
A.B. Simpson
A Matter Of Spiritual Vision
Albert Benjamin Simpson was born on December 15, 1843, to
parents of Scottish descent. He grew to be one of the most respected Christian figures in
American evangelicalism. A much sought after speaker and pastor, Simpson founded a major
evangelical denomination, published over seventy books, edited a weekly magazine for
nearly forty years, and wrote many gospel songs and poems.
However, the first few years of his life were spent in
relative simplicity on Prince Edward Island, Canada, where his father, an elder in the
Presbyterian church, worked as a shipbuilder and eventually became involved in the
export/import industry. To avoid an approaching business depression, the family moved to
Ontario where the younger Simpson accepted Christ as his Savior at age fifteen and was
subsequently "called by God to preach" the gospel of Christ.
After graduating from Knox College in Toronto in 1865,
Simpson accepted his first pastorate at Knox Church in Hamilton, one of Canada's largest
and most influential congregations.
After eight years at the church, God led Simpson to Chestnut
Street Presbyterian Church in Louisville, Kentucky. "God was answering his heart's
yearning for 'better things,'" writes A. W. Tozer in Wingspread, a book that
chronicles Simpson's life. He was also providing Simpson, whose health was suffering, with
a break from the harsh Canadian climate.
Simpson realized that God was using his weakness to move him
into a closer and deeper love for Jesus Christ. His dependence on God became natural as
did his communion with the Savior.
William MacArthur, a friend and co-worker, said Simpson once
told him: "I am no good unless I can get alone with God." MacArthur added:
"His practice was to hush his spirit, and literally cease to think, then in the
silence of his soul, he listened for the 'still small voice' [of God]."
Simpson discovered he was also developing a deep compassion
for the lost. A desire to evangelize began to consume him. In his biographical article on
Simpson, Daniel Evearitt wrote: "I discovered that those who knew [Simpson] paint a
picture of a dynamic but humble worker for God who inspired others to total commitment to
God's service and Kingdom. They portray him as a loving, caring, patient man."
Paul Rader, former pastor of the Moody Church in Chicago and
Simpson's long time associate, said: "He was the greatest heart preacher I ever
listened to. He preached out of his own rich dealings with God."
In Louisville, God gave Simpson a vision for a city-wide
revival. The result was astounding. "The city was moved to its depths and hundreds
were converted. At the close of the campaign, large numbers were received in to the
churches," writes Tozer.
"[Simpson] had become - though he did not yet realize
it full - an evangelist to the masses....From here on he belongs no more to one church,
but to all who need him, not to his parish only, but to all the lost world."
A time came when "in the privacy of his own room,"
Simpson yielded himself to God in total surrender. "Not knowing," he said,
"but it would be death in the most literal sense." He later referred to this
time as a death to self - the old man and the self-asserting ego.
From that point on, Simpson said he began to live "a
consecrated, crucified, and Christ-devoted life." God's call to the unevangelized was
now a full-blown part of his life.
Simpson went on to pastor the New York 13th Street
Presbyterian Church. However in 1881, he resigned and began to hold independent
evangelistic meetings in New York City. A year later, the Gospel Tabernacle was built; and
Simpson began to turn his vision toward establishing an organization for missions.
Simpson helped to form and head up two evangelization
societies - The Christian Alliance and The Evangelical Missionary Alliance. As thousands
joined these two groups, Simpson sensed a need for the two to become one. In 1897, they
became The Christian and Missionary Alliance.
Serving as pastor until 1918, Simpson continued to seek ways
to reach the hurting and unsaved. Tozer writes: "For thirty years he continued to
lead the society which he had formed, and never for the least division of a moment did he
forget or permit the society to forget the purpose for which it was brought into
being....'It is to hold up Jesus in His fullness, the same yesterday, and today, and
forever!'
"...He sought to provide a fellowship only, and looked
with suspicion upon anything like rigid organization. He wanted the Alliance to be a
spiritual association of believers who hungered to know the fullness of the blessing of
the Gospel of Christ, working concertedly for the speedy evangelization of the
world."
On October 28, 1919, Simpson slipped into a coma from which
he never recovered. Family members recall that his final words were spoken to God in
prayer for all the missionaries he had helped to send throughout the world.
To the end, Simpson remained devoted first to his beloved
Savior and then to all who would dare to take the gospel message to a lost and dying
world. A. B. Simpson - a man of vision and faith. |