QUIET CONDITION OF THE BAPTISTS GENERALLY. AGITATIONS ABOUT FREEMASONRY
AND SOUTHERN SLAVERY. THE TROUBLES WHICH FOLLOWED. THE DIVISION OF
CHURCHES. THE REMOVALS OF MINISTERS. THE NAME OF STAYSHORT APPLIED TO
MANY.
THIRTY YEARS AGO the Baptist denomination, as a general
thing, throughout the country, was free from the numerous and disastrous
excitements which soon arose in many places, and which in some extensive
regions, by the altercations and divisions they occasioned, essentially
hindered the prosperity of the society, which was then, in numerical
strength, ahead of all the great communities in the land so far as church
membership was concerned. For a long course of years prior to the period now
under consideration, extensive revivals of religion had prevailed amongst
our people in almost all parts of the country where Baptists were found; the
cause of missions was rapidly gaining ground among us; the same may be said
of the interests of education in all their departments; and a disposition
was very apparent among an increasing number of our influential men, both
ministers and laymen, to arouse and concentrate the energies of our growing
and wide-spread community in favor of benevolent and evangelical efforts at
home and abroad. Such was the state of things among the American Baptists
about one third of a century since. But a sad reverse of this pleasing
picture was at hand, and the painful scenes in which many of our ministers
became very deeply involved spread their baneful influence far and wide.
Freemasonry, and southern slavery, soon became the
subjects of the greatest interest among the contending parties, and, as a
natural consequence, respecting these new matters of excitement in their
then present shape, the most ardent altercations arose among the combatants
in this new warfare on Baptist ground, which involved questions, about
which, our churches had never legislated, nor adopted any rules of
discipline. New laws of course had to be made by these churches before they
could proceed in dealing with their members under the complaints which were
preferred against them by their accusing brethren. This caused no little
embarrassment at first, with the more thinking class of men, but as the
excitement became more intense, law or no law, majorities ruled, and
proscription was fully inaugurated in many locations.
Up to this date, the members of Baptist churches were not
molested in their religious standing on account of their connection with the
mystic order; and multitudes of the most staunch defenders of the Baptist
faith found themselves all at once in an embarrassing
dilemma in consequence of the new church laws, which they never subscribed,
and against which they entered a solemn protest. In some cases, this kind of
reasoning caused a stay of proceedings against the obnoxious members, but
where the new reformers were determined on victory, and had majorities on
their side, no arguments were of any avail. Wily statesmen who had ambitious
schemes ahead, not unfrequently stimulated our church reformers in their
undertakings, and thus, by a combination of influences, political and
religious, between outside agitators, and inside managers, many of our
hitherto strong and harmonious churches, mostly in the northern States, were
shaken to their center on mere matters of opinion, pro and con,
respecting the character of a professedly secret institution, and were
crippled for long succeeding years in their harmony and prosperity.
In this new Baptist reform, many strong men, and not a
few who could not properly be placed in this class, were engaged, with a
zeal which they had never before manifested against any of the evils of the
land, real or imaginary. The details of the strifes and commotions which
followed this modern warfare against a fraternity of very high antiquity, I
shall not attempt to repeat.
The disputes among our people about slavery, in an earnest manner, were
nearly contemporary with those just referred to. These disputes also, in the
outset, were respecting a system, with the evils of which they had but
little knowledge, only by report; and as in the business of masonry, new
questions came up on the subject of church discipline. Heretofore, ministers
and members of the great Baptist family, North and South, had freely
exchanged pulpits, and united together in all their religious exercises at
home and abroad. But now, strong efforts were made by many northern men to
restrain the freedom which had thus far been exercised, and the operation of
these efforts, in the end, led the southern brethren to go off by
themselves. The details of the long struggle here referred to, at present I
shall entirely omit. The formation of a new convention, which combines all
the doings of the Baptists in the southern States, for benevolent objects
generally, I shall briefly describe in its proper place, and under a
separate head. It is not my intention, however, in any of my reminiscences
of Baptist affairs, at the North or South, to identify myself with either of
the parties, or to denounce or defend the men on either side, but to present
the facts as they appeared to me at the time.
