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Christmas Evans of Wales
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 13:26
E.A. Johnston

Christmas Evans of Wales

E.A. Johnston · 13:26

E.A. Johnston highlights the life and ministry of Christmas Evans, emphasizing his holiness, sacrificial prayer, and powerful preaching that pointed sinners to salvation through the blood of Christ.
In this sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the remarkable life and ministry of Christmas Evans, a legendary Welsh preacher known for his holiness, powerful prayer life, and unique preaching style. Johnston highlights Evans’ dedication to preaching the doctrines of grace and his sacrificial service to his flock. Through vivid illustrations and biographical details, the sermon challenges modern believers and ministers to emulate Evans’ passion for revival and faithfulness to the gospel.

Full Transcript

Well, before we go to our time of prayer this evening, friends, we're still studying manna revival and our subject this evening is Christmas Evans of Wales. Wales is known as the land of revivals. As God has visited Wales in former times in powerful spiritual awakenings, God has seemed pleased to pour out his effusions of divine grace upon Wales time and time again.

The most memorable period of revival being 1904 to 1905 where God used the human instrument in revival of Evan Roberts. But Wales is also known for her great preachers and the one we'll be studying tonight is none other than the one-eyed preacher of Wales, Christmas Evans. He was named Christmas because he was born on Christmas Day 1766.

He had a powerful God-owned ministry which lasted 53 years. He always pointed sinners to find shelter in the precious blood of Christ and the great doctrines that Christmas Evans preached were those commonly known as Calvinism and it was the great doctrines of grace that made up the better part of his searching sermons which drove conviction into the hearts of his hearers to where they begged God for mercy and cried out what must I do to be saved. Christmas Evans had some advice to a young preacher once and the advice was preach the whole counsel of God from predestination to glorification.

Christmas Evans labored for 40 years in Anglesey and was often seen riding his horse across the lonely mountains to visit his parishioners. Christmas Evans was a unique man to behold for he only had one eye. After his conversion as a young man he chose to leave his wicked companions as he followed his new master Jesus Christ but six of his former friends jumped him one night and they beat him cruelly for his testimony in Christ.

One of these attackers hit him in the eye with a stick which later cost him the loss of his eye. He always wore a patch over that eye which gave him his unique and peculiar appearance and he became known as the one-eyed preacher so he was not only unique in his physical appearance but his preaching was unique as well friends for he made good use of allegory in his sermons which his preaching became so popular and well attended that he became known as the bunion of whales. Christmas Evans was a holy man of God who was wholly consecrated to God.

Early on he made a solemn covenant with God for holiness he believed in a walk of holiness to his master. I have his prayer that he prayed when he made this solemn covenant to God. Grant oh blessed Lord that nothing may grow and be matured in me to occasion thee to cast me off from the service of thy sanctuary like the sons of Eli and for the sake of thine unbounded merit.

Let not my days be longer than my usefulness. Oh let me not be like lumber in a house in the end of my days in the way of others to work amen. That was that man's sanctified prayer friends and because of his great pursuit of holiness in his life God honored his preaching with a special anointing from on high as it was said that the presence of God was all over this man known as the one-eyed preacher.

It's important for us friends to study men like Christmas Evans who was so mildly used to God in his generation for we can learn much from studying how God builds a man and how God used such a man as this. If our pulpits today took after the habits of Christmas Evans how different they would be. There would be less laughter and irreverence and more solemnity and authority in our preaching if our prayer habits were as consistent as his, our care of the sheep as sacrificial as his, and our belief in the word of God as sound as his.

Oh what a difference our own ministries would benefit from following his example in service to our king. He was a methodical man in his approach to ministry as soon as he arrived on the island of Anglesey. He divided the island into four districts so he could preach at three places each sabbath but the real power of Christmas Evans in the pulpit lay in his sacrificial prayer life.

He was a man who believed in the power of prayer to turn the ear of the almighty. He was known to appoint entire days of fasting and prayer in each of his preaching places that he would visit. Christmas Evans knew where his power lay friends.

He was tall in the pulpit because he spent much time low on his knees in prayer. His labors were incessant. Every moment of time he was employed in his master's service.

How many preachers today waste valuable time on sports and entertainment? Christmas Evans was either on his knees and in his bible or on his horse on his way to a preaching engagement. He traveled in bitter cold and inclement weather. Nothing stopped this hardy man from proclaiming the great doctrines of the gospel of the son of god to his beloved whales.

People would travel a great distance just to hear him preach. Often the power of god was so strong in a meeting that many were overcome with conviction of sin to where they were shut up to god and god alone for salvation. He always pointed his hearers to the redeeming blood of christ and on his deathbed he proclaimed I am leaving you.

I have labored in the sanctuary for 53 years and this is my comfort that I have never labored without blood in the basin. By this he meant a reference to the passover as the great theme of his preaching was the blood of christ and how sinners could find shelter in that precious blood. But it was his unique preaching style which made him so famous.

