Saillens was born in
Saint-Jean-du-Gard on 24 June 1855. At the age of fifteen, during the
Franco-Prussian War, he served with an ambulance crew. He was converted to evangelical Christianity in 1871. Although he had attended Free Evangelical churches (
Eglises évangéliques libres), he discovered as a young man that
Baptist beliefs better reflected his own convictions. After studying at the East London Missionary Training Institute in 1873-74, and then joining with
Robert W. McAll in his Paris ministry, he was ordained on 18 August 1879. Saillens then began a ministry in
Marseille before returning to Paris in 1883. In 1888, he founded a Baptist church on the
Rue Saint-Denis in Paris (later the Eglise et Mission du Tabernacle). In 1886, “his many talents led him to excessive work” and to a personal crisis. Following this experience, he invested considerable energy in the Baptist expansion throughout France, providing it with “decisive impetus.” In 1905, wearied by internecine quarrels, he distanced himself from French Baptist churches and began to preach mainly in interdenominational settings in France and Switzerland, such as conventions in
Nîmes,
Chexbres, and
Morges. In 1916, he took part in a series of meetings at
Charles Spurgeon's
Metropolitan Tabernacle in London, where he was introduced as “The Spurgeon of France.” Saillens married Jeanne Crétin on 1 August 1877. In October 1921, they founded the Institut Biblique de
Nogent-sur-Marne, in the eastern suburbs of Paris, a school for pastors and missionaries. Saillens also wrote a number of pamphlets, articles, and books, including
The Soul of France (1916) and
Le Mystère de la foi (1931). Saillens wrote and translated approximately 250 hymns, including the emblematic “La Cévenole,” sung every year by French Protestants at the
”Assemblée du Désert”(Mas Soubeyran). As early as 1888, Saillens published a book of fables and allegories (
Récits et Allégories) for the uneducated workers he sought to evangelize. "Le Père Martin," the most famous of these stories, is a Christmas tale about a shoemaker, a tale unwittingly plagiarized by
Leo Tolstoy. Emile-Guillaume Léonard, for many years the dean of the Department of Religious Sciences at the
EPHE(Sorbonne), said his generation had been fascinated by “’revivalist’ pastors such as Ruben Saillens, who had so many talents” that “they bore about them a sense of hope, as though they could call fire down from Heaven.” ==Works==