HISTORICAL MISREPRESENTATIONS—
GENERAL SUPERINDENT ROBERTS VERSUS BISHOP SIMPSON
So far as the author has been able to ascertain no
history put forth by any member of the Methodist Episcopal Church until this
day, covering the period of the difficulties in the Genesee Conference which led
to the organization of the Free Methodist Church, has fairly and truthfully
stated the facts in the case. On the other hand those writers who have dealt
with these matters have appeared with one consent determined to put the brand of
reproach and disgrace upon the Free Methodist movement by the uniform
misstatement of facts. When Roberts’s appeal from the verdict by which he was
expelled from the Gene-see Conference and the Church was refused consideration
by the General Conference of 1860, that good man turned away saying, “I
appeal to God and the people.” Referring to the matter in the Preface to
“Why Another Sect ?“ about twenty years later, he said:
Here we should have let the matter rest, but those
opposed to us will not permit it. They have published and sanctioned the most
bare-faced, flagrant falsehoods, which they intend shall pass as a history of
the affair. We should be wanting in our duty to the cause which is dearer to
us than life, and to the noble men and women who have given us their
confidence, if we allowed these falsehoods to pass uncontradicted. [1]
The volume from which the foregoing extract is made was
called forth by the gross misrepresentations contained in the “Cyclopedia of
Methodism,” but not without a candid effort on the part of its author to have
the needful corrections made in the periodicals of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, and in future editions of the book, and so to avoid the necessity for
its publication. This the following letter from his pen will show:
ROCHESTER, N. Y., Sept. 13, 1878.
REV. M. SIMPSON, D. D.,
Bishop of the M. E. Church.
Dear Sir: I think when one makes incorrect
statements, he should have the privilege of correcting them. I therefore take
the liberty to address you in reference to the article In your “Cyclopedia of
Methodism,” on the Free Methodist Church. In your Preface you say: “The aim
has been to give a fair, and Impartial view of every branch of the Methodist
family. For this purpose, contributors and correspondents were selected, as
far as practicable, who were identified with the several branches, and who,
from their position, were best qualified to furnish information as to their
respective bodies.”
Either no such selection was made from the Free
Methodists, or the information which they furnished, with the exception of the
bare statistics, was not given to the public in that article. In either case,
what becomes of the claim of fairness?
In this article there are some fifteen statements
or re-statements, which are utterly untrue, and some five or six statements
which, though In a Sense true, yet are, from the manner in which they are
made, misleading.
If furnished with proof, satisfactory to candid
minds, that these statements referred to are untrue, and misleading, will you
correct them in the Church periodicals, and in future editions of your book?
If not, will you give the authority upon which the statements complained of,
are made?
Yours most respectfully,
B. T. ROBERTS.
To this letter the Bishop returned the following reply:
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 23, 1878.
REV. B. T. ROBERTS,
Dear Sir: Returning home from a long tour in the
West, I find your letter of September 13th, complaining of inaccuracies in the
article on Free Methodism, but without specifying what those Inaccuracies are.
I am not aware of any incorrect statements in the
article, but if you will furnish me with corrections and the accompanying
proofs, I will gladly make any alterations in a future edition, should such
edition be called for. I desire to have perfect accuracy in every article, and
it will give me as much pleasure to correct, as it can you to furnish the
corrections.
Yours truly,
M. SIMPSON.
The foregoing letters are worthy of careful perusal
and comparison. Careful attention to their contents will disclose to the
intelligent reader the following points:
1. Mr. Roberts proposes to the Bishop,
- To furnish “proof, satisfactory to candid minds, that the statements
complained of are untrue and misleading ;"
- That he (the Bishop), in case he is furnished with such proof, “correct
them in the Church periodicals, and in future editions of [his] book;”
- That, if unwilling to do this, he “give the authority upon which the
statements complained of are made.”
2. Bishop Simpson’s letter discloses the following facts:
- That he fully assumes all responsibility for the contents of the article
in question.
- That he shows no disposition, however convincing the proof of their
inaccuracy may he, to make any corrections, through the Church periodicals, or
otherwise until and unless a future edition of his book be called for. In
other words, he proposes to leave the article, however inaccurate, to create
whatever prejudice it may, and to do all the injustice of which it is capable,
until a second edition of his book is demanded, and for all time, should no
such demand arise.
- That he is utterly silent with reference to giving authority for the
offensive statements.
- That he does not claim here, as in the Preface to his book, that, in order
“to give a fair and impartial view” of this “branch of the Methodist family,”
he had selected a “contributor” from the Free Methodist Church who was
identified with the movement, and who, “from his position, was best qualified
to give information” as to this particular body. Neither does he assign any
reason why this was not considered “practicable.” Right in the city where he
lived were men fully informed on the subject, and every way qualified to give
an accurate and trustworthy statement of the case.