I have a book of his sermons in my library and they are truly fantastic in their homiletical approach to preaching. He was truly a unique preacher who could get away with using allegory and still keep it doctrinal. I would like at this time friends to read you a part of a sermon extract from one of christmas heaven sermons where he makes use of allegory in a powerful way to illustrate that salvation is in the hands of god and not man.

That man is a dead man dead in trespasses and sins and nothing can awake him except the voice of jesus christ through saving faith. Here now is a sermon extract from this remarkable man christmas evans. These are his words behold lazarus lying in the cave locked in the sleep of death now how shall he be raised how shall he be brought back to life who will roll away for us the stone from the sepulcher first came one who went down into the cold cave with blankets and salt to rub with the formations of duty to appeal to the will to say to the sleeping man that he could if he would chafing and rubbing the cold and inert limbs he thinks to call back the vital warmth and then retiring and standing some distance apart he says to the other spectators uh do you not see him stir are there no signs of life is he not moving uh no he lies very still uh there is no motion how could it be otherwise how could a sense of moral duty be felt by the man there for the man was dead the first man gave up in despair he had failed then came the second as cocksure as the first i thought you would never do it he said with sarcasm but if you look at me and watch carefully you will see a thing or two you have not learned the way yet your treatment was far too gentle and he went down into the cave with a scourge and with boastfulness he said the man only wants severe treatment to be brought back to life i will certainly make him feel and he laid on him in quick succession uh the fervid blows the sharp threatenings of law and judgment and future danger and doom and then he retired to some distance is he not waking he said uh do you not see the corpse stir uh no a corpse he was before the man began to lay on his lashes and a corpse he remained still uh for the man was dead ah said a third person as he advanced with head and air i have wonderful power uh you with your rubbing and smiting what can you do you have nothing i have two things two vital things he advanced and fixed an electric battery and arranged it so that it touched the dead man and then from a flute which he held he drew forth such sweet sounds that they charmed the ears which were listening and whether it was the battery or whether it was the music so it was that effect seemed to produce uh behold said he what the refinements of education and cultivation will do and indeed so it was uh for the hair of the dead man seemed to rise and his eyeballs seemed to start and dilate and see he rises starts up and takes a stride down the cave ah but it's all over it was nothing but the electricity and the battery and he sank back again flat on the floor of the cave for the man was dead and then when all were filled with despair there came one and stood by the entrance of the cave but he was the lord and giver of life and standing there he said come from the four winds oh breath and breathe upon this slain one that he may live christ has given thee life awake thou that sleepest and the man arose he shook off his grave clothes what he needed had come to him now a life a life is the only cure for death not the prescriptions of duty not the threats of punishment and damnation not the arts and the refinements of education but new spiritual divine life well friends i hope this message on the life and ministry of the great christmas evans has been as beneficial to you as it's been to me for all of us preachers should be willing to give our right eye just be able to preach like that may the lord of glory be pleased to grant each of us an ounce of christmas evans in our day let us go now to our time of prayer friends and pray that god will raise up some men in our generation men like christmas evans blessed be the name of the lord

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • Introduction to Wales as a land of revivals
    • Overview of Christmas Evans’ life and ministry
    • His unique physical appearance and preaching style
  2. II
    • Evans’ commitment to holiness and prayer
    • His methodical approach to ministry and pastoral care
    • The power of sacrificial prayer in his preaching
  3. III
    • The centrality of the blood of Christ in his sermons
    • Use of allegory to illustrate salvation
    • The impact of his preaching on hearers and revival
  4. IV
    • Lessons from Christmas Evans for modern preachers
    • Call to emulate his dedication and prayer life
    • Closing exhortation and prayer for revival

Key Quotes

“Grant oh blessed Lord that nothing may grow and be matured in me to occasion thee to cast me off from the service of thy sanctuary like the sons of Eli.” — E.A. Johnston
“He was tall in the pulpit because he spent much time low on his knees in prayer.” — E.A. Johnston
“A life is the only cure for death, not the prescriptions of duty, not the threats of punishment and damnation, not the arts and the refinements of education but new spiritual divine life.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Commit to a consistent and sacrificial prayer life to empower your ministry.
  • Embrace holiness as a vital part of your walk with Christ and service to others.
  • Preach and live out the whole counsel of God, pointing others to salvation through Christ’s blood.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Christmas Evans?
Christmas Evans was a prominent Welsh preacher known as the one-eyed preacher, who ministered for over 50 years with a focus on holiness and the doctrines of grace.
Why was he called the one-eyed preacher?
He lost one eye after being beaten by former friends for his Christian testimony, and he wore an eye patch thereafter.
What was the main theme of his preaching?
The blood of Christ and salvation through faith were central themes in his sermons.
How did Christmas Evans approach ministry?
He was methodical, dividing his parish into districts, preaching frequently, and emphasizing prayer and holiness.
What can modern preachers learn from him?
They can learn the importance of prayer, holiness, doctrinal preaching, and sacrificial service.

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