ECCLESIASTICAL PROSCRIPTION CONTINUED—
PROCEEDINGS AGAINST B. T. ROBERTS
The battle over the issue of “Scriptural holiness”
was now becoming more and more closely drawn. The “Regency” faction was
desperate in the extreme. Matters were well-nigh equally intense on the part
of the reform party. Both were coming to feel that the case was one o. life or
death, and so girded themselves for intense warfare. What had already occurred
was only light skirmishing; what was to follow was warfare that tried men’s
souls.
When it was found, at the next session of the
Conference, that, in accordance with a petition signed by fifteen hundred
members of the Church within the Conference bounds, the Rev. L. Stiles, Jr.,
and the Rev. I. C. Kingsley had been re-transferred to the Genesee Conference,
the desperation of the “Regency” element was kindled to the utmost intensity.
They saw clearly that heroic measures must be inaugurated, lest they should be
brought to account for their misdoings. Accordingly they hired a hail, without
even being suspected by the so-called “Nazarites,” and held secret meetings at
night to plan their method for the continuation of the warfare.
The method adopted was characteristic of the men
who planned it, and suited to the end they sought to accomplish. As we have
already seen, they now had a majority of the Presiding Elders subject to their
control. The next step was to let the young preachers, and those who were
unacceptable, understand that the character of their appointments depended
upon which of the two parties in the Conference—the “Regency” party or the
so-called “Nazarites” they henceforth identified themselves with. By so doing
they were soon enabled to draw enough men from these classes into their secret
meetings to make a majority of the Conference. THEN THIS MINISTERIAL CONCLAVE,
COMPOSED OF MEN WHO WERE TO CONSTITUTE THE JURY, AND WHOSE PREVIOUS SECRET
VOTES COULD BE COUNTED ON IN ADVANCE TO SECURE A CONVICTION, VOTED TO PRESENT
A BILL OF CHARGES AGAINST B. T. ROBERTS AND W. C. KENDALL!
Mr. Roberts had just published his article on “New
School Methodism,” and the charges formulated against him were based upon the
contents of that article. The general charge preferred was that of
“Unchristian and immoral conduct.” The entire bill of charges will be given
presently. But first it is proper to state what Mr. Roberts offered to do in
order to obviate the necessity of a trial in his case. On presentation of the
bill before the Conference, he arose and said:
I have no intention to misrepresent any one. I
do not think I have. I honestly think that the men referred to hold just the
opinions I say they do. But if they do not, I shall be glad to be corrected.
If they will say they do not, I will take their word for it, make my humble
confession, and, as far as possible, repair the wrong that I have done. I
will publish in the Northern Independent, and in all the Church
papers they desire me to, from Maine to California, that I have
misrepresented them.
What fairer proposition could he have made? What more
could he have been expected to do? What but a predetermination that the man
must be sacrificed on the altar of expediency could have induced the majority
in an Annual Conference to have rejected so fair and noble a proposition? Not
one among them was willing to say that he had been misrepresented in anything
Mr. Roberts had written; and yet, as we shall soon see, he was tried and
convicted of “unchristian and immoral conduct” for alleged misrepresentations
of these brethren in what he had published in “New School Methodism.” Why this
strange inconsistency? The only solution of the question would seem to be that
the “Regency” had been at such great pains to secure their majority for the
crushing out of “Nazaritism,” that the leaders felt they must now use it, both
as a matter of self-justification, and as a damaging blow, if not a
death-blow, to the alleged fanaticism of the “Nazarites.” One of their number
had boastfully declared, and now they must try to make good the boast, “Nazaritism
must be crushed out, and we have got the tools to do it with!’
The Conference proceeded with the trial. The
following account of the proceedings was published by Mr. Roberts in 1879, in
“Why Another Sect ?“ and during all the intervening years has remained
unchallenged, which is conclusive evidence of its correctness:
There was little to do, as I admitted that I wrote
the article. In my defense I showed:
1. That it is an undisputed principle of common law, that In all actions
for libel, the precise language complained of as libelous, must be set forth
In the Indictment.
“An indictment for libel must set forth the very
words; it is not sufficient to aver that the defendant published a certain
libel, the substance of which is as follows.”—Brightley’s Digest, Vol.
II, page 1631.
“In an action for libel, the law requires the
very words of the libel to be set out, in order that the Court may judge
whether they constitute a good ground of action.”—Sergent & Rowlin’s
Reports, Vol. X, page 174.
