ON CUSTOMS NOW GENERALLY ABOLISHED, WHICH PREVAILED MORE
OR LESS AMONG THE BAPTISTS IN FORMER TIMES; AS LAYING ON OF HANDS. — WASHING
FEET. — DEVOTING CHILDREN. — RULING ELDERS. — DECLINE IN THE USE OF BROTHER
AND SISTER, AND ELDER. — SEVEN DEACONS THE GOSPEL NUMBER FOR A FULL GROWN
CHURCH.
The Laying on of Hands
THIS was a practice of high antiquity in our denomination
in other countries, and in this country it formerly prevailed much more
extensively than at the present time. I find traces of it in the history of
many of our oldest communities. In the old church in Providence, R.I., I
conclude it was always in use until about the middle of the ministry of the
late Dr. Gano, when it was gradually laid aside.
This practice, I infer, came to us with our ancestors
from the old world, where, by some of our oldest churches, it was
tenaciously adhered to as far back as their history is recorded.
The laying on of hands, as a religious rite, as far
as I can learn, has always been practiced in the same manner. The candidates
for church membership, after being baptized, as a final act of admission
come forward to the minister, the same as those do who receive the right
hand of fellowship; and the minister, instead of taking them by the hand,
puts his hands on their heads and prays, and then their initiation is
completed.
This rite, by Episcopalians has been denominated,
familiarly, a Baptist confirmation.
Dr. Gano did not object to the thing itself, which he
admitted was a proper way of receiving church members, but he disliked the
idea of its being considered a church ordinance, which he found was the
sense of a portion of his members; and as its relinquishment all at once
would have been grievous to some of the aged members, who were most attached
to an order in this primitive body, to all appearance from time immemorial,
it was left optional for new members to come into it under hands, or by the
hand of fellowship, as they might choose. After continuing the two forms of
admission for a few years, the practice of laying on of hands was wholly
discontinued.
The church of Pawtucket, which was a branch of the old
Providence community, arose about the time of the discontinuance of this
ancient custom in the mother body. In this new interest the practice in
question was not introduced, nor was there ever any discussion on the
subject, either at its origin, or at any other time; my own impressions,
however, were rather favorable than otherwise towards a practice so
significant, and of such high antiquity, as the one under consideration.
The people called Six Principle Baptists, most of whom
are in Rhode Island and vicinity, are the decided advocates for the practice
of the laying on of hands. Their name is derived from <580601>Hebrews 6:1,
2, where, as they maintain, this number of Christian principles are laid
down, and among them, the laying on of hands holds a conspicuous place.
The Washing of Feet
From time immemorial this oriental custom, so often
referred to in the history of the early Christians, has been observed by
small groups of Baptists, in a religious manner, in different parts of this
country. In early life, I was acquainted with such a company, who, being
Bible Christians to the letter, felt themselves bound literally to comply
with the following direction of Christ, namely: "If I then, your Lord and
Master, have washed your feet, ye also ought to wash one another's feet. For
I have given you an example, that ye should do as I have done unto you."
The general exposition of this passage, or the sense in
which most of our divines understand it, namely, that the Saviour here meant
to teach his disciples humility and hospitality, did not satisfy the
old-fashioned Baptists to whom I have alluded, and many others of their
class. In their opinion, it was in some sense a divine institution.
Among the Mennonites, as I understand the matter, the
practice of feet washing is still uniformly maintained, and is
performed at the close of their communion service; while with our people it
has generally been discontinued. While this ancient custom was kept up, the
observance of it was not confined to communion seasons, but it was performed
at the close of conference meetings and social gatherings of Christian
friends.
Devoting Children, or Dry Christening, Love Feasts,
etc.
John Leland, in his Virginia Chronicle, in 1790,
informs us that the dry christening ceremony prevailed to some extent
in the Old Dominion at that time. This unusual rite among the Baptists,
which long since went out of use, was founded on the incident of parents
bringing little children to Christ to bless them, and was thus performed: as
soon as circumstances would permit, after the birth of a child, the mother
carried it to meeting, when the minister either took it in his arms, or laid
his hands on it, thanked God for his mercy, and invoked a blessing on the
little one, in a public manner. At the same time the child received its
name. This rite, by those who practiced it, was called devoting children
to God, while outsiders, as they saw no water connected with it, called
it a dry christening. It prevailed in easy times in many parts of
Virginia, but mostly within the bounds of the Sandy Creek Association in
North Carolina, and in the wide-spread branches of that ancient and
extensive community. This association was founded by the New Lights
from New England, to whom I have often alluded, and the ceremony under
consideration, I am inclined to think, originated with this people. Although
they were thorough-going Baptists, so far as the baptismal service was
concerned, yet in their easy operations, they adopted a number of rules of
discipline which were not common with the denomination then, nor before, nor
since. Besides Baptism and the Lord's Supper, which usually constitute the
whole of the Baptist ritual, these people held to a long list of religious
rites, namely, love feasts, laying on of hands, washing feet, anointing
the sick, the right hand of fellowship, kiss of charily, and devoting
children, or the dry christening. They also held to ruling
elders, elderesses, deaconesses, and weekly communion.
