Dr Alan C. Clifford wrote this excellent piece:
Although John Jones had been preaching for several
years, and had become famous throughout Wales and beyond, he had not
received full ordination at this time. However, this occurred in the
Bala Association in June 1829, when five others were ordained with him.
At the close of the ordination service, John Elias delivered the charge.
In the same Association, in the evening of the last day, John Jones
preached on the words, ‘The Lord reigneth; let the earth rejoice; let
the mul titude of isles be glad thereof. Clouds and darkness are round
about Him; righteousness and judgment are the habitation of His throne’
(Psalm 97: 1-2). He was aware of the deep and solemn importance of
ordination to the full calling of the Christian ministry. ‘His own
sensitive spirit was deeply moved’, wrote Owen Jones, ‘and his sermon
that night was delivered with great power. The Revd John Hughes,
Wrexham, preached after him. In speaking of the event, Mr Hughes said,
“It would have been disheartening even for John Elias to rise up after
him”’.
Ever since the
first ordinations of 1811, the Calvinistic Methodists were aware of the
high privileges and responsibilities of an ordained ministry. Freed at
last from the shackles of Anglicanism, they were able to develop,
establish and express a truly Reformed view of the Church. From a
Continental perspective, the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists were truly
‘The Reformed Churches of Wales’, later known as the Presbyterians of
Wales - without denying that other branches of Welsh Nonconformity share
some characteristics of Reformed churchmanship. The Confession
of 1823 outlined the ethos and duties of the people of God, which John
Jones and his brethren promised solemnly to uphold, teach and maintain:
Christ the head of the church, has instituted ordinances, means of grace, and an order of worship, to be used in the church by all his people, - in private, in the family, and in the congregation. Through these ordinances, God gives grace, and nourishes and increases the grace given. They are the ordinances of preaching, reading and hearing the word, prayer, praise, mutual instruction, conversation [cydymddyddan], the exercise of every part of church discipline, and the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.
Whatever
biblical reservations John Jones entertained about the ‘Owenite’
features of Article 18 ‘Of Redemption’, he was fully committed to
Article 37. In his high views of the sacraments, he was neither Baptist
nor Anglican. Furthermore, ‘he was anxious to keep these high in the
estimation of the people’.
Regarding
baptism, John Jones’s own family experience - as a son of godly parents
and now a father of a growing family - was a constant reminder of God’s
covenant mercies. Owen Jones creates a beautiful picture of John Jones’s
understanding of the ordinance of covenant baptism:
And whenever the Sacrament of Baptism or of the Lord’s Supper was administered by him, he always performed the duty with the solemnity that was due to the occasion. In the case of the Sacrament of Baptism, he would deliver an appropriate address upon the duties which parents owe to their children, upon the profession of Christ made through baptism, the importance of bringing up the young in the church; at other times he would speak of the meaning of the Sacrament, and of the great change that was signified by it. Some of these addresses were very thrilling, and his prayers were always fervent for the blessing of God upon the parents and the children.
Owen
Jones’s account of John Jones’s celebration of the Lord’s Supper is a
narrative of exquisite rapture, and deserves to be quoted in full:
His administration of the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper was more impressive still. This is done in Wales generally at the close of the service. After prayer and consecration the minister goes round the members with the bread and wine; and while doing so he speaks words appropriate to the occasion. Mr John Jones always took some special point in connection with the death of Christ: His love, His humiliation, His self-denial and obedience to the will of God; the sufficiency of His sacrifice, the cleansing through His blood, &c.; and he dwelt upon it, and expressed his thoughts until gradually he became warmed by the subject; his ideas flowed as from a fountain; his mind was thrilled; those emotions passed from him to the congregation; the people became absorbed in the same great subject; and they forgot themselves at last, and seemed lost in a sea of gladness and Divine joy. We have heard it said that his addresses at the Communion table were at times so fervent, so glowing, so heavenly, that the people could hardly venture from a feeling of awe and reverence to take the elements from his hand.
A
uniquely-glorious experience of such heavenly joy was felt when John
Jones was preaching at the Tabernacle, Bangor one Lord’s Day evening in
the early summer of 1835. Again, Owen Jones paints the wonderful
picture:
The service commenced at six o’clock. The sermon was not over till half past eight. Nevertheless, the people were not tired; under the spell of his oratory time was forgotten. On this occasion there was a Communion service to be at the close. The sermon itself was impressive; and the congregation had been worked up to a high pitch of emotion. It was felt at the Communion table that the service went on with great ease. The preacher was in a most elevated mood, and grace was evidently being poured into his lips, and a live coal from the altar of the sanctuary had touched them; so that they glowed with peculiar eloquence that evening. The preacher had gone round the large chapel with the bread, and was now returning for the wine. He took the cups in his hands, and held them up with the wine in them, and with his sweet voice he said, “Do you see, my friends, how the wine begins to redden?” These words, with those beautiful notes of his, ran electrically through the multitude. The tears rushed to the eyes of many, as if to see what was the cause of such a shock, and they gave vent to their emotions in words; and probably there was not a man who did not feel that moment something creeping shudderingly over him. After a while there was perfect silence again, and he went on speaking upon the “precious blood of Christ.” The time had gone; no one thought of looking upon the clock. Their minds had been absorbed. It was after ten o’ clock when he commenced praying in order to close the meeting. He said, “Indeed, Lord, we would have praised Thee to-night, only that it has gone late. Blessed be God, because we have hopes of going into a country where there will be no record of time to disturb our worship; and because we can hope for the day when we shall never become tired of the house of God.” Before he had gone any farther, the feelings of the people became too warm again; and their voices drowned the voice of the preacher; and there they remained till it was eleven o’clock.
Such
were the amazing labours of the Revd John Jones, Talsarn. For all the
joys of heaven poured out in such abundance, his Lord’s day travels
denied him any rest. He often had to preach in three places, many miles
apart, each service concluding with the Lord’s Supper and sometimes a
baptism. Clearly his ordination as a minister of the Gospel had a
profound influence upon him. His biographer appropriately describes this
period in the preacher’s career: ‘He consecrated his energies, his
talents, and his genius more than ever to the great cause of Christ. And
though his toil was incessant and his labours excessive, yet he was
employed with the work he delighted to be in; and he enjoyed times of
most thorough refreshing and happiness. His ministry advanced in power,
and his popularity became greater still’.
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