immediately of the Lord, however much they realized their own insufficiency. Diotrephes' censure stood a warning to all opposers of an apostle. They should therefore go on as they had began, and on no other ground would they bear the burden of the churches. This decision they delivered in August, and in September closed the council of Zion which had continued to be held monthly hitherto. In 1847 the council of the tribe of Judah began for the seven churches, as it goes on still month by month; there was also a meeting for their and other angels under the apostle. It appears, if Mr. Miller be rightly informed, that they look for the next council of Zion, as for the universal church, after the Lord's advent: a most irreverent idea of theirs.
But a serious, not to say deadly, blow was given to the prophets; for it was now laid down, more emphatically at least than before, that the state of the prophet modified materially his utterances: error as well as uncleanness might be there; so that the prophet fell under the general rule, and the decision lay with the apostles. How differently speaks God's word in Deut. 18: 22.
Thus the twelve prevailed; yet the twelfth could not go with the rest. Mr. Mackenzie, though bowing to the measures, withdrew from active personal responsibility. (“Narrative,” p. 83.) All efforts failed to induce him to act the apostle without the power, which he failed to see in any. He doubted them till “they had received a second Pentecostal endowment of power in supernatural manifestations.” Here again, as in Mr. D. Dow's case, was a deep wound in the twelve-fold unity, their articulus stantis vel cadentis ecclesiae. But their eyes were sealed. They were for the most part so committed to their notions, as the voice of God, that most refused the warning. Visits of the churches followed, and general acquiescence with answers of unchanged confidence. Satan does not let off the truth so easily. Yet not a few escaped, and many more stood aloof.