IN Boston I had long and free conversations with the
Catholic priesthood on their own premises. A Mr. Taylor, who afterwards
became a bishop in France, where he died long since, took the lead in the
conversation with his accustomed affability. While on the points of grace
and free will, such were his definitions that I said to him, "Then, if I
rightly understand the position of your church, you approach the Arminian
standard. Shall I say so in my book?" "That will not do," was his quick
reply; "we copy from no party." "Well, how shall I express the matter
agreeably to the fact, and the true state of the case?" "You may say, the
Arminians approach us on the points of grace and free will. That will
do. But to say that the Catholic church, the oldest of all churches, follows
any other creed, would be an historical error."
Among the many topics which came under discussion during
my visit to Catholic officials in Boston, was the pope's infallibility. "No
such thing in our creed," said one. "Not at all" said another, "do we hold
that doctrine, in the sense ascribed to us by our opponents." "The pope is
not more infallible than you are," said Mr. Taylor. "It is true," continued
he, "that Bossuet, and some other high churchmen, have flattered his
holiness with this appellation, in the excess of their zeal for the
apostolic prerogatives against the Protestants." At this point various
definitions were given by the company of theologians by whom I was
surrounded, the substance of which, as near as I can recollect was, that as
the decisions of the church, in all matters of faith, were infallible, and
as the pope is its head, this attribute is erroneously ascribed to him in
his own private character.
The adoration of the cross also came under discussion at
this time, with similar efforts on the part of the Catholics to correct the
misrepresentations of the Protestants; when one of the company, touching the
golden pendant on his breast, quaintly observed, "Too many of all parties
worship the material of which this symbol is made."
At the time here referred to, the controversy between the
Unitarians and the Orthodox was in full vigor, and it was plain to be seen,
that the sympathies of these Catholic men were on the Unitarian side,
notwithstanding they were bound to a very strong Trinitarian creed.
With other ministers of this order I at times had free
conversations on various subjects, one of which was the power of priests to
pardon sins, which they declared was a vulgar error to which no good
Catholic subscribed. God alone can pardon sin, was their prompt decision;
but when, said they, the priest at confession, gains evidence of sincere
penitence for sins confessed, he grants absolution to the confessing party,
and thus has arisen the error in question. As I was a mere inquirer after
matters of fact, I gave no opinions of my own on whatever statements were
made to me, but I received them and recorded them in this case, and in all
others, as the sentiments of the men of whom I inquired, according to their
own professions. And as to the Catholics, who, as a general thing, are
intensely disliked, I have thought it best in all my intercourse with them
to endeavor to treat them with more mildness than they generally exhibit
towards their opponents, and show them by my language and spirit towards
them that our religion is better than theirs. This idea was suggested to me
a long time since by one of my correspondents, who was once a member of that
church, but who, for many years, has been a very successful minister of our
order.
In the city of New York I made an extensive survey of the
different classes of Presbyterians, and especially the Scotch Seceders, most
of whom have congregations in this great metropolis. When I returned to the
house of one of these ministers who accompanied me in the round, I expressed
my surprise to him at the similarity of all the parties of the Secession
church, and I said to him, "How shall I describe these dissenting interests,
and what difference in them shall I point out? Your parties all appear so
much alike, that for any thing I can see, they all ought to be classed under
the same head; and yet the lines between them are distinctly drawn and
strictly maintained. You are all Presbyterians in your form of church
government, you are all orthodox in your creeds, and you are all rigid
Protestants and Pedobaptists. You all complain of the Baptists for their
close communion, and yet you do not all commune with each other. Is not this
an anomaly in church history?"
The comments of my friend I do not recollect, but this
much I remember, namely, that throughout my whole interview with him he
acted the part of a Christian gentleman, and displayed the sociability of a
well-bred Scotchman.
I found the Lutheran ministers very tenacious of the term
evangelical, as applied to their church, and that they viewed with
much complaisance the prosperity of their cause in this country. The clergy
of this community, with whom I conversed, appeared sound in the faith, and
lamented the defection of so many men of eminence in the Lutheran church, in
the old country. In their public worship, I observed, they use a liturgy of
a very limited extent. When I inquired of this people respecting Luther's
famous doctrine of consubstatiation, instead of transubstantiation, as held
by the church of Rome, they informed me that although it was in their creed,
yet very little was said among them on the subject. Indeed, they did not
hesitate to say that this mysterious and peculiar dogma of the great
reformer had become a dead letter with many, if not most of their community.