It so happened that about the time that the agitations
above alluded to were at their height, I found it necessary to take a
journey through all the southern States in pursuit of historical information
for my late work on the history of the denomination, when I found a material
change from former years in the feelings of our brethren in those regions
towards the institution in question, and in their conversations respecting
it. Formerly they were accustomed to use the language of apology for a
system which they could neither regulate nor abolish, but which they would
be very glad to be rid of, if this could be done in a legal and peaceable
manner; while now, they defended it on scriptural grounds. And when I
inquired of one of our prominent ministers in the city of R , the reason
of this change, he discoursed to me on the subject in the following manner:
"Formerly, we viewed ourselves on a level with our brethren in the free
States, but the language and resolutions which for a long time have been
coming down to us from the North, place us in the background. Indeed, if we
remain as we are, if these brethren mean all they say, we are not fit to be
ranked among gospel ministers or real Christians. And as we were not
disposed to renounce all our professions at once, we set about a new course
of study, and made new and more thorough examinations of the Bible, to find
where we stood; and soon we were surprised to discover from the sacred word
how easily we can defend our cause, from the practice of the early
Christians, among whom we believe slavery most certainly existed." This mode
of reasoning, I have found, is now pretty generally adopted by the ministers
and the people of all parties in the slave-holding States; so that instead
of pleading for toleration and forbearance from their opposing brethren,
they now stand on the defensive with much decision; and some of the
ministers of our own order, as well as those of others, have become
champions in defense of a system which, by multitudes in the free States, is
most intensely opposed; and as the unpleasant feelings between the parties
were daily increasing in strength and severity, as was painfully apparent at
the great meetings in which they attempted to work together, and with a
gloomy prospect for the future, I was glad when the line of demarcation was
peaceably drawn between the North and South, for the sake of peace on both
sides, and for other reasons which I shall assign in the chapter on the
Southern Baptist Convention.
Since the separation, thus briefly described, took place,
the two wings of the great Baptist community in this country have each
pursued their own way, without any clashing with each other; and have done
much more in the support of missions at home and abroad, and other objects
of benevolence, than they could have done had they continued in one body.
The southern Baptists never had much disputing about
masonry, and none about slavery among themselves, but matters were very
different at the North, where, in the exciting times now had in view,
multitudes who stood aloof from all matters of controversy, were in
continual fears for the safety of their hitherto quiet spiritual homes, on
account of divisions, which they could neither hinder nor heal.
The disputes respecting Freemasonry and Slavery stood
foremost in the order of time, as they did in point of importance, in the
minds of the most active promoters of these agitations. With them, all other
evils in the Baptist ranks were of minor importance, and in support of their
opinions on these subjects all available arguments and measures were by them
resorted to. Ministers in cases not a few became lecturers and agents, and
leaving their pastoral stations, they traversed the country far and wide, in
pursuit of their new vocations. These men were joined by many of the secular
class, whose preferences were not very well settled on religious opinions of
any kind; and soon Baptist pulpits, which had hitherto been devoted
exclusively to the preaching of the gospel, were freely opened to a
promiscuous company of declaimers of all castes and creeds, by whom the
objects principally aimed at were of a politico-benevolent character. Such
was the opinion of many outside observers.
The Baptist lecturers, however, preferred to labor for the cause of religion
and humanity only.
Out of these agitations, as an unavoidable consequence,
arose confusion and division in many of our churches; and in others, where
no rupture took place, coldness and deadness ensued, and an estrangement of
feeling among most intimate friends.
At associations, conventions and other large gatherings
within the range of these troublesome discussions, there were men always
ready to introduce resolutions in favor of their anti-isms of various
kinds, the agitation of which, in many cases, it was difficult to avoid,
with the free principles of the Baptists, and with their notions of equal
rights when met in public assemblies. The consumption of time on these extra
matters, which was needful for legitimate objects, was an evil often
complained of, but the bad blood which was engendered between contending
parties was a greater evil still.
