MORE PREACHERS EXPELLED.
The next session of the Genesee Conference was held at Brockport, in
October, 1859. The efforts made to kill the influence of those whom
they selected at the last Conference to make examples of, had most
signally failed. These expelled preachers had never been more
cordially received by the people than during the year.
The Buffalo Advocate and the Northern Advocate teemed with
inflammatory appeals to their adherents to crush out what they
called the "Nazaritism" yet remaining in the Conference. The
dominant party of the Conference came together prepared to adopt any
measures which their leaders proposed, to finish the work of
extermination which they had commenced. Their ill-feeling was
intensified at the sight which they witnessed when they came
together.
In the outskirts of the village, in plain sight, and almost within
hearing of the church, Fay H. Purdy, a well known evangelist of the
M. E. Church, had commenced a tent meeting which was to continue
during the session of Conference.* A large pavilion, capable of
holding three thousand people, was spread. Around this were several
rows of family and society tents. To this meeting were gathered a
large number of intelligent, devoted, earnest Christians, who were
stigmatized by the dominant party as "Nazarites. "
It was evident at the opening of the Conference that extreme
measures would be adopted. This expectation was not disappointed;
yet, the audacity of the majority in trampling upon human and divine
law, exceeded the anticipations of those who had the highest opinion
of their capacity for wrong-doing.
According to the constitution of the M. E. Church, an Annual
Conference has no legislative powers. It may execute such of the
laws of the Church as may fall within its province, but it can make
no laws. Nor can it give to any enactments of its own the force of
laws by affixing to them a penalty. Its powers are executive and
judicial.
Yet this Conference, the second day of its session, passed five "
resolutions "—the first four of which were aimed against
fraternizing with the expelled preachers, and against " holding in
an irregular way, or in countenancing, by taking part in, the
services of camp meetings, or other meetings thus irregularly held.
The last resolution provided, " That if any member of the Conference
be found guilty of disregarding the opinions and principles
expressed in the above resolutions, he shall be held to answer to
this Conference for the same."**
These resolutions were made a test in the examination of character.
Those preachers who would agree to be governed by these resolutions
were passed; those who would not, were put on trial unless they
would locate.
It is said that Bishop Simpson, who presided at this session, gave
to these "test resolutions" his emphatic endorsement and support.
In accordance with the spirit of these resolutions, Bishop Simpson
ordered several preachers who had come from other Conferences to
assist Mr. Purdy in his meeting, to take no further part in it. Some
obeyed, but Rev. D. W. Thurston, the presiding elder on Cortland
district, Oneida Conference, continued to labor in the meetings.
Bishop Simpson called him before a committee and admonished him, but
the admonition was not heeded.
Under ' the operation of these resolutions, Rev. J. W. Reddy and H.
H. Farnsworth were located. Revs. Loren Stiles, jr., John A. Wells,
William Cooley and Charles D.
Burlingham, not being willing to submit to this tyrannical
assumption of authority, were expelled from the Conference and the
Church.
The charges against Rev. L. Stiles, Jr., were as follows:
I hereby charge Rev. L. Stiles, Jr., 1. With falsehood. In testifying in the case of B. T. Roberts, at the session of our
Conference held at Perry, Oct. 6th, 1858, that he did not receive or
read the proof sheet of a document printed at Brockport, signed Geo.
W. Estes, and entitled New School Methodism," and " To whom it may
Concern;" and, in the case of J. McCreery, Jr., occurring at the
same Conference, testifying that he did receive a paper purporting
to be the proof sheet of such document with an accompanying note
explanatory of its nature, and did read it, or a portion of it. 2. With contumacy. 1st. In receiving into his pulpit, and treating as a minister, an
expelled member from this Conference. 2nd. In going into the bounds of F. W. Conable's charge, and there
holding meetings and organizing a class, contrary to the admonition
of his presiding elder.
J. B. WENTWORTH.
The first charge was made simply to try to blacken his character.
But there was no show of proof to sustain it, and the majority were
so far restrained that they voted this charge not sustained. God
would not let even them affix this stain upon His servant. Of the first specification under
the second charge there was no proof whatever. It was shown that
once during the year Rev. B. T. Roberts was at a general quarterly
meeting at the M. E. Church at Albion, of which Brother Stiles was
pastor. One evening, after Rev. B. I. Ives preached, B. T. Roberts,
by his invitation, exhorted. But in defence of this, it was shown
that he had at that time drawn up in due form, a regular exhorter's
license ! Mr. Roberts was treated simply as an exhorter and nothing
more ! He was not called upon to perform and did not perform one of
the functions of " a minister !"
This second specification was admitted to be nominally true. Holley,
N. Y., is a large village between Brockport and Albion. There had
been no Methodist society and no Methodist preaching there for a
number of years. When I was stationed at Brockport, I occasionally
preached by invitation at Holley. I went to Albion from Brockport,
and still now and then preached in Holley sometimes in the Academy,
and sometimes in the Presbyterian church. After Mr. Stiles went to
Albion he kept up these occasional appointments at Holley. The
interest increasing, and souls getting converted, Mr. Stiles formed
a class,
which, we may add--has grown into a prosperous church, which has
built one of the finest edifices in the place. No objection was
made, until after the work of expulsion was begun, and " occasion "
was sought against Mr. Stiles. Mr. Conable had no appointment at
Holley, and never had. His nearest appointment was about three miles
away. Mr. Stiles' appointment to preach was generally on a different
day and hour from his. Mr. Conable had a small number of members two
or three living at Holley. But they did not have him make an
appointment at their place.
It was not claimed that these members at Holley did not contribute,
as usual, to Mr. Conable' s support. So that Mr. Stiles, in going to
Holley to preach, interfered. in no way, either with his
appointments or his salary.
It was not attempted to be shown that Mr. Stiles had violated any
provision of the discipline. On the contrary, he read from the
discipline from the rules for a preachers' conduct: " You have
nothing to do but to save souls: therefore spend and be spent in
this work; and go always not only to those that want you, but to
those that want you most." This was precisely what he had done
—nothing more and nothing less.
On such a charge, thus sustained, the majority voted to expel from
the Genesee Conference
AND THE M. E. CHURCH, Loren Stiles, Jr., one of the most devoted,
eloquent, gifted, noble-hearted men then in the ministry of that
denomination.
Of all the Methodist papers, official or independent, there was but
one that spoke out in condemnation of this violent, illegal action.
Yet a few years later, when Rev. S. Tyng, Jr. was mildly censured by
the authorities of the Protestant Episcopal Church, for preaching in
the parish of another clergyman without his consent, the Methodist
papers, with much warmth and zeal, condemned such an encroachment
upon personal liberty !.Yet there was this difference: Mr. Tyng's
Church had a plain law, forbidding the act: the Methodist Church
had no law forbidding its ministers to do as Mr. Stiles had done.
