WAR AGAINST THE MEMBERS.
Arbitrary power demands abject submission. Conscious of their
strength and flushed with their victory, the' preachers used every
means to bring the members who op-posed the oppressive acts of the
Conference, into subjection. We have never read, in any period of
the church's history, of the employment by the preachers, of more
arbitrary and tyrannical measures than those adopted by the
preachers of the dominant party in the: Genesee Conference to
subjugate those members who would not bow implicitly to their
authority. Had such tyranny been exercised by the priests of the
Roman Catholic church, there would have been an outcry raised which
would have been heard all over the land and across the Atlantic.
To expel members and read them out with-drawn without their consent
became the order of the day. The preacher was often prosecutor,
witness, judge, and if not jury, it was a servile body of his own
creation. He selected the committee who tried the case. Where enough
men sufficiently pliant to do his bidding could not be found in the society, he imported them from a
distance.
I will not do your dirty work for you, ' indignantly said a local
preacher of the circuit, when asked to sit on a jury to expel
Claudius Brainard. So one was brought seventy miles, from Buffalo, for the
purpose.
To have attended the Albion Convention was held to be a crime
sufficient for expulsion. No matter how long a man had been a member of
the M. E. Church, or how important his services, or how great his
sacrifices had been in its behalf; no matter how spotless his
reputation or godly his life, if he dared to befriend those whom the
majority. of the Conference had anathematized, he was liable to have
the heaviest anathemas poured upon his head.
One preacher was arrested for praying with us. By chance, Rev. Rufus
Cooley and his wife, and myself and Mrs. Roberts met at the house of
Mrs. Cooley' s mother. After tea we had a season of prayer. Mr.
Cooley prayed and I prayed. For this offence the character of the
Rev. Rufus Cooley was arrested at the next session of the Genesee
Conference !
On the 14th of February, 1859, the Rev. Claudius Brainard, of North
Chili, was tried and expelled for attending the Laymen's Convention
at Albion. There were three charges
and nineteen specifications preferred against him, all taken from
the proceedings of the Laymen's Convention.
For a number of years Claudius Brainard was an acceptable and
useful, travelling preacher. His health failing him, he was obliged
to locate. He continued, however, to preach, as his health
permitted, and his services were needed. His acquaintance was
extensive, and wherever known he was regarded as a deeply devoted
Christian, and a man of unbending integrity and sincere piety. To
make the matter sure, the Rev. J. B. Lankton, preacher in charge,
summoned a committee of local preachers from a distance men who
could be depended on to execute the will of the "Regency."
Of his expulsion, Mr. Brainard said in the Independent, of February
15th, 1859:
" Yesterday, I was expelled from the M. E. Church, for attending the
Laymen's Convention. No other charge was preferred. For all harsh
words or unchristian expressions, just retraction was made. My
expulsion was for the expression of my honest sentiments. Had I
given up my judgment to an Annual Conference, I could have retained
my standing in the church. But then I should not have been a
minister of the Lord Jesus Christ, nor even a Christian. I would die
a martyr's death for my own judgment, rather than yield my judgment
to an Annual Conference. My soul sweetly rests in Christ.
A consciousness of right, and the approval of my Judge, sustain me.
I shall unite on trial, the first opportunity, with the M. E.
Church. It is time the laity were. awake to their own rights in the
church."
Mr. Brainard appealed to the Annual Conference, but they refused to
entertain the appeal. This was contrary to an, explicit rule of
discipline, but they paid no attention to the discipline, only as
far as they could use it to punish those who would not submit to
their dictation.
When the Rev. Wm. D. Buck, a personal friend of Mr. Brainard, was
asked why he voted against entertaining his appeal, he frankly
replied, " Because Bishop Simpson told me to."