2. That if you make a man responsible for the construction which his
enemies put upon his words, you might condemn any man that ever wrote. Nay,
you could on that principle condemn the Savior Himself. He said: “All that
came before me were thieves and robbers.” Noah, Job and Daniel came before
Him. Therefore He slandered Noah, Job and Daniel, by calling them thieves
and robbers. In fact our Savior was condemned for the construction which
His enemies put upon His words.
3. I showed that in all the important specifications they not only had
not given my words; but they had perverted my meaning. I claim the ability
to say what I mean. That the contrast between their charges and my words may
be the more easily seen, we give both in parallel columns:
“CHARGES AGAINST REV. B. T. ROBERTS. |
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“WHAT HE DID SAY. |
“I hereby charge Rev. B. T. Roberts with unchristian and immoral
conduct |
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“1st. In publishing in the ‘Northern Independent’ that there exists In
the Genesee Conference an associate body numbering about thirty, whose
teaching is very different from that of the fathers of Methodism. |
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“1st. Already there is springing up among us a class of preachers
whose teaching is very different from that of the fathers of Methodism.
They may be found here and there throughout our Zion; but in the Genesee
Conference they act as an associate body. They number about thirty. |
“2d. In publishing as above that said members of Genesee Conference
are opposed to what Is fundamental in Christianity—to the nature itself of
Christianity. |
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“2d. This difference Is fundamental. It does not relate to things
indifferent, but to those of the most vital importance. it involves
nothing less than the nature of Christianity itself. |
“3d. In classing them In the above-mentioned publication with Theodore
Parker and Mr. Newman as regards laxness of religious sentiment. |
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“3d. The New school Methodists affect as great a degree of liberalism
as do Theodore Parker and Mr. Newman. |
“4th. in charging them, as above, with sneering at Christianity in a
manner not unworthy of Thomas Paine, and that falls below that of
Voltaire. |
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“4th. The following sneer is not unworthy of Thomas Paine himself. it
falls below the dignity of Voltaire. |
“5th. In charging them, as above, with being heterodox on the subject
of holiness. |
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“5th. The New School Methodists hold that justification and entire
sanctification, or ‘holiness,’ are the same—that when a sinner Is
pardoned, he is at the same time made holy—that all the spiritual change
he may henceforth expect is simply a growth in grace. When they speak of
‘holiness,’ they mean by it the same as do evangelical ministers of those
denominations which do not receive the doctrines taught by Wesley and
Fletcher on this subject. |
“6th. In asserting that they acknowledge that their doctrines are not
the doctrines of the Church; and that they have undertaken to correct the
teachings of her standard authors. |
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“6th. The New School ministers have the frankness to acknowledge that
their doctrines are not the doe-. trines of the Church. They have
undertaken to correct the teachings of her standard authors. In the name
editorial of The Advocate, from which we have quoted so largely, we read:
‘So in the exercises and means of grace Instituted by the Church, It is
clearly apparent that respect is had, rather to the excitation of
religious sensibilities and the culture of emotional piety, than the
development of genial and humane dispositions, and the formation of habits
of active, vigorous goodness.’ |
“7th. In charging them as above, with attempting to abolish the means
of grace-substituting the Lodge for the class-meeting and love-feast, and
the social party for the prayer-meeting. |
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“7th. The means of grace In the use of which an Asbury, an Olin, a
Hedding and a host of worthies departed and living, were nurtured to
spiritual manhood, must he abolished; and others adapted to the
‘development of genial and humane dispositions,’ established in their
places. The Lodge must supersede the class and the love-feast, and the
old-fashioned -prayer-meeting must give way to the social party. |
“8th. In representing as above, the revivals among them as
superficial, and characterizing them as ‘splendid revivals.’ |
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“8th. The leaders of the new Divinity movement are not remarkable for
promoting revivals; and those which do occasionally occur among them may
generally be characterized as the editor of The Advocate designated one
which fell under his notice, as ‘splendid revivals.’ Preachers of the old
stamp urge upon all who would gain heaven, the necessity of
self-denial—non-conformity to the world; purity of heart, and holiness of
life; while the others ridicule singularity, encourage by their silence,
and in some cases by their own example, and that of their wives and
daughters, ‘the putting on of gold and costly apparel,’ and |
“9th. In saying, as above, that they treat with distrust all
professions of deep religious experience. |
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“9th. Treat with distrust all professions of deep religious
experience.” |
“LeRoy, Sept. 1st, 1857.” |
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“REUBEN C. FOOTE.