Mr. Tyng preached in the immediate neighborhood of an Episcopal
church. There was not a Methodist church or preaching place within
three miles of the place where Mr. Stiles preached ! Mr. Tyng
preached at the regular hours for service. Mr. Stiles preached
generally on a week-day evening, when it did not interfere with any
preacher anywhere.
Will the Methodist editors explain why it was wrong for the
Episcopal Church to censure Mr. Tyng—and right for the Methodist Episcopal Church to expel
Mr. Stiles from the ministry and the church, for the same act—when
all the points of difference were in, favor of Mr. Stiles?
CASE OF REV. C. D. BURLINGHAM. We extract the following from: A statement by C. D. Burlingham to
the Genesee Conference, * responding to a charge and specifications,
preferred against him by the Rev. D. F. Parsons.
BROCKPORT, Oct. 15, 1859.
Charge, ` Contumacy.' 1st specification: 'In receiving an expelled member of the Genesee
Conference, into the church on trial without confession or
satisfactory reformation.'
I received Benjamin T. Roberts on trial, in Pekin, Nov. 7, 1858, in
a general society meeting, pursuant to a unanimous vote, without his
confessing the alleged crime, for which he had been expelled.
My reasons for so doing are:
1. I believe that there are exceptional cases, in the application of
the rule of discipline referred to, because if the strict letter of
the rule must always control in the cases of applicants for
admission on trial, then it follows that an innocent person, who has
been wrongfully expelled, can never be re-admitted into the church.
If the " reformation," or moral state of the applicant is
satisfactory to the administrator and the society, or if they
believe him to be innocent, and he meets all the conditions of
membership, his admission, I judge is in harmony with the rule. I understand Bishop Baker to confirm this view:
see Guide Book, page 159, paragraph 9. "When a member or preacher
has been expelled, according to our form of discipline, he can not
afterward enjoy the privileges of society and of the sacraments in
our church, without contrition and satisfactory reformation; but if
however, the society becomes convinced of the innocence of the
expelled member, he may again be received on trial without
confession;" the principle in the conclusion, covering of course
both cases, " member or preacher," in the premises. 2. I believe that such admission into the church could not remove
the ground of his appeal to the General Conference, because that
body, I judged, could act in the case, only on those points
submitted in the appeal; he being responsible for his subsequent
acts to his Conference, should the General Conference reverse the
decision by which he was expelled. 3. The next day after the expulsion, the appeal having been
notified, the question of his admission into the church was
discussed informally, by Bishops Janes and Baker, and the presiding
elders. The point was not, can he be received by confessing the
alleged crime, for of course that would remove the ground of his
appeal; but the question was, can he be received on trial, and not
injuriously affect his appeal. Not one of those seven officers of
the church took the position, that there was anything in the Methodistic law to prevent his being received. No one of them, who
spake on the subject, was clear in his mind, he said, as to the
effect of such an act on his appeal. Those aged and experienced
presiding elders —for some of them were such,—with the two Bishops,
were in doubt on the question, showing at least, that
such a question had not, then, been definitely settled, in the
administrative rules of the church, as intimated by our president a
few days since. Subsequently, Bishop Janes, as Brother Roberts informed me, when I
first met him in Pekin, said to him, that he had not lost confidence
in him, and that he could join the church again or words to that
import, leaving that distinct impression on his mind. I put
this and that together, and connecting both with advice from
some eminent ministers, within and without our Conference bounds,
and after receiving all the light then accessible to me, I received
him on trial. A few weeks after, as per letter of Bishop Baker to me
several months later, the Episcopal Board met at Chicago, and
settled, as I understand, the principle of administrative law, that
is to govern in such cases. This decision having been published, at
least editorially, and announced by Bishop Simpson, a few days
since, we all now understand it; though some of the younger members
of this body have assumed, in their speeches, that they had
understood it, even before they were admitted into full connection
in the Conference, because they had read the book of discipline. But
I confess that I was in doubt on the question, a year ago; and,
having occasion to act in this 'case, with such light as dawned upon
me, I did what I thought was right and proper. 4. A fourth point in this argument is a case, perfectly analogous,
in reference to the principle of receiving a person on trial
'without confession,' etc., of more than ordinary notoriety, that
transpired within our Conference bounds. A prominent member was
expelled. He appealed. The quarterly
conference, for some informality, sent the case back for a new
trial. He was expelled the second time. Under the instruction and
advice of the deeply experienced presiding elder of the district—a
man of profound erudition this expelled person was received on
trial, without confession, in a charge a few miles distant; and then
took a letter and joined a new charge, nearer his home, without
either changing his residence, or confessing the crime for which he
had been expelled. This administration may have been correct—I do
not know, because I do not know the whole case; but, if correct, it
is so on the ground of my first reason herewith presented; and if
correct, then it covers in a moral point of view my act of receiving
' without confession,' etc. Of course, a wrong administration in
that case will not justify a wrong one in another case. But when
wiser men than I am are allowed thus to practice, without being
treated as contumacious, surely I ought to have the benefit of such
clemency. 5: After I had learned from an authentic source—Bishop Baker what
was the Episcopal decision that would apply to this case, and might
remove the ground of his appeal; after consultation with Brother
Roberts, who has expressed from time to time a desire and purpose to
prosecute his appeal, and with some eminent ministers who have the
confidence of the church, and who may act as his counsel in the
case, I have obeyed the implied advice of the Bishop, and granted
the request of Brother Roberts, by discontinuing his probationary
membership in the same manner he had been received. The conclusion
then, from these five points, each and all, is
summed up in few words: There is not can not be —a shadow of
contumacy, either in principle, motive, or act. I assert most
solemnly, the purity of my intention and motive; and the character
of the act is to be judged in the light of the points I have made,
especially the first and third. The first covering fully the
reception ' without confession,' etc.; and the third covering the
reception while the appeal is pending. The fourth point is an
illustrative precedent, the benefit of which I am entitled to
receive. The fifth point, in connection with all the others,
furnishes evidence of not a perverse, but a teachable spirit, not
resistance to and contempt of, but submission and obedience to
the rules, and decisions, and authorities of the church.