William Hosmer was. the only editor that was awake to the enormities
that were being perpetrated, or that had the honesty or the courage
to hold them up to public reprobation. In reply to some who
endeavored to conceal the fact that Mr. Brainard was expelled for
attending the Albion Convention, because there were three charges
against him, Mr. Hosmer said:
"Three charges were, to all intents and purposes, one charge, and but
one, unless the specifications relied on to support them had their
origin in circumstances apart from the Albion Convention. The crime
of attending that Convention might have been prosecuted under forty
different heads, and by a
thousand different specifications, and yet all would have been
substantially one and the same charge. In order to show that there
was in reality more charges than one, it should have been made to
appear that crimes unconnected with said Convention, and of a wholly
different character, were alleged against the party accused. For
prudential reasons, it is not uncommon in criminal prosecutions of
this kind to disguise the real offense under formidable allegations
which no one expects to prove or ever supposed to be true. In such a
case, though the charges are not proved, they help blacken the
character and cover the nakedness of the attempt. If sham charges
are made, some will believe them, and in the mean time the accused
can be convicted with better grace on the less flagrant points in
the indictment. What the facts in this case are can only be known
from the specifications themselves, and the entire history connected
with the trial. The matter is in itself of very great moment,
because it clearly involves the right of the laity to assemble for
the redress of grievances. If attendance on such meetings is to be
construed into a crime, or, if words spoken there are to be
prosecuted under the grave head of ' contumacy," slander," sowing
discord,' etc.; then what-ever may happen, our laymen must be silent
on pain of expulsion. Such a condition of things would be nothing
better than now falls to the lot of the deluded votaries of the
Catholic Church. Can the brethren concerned in this apparently
unfortunate piece of administration, show that Brother Brainard was
not expelled for words spoken, or deeds done, at the Albion
Convention? Had this case
stood alone,. we should not have noticed it, as occasional errors
are to be met with in the best administrations, but there is good
reason to suppose that it connects with a principle which is to have
a wide application.—When ecclesiastical persecution assumes a
judicial form, it is one of the most tremendous scourges ever let
loose upon society. The fires of Smithfield were kindled by
misguided church judicatories, and every Romish auto-da-fe has the
same origin. Believing not only that these ecclesiastical
decapitations aye the worst kind of murder, but that slavery will
demand in other Conferences a repetition of the scenes enacted in
the Genesee Conference, we shall both apprise the public of what is
going on and strip the proceedings of their assumed sanctity."
On the same circuit Mr. Thomas Hannah and Alexander Patten were also
expelled for the same cause. They were well-to-do farmers, men of
solid judgment and sound piety. Mr. Hannah had recently paid three
hundred dollars for a church on the circuit, and given his note for
three hundred more. This they collected, though they had
unceremoniously excluded him from the house for which it was
intended to pay.
Mr. John Prue, Mrs. Sarah Prue, Mr. and Mrs. Hutchins, Mrs.
Elizabeth Porter, Mrs. H. Loder, Fanny Smith and Mrs. N. S. Brainard,
were read out as " withdrawn" without their consent. Mr. Prue,.and
others, had
just paid liberally towards building the churches.
On the adjoining circuit Mr. Hart Smith, an upright, conscientious
Christian, for years a member of the church, was expelled by Rev.
Sumner Smith, with the help of a committee taken from Chili, the
members in Churchville refusing to act in the case.
On the.13th of April, 1859, Mr. Thomas B. Catton, ' of Perry, was
tried by his pastor, Rev. W. S. Tuttle. There were four charges and
twenty-three specifications. presented against him. The pastor
assumed in the out-set that he should be expelled, and cited him
" To answer to said charges and specifications, and show cause why
you should not be expelled from the M. E. Church."
In other courts, the prosecution must show cause why the accused
should be punished, but in this court it was taken for granted that
one accused of being a ` Nazarite " deserved the highest penalty of
the law, and he must show cause why it should not be inflicted.
As in the case of Rev. Mr. Lankton, the Rev. - W. S. Tuttle claimed
to be one against whom the action of the Albion Convention was
directed that is to be a party in the case and yet he acted as
Judge, selected his own jury, and in reality conducted the
prosecution.
Mr. Catton wrote us of his trial at the time:
" You can get only a very faint idea of the proceedings, from the
minutes. Brother Hibbard said in speaking of your trial, that, ` all
the forms of law were exhausted;' we think in my case that all the
forms of law were outraged. When a Methodist minister can take such
a stand, as the Rev.W. S. Tuttle took in this trial, and can find
devotees to carry out his desires, it is high time for the laity to
be aroused. There can be no safety, when a man claiming to be
slandered, can, on the trial of the one accused of slandering him,
sit as judge, and appoint the jury, and repudiate the laws of
evidence, which have been established for ages. ' Who ever heard
outside of the Genesee Conference, of a member of the M. E. Church
being tried, and receiving a penalty, because he could not in
conscience, pay the minister appointed? Yet Mr. Tuttle stated that
he had written to Bishop Baker, and had his sanction for commencing
an action under this new rule. I am now satisfied that the worst
construction, that can be put upon the language used by the Albion
Convention—if it was not true then, is certainly true now."
In this trial, several reliable Witnesses testified that to their
knowledge so-called "Regency" preachers were absent from the
Conference a day at a time while the evidence was being given in the
case of Rev. B. T. Roberts.
E. Sears, Thomas Jeffres and J. Grisewood testified that at
different times they heard different-preachers who voted for the
expulsion
of B. T. Roberts say, that they did not vote for his expulsion
because of the evidence adduced. The only reason any of them
assigned was, because he undertook a defense of the Estes pamphlet.
