M'CHEYNE'S LIFE & TIMES
INTRODUCTION
Robert Murray M'Cheyne (1813 - 1843) was the minister of St Peter's Church Dundee (1836 - 1843).
He was a godly evangelical pastor and evangelist with a great love for souls.
These pages are devoted to providing information and links to archive material by or about M'Cheyne, one of my heros of the faith from the 19th century. We would be pleased to receive any additional material by or about M'Cheyne that comes to light. Please use our contact form to submit any information.
This following article was originally published in The Banner of Truth magazine (Issue 4, December 1955, pages 14-23), and is reproduced with permission from the publishers. This article was transcribed by David F. Haslam. The original spelling of McCheyne was replaced throughout by the preferred M'Cheyne.
He was a godly evangelical pastor and evangelist with a great love for souls.
These pages are devoted to providing information and links to archive material by or about M'Cheyne, one of my heros of the faith from the 19th century. We would be pleased to receive any additional material by or about M'Cheyne that comes to light. Please use our contact form to submit any information.
This following article was originally published in The Banner of Truth magazine (Issue 4, December 1955, pages 14-23), and is reproduced with permission from the publishers. This article was transcribed by David F. Haslam. The original spelling of McCheyne was replaced throughout by the preferred M'Cheyne.
THE COMMON MAN
Two men were working beside a fire in a quarry, one day in winter, when a stranger approached them on horseback. Alighting from his horse he began to enter into conversation on the state of their souls and drew some alarming truths from the blazing fire. The men were surprised, and exclaimed 'Ye're nae common man.' 'Oh yes,' he replied, 'just a common man.' One cannot meet Robert Murray M'Cheyne either in his biography (so powerfully written by Andrew Bonar) or in his sermons, without receiving the impression which these men received in their personal encounter with him so long ago. His brief ministry of seven-and-a-half years 'stamped an indelible impress on Scotland,' and though he died in his twenty-ninth year, more was wrought by him that will last for eternity than most accomplish in a lifetime. If we could summon but one life from the past, the lessons of which would apply most directly to this slothful and careless generation, perhaps it would be the life of Robert M'Cheyne. After his death, a fellow minister wrote, "Indolence and levity and unfaithfulness are sins that beset me ; and his living presence was a rebuke to all these, for I never knew one so instant in season and out of season, so impressed with the invisible realities, and so faithful in reproving sin and witnessing for Christ."
EARLY YEARS (1813 - 1827)
Robert M'Cheyne was born in Edinburgh in May, 1813, the youngest child in a family of five. His father was a prosperous lawyer and a man of social importance. Their spacious home, with its gardens, commanded a glorious view across to the shores of Fife. Here in Edinburgh M'Cheyne spent his childhood and youth.
After passing successfully though the High School, he entered the Arts Faculty of the University in autumn 1827. "He was of a lively turn" - his father later recorded - "and, during the first two or three years of his attendance at the University, he turned his attention to elocution and poetry and the pleasures of society …" M'Cheyne became at this time an eager participant in the city's fashionable entertainments, and scenes of gaiety - card playing, dancing, music - occupied his leisure hours.
HIS AWAKENING (1831 - 1835)
But he was the subject of his elder brother's fervent prayers, and the early death of this brother in 1831 was a stroke which was used to awaken Robert from the sleep of nature. It was "the first overwhelming blow to my worldliness."
He began to be serious, and to sit under an evangelical ministry. In the winter of 1831, following his desire to enter the ministry, he entered the Divinity Hall of the University. Under the leadership of men like Chalmers and Welsh there was a new stir of spiritual life in the College at this time, indeed it proved to be a new stir in the life of the Church of Scotland.

We can trace from his diary in the following years a growing grasp of Scriptural truth, a growing desire to live in communion with God and under the power of the world to come. Entries like this speak for themselves:--
"June 22. Bought Edwards' works. Truly there was nothing in me that should have induced Him to choose me. I was but as the other brands upon whom the fire is already kindled, which shall burn for evermore!"
"August 15. Awfully important question, Am I redeeming the time ?"
"February 23. Sabbath. Rose early to seek God, and found Him whom my soul loveth. Who would not rise early to meet such company ?"