Second Specification.—' On. giving said expelled member license to
exhort, at the time of such reception on trial' On the recommendation, nearly unanimous, by the same general society
meeting that voted for his reception on trial, and on the same
occasion, I gave him a license to exhort. As the discipline recognizes exhorters as members of quarterly
conferences; and probationers cannot be members of a quarterly
conference; I stated in the certificate I gave him that he was a
probationary member; assuming thereby that a person, suitable in
other respects to officiate in the capacity of an exhorter, might do
so, before he, as a member of the church, could perform official
acts, as a member of quarterly conference. My reasons, then, for giving him such a license, are:
1. That he might, in a regular and orderly way, exhort the people
religiously. 2. I believed that he was really a probationary member in good
standing, legally; and the Bishop's opinion, given five or six days
ago, confirms this view; and, therefore, in that respect, there was
no impediment in the way. 3. And though the discipline makes no provision for investing
probationers with official powers, except it be an implied one,
perhaps, indicated by the words, ' member of society,' as required
in the church relations of a local preacher, (discipline, page 42);
and the words, " member of the class," in that of an exhorter,
(discipline, page 66); a distinction in words, in the two cases,
implying, perhaps, we say, that full membership is required in the
former case, but not in the latter. Yet the law of usage,—possibly
founded on this distinction that I have noted allows and sanctions,
in some cases, such administration as mine in the case before us:
Rev. Bishop H. B. Bascom, D. D., was authorized to exhort, while on
trial. A leading member of the Oneida Conference, eight or ten years a
presiding elder, says he has known many similar cases, several under
his own administration. And some of the older members of this
Conference say they have known numerous instances of the same, from
the period of their connection with the church down through its
administrative history to the present time. I have known several
such instances. On these grounds, and not contumaciously, I gave B. T. Roberts
license to exhort, in the form and manner I have stated. The idea of
setting up my own
private judgment in this case, and my personal convictions in
opposition and resistance to the solemn decisions of the Conference,
when sitting as a court, has never found its way into my thoughts or
heart to be cherished for a moment. My private opinions in this
whole case are solely my own property, under God; but my official
and administrative acts in the case have been performed in view of
my responsibilities to the Conference as a judicial body, to the
Bishop, and to the whole church. If my administration was incorrect under the first or second
specification, or both, it is certainly not an error of the heart;
and surely, I ought not to be regarded as contumacious because I am
not wiser: I know I intended to do, and I thought I did, for the
reasons stated, just what ought to be done, in view of all my
responsibilities. Third Specification.—' In attending and assisting in a so-called `
General Quarterly Meeting,' held in Ransomville, some time in
February last, within the bounds of the East Porter charge, and at
the same time of the regular quarterly meeting of said charge.' On this specification; I say I attended such a meeting at Ransomvile,
and' the following facts will show that I did not do it
contumaciously against the Conference, nor contemptuously against
the presiding officer of the district, as implied in the
specification: 1. In the light of the statement presented, I regarded Brother
Roberts as authorized, at that time, to hold religious meetings
where there was an opening, with the consent of the people and
authorities of the locality; and, therefore, under such
circumstances, I did not regard it as improper to be associated with him and others in religious worship. 2. The Wesleyans had invited this meeting to their church; our
people, as I understand, having neither church nor preaching
appointment in the locality. 3. I never knew or dreamed, until this bill was presented me, that
Ransomville was in East Porter charge, having understood that it was
in vacant territory, between Wilson and Porter, and about the same
distance from Pekin, my charge, as from either of those places. 4. The small pox was prevailing,• to some extent, in our place, and
our meetings were suspended; and, under such circumstances our
brethren deemed it proper to meet with other brethren in some
locality where they would violate no church order, and be likely to
do some good in the name of the Lord; and I was with them a part of
the time to do a little work and to • see what such people were
doing, as then and now, I can say, I know but little about such
meetings from personal observation. 5. This meeting happened to occur on the day of the quarterly
meeting of the Porter charge. I had nothing to do in getting up the
meeting or fixing the time, but I have good reason to believe the
appointment was made in ignorance that ' the other meeting was to be
at the same time. When it became known that the Porter meeting would
beat that time, it was too late to change the time of the other;
but, as I understood from brethren with whom I conversed, knowing
nothing of the localities myself then, that the circuit meeting
would probably be held in connection with Youngstown, or at some
point six or
eight miles from Ransomville. I judged the one would not interfere
with the other; and, therefore, I attended said meeting. It was a
source of regret to me that the two meetings were to occur at the
same time, for the reason that, possibly, the Porter meeting might
be in the eastern part of the circuit, in the more immediate
vicinity of Ransomville, and it might be thought that this meeting
was designed to interfere with that, which was not the case. Of
course, there is no occasion for me to stop and try to show that
there is here no contumacy in spirit or act. I am not the man to
interfere with the pastoral and gospel work of other men, in their
respective charges. I generally have more than I can do nearer home
; neither can I knowingly and intentionally encourage others to do
what I would not do myself. Brethren, I have endeavored to notice
and meet every point in the Bill; and though I admit some little
partiality for my client, I must say, in all candor, there is not,
there cannot be, in your convictions in the case, the shadow of any
evidence to sustain the charge; that though all the specifications
are nearly literally true, there is not in the case the slightest
degree of contumacy."
To the mind of every candid person, this Yhust be a complete defence.
But the majority of the Conference paid no attention to it, and as
they had the votes to do it with, they voted him guilty, and
inflicted upon him the highest possible penalty in their power
expulsion from the Conference and the M. E. Church. This was the
limit of their ability.
CASE OF REV. WILLIAM COOLEY. " I hereby charge Rev. Wm. Cooley with contumacy.
First Specification. In receiving into his pulpit and treating as a
minister an expelled member from this Conference.
Second Specification.—In violating the wishes and requests of his
brethren, as expressed by resolutions passed by them at this session
of our Conference against affiliating with expelled members from
this Conference.
J. B. WENT WORTH.
BROCKPORT, Oct. 14, 18592 On the first specification, the defense said, " I admit that. B. T.
Roberts once addressed the people at Kendall village, and J.
McCreery did once at West Kendall, from the pulpit. We had a four
day's meeting at Kendall; Brother Roberts came to the meeting, but
not by my request, and exhorted once. I invited him to take part in
the exercises,. and to exhort. Brother McCreery came to a two day's meeting at West Kendall. I did
not invite him to come. He went into the pulpit and addressed the
people, as he said, on his own authority. Rev. A: D. Wilbor called. —I am Brother Cooley's presiding elder. I
had a conversation with him about receiving expelled ministers. I
inquired if he had thus associated with them. He admitted what he
has here admitted, in substance; I admonished him. This conversation
was since the commencement of the present session of this
Conference. Testimony on the second specification. The defendant here admitted
that he had preached at
Purdy's' camp-meeting, but had not taken part in any irregular
meeting, as he knew of. He preached, before the resolutions of
Conference were passed. Rev. R. E. Thomas called Were you present at the
***Nazarite
camp-meeting down here? I was. Did Brother Cooley take part in it?
He sat on the platform; he knelt and prayed. Rev. C. Strong called. —I was present at Purdy's camp-meeting a few
times, as a spectator. Saw the defendant there two or three times..
