Archive for November, 2023

My ancestor Private James Smithies claimed he met Napoleon and turned his back on him

In 2020 I published a post concerning my discoveries relating to my Sutherland ancestors. This has taken me through the pages of history through the Highlands of Scotland to the advancement of the Sutherland railway, the Disruption of 1843, the Battle of Culloden and down through the Scottish reformation and the ancient Kings of Scotland to William Sutherland, the son in law of Robert the Bruce.

On my mothers side however, there is an entirely different story.

Many years ago I met my grandfather and he was in the Navy during WW2. However, it wasn’t until recent years when I decided to investigate the history I found that my mothers bloodline directly descends from the Smithies of Middleton and a certain Private James Smithies (1787-1868). His father William Smithies (1753-1844) is my sixth great grandfather and his brother Richard Smithies (1780-1856) is my 5th great grandfather.

James Smithies was born in Tongue, Lancashire, in 1787 and in 1804 he ran away from home to enlist and became a Private in the 1st Royal Dragoons between 1807-15. To my amazement I found that James wrote an important memoir of his life and times in the Napoleonic wars. The memoir is published under the title “Adventurous Pursuits of a Peninsular War Waterloo Veteran”. In this book he claims to have met Napoleon.

Details concerning his life are well documented, and he writes that Napoleon “paid a visit to the English soldiers who were his prisoners” and came and spoke to most of them, “but when he offered me his hand” (James Smithies writes) “I cursed him, and (showing him my wounded hand), said that but for him I should not have been hurt in that manner. I refused his proffered hand, and turned my back on him.” James goes on to say that Napoleon seemed to think his dignity had been “insulted” and gave James a “scornful look” that he said he “shall never forget.” (P. 69)

Turning his back on Napoleon was a very daring thing to do.

James Smithies had seen his friends nose and one side of his face cut off in battle and often told his shocking stories around the old pubs in Middleton and he also wrote songs and sang them. His songs are written in his memoir.

These are the horrors of war.

James Smithies was a very strong minded person who fought for what he believed in and it was a very unique moment for me to visit his gravestone and uncover this ancestral connection. James Smithies was my 5th great grand uncle.

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Why are false teachers “twice dead” in Jude?

The Epistle of Jude is one of the most important New Testament letters to read during times of great apostasy. Jude gives a strong message to believers that we are compelled to contend for the faith. When false teachers usurp their own authority and the Spirit of truth is attacked, never fear, the Epistle of Jude will always be there to help you out.

The Epistle was traditionally written by Jude the half brother of Jesus, who found himself in a situation where men were professing the faith but their lifestyles were not measuring up with scriptural morals. As a result Jude labels these men as ungodly because they were abusing the grace of God as a licence to sin. Jude became a sharp opponent even though they descended from the same religious tradition as he.

In his introduction the Jude refers to himself as a brother of James, and swiftly presents Old Testament examples of men who had fallen from grace. Jude does not want his readers to be deceived by these men so he informs the readers that they were ordained to condemnation long ago (verse 4). In verses 7-16 he writes about sin and judgment as a reminder that actions have consequences.

It is here in verse 12 where the words “twice dead” become intriguing. But what does it mean to be twice dead?

Essentially the context is that these false teachers were once dead in sin but had (at some point) been made alive in Christ, but now because they have fallen away and apostatised, they are dead again, thus “twice dead“. Essentially, these people fell away from the faith, abandoned good doctrine and became dead in sin again. Jude 12 is a proof text that affirms people can indeed walk away from their salvation, abandon the truth and be eternally lost.

According to Strongs (G1364) the Greek word translated twice means ‘again‘. It speaks of a repeated occurance.

Reading Luther’s commentary here can be useful since he rightly understood this passage to symbolically refer to false teachers as fruitless trees, “they make the claim and show as if they were Christian bishops, while neither the word nor the work of Christian bishops is there, but all dead at the root.

Very fitting to our present age!

Adam Clarke’s commentary is also useful since he understood this term to refer to believers who had apostatised and lost the grace they had received and became fruitless and twice dead,

First, naturally and practically dead in sin, from which they had been revived by the preaching and grace of the Gospel. Secondly, dead by backsliding or apostasy from the true faith, by which they lost the grace they had before received; and now likely to continue in that death, because plucked up from the roots, their roots of faith and love being no longer fixed in Christ Jesus.

Again, very fitting!

As John Wesley rightly stated, “These are spots – Blemishes. In your feasts of love – Anciently observed in all the churches. Feeding themselves without fear – Without any fear of God, or jealousy over themselves. Twice dead – In sin, first by nature, and afterwards by apostasy. Plucked up by the roots – And so incapable of ever reviving.”

The lesson is this, if like me you are a Christian who is devastated by the level of widespread apostasy that we are all having to face, don’t lose heart and don’t waste your time talking to dead people who won’t listen to the things that you are saying, they can’t hear you. They may be twice dead.

Instead listen to the Word of God and let the Text speak to you. Remember, if a sermoniser or bishop says anything that is contrary to the Bible those words have no authority whatsoever. The bishop, or priest is merely echo chambering his own words into the air.

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