Reading the biographies of past ministers had a profound influence on M'Cheyne at this time, especially such lives as Jonathan Edwards, Brainerd, Martyn, Payson, and Halyburton. In fact he became so familiar with the works of the first named, that Edwards' 'Resolutions' became exemplified in M'Cheyne -
- "Resolved never to lose one moment of time, but to improve it in the most profitable way I possibly can."
- "Resolved, That I will live so, as I shall wish I had done when I had come to die."
- "Resolved, To live with all my might, while I do live .."
From a letter M'Cheyne later wrote to a student, we can see what rules he applied to himself - "Do get on with your studies. Remember you are now forming the character of your future ministry, if God spare you. If you acquire slovenly or sleepy habits of study now, you will never get the better of it. Do everything in earnest. Above all, keep much in the presence of God. Never see the face of man till you have seen His face who is our life, our all."
The last entry of his student days is
"March 29, 1835. College finished on Friday last. My last appearance there. Life is vanishing fast, make haste for eternity."
So ended his preparatory discipline, both of heart and mind. "His soul," writes Bonar, "was prepared for the awful work of ministry by much prayer, and much study of the word of God ; by inward trials ; by experience of the depth of corruption in his own heart, and by discoveries of the Saviour's fulness of grace."

We can trace from his diary in the following years a growing grasp of Scriptural truth, a growing desire to live in communion with God and under the power of the world to come. Entries like this speak for themselves:--
"June 22. Bought Edwards' works. Truly there was nothing in me that should have induced Him to choose me. I was but as the other brands upon whom the fire is already kindled, which shall burn for evermore!"
"August 15. Awfully important question, Am I redeeming the time ?"
"February 23. Sabbath. Rose early to seek God, and found Him whom my soul loveth. Who would not rise early to meet such company ?"
Reading the biographies of past ministers had a profound influence on M'Cheyne at this time, especially such lives as Jonathan Edwards, Brainerd, Martyn, Payson, and Halyburton. In fact he became so familiar with the works of the first named, that Edwards' 'Resolutions' became exemplified in M'Cheyne -
- "Resolved never to lose one moment of time, but to improve it in the most profitable way I possibly can."
- "Resolved, That I will live so, as I shall wish I had done when I had come to die."
- "Resolved, To live with all my might, while I do live .."
From a letter M'Cheyne later wrote to a student, we can see what rules he applied to himself - "Do get on with your studies. Remember you are now forming the character of your future ministry, if God spare you. If you acquire slovenly or sleepy habits of study now, you will never get the better of it. Do everything in earnest. Above all, keep much in the presence of God. Never see the face of man till you have seen His face who is our life, our all."
The last entry of his student days is
"March 29, 1835. College finished on Friday last. My last appearance there. Life is vanishing fast, make haste for eternity."
So ended his preparatory discipline, both of heart and mind. "His soul," writes Bonar, "was prepared for the awful work of ministry by much prayer, and much study of the word of God ; by inward trials ; by experience of the depth of corruption in his own heart, and by discoveries of the Saviour's fulness of grace."
THE MINISTRY (1835 - 1836)
M'Cheyne was licensed by the presbytery of Annan on July 1st, 1835 and became "a preacher of the Gospel an honour to
which I cannot name an equal."
After a further period, largely of preparation for the future, as assistant to Mr. John Bonar the minister of Larbert and Dunipace, he was ordained minister of St. Peter's, Dundee, I November, 1836. It was a new church built in a sadly neglected district containing some 4,000 souls. "A city given to idolatry and hardness of heart," was his first impression. "A very dead region," is Bonar's description, "the surrounding mass of impenetrable heathenism cast its influence even on those few who were living Christians." "He has set me down among the noisy mechanics and political wavers of this godless town," M'Cheyne wrote.
There was nothing in his message to please such a people ; "If the Gospel pleased carnal men it would not be the Gospel," he declared. He was deeply persuaded that the Spirit's first work in salvation is to convict of sin, and to bring men to despair of their condition by nature, it was therefore on this note that his ministry commenced and continued - "Men must be brought down by law work to see their guilt and misery, or all our preaching is beating the air. A broken heart alone can receive a crucified Christ.
The most, I fear, in all congregations, are sailing easily down the stream into an undone eternity, unconverted and unawakened." Urgency and alarm characterised his message. "God help me to speak to you plainly! The longest lifetime is short enough. It is all that is given you to be converted in. In a very little, it will be all over ; and all that is here is changing - the very hills are crumbling down - the loveliest face is withering away - the finest garments rot and decay. Every day that passes is bringing you nearer to the judgment-seat. Not one of you is standing still. You may sleep ; but the tide is going on bringing you nearer death, judgment, and eternity.
