THE MONTHLY REPOSITORY of THEOLOGY and GENERAL LITERATURE 
JANUARY TO DECEMBER INCLUSIVE 1816 
VOLUME XI 
HACKNEY 
Printed for JOSHUA TOULMIN DD 


Review of John Hyatt's Sermons at the Tabernacle
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	JOHN HYATT is one of the ministers of the Tabernacle, the temple of modern Evangelical worship, 
and he has here favoured the public with ample specimens of that kind of preaching which, throughout 
all England, is drawing the multitude away from their parish churches and forming them into a "peculiar 
people, zealous" - for a more rigid species of Calvinism than was taught by the mortal enemy of Servetus.

	The Evangelical preachers will not, we apprehend, object to Mr Hyatt's being considered as the 
representative as from his station he is the chief of their order. He is regarded, we are told, as one 
of the best preachers of the sect and he appears to be a man of thought and to possess a vigorous 
imagination. Evangelical preaching is, we need not say, preaching without book. The preacher believes 
himself and is believed by others to be under the influence of the Holy Ghost, a written discourse 
would stint the spirit and instead of the word of the Holy Ghost the speaker degenerated to reader 
would utter the words of man's wisdom.

	Extempore speaking is winning from its familiarity and in Mr John Hyatt's specimens is rendered 
more attractive by certain tender appellations by which the auditory is addressed "Poor sinners, Precious 
souls, my dear friends" and other similar expressions of endearment go, we imagine, a great way in 
helping forward the effect of this strain of preaching. 

	Mr John Hyatt and his brethren are pleased with themselves for lowering their discourses to 
the rude apprehensions of the lowest vulgar, not once thinking that it is possible or feeling that it 
is desirable to improve their taste and enlarge their understandings. Hence they deal out common places 
with great self complacency and the merest truisms with a pompousness which indicates self admiration. 
Their words drop from them with a Volubility which makes the multitude stare, for they preach against 
critics and would think it criminal to stay to sift and select words and phrases and to consult purity 
and elegance of language. 

	These preachers think it necessary to prove nothing, every thing is taken for granted, but 
then there is a text for everything - though it is seldom deemed requisite to justify the application 
of the words of Scripture to the preacher's subject. It seems as if minister and people considered 
their creed as matter of absolute certainty and regarded it as the end of preaching to deliver out 
the articles of their faith and to express pity for or to denounce judgements against such at cannot 
understand or will not embrace them. 

	In point of composition, the sermons of Mr John Hyatt's class of preachers are artless to a 
degree that borders on childishness. A whole paragraph will often consist of a self evident proposition 
repeated in several forms, sometimes put in a broad simile, followed by a set of Scripture quotations 
unconnected and unexplained, mingled with interjections and the whole concluded by an anecdote, a dying 
experience, a stanza from Dr Watts or possibly a couplet from Dr Young.

	Perhaps nothing has contributed more to the illusion which Evangelical or Tabernacle preaching 
brings over the mind than its abounding in Scriptural quotations which seem to invest it with sanctity 
and solemnity, and to cover its meagreness and folly. In a great mass of citations some must be 
appropriate and we have observed occasionally in this volume a happy use of the sublime and affecting 
language of Holy Writ. Great wrong, however, is done to the Bible in the ordinary way of selecting texts 
for this class of sermons - passages are plainly taken more for sound than sense and whether moral, 
devotional, doctrinal, prophetic or historical are forced to speak Tabernacle theology. 

	But the principal and most availing part of Evangelical preaching is its damnatory style, its 
denunciation and description of the torments of the damned in hell - this is the heavy artillery of 
Calvinism with which the least skillful engineer can beat down the proud heart and storm the stubborn 
conscience. A great part of the conversions recorded in the Evangelical Magazine here been effected 
by the sons of thunder. Thundering however, as Dr South remarks, from hell and not from heaven. To 
thoroughly ignorant vicious men it is in the nature of things that such preaching should be interesting 
and affecting, we believe that it rarely produces striking effect on the minds of men of information 
and good moral habits. 

	But it is proper we should exhibit Mr John Hyatt himself to our readers, so we shall select a 
few passages from him which explain the style of Tabernacle preaching and illustrate some of our remarks.