With the Moravian ministers, on whom I called, I was very
much pleased, especially their kind and unassuming manners. Their private
dwellings and confraternity establishments I found remarkable for their neat
and comfortable appearance, and their mode of living gave me to understand
how this community can sustain their operations on so broad a scale, with so
small an amount of funds.
The simple and moderate episcopacy of the United Brethren
appeared to me a model of church government, of the Episcopal form, which I
should be disposed to adopt, were I to relinquish the Baptist rule.
In one instance a singular result followed my call on a
clergyman, who received me very kindly, and from whom I parted without any
suspicion of rival-ship. But it so happened that before my work came out,
one on All Religions, about the same size, was issued, and put into
the hands of book peddlers by a large publishing house in the city of ___.
This book was hastily thrown together from other works, and I ascertained
that the clergyman above referred to was the compiler of the production,
which was without a name. I never saw the man afterwards. He died many years
ago. The most singular part of the story is, that the agents who were sent
out with the work in question, actually palmed it off on many of my
subscribers. With this transaction, however, I did not suppose that either
the compiler, or the publishers were concerned.
The Result of these visitations.
— I have already stated that my free and familiar intercourse with men so
diversified in their religious opinions and pursuits, confirmed me in an
opinion which I adopted long ago, namely, that the course I had pursued
spoils a man for a bigot; and again, that a firm attachment to one’s own
church and creed, and a cordial Christian friendship for good men of every
name, are entirely compatible with each other. In the visitations above
described, where I discovered the vitality of religion, I often found my
sympathies involuntarily enlisted on the side of the men with whom I was
then associated, in all that pertained to their trials and embarrassments,
and was really glad for them, when they could make out a good account of
their affairs, and exhibit fair prospects for the future.
With almost all the parties I visited, I found them
complaining, a good deal like the Baptists of the following things:
1. Of misrepresentation and unfair treatment by
other societies. Something or other in their
faith or forms was misunderstood or was erroneously stated. In some cases a
slight modification of terms would make all right; and they were often
grieved that their opponents would hold them accountable for language which
they did not adopt, but which was put into their mouths by others, and for
sentiments which were palmed upon them by analogy and construction. This
complaint, according to all church history, I find has been common in all
ages and countries, so much so that in my judgment, misrepresentation,
in some way or other, has been the bane of the world, especially in
religious matters, and most of all, when dissenters from national churches
have been made to feel its power. This subject will be more fully discussed
in the next chapter.
2. Of pecuniary embarrassments, and the want of
liberality among the people. I soon found that
the Baptists were not alone in these matters, but that many other
communities were groaning under embarrassing debts on their houses of
worship. They too had depended much on borrowed capital. This false
principle, this most miserable rule of action in former years, seemed to be
a truly American idea, and many splendid sanctuaries have I seen, which had
been dedicated to the God of heaven, but which were owned in reality by men
of the world, in part at least.
Many suppose, that as a whole, the Baptists are the most
backward of any denomination in the land, in parting with their money for
religious purposes, but I have heard grievous complaints on this score from
other quarters. I well remember the free remarks on this subject, of an old
Lutheran minister of Philadelphia, while he was showing me the spacious
church in which he officiated. The parsimony of his people and the smallness
of his stipend were freely commented on by the good old German divine.
"I thank the Lord for a free gospel," said a zealous Methodist. "I have been
a member of the society twenty-five years, and it has never cost me
twenty-five cents." "The Lord have mercy on your stingy old soul," said the
minister from the desk.
My late Edition of Baptist History.
— After a lapse of about thirty years from the time my old history was
published, I began to make preparations for a new edition, the principal
object of which was to bring down the account of the denomination to the
then present time. I also resolved to present to my readers all the new
facts which I could obtain in favor of the main positions of the Baptists,
relative to the antiquity of their sentiments, and the prevalence of the
same in all ages and countries where any traces of them can be found. For
this purpose a great amount of additional reading became necessary, and a
considerable number of books, which I could not find in this country, had to
be sent for from abroad; but this labor was small compared with the long
journeys which I found it necessary to perform, and the extensive
correspondence which I found it absolutely needful to maintain.