HIS CHRISTIAN WALK
M'Cheyne was enabled to walk in a continual awareness of these truths - "I think I can say, I have never risen a morning without thinking how I could bring more souls to Christ." In his diary we find records like this:-- "As I was walking in the fields, the thought came over me with almost overwhelming power, that every one of my flock must soon be in heaven or hell."
But there is another feature of M'Cheyne's life which is perhaps even more prominent than his constant longings for the salvation of souls. "Above all things, cultivate your own spirit," he wrote to a fellow-minister. "Your own soul is your first and greatest care. Seek advance of personal holiness.
It is not great talents God blesses so much as great likeness to Jesus. A holy minister is an awful weapon in the hand of God. A word spoken by you when your conscience is clear, and your heart full of God's Spirit, is worth ten thousand words spoken in unbelief and sin."
"Get your texts from God - your thoughts, your words, from God."
From his diary we gather his own private observations:
- "I ought to spend the best hours of the day in communion with God. It is my noblest and most fruitful employment"
- "The morning hours, from six to eight, are the most uninterrupted - After tea is my best hour, and that should be solemnly dedicated to God, if possible."
Bonar writes, "the real secret of his soul's prosperity lay in daily enlargement of his heart in fellowship with his God. Meditation and prayer were the very sinews of his work." Even when pressed by duties, "he kept by his rule, 'that he must first see the face of God before he could undertake any duty.'" It was M'Cheyne's constant aim to avoid any hurry which prevents "the calm working of the Spirit on the heart. The dew comes down when all nature is at rest - when every leaf is still. A calm hour with God is worth a whole lifetime with man …"
A MINISTERS DUTY
M'Cheyne was ever concerned to deepen his ministry by continual study. "Few", says Bonar ; have maintained such an "undecaying esteem for the
advantages of study." Though always conscious that souls were perishing every day, he never fell into the error of thinking that a minister's
main work consists of outward activity. "The great fault I find with this generation is, they cry that ministers should be more in public ;
they think that it is an easy thing to interpret the word of God, and to preach.
But towards the end of 1838 the course of his ministry was interrupted by symptoms which alarmed his friends.
He was attacked by violent palpitation of heart - the effect of unremitting labour. It soon increased,
so that his medical advisers insisted on a total cessation of work. Accordingly M'Cheyne with deep regret returned to
his parents home in Edinburgh, to rest until he could resume his ministry. This separation from his people occasioned some of his
richest letters. "Ah!" he writes, "there is nothing like a calm look into the eternal world to teach us the emptiness of human praise,
the sinfulness of self-seeking, the preciousness of Christ."
Prolonged illness prevented M'Cheyne's speedy restoration to his people,
and in the spring of 1839 it was proposed in Edinburgh that he should accompany a party of ministers who were to visit Palestine
to make personal enquiries into the state of Israel. The voyage and climate it was thought would prove beneficial to him. His acceptance, and their subsequent travels to Jerusalem
and Galilee we cannot pause to describe.
W. C. Burns - a young man of twenty-four - was supplying M'Cheyne's place at Dundee
in his absence. It was under his preaching on 23rd of July that the great Revival at Kilsyth took place. "All Scotland heard the glad news that the sky was no
longer brass. The Spirit in mighty power began to work from that day forward in many places of the land."
As his ministry drew towards its solemn close, he became increasingly conscious of the brevity of time. "I do not expect to live long … Changes are coming ; every eye before me shall soon be dim in death. Another pastor shall feed this flock ; another singer lead the psalm ; another flock shall fill this fold … There is no believing, no repenting, no conversion in the grave - no minister will speak to you there. This is the time of conversion. Oh! My friends, you will have no ordinances in hell - there will be no preaching in hell … Oh that you would use this little time! Every moment of it is worth a world."
In his last year at St. Peter's we find him preaching with terrible clearness on the eternal punishment of the unconverted -
four sermons were devoted to this subject.
Robert Murray M'Cheyne died on Saturday, March 25th, 1843.
It is then no small question for ministers to ask - "Where lies the difference between his ministry and ours?"
No other questions are so vital as this, the answer is far from the minds of many.