	In nothing is the good sense of a preacher more tried than in the announcement and development 
of the plan of his discourse, his division if he adopt one formally should be natural, simple and 
distinct and the several branches of his subject should be connected together and all appear important. 
The terms in which the plan of a sermon is laid down should be plain and precise. Ingenuity and eloquence 
should here be avoided, a painted ornamented threshold would be a silly device even for the entrance 
to a palace.

	We have not to blame Mr John Hyatt for ingenuity or eloquence in this particular, he is on the
contrary blunt and quaint. The first sermon for instance "On the Importance of Meditation" from 
Gen xxiv 63 - "And Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the even tide" is thus divided:

	"Let us first notice the nature and importance of this exercise 
	mentioned in the text; secondly mention some suitable subjects 
	for the believer's meditation; and, thirdly urge it upon Christians 
	to imitate Isaac in this exercise." - P. 4.

	Sermon IV on "The Death of the Righteous" from Numbers xxiii 10 "Let me die the death of the 
righteous and at my last end be like his" is thus divided:

	"From these words we shall observe;
	I. Death is the common lot of mankind, both the righteous and the 
	wicked must die. 
	II. It is most desirable to die as the righteous die [dies] and 
	that our end be like his. 
	III. However desirable is [be] the death of the righteous the wish 
	for it is vain without a gracious change produced in the mind by 
	the Holy Ghost." - P. 80. 

	The following extract from Sermon II on "Abundant Grace" is a favourable specimen of the 
preaching the Tabernacle school;

	"Grace is one of the most comprehensive and interesting terms with 
	which any of mankind are acquainted If its real importance was were 
	understood and experienced by every one present each countenance 
	would brighten each heart would leap with joy and all would readily 
	unite in expressing the sentiment of the truly excellent Doddridge:" 

		"Grace! 'tis a charming sound,
		Harmonious to the ear."

	"There is infinitely more in this term, when its meaning is understood 
	and its blessings are realised, to encourage the heart of man than 
	there is in all the terms by which the consequences of sin are 
	expressed to discourage Grace, in an effectual remedy for all the 
	spiritual maladies of the soul. Sin has not produced an evil in the 
	nature of man, which grace cannot effectually counteract, and finally 
	remove. Hath sin blinded the understanding? - grace ran enlighten it. 

	Hath sin perverted the will? - grace can reduce it to subjection. Are 
	the affections defiled? - grace can sanctify them. Is man impoverished? 
	- grace can enrich him. Is he ignorant? - grace can instruct him. Is he 
	guilty? - grace can pardon and justify. Is he an heir of hell? - grace 
	can make him an heir of heaven. Nothing else has ever performed such 
	wonders. The loudest note that is heard in glory sounds in praise of 
	grace. It is an inexhaustible theme, its wonders will be: 

	Ever telling - yet untold" - Pp. 28. 29. 

	The conclusion of the same sermon is in the terrific style which we have adverted to:-

	"Is there in this assembly an individual whose desperately wicked 
	mind derives encouragement to sin from the aboundings of grace? 
	Because God is able to make all grace abound towards the chief of 
	sinners, are you resolved to try how far you can proceed in a 
	course of ungodliness? Abominable wretch! how knowest thou but 
	thy base determination is the effect of thy having been given up 
	by the Almighty to hardness of heart? How knowest thou but God 
	hath said concerning thee "Let him alone!" Should this be the 
	case, O! how tremendous will be the end of thy mortal course! 
	Miserable wretch what will thou do when the heavens lower, and 
	the tempest roars, whither in thine extremity wilt thou turn for 
	shelter? Then no voice of pity will address thine ear, no place 
	of refuge will encourage thy flight, but without refuge and 
	without hope thou wilt be hurled to the dismal abodes of 
	everlasting despair." - P. 50. 

	But this is feeble compared with the following address to "An ungodly sinner", [words which 
could not be associated with propriety under any system but Calvinism] in Sermon III entitled 
"The Christian's Desire of Heaven" :-

	"Ungodly sinner, if you die in your present state when absent 
	from the body you will be present with the devil and innumerable 
	fallen spirits in the world of endless misery. Thoughtless sinner, 
	did you see how near death is to you and how thin is the partition 
	between death and hell how would you tremble! how terrible to die 
	in your sins and sink into everlasting darkness. You may now 
	indeed enjoy health and vigour and anticipating many years in 
	this world, nothing that we can say concerning death and eternal 
	misery alarms you, but your days upon earth may be fewer than you 
	expect years - yes tomorrow or before tomorrow, death's cold hand 
	may press hard upon you, your countenance may be distorted your 
	pulse irregular and HORROR STARING FROM YOUR EYES TERRIFY THOSE 
	ABOUT YOU; sad state, unable to live and most reluctant to die. 