He appeared to be taking part in the exercises during the time of
prayer-meeting or when a great deal of noise was being made, in what
I should call the general hallooing and clapping concert. I did not see B. T. Roberts there at the time of the sacrament, but
at other times. I saw J. McCreery on the stand. I saw him come
forward to the communion. A man I have heard called Purdy seemed to
supervise this meeting. Rev. K. D. Nettleton called. —I was present a part of the time
during the sacrament and tent-meeting. I was a spectator. Saw McCreery partake of the sacrament with the
ministers. A man administered the sacrament, at the first
invitation, whom Mr. Purdy called a presiding elder of the Oneida
Conference by the nanie of Thurston. Saw defendant and McCreery go
forward to the sacrament. Saw defendant take part in the exercises,
, and also expelled ministers. Rev. B. F. McNeal called. —I was present at the sacrament on Tuesday
evening of this week, as a spectator. Defendant and J. McCreery were
there;
I saw defendant, and McCreery, and a large number of ministers go
forward to the sacrament, and immediately took my departure. A man
they called Thurston presided at the sacrament.. Cross-examined. There were from twenty to thirty ministers present
at the sacrament. Rev. A. D. Wilbor called. The tent-meeting was not held by my
consent, but against my wishes. Cross-examined. —I have given no public expression to that effect. I
did express my disapprobation at the preachers' meeting at Le Roy.
The defend-ant was not there. I think the notice of the tent-meeting
was published in the Northern Christian Advocate. I supposed the
meeting to be held within the bounds of the Brockport charge. Rev. B. M. Buck called. Was Purdy's meeting in the bounds of your
charge? Yes. I objected to this meeting to Purdy. I say. the notice
of it. Cross-examined. —I have no personal knowledge that defendant knew of
my objections to Purdy's meetings. Rebutting Testimony. Rev. A. D. Wilbor called. —I did not, inform defendant previous to
the commencement of this session of the Conference, that his course
was objectionable. Cross-examined. —I admonished him the second or third day of
Conference; it was before his character was arrested. Rev. A. L. Backus called. —I received Joseph McCreery into the
church on probation, the second Sabbath after the adjournment of the
last Conference. I dropped him the first Sabbath after the Bergen
camp-meeting. Cross-examined. I did not license him to exhort or preach, or any
thing of that kind." Direct testimony resumed: " I did not give public notice that I had dropped him. I did report
him dropped by name." Rev. C. D. Burlingham's testimony, taken in Brother Stiles' trial
and admitted in this trial: ‘l gave B. T. Roberts license to
exhort, having first received him into the church as a probationer,
which was the second Sabbath after the last Conference.' "
Soon after his expulsion, the Rev. Wm. Cooley wrote respecting his
trial, the following notes:
"1. The second specification was added after the trial was
commenced, and altered twice; and at the suggestion. of Bishop
Simpson. was most of it with-drawn, to prevent Brother Purdy's
testimony, which would have made his meeting a regular one, because
he had Rev. E. M. Buck's consent to hold the meeting when he did. 2. Brother Roberts exhorted at Kendall in the forepart of the
Conference year, and the presiding elder, Rev. A. D. Wilbor, was
four times on my circuit to hold quarterly meetings during the year,
and had opportunities to admonish me of my great error in allowing
Brother Roberts to exhort the people to serve God, and never passed
a word with me as to this being an irregularity or wrong until the
second or third day of this session of Conference. It certainly
looks as though the design was not to check irregularities, but to
find some occasion against me. 3. When my trial was nearly through, leading Regency ministers came to me, and said if I would locate, I might go
out with clean papers, as a local preacher, to preach the Gospel.
But I felt I had lived in all good conscience, and had done nothing
to forfeit my Conference relations, and could not take any such
responsibilities on myself. 4. Great efforts were made by the dominant party in the Conference
to get me to subscribe to the " Five Puseyite resolutions," passed
by the Conference, with the understanding that if I could do this,
my character should pass; but I could not ignore my manhood, and
obligations to God to obey him rather than man, so much as to bow
down to that idol, set up by men. So I was expelled, first from
Conference, and then from the church; but God has been with me every
hour since, saving and keeping my soul in glorious freedom, and I am
enabled to say, " But none of these things move me, neither count I
my life dear unto myself so that I might finish my course with joy,
and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus to testify
the Gospel of the grace of God."
"APPEAL OF REV. JOHN A. WELLS. To the members of the M. E. Church and all persons who respect the
rights of humanity and religion. Dear Brethren: Allow me to present to you a candid statement of the
facts in reference to my expulsion from the M. E. Church. The Journal of the Genesee Conference for Oct. 13, 1859 contains
the following record: ' Resolved. That John A. Wells be expelled from the Genesee
Conference and from the M. E. Church.' The charges which furnished the occasion for the above action are as
follows: I hereby charge Rev. J. A. Wells with 1st. Contumacy in recognizing as a minister, by admitting to his
pulpit, and holding religious meetings in connection with B. T.'
Roberts, an expelled. member from this Conference. 2d. Disobedience to the order of the church, in going into the
bounds of other brethren's charges, and holding religious meetings.' (Signed,)
S. M.
HoPKINs.
Dated, BROCKPORT, Oct. 1, 1859.. It would be tame, indeed, for me to say that I am dissatisfied with
the above action of Conference. A blow has been struck at the vitals
of Christian liberty. I do not feel that I am guilty of contumacy,
or disobedience to the order of the church; neither if I were guilty
to the extent of the specifications could I believe that the
severest penalty known in ecclesiastical discipline ought to be
inflicted on me. I now make my appeal to you, and hope to be
received. and treated in accordance with the verdict which your
candor and religion shall render. I admitted on my trial, that I had permitted B. T. Roberts to speak
in my pulpit; and that I had attended and took part in religious
meetings conducted by him. Also, that I had preached in a few
instances within the bounds of other brethren's charges. There was
nothing material proved in addition to this. I showed in my defense, 1st. That B. T. Roberts, since his expulsion had been admitted to
the M. E. Church on trial, and
licensed to exhort, and as such I had received him. Bishop Simpson
had decided that an error or irregularity on the part of an
administrator of discipline does not invalidate the title to
membership of a person received into the church. So that Brother
Roberts was legally and properly a member of the M. E. Church on
trial. Whether his license to exhort given him by Rev. C. D. Burlingham, he being recommended to do so by the unanimous vote of
the. society at Pekin, was valid or not, according to the. letter of
the law, it was at least a good reason in favor of my allowing him
to speak. I could not forbid a man to speak in my pulpit who came
with such recommendations. If there is contumacy in this, it must
consist in a refusal of absolute subjection to the will of the
Buffalo Regency, and not in resistance to the reasonable authority
of the church. I showed in my defense, 2. That not one of the preachers on whose charges I had preached,
had ever by word or by letter, intimated to me that they were
displeased with my preaching within the bounds of their charges;
and also, that my presiding elder had never admonished me never to
do so. If I was expelled for that, it certainly was a crime that
none of the men who claim to be injured thought enough of to speak
to me about it, though months elapsed between its commission and the
Conference. I contend that I am expelled from the Church for no crime whatever;
either against the word of God, or the Methodist discipline. In
these things for which I was expelled, I have not violated my
obligations to
God, nor transcended my rights as a Methodist preacher. I am not blamable in receiving Brother Roberts as I did. I received
him and treated him as an exhorter. It was not proved that I did
more than this. His relation to the church, and the license which he
held, fully entitled him, according to the discipline. and usages of
Methodism, to all the respect which I paid him. But I had higher
reasons than these for doing as I did. I had for many years regarded
Brother Roberts as a devoted servant of God, eminent for his
usefulness. I really believed that his expulsion from the Church was
only the result of hatred aroused by his faithful denunciation of
sin, and that he was, in the sight of heaven, as much a servant of
God and a minister of the Gospel after his expulsion, as before it.