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I explained to them so clearly that the dullest
could not fail to see,
1. That men may “act as an associate body,” who do not “exist as
an associate body.” It was true that they had a regularly organized
“associate body,” but I did not know it, or even suspect It, and so I did
not say it.
2. That men might have a difference about what is “fundamental,”—about
“the nature itself of Christianity,” without any of them being “opposed to
what is fundamental,” or to the nature of Christianity. In point of fact,
the Calvinists and the Armenians —the Unitarians and Trinitarians do so
differ.
3. That there is a wide difference between “liberalism,” “possessing
charity,” and “looseness of religious sentiment.”
4. That saying “the following sneer is not unworthy of Thomas Paine,” is
by no means equivalent to saying, “They sneer at Christianity in a manner
not unworthy of Thomas Paine.”
5. That in saying they mean by “holiness” the same as “evangelical
ministers” of the other Protestant Churches generally do, is by no means
charging them with being “heterodox on the subject of holiness.”
6. That the article from which I quote fully sustains all I say upon the
point involved in the sixth specification.
7. That in showing that if certain views of religion prevailed, “the
Lodge must supersede the class and the love-feasts,” I did not charge them
with attempting to do it, but that this would be the logical result of the
teachings that I was reviewing.
8. That in calling their revivals “splendid revivals,” I simply quoted
from an editorial of their own organ.
9. That in saying they “treat with distrust all professions of deep,
religious experience,” I simply told what was notoriously true. I heard one
of these preachers say, “When I hear a man profess holiness, I feel for my
pocketbook.” Another said, - “If I should find Jesse T. Peck’s book on “The
Central Idea of Christianity,” in my house, I would take it with the tongs
and throw it into the fire.”
Yet with the matter thus plainly before them, a
majority of the Conference voted these specifications, (except the 4th,
which was withdrawn) sustained. In doing that, every man of them voted as
true what he knew to be false. We can not come to any other possible
conclusion. They were not ignorant men who did not know what they were
about. They were not acting hastily over a matter they did not understand.
The case was fairly laid before them. They deliberately voted that I
wrote what they knew I did not write.
I was sentenced to be reproved by the chair. I
received the reproof and appealed to the General Conference.
When the appointments were read, near the end of the
session, Mr. Roberts was read off for Pekin, Niagara County, New York. This
was about the only part of the Conference territory in which he was a total
stranger. So far as he knew he had never seen any one belonging to the Pekin
circuit. With faith and courage he proceeded to his new field, but before he
reached it a prominent preacher of the “Regency” faction had preceded him, and
had informed the members that the preacher sent them had been convicted at the
Conference of “unchristian and immoral conduct.” This report was also
published in the Buffalo Advocate, and that without a word of
explanation, thus leaving people to imagine the grounds upon which his
conviction had been secured. They had no means of knowing whether he had been
convicted of fraud, drunkenness, licentiousness, or some other crime; and this
course was evidently pursued with the intention of embarrassing him on his new
field of labor as much as possible, if not with a view to blocking his way to
being received on the circuit.
What circuit would willingly receive a preacher
whom none of its members had ever seen, and whose coming was preceded by the
unqualified statement from a prominent minister of the Conference to the
effect that the new appointee had just been convicted of “unchristian and
immoral conduct”? It is not to be wondered at, that, in recording the event,
Mr. Roberts should have said, “We doubt if any itinerant ever had a colder
reception. Even Father Chesbrough, one of the noblest of men, and one of the
most loyal of Methodists, at first thought he would not go to hear me preach.
‘What have we done,’ he exclaimed, ‘that a man convicted of immoral conduct
should be sent as our preacher?’”
Nevertheless, when the first Sabbath morning of
Mr. Roberts’s pastorate came round, Mr. Chesbrough concluded not to deviate
from his uniform and life-long custom of attending Church service, saying, “It
can do no harm to hear him once, anyway.” So with his family he attended the
service. His son often related afterward how, on their way home, the venerable
man rode in silence over a mile, and then said: “Well, Sam, I know nothing
about the man, but I do know that what we have heard to-day is Methodism as I
used to hear it in the old Baltimore Conference, and as I have not heard it in
Western New York.”