For a long time previous to the peculiar age now under
review, the old-fashioned longevity of Baptist pastorships was getting more
and more out of fashion, every year; and now these relations, in many cases,
were so much narrowed down, that a multitude of our ministers could truly
say on this subject,
"A span is all that we can boast,
A year or two of time."
And each of these migratory shepherds, on retiring from
their transitory stations, could say, "Few and evil have been the days of my
pilgrimage, with an uncomfortable, discordant, and inefficient people."
A writer in the Christian Watchman and Reflector,
in Boston, not long since gave a good description of a minister, under the
significant cognomen of Mr. Stay-short, who, in consequence of the
ardor with which he entered into every agitation afloat, was constantly on
the move. He would resolve, on his entrance into each new place, that he
would avoid his former mistakes and let all agitations alone, but such was
the constitution of his mind, and so large was his bump of combativeness,
that none of his prudential resolves were of any avail. So strong in his
mind were the convictions of duty, and so fully did he believe that without
his aid, the truth would suffer, and the interests of justice and humanity
would be trampled under foot, that he must speak out, hit or
miss, and come what would, he must contend earnestly for the truth.
And soon away he would go to some new location.
This meddling with all new excitements which arose in
such quick succession about these times, while it unseated many who had
heretofore devoted their whole attention to the gospel ministry with
reputation and success, served to diffuse a spirit of discord and contention
into many churches, who, up to this period, had been distinguished for
concord and quietness.
The family of Stayshorts in the pastoral line has been
greatly augmented in our denomination since the age of excitements
commenced. Men who will plunge into controversies on any subjects ought to
be making arrangements for a change of location without much delay, and
especially if on the matters of dispute, the people of their charge are
divided in their opinions and pursuits.
The Staylong preachers, as a general thing, are
noncommittal in the midst of all the contests here referred to. When it
comes to the question of truth and duty, as gospel ministers, the ease is
very different, but even here the mild spirit of the gospel should be
cultivated in preference to that of acrimony and contempt. A minister whose
mind is deeply imbued with the Spirit, and who is wholly devoted to his
divine calling, will easily avoid the evils in which his combative and
inconsiderate brethren too often become involved.
In this free country, and with our free principles, all
must be left to their own choice, and the minister who attempts to interpose
and influence on, any side, either in political or any other contests, which
may agitate the minds of the people, will see his mistake often when it is
too late.
In addition to the injurious influence on the Baptist
cause, from the agitations which I have thus briefly described, its former
tranquility was much disturbed, and its prosperity was very seriously
retarded by the continued hostility of the anti-mission party, which was
spreading its paralyzing principles far and wide, and which erected barriers
at every point against the progress of all the benevolent and reforming
operations of modern times.
The Campbellites or Reformers, in the southern and
western States, thirty years ago and onward, were in the full tide of
success, and were making proselytes from the Baptists with great rapidity.
Not unfrequently ministers and whole churches espoused the cause of the
zealous Reformers, and churches not a few, which made strenuous efforts to
maintain their ground, were in the end essentially enfeebled or wholly
destroyed.
The Campbellites are intensely Baptistical, so far as the
baptismal service is concerned.
The Millerites, or Adventists, about this time, and at a
still later period, made inroads on our ranks much more extensively than
many have supposed. Mr. Miller, himself, was a plain Baptist minister in the
earlier part of his life, and as immersion was the standing rule of his
party, the Baptists could carry with them their old favorite practice when
they rallied around their new and popular leader.
On the whole, the decade now under review may be properly
denominated the iron age of the American Baptists. Revivals of religion,
like angels visits, in most parts of the country were few and far between,
and it may be truly said the dearth was sore in the land.
Such is a brief account of the depopulating measures and
influences which our extended community had to encounter during most of this
decade, and of the inroads which by them, were made upon our ranks.
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