I could not do less than receive him. To have forbidden him to speak
in my pulpit, would have been a sin against God that I would not
bear in the judgment, for all worlds. 2. I have not sinned in preaching within the territories claimed by
other preachers. Simply preaching the Gospel is all that I did. I
was not charged with doing more. So that the solution of the
question, Has one preacher any right to preach on another's'
territory? will make me guilty or innocent. The commission which
God gave me is, Go into all the world." I was ordained an elder in
the church of God. Now if there is anything in our Church order,
limiting my right to preach to one small charge, and shutting me off
from any particular place, let it be shown. In joining the itinerant
ranks of Methodism, we do so far surrender our right of choosing
our field of labor as. to allow the president of the Conference to
appoint 'where we shall preach. But we do not so surrender our
rights that he, or any other power on earth can appoint where we can
not preach. To make such a surrender would be treason against God.
The discipline provides penalties for the preacher who refuses to go
to his work, but it is nowhere made a crime to preach the Gospel off
from his charge. I have foreborne to speak for others who are my companions in the
same tribulation, partly because I left the seat of the Conference
before the adjournment, and do not know how far the work of
decapitation had proceeded, and partly because I prefer that they
should speak for themselves. The charges against eight preachers
were nearly the same as those on which I was condemned, viz
contumacy and disobedience to the order of the church. The Conference, on the second day of its session, adopted a series
of resolutions which amounted to an ex post facto law, according to
which every preacher's character was to pass. Every preacher who was
supposed during the year past to have violated the code contained in
the resolutions, had his character arrested. No man could pass until
he had testified his penitence for having violated them, (before
they existed) and promised tc observe them in future. To what extent this persecution will be carried the future alone can
reveal. The majority of the Conference are evidently determined, by
raising the mad dog cry of " Nazaritism," to drive out of the church
all who have religion enough not to endorse their measures. What
others may do I cannot tell, but as for myself, I am yet firmly attached in heart to the M. E. Church. I
believe her doctrines and love her discipline. I have appealed to
the General. Conference. I shall get back into the Church again if I
can. BELFAST, OCT. 20, 1859. J. A. WELLS.
Of these expulsions, the editor of the Northern Independent spoke
in brave, just terms of condemnation in an editorial of Oct.
20,.1859:
"THE GENESEE CONFERENCE. Last week we referred to the trials going on in this Conference, and
expressed an opinion that they were pernicious. It is now our
painful duty to record the result of these most infatuated
proceedings. Up to the time of this writing, four of the best
members of the Conference have been expelled, both from the
Conference and the church. We have known ecclesiastical blunders
before, but never one so great as this. We do not care to repeat
what we have already said of these trials, nor' do we wish to enter
into the controversy further than to note what we think to be a very
dangerous perversion of Conference authority. Every man of common sense knows that contumacy is not necessarily
a
crime; and hence if the defendant had been guilty of all that was
charged upon him, there was no occasion for his expulsion. Contumacy
is often a virtue. It may be a minister's duty to comply with the
rules imposed by a majority, or it may not; all will depend on the
character of the rules—if right, he may keep them; if not right, he
is bound to disregard them, or peril his soul. When Conference
action is just and wise, it becomes'
obligatory; but when it is unjust and foolish, the obligation
ceases. Else an Annual Conference, becoming perverse, might decree
that all its members should abstain from praying, and the decree
would be binding. As such a conclusion is absurd, we are obliged to
reject the premises on which it rests, and hold that Conferences
have power only so far as they keep to the right. So much for the
merits of the case, even if contumacy had been among the things
forbidden by the church. But the fact is, we have not, and never had
any rule making contumacy a sin. It is not an offence, either named,
or contemplated by our discipline. It is a crime unheard of in the
annals of Methodism—a miserable aping of the most questionable and
dangerous prerogatives ever exercised by secular authority. That a preacher may be expelled for ' improper tempers, words, or
actions,' is true, and if the charge had been made for either or all
of these things, it would at least have been right in form, and
might have been tried on its merits. But a trial for contumacy is
quite another thing, and altogether beyond the record. In making
these trials rest upon this basis, no Conference has, in fact,
established a new law, and given sovereign power to every straggling
resolution that may chance to be passed. Not to obey a perverse
resolution, would be very far from evincing 'improper tempers,
words or actions,' but it would certainly be ' contumacy.' Hence the
unpardonable liberty taken in departing from the words of the
discipline, and manufacturing this new test of character. This style of administration assumes an importance
far beyond the individual instances of decapitation which have
already occurred. Acting on the same principle, the Genesee
Conference, or any other Conference, has only to pass a resolution
that no member shall take the Northern. Independent, or act as agent
for it, and the work is done—thenceforth, whoever gets a subscriber
or receives the paper into his house, is guilty of contumacy, and
destined to be expelled. Thus this unfounded assumption seizes upon
the press, sweeps away every vestige of personal liberty, and makes
the minority of the Conference the veriest slaves. It is true, the
Conference has not yet given the principle on which it is acting
this particular application, but how soon it may, none can tell. At
this session, the members have been forbidden to attend all meetings
not regularly appointed, as will be seen from the third and fifth
resolutions of the following series: Resolved, 1st. That the safety and prosperity of a Church can only
be maintained by a solemn deference to its councils and discipline,
as legitimately determined and executed. 2d. That we consider the admission of expelled ministers, whether
traveling or local, to our pulpits, and associating with them and
assisting them as ministers, until they have, by due process, as
described in the discipline, been restored to the fellowship of the
church, as subversive of the integrity and government of the church,
directly tending to the production of discord and division and every
evil work. 3d. That we disapprove and condemn the practice of certain members
of this Conference, in holding in an irregular way, or in
countenancing by taking part
in the services, of camp-meetings, or other meetings thus
irregularly held. 4th. That in the judgment of this Conference, it is highly improper
for one preacher to go into another preacher's charge and appoint
meetings, or attend those that may be appointed by others in
opposition to the wishes of the preacher in charge, or the presiding
elder. 5th. That if any member of this Conference be found guilty of
disregarding the opinions and principles expressed in the above
resolutions, he shall be held to answer to this Conference for the
same."
