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1794 BAPTIST. 263pp MSs Unpublished Memoir & Sermons of Scottish & Maine Baptist Immigrant.

1794 BAPTIST. 263pp MSs Unpublished Memoir & Sermons of Scottish & Maine Baptist Immigrant.

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A superb unpublished memoir and sermons of important early Maine Baptist, Rev. Charles Miller [1794-1887]. 

Born in St. Ninian's parish, Stirlingshire, Scotland, Miller was baptized in the Established Presbyterian Church of Scotland, but his parents were Congregationalists. He was converted to the Baptist faith as a youth and preached among the Baptists of Scotland for four years. He mind was then impressed with the idea of becoming a missionary in Africa, but he did not pass up an opportunity in 1819 to take "a sea voyage with a Baptist merchant who was opening a business in Miramichi, New Brunswick." After his arrival he accepted an invitation to teach school in North Esk parish.

At the end of the first week of school, Miller asked his pupils to tell their parents that on Sunday he would be holding a meeting in the schoolroom. He seems to have been too modest to announce he would be preaching. But when the Rev. Elijah Estabrooks visited North Esk a few weeks later on behalf of the Baptist Association he was so encouraged by the religious initiative which Miller had taken that he stayed there two or three Sabbaths, baptized a number, and organized the North Esk Church with nine members, including the young school-teacher.

The organization date of the Miramichi (North Esk) Baptist Church was 2 August 1819, and Miller was its first pastor. Prior to his arrival, Joseph Coburn of the state of Maine had preached and baptized along the Miramichi, but Miller would appear to have been the first resident Baptist preacher anywhere on the river. He was ordained at a conference held in Sackville in 1820 and won many converts during four years with the North Esk congregation.

In 1823 Miller was installed as minister of Germain Street Baptist Church in Saint John. Three years later he was called to South Berwick, Maine. He was based there and in Turner, Maine for a total of seven years and spent an equivalent period of time in Massachusetts, during which he had pastorates in Cambridge and Boston. He returned to Maine and was finally the Baptist minister in the town of Skowhegan, from the 1840s until his retirement around 1874. He continued to reside in Skowhegan until his death in 1887, at age ninety-three. His son C. Davis Miller was a lifelong resident of Skowhegan.

The manuscript memoir, in two parts, appears unpublished. It's 60 pages contain a detailed account of his painful and lengthy conversion, his alignment with the Scottish Baptists, sense of call to the ministry, emigration, etc., 

The memoir is followed by 203pp of unpublished sermons, including:

Sermon 1. The Morning Star, 23pp. 

Sermon 2. The True Physician, 35pp.

Sermon 3. The New Birth, 42pp.

Sermon 4. The Friends of Christ, 33pp.

Sermon 5. The Bliss of the Heavenly State, 35pp.

Sermon 6. The World's Vanity and the Believer's Sure Portion, 35pp.

These are later holograph copies, but are dated and were preached between 1820's and 1840's. The originals do not appear to be extant. 

A good plus copy, bound in half leather, with the spine cover lifted, and boards are tender. The text is generally solid, with generally bright page.

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