This the portrait held by the National Library in Aberystwyth |
Thomas Lewis Memoir Part 1e (last)
Thomas Lewis Memoir Part 1d
Thomas Lewis Memoir Part 1c
In the year 1812 we meet with the following remark from Mr Thomas in his notebook - "For six weeks after the 10th of May I did not preach at all being much indisposed in my body. During this period the excellt. Mr. Fuller paid us a visit. He preached in our place May 31st at 11 o'clock, forenoon. His text was Ps. 86.17 Shew me a token for good."
June 1st, he preached in Trosnant at 2.30 pm from Acts 12.24; June 3rd, he preached at the Association at Hengoed from Isaiah 9.7 the last clause; June 4th, he preached at Zion Chapel Merthyr at 6 o'clock in the evening from John 3.35; June 7th, he preached in the Back-lane meeting house at Swansea at 3 o'clock from John 17.20, 21; June 8th, he preached at Carmarthen in the Tabernacle at 7 o'clock from Phil. 3.8; June 10th, he preached at the Association at Cwm Felin Monach (Cwmfelin Mynach) in Carmarthenshire from John 17.(20), 21. Afterwards he returned to Bristol. June 21st, returned to my work and preached in Abergavenny."
For many years Mr Thomas and the church met in the old building in Heol Tydur, which belongs to the Welsh Brthren of Llanwenarth, but with the increase of the church and the hearers growing, they had to look for a more spacious and convenient place. As a consequence they built a bigger place of worship; this one had a gallery and there was also a vestry and a burial ground at the back. The building stands at the bottom of Frogmore Street. The foundation stone was laid by Mr Thomas himself on July 6th, 1815. The building, an oblong square, measures 60 feet in length and in 36 feet in width and is big enough to take comfortably 500 or 600 people. A Sunday School was established at the same time and it still co-exists and co-operates with the church.
March 17, 1815, Mr Thomas preached his last sermon in the old building from Isaiah 53:10 and at the end of the service excitedly said this "I hope it is the prosperity of God's good pleasure in the hand of Christ that has rendered it needful for us to erect a larger place than this in which now for the last time we meet. The prophet says in the next chapter viz Isa 54.1-4 Enlarge your tent, etc. Permit me to run over just some of the circumstances with regard to the cause amongst us since the 8th of January, 1807, when I preached for the first time in this pulpit, down to the present time, that is 17th of March, 1816; and is it arrogant for me to say surely the pleasure of the Lord has prospered in the hand of Christ here? May it be made to prosper among our brethren that will continue to worship here from Sabbath to Sabbath. And may it increasingly prosper among us in the laceto which we go." March 24th, Mr Thomas preached his first sermon in the new building from 1 Kings 9:3; this was an appropriate text. And the Lord said unto him, I have heard thy prayer and thy supplication, that thou hast made before me: I have hallowed this house, which thou hast built, to put my name there for ever; and mine eyes and mine heart shall be there perpetually.
Thomas Lewis Memoir Part 1b
Thomas Lewis Memoir Part 1a
Memoir by John Jenkyn Brown Part 3
Memoir by John Jenkyn Brown Part 2
Memoir by John Jenkyn Brown Part 1
Thomas Lewis on the final years 1841-1853
Thomas Lewis on the preaching 1829-1838
Astwood Bank
1829. June 9th, he preached in the Ross congregation from Ezekiel 36:37.
Thomas Lewis on the preaching 1818-1828
1818. This year we find him preaching in different chapels in Bristol, London, Birmingham, Kidderminster, Alcester and Gloucester. June 3rd, he preached to the Brecon congregation from Romans 8:3,4. September 27th, Dr [William] Steadman [1764-1837] preached instead of him.
Thomas Lewis on the early years
Ryeford Baptist Chapel |
1803. According to a table Thomas preached at home 54 times and away from home 60 times. During the years that Mr Thomas was in Ryeford he often preached in the following nearby places: Hoarwithy, Gansley, Coleford, Ross, Tainton (Tintern?), Ruardean and Mitcheldean. In the same year he also preached in Leominster (Llanllieni), Bridgnorth, Llanwenarth, Blaenavon, Penygarn, Trosnant, Bristol and Hereford.
1804. According to a table Thomas preached at home 42 times and away from home 67 times. In this year the old building in Ryeford was repaired. It was re-opened on the 17th of October when the preachers were Mr [John] Rowland of Pershore [who preached when Micah Thomas was ordained] and Mr [Thomas] Symmons of Wotton-under-Edge. Their texts were Isaiah 4:3 and 66:14. [It was some time around 1804 that Thomas married his first wife Sophia Wall of Ross, 23 years his senior!]
1805. According to a table Thomas preached at home 46 times and away from home 66 times. This year Mr Thomas preached in Bradford [on Avon], Bath, Bromley Shrewsbury, Coseley, Pershore and Evesham.
1806. According to a table Thomas preached at home 44 times and away from home 48 times. This year he preached in Cardiff, Peterstone, Caerphilly, Cadoxton and Worcester. This was the first year of stirrings about baptism. He baptised 27 all told in Ryeford.
1807. According to a table Thomas preached at home 95 times and away from home 90 times. January 4th was Mr Thomas's last Sabbath in Ryeford. The following Monday he went to Abergavenny and one Mr Jonathan Davies from Llanddewi Rhydderch moved his furniture. Jonathan Davies was a member in Llanwenarth and a reliable and godly man. His children are now members in Llanddewi, and two of his sons are deacons there. This J D ... John Williams from Tresaeson ... the men who started the cause in Llanddewi about 60 years ago. It is their disciples who are there to this day and they are blessed. ...
Biographical Material in Seren Gomer 1855
Baptist Chapel Llanddewi built 1827 |
I have recently realised that there is a series of biographical articles on Micah Thomas by Thomas Lewis Llanddewi (1823-1900) that appeared in the Welsh language publication Seren Gomer in 1855. It would seem that Lewis wrote it in English first but then translated it into Welsh. An English version exists then in the National Library but the Welsh version is available online. I am trying to read it, although my Welsh is rather poor. Lewis was born in Llandeilo'r-fan, Breconshire. In 1829 the family moved to Cwmdŵr where he was baptised in 1837. He worked in the woollen mills at Cwmdŵr and Llanwrtyd and began to preach in 1840 at Pantycelyn. He was trained for the ministry at Horeb (Cwmdŵr), at the school kept by Brutus near Pentre-bach, at D. Williams's (Independent) school at Tredwstan, and at an academy at Pontypool. He was minister at Llanddewi Rhydderch, 1848-1856; Llanelly, Breconshire,, 1856-1859; Jerusalem, Rhymney, 1860-1863; Penuel, Carmarthen, 1863-1874; Moriah, Risca, 1874-1880. He retired to Newport, Monmouthshire. He published Cofiant … Titus Lewis, Carmarthen; Cofiant … James Richard, Pontypridd; Ymddygiad y Feibl Gymdeithas Frytanaidd a Thramor at y Bedyddwyr; and Esboniad y Teulu. His Hunangofiant appeared in 1903 and his 'Hanes Eglwysi'r Bedyddwyr ym Mynwy hyd 1890,' still in manuscript, is kept in the county archives at Abercarn. He was a frequent contributor to the periodicals, and wrote articles for the Geiriadur Bywgraffyddol, the Geiriadur of Mathetes and Y Gwyddoniadur..