	Your friends may crowd around your bed and weep bitterly but alas! 
	they will not be able to afford you the least relief; your unwilling 
	soul at length may be forced out of her 'earthly house' then with 
	a dismal groan she will leave the world to GROAN IN HELL FOR EVER."
	 - Pp. 71. 72. 


	Enough of this outrageous rant! fit only for Bedlam or the Court of Inquisition. We gladly 
turn to the following amplification of a pleasing image of Scripture occurring in Sermon VI II entitled 
"The Redeemer's Sympathy" from Exodus? [[barely readable text, Ed.]] ix iii 9:- 

	"Ye have seen (said God to the children of Israel) how I bare 
	you on eagles wings and brought you unto myself. The Lord's 
	portion is his people, Jacob is the lot of his inheritance. 
	He found him in a desert land and in the waste howling wilderness, 
	he led him about, he instructed him, he kept him as the apple 
	of his eye. As an eagle stirreth up her nest, fluttereth over 
	her young, spreadeth abroad her wings, taketh them, beareth 
	them on her wings, so the Lord alone did lead him, and there 
	was no strange God with him. What a fine description of the 
	tender case of Jehovah towards his people. The maternal eagle, 
	perceiving that her young ones are in danger from an enemy is 
	anxious to preserve them she, flutters over her nest thus 
	exciting them to fly by her example; but the nestlings are not 
	sufficiently fledged for flight. What then will she do? will 
	she forsake her helpless brood and leave them all exposed to the 
	merciless foe? No, finding that they cannot by their own strength 
	to avoid the danger which threatens them she takes them upon her 
	wide spread wings and bears them away to some place of safety. 
	Thus the Almighty secures his people from the cruel designs of 
	all their potent and inveterate adversaries." 

	"O ye persecuted and tempted saints, fear not! While the eternal 
	God can afford you support and protection you shall not perish. 
	He will 'bear you as on eagles wings' to the world of perfect 
	and everlasting felicity." - Pp. 203. 504. 

	In Sermon III "The Christian's Desire of Heaven" is some appearance of argument in favour of 
an intermediate state of conscious existence between death and the resurrection and this is almost 
the only passage we have observed in which there is any argument - the preacher has stated pretty 
strongly and tolerably well the scriptural proofs in favour of the popular scheme. He concludes with 
repelling the interpretation put by the Materialists on our Lord's address to the penitent malefactor 
and finishes with this burst of fanaticism and intolerance which we are happy to remark is not 
countenanced by any similar passage in the volume:-

	---"in this way is Scripture tortured and distorted with a 
	view to make human souls sleep - One wonders that the wrath 
	of God steeps that it is not roused to resent such daring 
	insolence in presumptuous man." - P. 59. 

	Apostrophe is a favourite figure with the preacher of the Tabernacle, there is something 
ludicrous in the following use of it Sermon III p. 73.

	"Precious Bible! I love thee; because from thee I have 
	received direction in many difficulties etc. & etc.." 

	"Tabernacle, I love thee because within thee I have 
	often enjoyed the presence of my much loved Saviour; 
	here have I beheld his goings &c" 

	The Sermons are fourteen in number but it is observable that there is not one on a practical 
subject. This may be mentioned as another feature of modern "Evangelical" preaching which is indeed 
explained to be preaching up the doctrines of grace. Holiness is insisted on in several of these 
Discourses as we suppose it is in most discourses, bearing the Tabernacle stamp, the mint mark of 
orthodoxy, but we fear the common people would not understand by this term doing justly and loving 
mercy. It imports something done for them rather than any thing which they are to do. We shall not 
however, here borrow the language of the alarmists on the subject of the anti-moral teachers, partly 
because we believe that it is commonly unjust and therefore mischievous, but principally because 
Mr John Hyatt has not provoked censure by a single remark or expression that we have met in 
disparagement of good works and moral worth. 

	These Sermons considered as the official homilies of the Tabernacle or Evangelical party, 
present us with the idea of a sect not far advanced in knowledge and refinement they can be relished 
only by persons of little inquiry and of mediocrity of talent.


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