Referring to the resolutions, he says:
"These resolutions are well enough, considered as merely declarative
or advisory, but regarded as the ultimate law of the church, they
are a grievous outrage on the rights of every member of an Annual
Conference. Annual Conferences may advise, and may execute laws
already made, but they are not law making bodies, and consequently
cannot pass a resolution having the force of law. But if a man be
expelled for non-conformity to a rule made by an Annual Conference,
then is an Annual Conference, in the very highest sense, a law
making body. An Annual Conference may expel a preacher for violating
the discipline, but not for violating one of its own rules. Were it
not for this necessary restriction, each Annual Conference could
make laws ad libitum, and the law making power of the General
Conference would be a nullity. Surely, in view of the above
resolutions, every Methodist preacher may ask, Have we an organic
law? Or, are we at the mercy of a bare majority, however obtained
and however disposed?
If a simple Conference resolution is law, we are without a
constitution, and in that respect worse off than a temperance
society, or any other voluntary association whatever. It will be
conceded by all, that an Annual Conference bas no more right to make
laws than a quarterly conference, and what would be thought if a
quarterly conference should pass a series of resolutions, to be kept
by all its members, under fain of expulsion? Such a thing is
unprecedented, and yet would be quite as legal as the penalties
threatened in the foregoing resolutions.
Are we then, says an objector, to endure the evils complained of in
the foregoing resolutions? Not necessarily. There are other and
milder remedies than expulsion. But even if the General Conference
itself should make a rule prohibiting the things forbidden by these
Genesee Conference resolutions, we should doubt the utility of the
measure. Some things are better for being let alone. Not many ages
since, the civil law undertook to regulate religious opinion; but
after much blood had been shed to no purpose, it was found that
toleration was better than legislation. So also in the operations of
Methodism, it may perhaps be found that forbearance is a better cure
than law.
It may be a sin, and a sufficient cause for expulsion, to treat an
expelled minister as though he were yet a minister, but our Church
has nowhere affirmed the fact. All the discipline says on the
subject is, that after an appeal has been had—mark that —a " person
so expelled shall have no privilege of society or sacrament in our
Church, without confession, contrition, and satisfactory
reformation." Here is the sum total
of the penalty to be inflicted, but none of it is fairly due until
the appeal has been heard, for until then the trial is not ended the
case has not yet reached the highest court. In civil law, the
execution of the sentence awaits the action of the appellate court.
We do not hang a man because the jury finds him guilty, but wait
till the final hearing of the case before the highest tribunal.
Following this analogy, a minister expelled by an Annual Conference,
is at most barely suspended, and though not eligible to an
appointment, may, nevertheless, not be wholly excluded from the
courtesies due to ministerial character. It was this view of the
case, joined with a full conviction of the injustice of the
sentence, and modified also by the fact of the actual readmission of
the the expelled persons into the church, which induced treatment of
which complaint is here made. What relates to invading other charges
is too trivial for notice.
These cases of expulsion will, no doubt, go up to. the ensuing
General Conference, where they are quite certain to be reversed, if
they can be fairly heard. Some have intimated that the expelled
brethren must be very cautious, and do all honor to the act of their
expulsion, by remaining silent until their appeal is acted upon. We
are glad that even in this respect there will be no little breadth
to the question. If, after their expulsion, they labor on—not as
Methodists, but as men—and do what good they can, it ought not to be
imputed to them as a crime, nor in anywise prejudice their appeal.
They still have what God and nature gave them—the right to speak and
to act as men and as Christians; Methodism takes
away only what it gave. The gift of life, the divine commission, and
the assurance of pardon, are all from a higher source—a source over
which Conferences have no control.
We are convinced that a principle is involved in the administration
of that Conference which, if unchecked, must be fatal to Methodism.
Our Annual Conferences would be converted into so many petty
tyrannies, alike injurious to men and offensive to. God. Majorities
would become simply machines for the extirpation of progressive
sentiment.
Since the above was written, we have received the following from
Brother Roberts: ` A resolution was passed on Saturday against any
of the members of Conference acting as agent for the Northern
Independent.' Now, we all know what such a resolution means in the
Genesee Conference. —Every preacher. who dare act as agent for us,
will be expelled for contumacy. Thus the war has commenced openly.
It. will now be known whether Methodists are slaves or freemen.
We give the resolution relating to the Independent, with the
comments of one of the corresponding editors:
' Resolved, That we disapprove of any member of this Conference
acting as agent for the Northern Independent, or of writing for
its columns, or in any way giving it encouragement and support.'
The above is of ' striking significance,' from the fact that the '
regency ' has recently put on General Conference authority, and has
become a law making body. Every man who disobeys this resolution,
does
so at the peril of his ministerial office, and his membership in the
M. E. Church. It would be as clear a ease of ' contumacy' as any for
which the brethren were expelled, to whom we have referred. The "
regency," be it remembered, are legislators, jurors, judges and
executioners, and wo be to any member of the Genesee Conference who
shall be found in any way giving it (the Independent) encouragement
and support.'
Dr. Hibbard is in raptures over the ' extraordinary proceedings of
Genesee Conference,' and especially over the passage of the
resolution against the Independent. ' That was manfully said,' he
exclaims, ' it ought to inspire all its sister Conferences,' etc. It
will inspire with supreme disgust, all sister Conferences who are
not steeped to the lips in pro-slaveryism and popery."
Mr. Stiles, having attended the Methodist Theological Seminary at
Concord, and having been about a good deal, one year stationed at
Cincinnati had a more correct idea than the other expelled
preachers, of the justice to be looked for at the General
Conference. He said it was of no use to, take an appeal, and he
should not waste the time and endure the strain of prosecuting an
appeal; for he had no hope whatever that the General Conference
would do justice in the matter.
He returned to Albion at the urgent call of the people. Members of
the church and congregation, who " loved righteousness and hated
iniquity," rallied around him. They were so largely in the majority
that, according to equity and according to the laws of the State,
they were entitled to the church property; but they chose rather to
give no cause of complaint, and " took joyfully the spoiling of
their goods." His friends gave up the church property. With great
expedition the people put up a large edifice for him at Albion,
where he lived and labored, and died in the warm affections of the
community.