This portion of our brethren, it will be seen, labored to
conform to all the suggestions of the Scriptures in their fullest extent, in
the rites and rules above enumerated; but if any of their churches omitted
any of them, this omission was freely tolerated by the more rigid party. By
degrees, however, these numerous observances of an unusual character, for
Baptists, fell into disuse, so that when I was on the ground, more than
forty years ago, the descendants of the old New Lights in their modus
operandi were much like other Baptists.
A Decline in the Use of the Terms "Brother" and
"Sister" among the "Laity, and of "Elder" as applied to Ministers.
In my early day, among by far the largest portion of the
Baptists, the terms "brother" and "sister" were in common use
in the every-day conversation of this people, when speaking to or of each
other. This language was so familiar with them that they employed it in all
places and before all people, in the market places, in public conveyances,
on the highways, and wherever they had occasion to speak to, or of each
other. In this respect the Baptists and Methodists were much alike in their
fraternal language with reference to each other. And what is said of former
times may also be affirmed of this time, among a very large portion of the
great Baptist family. A great change has, indeed, taken place in this
business in some locations, where much less of this old-fashioned
familiarity of speech is heard than formerly; and this change is the most
apparent in the older and more populous parts of the country, where forms
and fashions have produced such a worldly conformity on the part of the
Baptists, that their language relative to church associates is as cold and
formal as that of worldly people. I once heard an aged minister of our
order, of the popular class, whose notions were somewhat precise in matters
of this kind, complain of his country brethren, who came to the city on
business affairs, for using the brotherly language too freely in the
streets, and everywhere, before all people, on all occasions, and of calling
loudly on "brother A., B.," etc., in their worldly transactions. This
language, he thought, should only be employed in church meetings and
religious doings, where it would not be desecrated by being made too common.
Of multitudes of Baptists, of modern times, this venerable and very worthy
doctor would have no occasion to complain of their being too free and
unguarded, too familiar and too methodistical in their use of the
old-fashioned terms, "brother" and "sister."
The term "elder," as a proper distinction for our
ministers of all grades, old or young, in my early day, was, and indeed from
time immemorial it has been, the usual title for them. Office instead of age
has always been intended by it. But there has been a great change in this
respect among the more fashionable class of Baptists in many parts of the
country, where the term reverend has taken the place of the old and
favorite cognomen above referred to. Still, in the country parts of the
older States, and in nearly all the newer regions, the people still
distinguish as formerly their spiritual guides. And not only so, but they
often thus distinguish the ministers of other creeds. I have often been
amused in our region of country, where the Baptists were the first settlers,
and where they always have been numerous, to hear our old-fashioned people,
especially among the sisterhood, apply the term "elder" to ministers of
other denominations as freely as they do to their own order.
Ruling elders, in addition
to deacons, in former times, in a few instances, were found among the
Baptists; but at present I know of no church of our persuasion where this
office is maintained. The people where they once were found, may have copied
the rule from the Presbyterians, or else have taken it from the words,
the elders that rule well, etc.
Ruling elders were almost everywhere met with among the
Puritans of this country in early times, but we do not find them anywhere
among the old Baptists, who came out from them, till we come down to those
which arose in the New Light stir. The few churches in which these officers
were found were mostly in the middle States.
In the chapter on the Deaconship, yet to come in, I shall
advocate the primitive practice of having seven men of good report, full of
the Holy Ghost and wisdom, for every full grown church of our order, to
cooperate with the pastor in the management of church affairs, then there
will be no need of ruling elders, nor of executive committees for this
business. I shall also recommend that deacons be appointed for a limited
time, instead of for life, as is now done; and this rule I would apply to
the officers of all our benevolent institutions. Four years is the term I
propose.
A full exhibition of my views of the present evils of our
deaconship, and of the proper remedies for these evils, will be given in the
chapter referred to.
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