They heard seven different preachers at various times make this
statement.
Mr. Catton made so vigorous a defense, and public sympathy was so
much stirred up in his favor that, strange to say, he was not at
that time expelled. He was censured. Afterwards he had another trial
for " contumacy," and was finally disposed of with seven-teen others
who, without their consent, were read out as withdrawn.
Mr. Jonathan Handly, of Perry, one of the solid, quiet, substantial
members of the church for over thirty years, against whose ' moral
and Christian character his bitterest enemies could bring no
accusation, was tried for at-tending the Laymen' s Convention and
expelled!
We copy the following from the Olean Advertiser, in relation to
another who was expelled for attending the Albion Convention:
"James H. Brooks Esq., a resident of Olean these thirty odd years, a
man of unblemished private character, a member of the Methodist
Episcopal Church ever since he was fifteen years old, a Christian of
acknowledged worth and usefulness, and a citizen against whom the
breath of calumny has never breathed
until now, has been expelled from the church.. This fact being
announced, the inquiry is natural and pertinent—" Why?" This is
just what we would like to know. James H. Brooks has grown up in our midst from boyhood; his private
worth is as familiar to our citizens, as a " thrice told tale."
Generosity, integrity, honesty, and living piety, are eminent
characteristics of the man. For the last twenty-eight years, he has
been a member of the M. E. Church, and has contributed liberally for
the advancement of Method-ism, and the promulgation of the Gospel.
The ministers and brethren of the church, have ever found a place at
his board, and a welcome at his fire-side. It was indeed a truthful
exclamation of the accused after his conviction, and was not
contradicted by his accusers, " my old mother sitting there, has
given more meals to Methodists, than all the rest of this church
together." The trial and expulsion of such a man, naturally produces in the
public mind, a supposition that he has been guilty of some heinous
offence, either against good morals or the peace of society, and
that the proceedings were necessary to purify the church, and to
warn the world against an unchristian example. We however learn, and are gratified in being able to say that such
is not the case, that he has neither adopted a spurious faith, nor
has been guilty of any heresies, condemned by the doctrines of his
church, nor has he indulged in any impropriety of conduct, that
would warrant under any ordinary circumstances, his expulsion from
the church.
In every human mind there is an innate sense of justice which is
offended and aroused at acts of oppression and palpable wrongs. We
confess we partake of the general feeling pervading this community,
that a grievous wrong has been done Mr. Brooks.
So intolerable did the oppressive acts of the dominant preachers
become that the laymen's Convention, to which the Rev. Mr. Crawford
alludes in his account of the Bergen Camp-meeting, was called. In
the call, the Hon. Abner I. Wood, President, and the secretaries,
Rev. S. K. J. Chesbrough, and W. H. Doyle, say to the members of the
late "Albion Convention:"
" DEAR BRETHREN: At. our session at Albion, we were authorized to
call a meeting again in June. We feel that the difficulties among us
demand such a meeting. Ever since our action at Albion, we have been
misrepresented, and our characters slandered. No stone has been left
unturned, either by flattery or threatenings, to intimidate many
from the positions then taken. How many have been led thus to
with-draw from us, we know not; nor is it our concern. If any one
feels duty thus calls him to retract, let him thus decide, and walk
no more with us. We feel satisfied that not only a vast majority of
those that attended still adhere to those resolutions, but many more
who did not adhere, are now convinced that we have the right on our
side, and to day are in sympathy with us. Important interests are.
at stake; we feel the iron heel of oppression heavily
laid upon us as laymen. We feel unwilling to become the slaves of
any power. Many of our beloved brethren, who acted with us there,
have been tried for attending that Convention some have been
expelled. Let us meet together and show to them that the cause is
one, and when they suffer, we suffer with them. If our action there
is to be the "war-note," and the moving cause of our decapitation or
removal from office, wherever possible, the time has come, yea,
fully come, for us to stand firm and reiterate that our sentiments
and our resolutions are still unchanged, and that we intend to
maintain the position then taken, let the cost be what it may to us
; the fear of expulsion or removal from office should never drive a
Methodist from doing his duty. We need also to
reaffirm our undiminished confidence in our beloved Brothers
Roberts and McCreery, and our condemnation of the unjust expulsion
of these brethren from the Conference. Let us, to a man, stand by
them, they are worthy of our sympathy and our."
material aid." We cordially and earnestly invite all our brethren who are in
sympathy with us, and who are willing to act, to meet us in
Convention at North Bergen, on the Genesee Camp Ground, Thursday,
June 20, 1859, at 4 p. M., to take such action as may there be
deemed advisable.
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