He assisted in forming the discipline of the Free Methodist Church,
and gave his hearty efforts to secure the election of its first
General Superintendent.
He was of too sensitive a nature to endure the strain to which the
indignities he suffered at the hands of the Genesee Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church had subjected him.
He was taken down with the typhoid fever, and the disease assumed
from the first a malignant character. He was greatly blessed in his
soul when he was taken sick, and to this he often referred, even
during the spells of delirium. One evening, as we were watching with
him, he thought he was in the hands of a secret society committee,
and cried out, " Brother Roberts, I want you should go out and tell the committee that I am ready to die in two hours, or one
hour, or even this minute. The Lord has greatly blessed me and I
shall go straight to glory." The day before he died, he said to the
physician, "ALL IS RIGHT." He grew gradually weaker, and, without a
struggle, on the 7th of May, 1863 his pure spirit passed away to the
realms of bliss.
His funeral was attended by an. immense congregation the large
church being filled, and hundreds standing outside, unable to gain
admission.
The Rev. William Hosmer, his fellow hero in the battle against all
sin and wrong, preached an eloquent, impressive sermon from 'the
text, " He endured as seeing Him who is invisible. Heb. xi, 27.
The concluding part of his sermon was 'as follows:
" We have no words adequate to this occasion. He who lies before us,
stricken down in his prime, was a living illustration of greatness
produced by the presence of God. He did and dared, as none do or
dare who are not conscious of Divine aid. Eminent as he was, in
intellectual ability, and surpassingly eloquent in his pulpit
ministrations, he never forgot himself for a moment, nor appeared
other than the most humble of men. Anxious only to do good, absorbed
with the duties of his high commission, and admonished by the
feebleness of his system, that his period
of labor might be short, he gave the world an example of
self-abnegation and tireless industry worthy of an apostle. When the
Genesee Conference withdrew its sanction from his ministry he felt
no lack; God was still with him and he asked no more. Besides, the pressure which was upon him the woe is upon me if I preach not the Gospel 'was much too great to
admit of interruption from slight causes. His call was from above,
and he well knew that men could not revoke it. Following the
apostolic example, he preferred to ' obey God rather than man. With
others of his fellow laborers who had been similarly maltreated, he
entered at once upon new church relations of such a character as
promised to help and not hinder his efforts for the salvation of
men. Here he soon found that the things which had happened to him, '
had fallen out rather unto the furtherance of the Gospel.' The Chief
Shepherd and Bishop of souls, instead of granting a discharge from
service, had done for him what had previously been done for Luther
and Wesley, namely, enlarged his pastorate by removing the trammels
of ecclesiastical authority. How well, how successfully, how self-consumingly he labored in the
extended field thus Providentially opened, you all know. You know
also that amid the severe trials to which he was subjected, his
reputation was stainless—not even the breath of malice itself could
soil a character so essentially pure. Mysterious indeed that we come
today to lay in the grave one so well prepared to live, one so rich
in gifts, so useful, we had almost said indispensable to the church
and to his family. But the ways of God
are not the ways of man; and what we know not now, we shall know
hereafter. We must not complain that his sun went down at
noon—rather let us glory that it sunk in the full splendor of
meridian 'brightness. That life which has afforded an opportunity to
do and to suffer so much, can not be regarded as short, nor can that
death which simply opens the gate of heaven, be considered as
premature."
Charles D. Burlingham, at the time of his expulsion, had been an
effective preacher of the Genesee Conference nineteen years. For
four years he had filled with acceptability the office of presiding
elder. He was a preacher of more than ordinary ability, original in
his style, clear in his reasonings, and happy in the use of
illustrations. He. had labored beyond his physical ability, and was
left. broken in constitution, with. a large, dependent family, and
no means for their support.
He was restored to the Conference by means which showed the
injustice of the M. E. Church almost as forcibly as his expulsion.
He continued to preach for fifteen years, yet never regained his
former vigor and strength; but seemed a crushed, broken-hearted
man. He died in 1874.
William Cooley had been seventeen years a diligent, faithful and
acceptable preacher. He is a quiet, peaceable, unoffending, upright
man.
He is a clear, Scriptural, searching preacher, and generally has
had. good revivals on the charges on which he has labored.
He is now preaching in the Free Methodist Church in Iowa.
Rev. J. A. Wells had been seven years a successful preacher in the
Genesee Conference. He was a good, able preacher, studious in his
habits, entirely given up to the work of God, a man of honest
intention and unbending integrity. He is now, we believe,. pastor of
the Presbyterian church at Springville.
THE LAYMEN'S CONVENTION held its second
annual session in the Baptist church, at Albion, Nov. 1st and 2d,
1859, Hon. Abner I. Wood was chosen President; George W. Holmes,
John Billings, Jonathan Handly, Edward P. Cox and S. C. Springer,
Vice-presidents; and S. K. J. Chesbrough, Stephen S. Rice, Wm. Hart
and Thomas Sully, Secretaries.
The Convention said:
" When we met last year in Convention we trusted that the preachers,
whose course was the cause of our assembling, would be led to
repentance and reformation. But our hopes have been blasted. The
Scripture is still true, which saith, that ` evil men and seducers
shall wax worse and worse, deceiving and being deceived.' That we have the right to take into consideration
the public acts of a public body to which we are intimately related,
cannot be denied. That such consideration has become our duty we are
well satisfied. Our Lord has given us the test, ` By their fruits ye
shall know them.' What has been the fruits for the past year of the
party in Conference, known as the ' Buffalo Regency?" Have they
been such as we should expect from men of God? We are pained to be
obliged to bear testimony to the fact that some occupying the place
of Methodist ministers have used their influence, and bent their
energies to put down under the name of ' fanaticism,' what we feel
confident is the work of the Holy Spirit. The course pursued by some of our preachers, in expelling from the
church, members in good standing, and high repute for their
Christian character, because they attended our Convention in
December last we look upon as cruel and oppressive, and it calls for
our most decided disapproval. What does the right of private
judgment amount to, if we can not exercise it without bringing down
on our heads these ecclesiastical anathemas? To our brethren who
have been so used, we extend our cordial sympathy, and we assure
them that our confidence in them has not diminished on account of
their names being cast out as evil for the Son of man's sake. The
action of the majority, in expelling from the Conference and the
church, four able and devoted ministers, and locating two others,
upon the most frivolous pretexts, is so at variance with the
principles of justice and our holy. Christianity, as to cause minor
offences to be aggravated, when they would otherwise be overlooked.