Mr. Roberts gave himself to the work of the
circuit with his characteristic ability and energy, not allowing himself to be
cast down or in any wise discouraged by the evil that had befallen him at and
following the Conference session. Notwithstanding the indifference of the
Presiding Elder, and the open opposition of a few members of the Official
Board, a mighty revival soon broke out, which continued with increasing power
and fruitfulness throughout the year. The work reached the young people,
especially, and went so thorough among them that many of them, in their
earnest seeking after God, forsook the world, gave up their jewelry and
finery, and gladly took the narrow way. Dissatisfied because of this, one of
the stewards started prayer meetings in his house across the street, probably
as a counter-attraction. Mr. Roberts paid no attention to this, however, and
they soon came to naught, while the work of God went on unhindered.
At the district camp-meeting of that year Mr.
Roberts had one of the largest tents on the ground, and many of those who had
been saved in his meetings were also present with him and his devoted wife.
The meeting was held but three miles from the home of the Presiding Elder, and
yet, for some reason, he had never mentioned the subject to Mr. Roberts.
During the first three days of the meeting no opportunity was given for public
testimony, evidently lest some of those who had been saved in the Pekin
revival should tell what God had done for their souls under the labors of Mr.
Roberts. Finally one woman, who was free in Christ, broke through the
conventionality, and testified with the blessing of God upon her, from which
time the tide of salvation began to rise. During the intervals between the
meetings at the stand they were kept going in the Pekin tent, where many were
converted and many were fully sanctified.
The following report of the work on the Pekin
circuit that year was published in the Northern Independent:
It can not be denied that we received to our
Church as our pastor, a man whom The Advocate informed us was tried
and found guilty of “immorality ;“ and judging from the articles which have
appeared from time to time in that paper, it would seem that his opposers
think “if we let him alone, all men will believe on him ;“ and the only way
to destroy his usefulness is to pursue him with “slanders” and
“persecutions.”
A recent article in The Advocate, which
descends to language unbecoming one Christian speaking of another, is hardly
worth noticing, ns the shafts hurled at Brother Roberts fall far below him.
The statement, however, that he was not returned to Niagara Street Church on
account of his unfitness, will do well enough among those who have never
heard from Brother Thomas [Eleazer Thomas, P. D.] all the facts in the case,
which, thank God, there are many who understand as fully as the editor of
The Advocate, and who dare to tell the whole truth when called upon.
In view, then, of all these things, the grand
question to be answered is this: Has the Church prospered under his labors,
and has God honored his labors by bestowing His blessing upon them? We feel
glad to say that the Church has prospered through the blessing of God,
during the year. And all the honor and glory we lay at the feet of Jesus,
for without Him His children can do nothing.
Though we have not been favored during the year
with the “able, impressive and appropriate prayers,” that some of the other
Churches have been, we feel thankful that we have had “the effectual,
fervent prayer[s] of the righteous man, which avail much.” Notwithstanding
the many reports which have circulated to the contrary, God has been at work
among the people. Between fifty and sixty have professed conversion, about
forty of whom have joined on probation. The preaching has been plain, simple
and pointed, and in accordance with the doctrines and Discipline of the
Church. The consequence has been, very many of the members of the Church
have been seen at the altar of prayer, some for justification, some for
sanctification. Quite a number have publicly professed to have received the
blessing of sanctification. Without an exception, every aged member in our
Church has rejoiced to see the return of the days of Wesleyan Methodism,
with its uncompromising and earnest spirit.
When Brother H. came among us, our Sunday noon
class numbered about fifteen; now the average attendance is, and has been
for some time, from seventy-five to eighty. Our prayer-meetings and week
evening class-meetings, and they occur every night in the week at various
points on the charge, have been better sustained through “haying and
harvesting,” and have been more interesting than for years past. The
Sunday-school has also reached a point in attendance and interest never
before attained In its history. There are scores in the Church to-day, who
feel to thank God for having sent him among us.
S. K. J. CHESBROUGH.
SOUTH PEKIN, Sept. 24, 1858.
The writer of the foregoing was a son of “Father
Chesbrough,” referred to in a previous paragraph. Later, with his excellent
wife, lie became a member of the Free Methodist Church, which he served with
great efficiency in the ministry for a number of years, and, still later, as
Agent of the Free Methodist Publishing House for nearly twenty years. As
editor of the Free Methodist the author was in close touch with him for
nearly nine years of his twenty in the Publishing House, and often heard him
relate in substance the events which are narrated in this chapter. They were
fully corroborated by his testimony.
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