Burns was brought up in a well-to-do household. He was born in Forfarshire,[1] the third son of a local church minister, William Hamilton Burns (1779–1859) and Elizabeth Chalmers (1784–1879).[2][3] At the age of seventeen, Burns's faith was strengthened through tragedy, and he subsequently commenced theological training at Marischal College in Aberdeen,[4] and at the University of Glasgow's Divinity Hall. (His brother Islay, author of Memoirs, was later a professor there).
During a revival meeting, he encountered an experience in which it became apparent that God had particularly appointed him into His service. By 1839, at the age of 24, Burns had obtained the licence to preach from the Glasgow Presbytery.
While still in his homeland of Scotland, he experienced, together with the preacher Robert Murray M'Cheyne, genuine revival meetings.[5] It was one of the tools from which the great spiritual revivals in his home town of Kilsyth resulted, that took place from July 7, 1839. Burns preached at St. Peter's in Dundee while Robert Murray M'Cheyne was away on a mission to the Jews in Palestine.[6] The days of revival also deeply affected Dundee, and continued after M'Cheyne returned to St. Peter's in November, 1839.
In 1847, Burns went to the Chinese empire via Hong Kong; during this long ship journey, he spent a lot of time studying the Chinese language.[7] He began his missionary service during the late Qing dynasty in British Hong Kong and went on to preach in such locations as Shantou, Xiamen and Beijing.
In 1855 Burns met Hudson Taylor and the two worked together for quite some time.[4] Both had the courage to advance into the Chinese interior. Hudson Taylor regarded Burns as one of his spiritual mentors and wrote about the depth of Burns's prayer life. Taylor, however, influenced Burns in the way in which he sought to contextualize his ministry by breaking with missionary tradition to wear Chinese clothing while evangelizing in China's interior. During his twenty years of preaching the gospel in China, Burns also spent a short period wrongly imprisoned in Guangzhou.
In 1868, Burns died after a short illness in Yingkou (Niuzhuang), Liaoning Province.
One of William Burns's well-known quotes was: "Always be ready" (1 Peter 3:15).
Stewart James Alexander, Biographical Sketches: William Chalmers Burns / Robert Murray McCheyne, Asheville, NC: Revival Literature, 1963
Tow, Timothy, William C Burns: Grandfather of Bible-Presbyterians, Singapore: Christian Life Publishers, 1994. ISBN9971-9913-4-9
Dutch
Valen, L. J. van, Die aan alle wateren zaait : uit het leven van William Chalmers Burns ; zendeling en evangelist, Ede : Hardeman, 1988, ISBN90-71272-22-2