The charge against each was the convenient one of contumacy.' The
specifications were in substance, the receiving as ministers those
who were expelled at the previous session of the Conference, and
for preaching in the bounds of other men's charges. Where in the
Bible, or in the discipline, is ` contumacy,' spoken of as a
crime? It is a charge generally resorted to for the purpose of
oppression. Let whatever the dominant power in the church may be
pleased to call ' contumacy' be treated as a crime, religious
liberty is at an end. There is not an honest man in the Conference
but may be expelled for ` contumacy,' whenever, by any means, a
majority can be obtained against him. There is not a member of the
M. E. Church, who acts from his own convictions of right, but may
be excommunicated for " contumacy," whenever his preacher is
disposed to do so. Let some mandate be issued that cannot in
conscience be obeyed, and the ' guilt of contumacy is incurred.
The Regency party not only expelled devoted servants of God for
contumacy, but did it under the most aggravated circumstances. An
Annual Conference possesses no power to make laws. A resolution
with a penalty affixed for its violation, is to all intents and
purposes a law. The Regency passed resolutions at the last session
of the Conference, and then tried and expelled men for violating
them months before they had an existence ! That any honest man can
entertain any respect for such judicial action is utterly
impossible. The specifications were in keeping with the charge.
The first was for recognizing as ministers, the expelled members
of the Conference. The charge was not for recognizing them as
Methodist ministers; for the expelled brethren did not claim to
have authority from the church. They acted simply by virtue of their
commission from God. If a man believes he is called of God to
preach, and God owns and blesses his labors, has he not the right
thus to warn sinners to flee the wrath to come? At the second
Conference held by Wesley, it was asked, ' Is not the will of our
governors a law?' The answer was emphatic—` no not of any
governors, temporal or spiritual. Therefore if any Bishop wills that
I should not preach the Gospel, his will is no law to me. But what
if he produced a law against your preaching? I am to obey God
rather than man.' This is the language of the founder of Methodism.
How it rebukes the arrogant, popish assumptions of some of the
pretended followers of Wesley. The second specification was for preaching in other men's charges
without their consent. Where is there anything wrong in this?—What precept of the Bible,
what rule of the discipline is violated? Does it not evidence the
faithful minister of Jesus, burning with love for souls, rather than
the criminal deserving the highest censure of the church? Methodist
ministers are bound by their obligations to serve the charges to
which they are appointed by the Conference: but they do not promise
that they will not preach !any where else. On the contrary, the
commission from Christ reads, ' Go ye into all the world and preach
the Gospel to every creature.' The discipline says, ' You have
nothing to do but to save souls; therefore, spend and be spent in
this work; and go always, not only to those who want you, but to
those who want you most. Observe, it is not your business only to
preach so many times, and to take
care of this or that society, but to save as many as you can; to
bring as many sinners as you can to repentance, and with all your
power to build them up in that holiness, without which they cannot
see the Lord.' On this ground, were these men of God, as we esteem
them, Revs. Loren Stiles, Jr., John A. Wells, Wm. Cooley, and
Charles D. Burlingham excommunicated by the Regency party of the
Genesee Conference at its last session. Fidelity to God will not
allow us to quietly acquiesce in such decisions. It is urged that we
must respect the action of the church. But what is the church? Our
13th article of religion says, ' The visible church of God is a
congregation' of faithful men, in which the pure word of God is
preached, and the sacraments duly administered.' The ministers then
are not ' the church.' If ministers wish to have their acts
respected, they must, like other men, perform respectable actions. These repeated acts of expulsions, wrong as they are in themselves,
deserve the stronger condemnation from the fact, scarcely attempted
to be disguised, that THE OBJECT is to prevent the work of holiness
from spreading among us—to put down the life and power of godliness
in our churches, and to inaugurate in its stead the p3aceable reign of
a cold and heartless formalism. in short, to do away with what
has always been a distinctive feature of Methodism. If the work
which the men who were expelled both this year and last, have
labored, and not without success to promote, be ' fanaticism,' then
has Methodism from the beginning been ' fanaticism.' Our attachment
to Methodism was never stronger than it is at
present, and our sympathy and our means shall be given to the men
who toil and suffer to promote We can not abandon, at the bidding of
a majority,
the doctrines of Methodism, and the men who defend them. The course of the Regency in shielding members of their faction,
create the suspicion that a stronger motive than any referred to
lies at the foundation of their remarkable action, the principle of
self preservation. It may be that the guilty, to prevent exposure,
deem it necessary to expel the innocent. Their refusal to entertain
charges; and their prompt acquittal of one of their leaders, though
clearly proved guilty of a crime sufficient to exclude him from
heaven,. look strongly in that direction. The recent public exposure
in another Conference of one of the founders of the Regency party,
who took a transfer, to escape from well founded suspicion, shows
how a minister may pursue, unconvicted, a career of guilt for years,
when ` shielded' by secret society influences, and willing to be the
servile tool of the majority.. —For the evils complained of we see
no other remedy within our reach, than the one we adopted last year:
WITHHOLD SUPPLIES.
To show, that such a remedy is ` constitutional' and ' loyal,' we
have only to refer to the `proceedings ' of the Convention of last
year and to the authorities therein quoted."
The Convention unanimously passed resolutions expressing the utmost
confidence in the preachers who had been expelled, assuring them of
the sympathy of the people, and encouraging them to " continue to
labor for
the promotion of the work of God and the salvation of souls, and
added:
" That, in Order to keep our people who are being oppressed by the
misrule of the dominant faction in the Genesee Conference from being
scattered, and finally lost to our church, we recommend our brethren
in the ministry to gather our people into Bands, and to encourage
them to union of action and effort in the work of the Lord."
A committee was also appointed to prepare a memorial to the General
Conference asking for a correction of the abuses complained of in
the action of the Genesee Conference.
A few weeks after this
LAYMEN'S CONVENTION was held, a letter was
circulated among the so-called " Regency. " preachers, encouraging
them in their policy. To the copy that has been furnished us, no
name is appended; but the author of the original is understood to
be no less a personage than a Bishop. We do not assume to know, but
we give a copy of the letter, and the reader can form his own
judgment ill the case. To us it certainly reads as if written by one
who felt that he had a right to speak with authority. " January 3, 1860.
DEAR BROTHER: A happy New Year to you. My advice is
decided that you should
remove every leader, who
takes part in the Albion Convention, or any of a similar character.
Do not be deterred by threats of difficulty, or of leaving the
church. Better have no members than disorderly ones.. The world is
wide. Sinners are numerous. We will go with the Gospel to them,
and God will give us fruit. I repeat then, by all means, stand
firmly by the action of the church. Remove every leader who arrays
himself against it, no matter what may be his influence, or how
great his usefulness, or how it may affect your congregation, or how
it will result in the end. As to private members, I would do nothing while they do not engage
in opposition meetings. But if they get up and sustain meetings for
expelled preachers, or resist church action, J would cite them to
trial, after proper admonition. Let me again assure you, that the safety of the church is in
straight Forward action." Yours truly,
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