| 15 years old.
I was first employed as errand-boy for the Runcorn and Widnes Co-operative
Society, a job, I might say, I thoroughly enjoyed. Eventually realising
the ‘error of
my ways', somewhat ironically, I left to study for a teaching certificate,
eventually taking up a post in Dudley in the West Midlands. It
was during the final months at Teacher Training College, though
I had attended the Christian Union throughout, that I was convicted
of sin, and eventually, by the grace of God, came to trust in Christ
as Saviour and Lord.
At this time I was attending the Baptist Chapel at Dudley, under
the excellent ministry of Alun McNabb. He had just begun to hold
Open-Air Meetings in Dudley Market place, at the spot where John
Wesley had preached during his visits to the town 200 years before.
I was interested in John Wesley and also keen on the idea of Open-Air
witness, so I became an enthusiastic supporter of this venture.
A number of raw recruits like myself were asked to read portions
of Scripture in between the short sermons of the more experienced
men. Eventually I found myself making applications of the passages
read, and became one might say, an open-air preacher.
Inwardly during this period, I felt that the Lord was calling
me to the preaching ministry, and though I never shared this with
anyone else, Providence ordained that I was asked to preach at
Dudley Chapel and several other places in the district.
It was also at this time that I met my wife Anne, a teacher from
Hertfordshire, and we were married in 1979; we have two grown-up
children, Elizabeth and Wesley.
Finally, becoming convinced that the Lord was calling me to full-time
ministry I shared this with the church, who recommended that I
embarked upon the part-time courses organised by the London Reformed
Baptist Seminary at the Metropolitan Tabernacle. This enabled me
to study and test my calling further, whilst remaining in teaching,
continuing to serve in the church and supplying pulpits in other
local congregations. This was followed by two-years of full-time
theological training at the London Theological Seminary, Finchley.
It was here, on the premises of Kensit Memorial Bible College
that I first became aware of the work of John Kensit, met the late
Mr Alfred Latimer Kensit, and made the acquaintance of the then
secretary of the Protestant Truth Society, Mr Alex Roberts. This
contact eventually, in the purposes of God led to my being asked
to join the PTS Council in 1991.
On leaving college I was called to Hadleigh Baptist Church in
Suffolk, where I served for 13 years. Hadleigh had been the home
of Dr Rowland Taylor, one of the first martyrs of the Marian persecution
of 1555. The monument marking the place of his martyrdom, in a
quiet field just outside the town, became a hallowed spot to me.
Every year the young people would help to clear and clean the monument
and this became an opportunity to remind them of the importance
of the Reformation and what it achieved, and of the faith and courage
of men like Dr Rowland Taylor.
Whilst in Suffolk I served on several of the Grace Baptist Association
Committees, and had the privilege of being Moderator in 1991. During
the same period the late Mr Gordon Hawkins invited me to be a member
of the Sovereign Grace Union Committee. I also took part in the
Suffolk Preachers Seminary, lecturing in Systematic Theology and
this led to my being asked to give occasional lectures at the LRBS;
I have been grateful to be in a very small way connected with the
great work done by the Metropolitan Tabernacle in recent years.
In order to better equip myself for these responsibilities I studied
privately for BA and MA degrees.
In 1998 I was called back to the West Midlands to the pastorate
of Ebenezer Baptist Chapel, Old Hill, Birmingham. We have experienced
six most blessed years in this place and are thankful to minister
to a church that has remained true to its Protestant foundations.
In these recent years I have been a member of the Trinitarian Bible
Society Committee and a trustee of the Cherith Trust, a local charity
founded by Mr Harold Crowter, committed to the care of elderly
believers.
Earlier this year I was given the opportunity to travel to the
Far East to lecture at the Reformed Baptist Ministers Conference
in Manila, and saw something of the hunger for the Word of God
in that region. Under the leadership of Brian Ellis a great work
is being done. It was thrilling for my wife and I to see at first-hand
the Protestant ethic being applied amongst the poor and underprivileged
of that city to very great effect.
In our hallway at home, I keep a picture of 'The Landing of William
of Orange at Torbay in 1688', with the well-known motto flying
from the ships mast.... 'The Protestant religion and the liberties
of England I will maintain'. It serves as a constant reminder to
me of our priceless Christian heritage, and of our solemn responsibilities
by the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, and in the strength that
God alone can give, to seek to maintain and advance these priceless
blessings.
Roland Burrows |