A number of local Baptist histories had been published in
different places since my old history was published, which supplied me with
good materials to a limited extent; but still it was reduced to a certainty,
after a fall view of the field before me, that widespread and long-continued
efforts must yet be made for the accomplishment of my new plan. The
denomination had increased many fold in the course of thirty years; vast
regions of country, which were in a wilderness state at the time my old work
was published, had been settled, and were filled with multitudes of our
people among other settlers, all of which regions must be explored anew, and
historical facts and documents collected from them, for the purpose of
carrying out my design to its full extent. This amount of labor had a
somewhat formidable appearance at first view; but by dint of perseverance,
with the aid of a long list of valuable correspondents, together with the
post office facilities, which I shall soon name, this greatest labor of my
life, in the collection of historical documents, in the course of about ten
years, was effected, and the work was published by L. Colby & Co., New York,
in 1848. One of my sons was with me five years, constantly engaged in
copying for the press, assisting in my correspondence, reading proofs, and
other parts of my labor.
In the commencement of this laborious undertaking, I sent
out a large number of printed circulars, in which were stated the outlines
of my plan, and the kind of assistance I needed. These I often directed at a
venture to men whose names I found in the minutes of our associations and
elsewhere, and in this way I obtained many of my stated correspondents.
The Historical Correspondent and Enquirer
was the name of a small paper which I published gratis for a number of
years. This sheet was wholly devoted to my historical pursuits. It came out
at different periods, as my wants required, and by being sent to Baptist
papers of all kinds, on exchange, in this way they came to ms free of cost.
Large parcels of the papers thus received are now on hand.
During all this time I had no interfering vocation,
except the care of the post office in this placer which I went into after I
had resigned a pastoral station which I had occupied twenty-five years. This
resignation was forced upon me by a severe pressure of one of the high
excitements of those times. The post office, then the third in the State in
size, I held ten years, so that I was literally "ten years among the
mail-bags." Most of the labor, however, was performed by my sons. While thus
occupying this official station, and at the same time pursuing my historical
inquiries, I was often at head-quarters, where I became pretty well
acquainted with the routine of Congressional affairs, with the interior
arrangements, and the outside management of the General Post Officer and
with many of the men in high official stations at the capital; and for a
while I was a member of the board of the college there under Baptist rule.
My principal reason for going into a secular employment
was the great assistance it would afford me in my historical pursuits by
means of the franking privilege, which was then enjoyed by
postmasters of all grades. This privilege was very useful to me in the
extensive correspondence, which I was at that time obliged to maintain. But
I found bigots among postmasters as well as elsewhere. Some of them
challenged my little historical sheet as not being a newspaper, in
the sense of the law, which defines their rights, because it did not contain
general news. This construction, had it been admitted at
head-quarters as correct, would have operated very much against me,
especially in the business of exchanges. In that case neither my papers
could go out, nor others would come to me free; and as newspaper postage was
then very high my bill of expense in this department must have been much
increased.
But my opponents failed at this point, and my little
paper stood its ground, and brought me in papers and pamphlets to a large
amount free of all cost.
The next and most serious complaint against me was for a
too free use of the franking privilege in sending letters and
circulars in such abundance all over the country in aid of a sectarian work.
But as our government has nothing to do with sects and parties in its laws,
which I had been careful not to violate, as I made it clearly to appear, the
case was dismissed and my franking went on.
In vindication of my free use of the mails for the
transmission of my documents far and wide, I stated to the men in charge of
the General Post Office, that besides my right, by the laws of the
Department, as a matter of equity I was entitled to a large share of mail
facilities, since I claimed to be the historical representative of more than
one fourth of the population of the United States, including Baptists of all
classes, with their adherents; that I corresponded with them all of every
name and nation, and was assisted by them in my historical pursuits.
The income of letters during the ten years in which I was
engaged in collecting materials and publishing the work now under
consideration, was very large. These epistolary documents are all preserved
with care among my papers of this kind.
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