Mr. Roberts’s letter does not charge the Bishop with
the willful misrepresentation of a single fact, but on the contrary assumes that
the errors had crept into the book unwittingly on his part, and that, on being
satisfied of their inaccuracy, he would be glad to make the proper corrections.
This the Bishop would not consent to, except in a second edition of his book,
should one be called for. Inasmuch as that might never be, Mr. Roberts proceeded
to write and publish, upon the request of the General Conference of the Free
Methodist Church, “Why Another Sect ?“ a volume of 333 pages. Regarding the
production of this work he writes as follows in the Preface:
With the leading facts which I narrate in this
volume, I was personally acquainted. I have endeavored to state them plainly,
in a Christian spirit, and without the slightest exaggeration. I have given
proofs which can not be set aside without practically denying the validity of
human testimony. But I am conscious of laboring under this great disadvantage:
the action of the Genesee Conference, sustained by the General Conference, was
so unjust and unprovoked—so contrary to anything which we might look for in a
body of respectable men, even though they laid no claim to piety, that the
plainest narrative of the events looks like wild exaggeration. But I have
endeavored to give the simple truth, without the slightest coloring. I have
read my manuscript to several intelligent, judicious brethren, familiar with
the facts, and they give it their hearty endorsement.
Dr. Buckley’s “History of Methodism in the United
States” did not appear until eighteen years after Mr. Roberts’s “Why Another
Sect ?“ was published. Either its author knew of the existence and character of
that work, or he did not know thereof. If he did know of these things, and
refused to recognize the charges made by Mr. Roberts, and the abundance of proof
furnished to sustain those charges, it would seem to be a grave reflection upon
his boasted love of historical accuracy and his loyalty to truth; and if he did
not know of “Why Another Sect ?“ and its contents, then we submit that he must
have written this particular part of his “History of Methodism in the United
States” without that fullness of research which a work of such importance
demands, and for the making of which a reputable writer of history should spare
no pains.
Now, with reference to the statement made in the
“Cyclopedia of Methodism,” and reiterated by Dr. Buckley, which identifies the
remote origin of the Free Methodist movement with “an association of ministers”
in the Genesee Conference who “privately adopted a platform, and in this
organization were known as ‘Nazarites,’” the author is prepared to show that the
alleged “Nazarite Organization,” “Union” or “Band,” never had any existence, but
was wholly a fictitious affair. Still, upon the authority of such pretentious
volumes as Bishop Simpson’s “Cyclopedia of Methodism,” and Dr. Buckley’s
“History of Methodism in the United States,” it has been written of as a matter
of historical verity, and as partaking the character of a secret society,
in which the movement originated which resulted in the formation of the Free
Methodist Church. During all the intervening years the erroneous and damaging
statements have been spreading, and their harmful influence has been increasing.
During the troubles in the Genesee Conference back
in the fifties those ministers who were opposed to the distinctive work of
holiness then in progress confidently affirmed, both privately and through the
press, that a “Nazarite Union” or “Band” existed within their bounds, and that
those preachers who were identified with the work of holiness were members of
the alleged organization, and especially advocated it with a view to
accomplishing the desired reformation in the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Official papers gave room to statements specially intended to helping the
delusion on.
Although repeated denials were made, of the most
emphatic character, regarding the existence of any such organization, and made
by those ministers of the Genesee Conference who were in a position to know the
facts, and who were supposed to be members of the “Nazarite Band,” their denials
were ignored, and their opponents continued persistently to affirm the existence
of such a society; and it is difficult for the broadest charity to credit them
with sincerity and honesty in those affirmations.
Great as is this difficulty, however, it is much
more difficult to understand how honest and unprejudiced men, writing from
twenty to forty years later, and with all the historic facts available which
have been committed to the general public since that time, and which abundantly
refute those earlier allegations regarding the existence of a “Nazarite Band,”
should feel hound to perpetuate these misstatements.
“Is it on the principle that a story often told is
at last believed? Or is it because it is the only shadow of an excuse that can
be made for an act of ecclesiastical tyranny and proscription which, looking
back upon after the lapse of twenty years, we deliberately pronounce to be
without a parallel in modern times, for its injustice ?“
In further discussing this question frequent
extracts from Mr. Roberts’s “Why Another Sect ?“ will be made, because of the
undoubted honesty and integrity of its author, his personal, undisputed, and
comprehensive knowledge of the facts, the abundance of the evidence he furnishes
to substantiate his positions, and the general spirit of fairness and justice
with which he writes. Moreover, the author hopes to present such proofs of the
wholly fictitious character of the alleged “Nazarite Band” as will abundantly
satisfy any candid reader that what has been written by various authors assuming
to connect the remote origin of Free Methodism with such an organization is
utterly without foundation.
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