FURTHER PERSECUTIONS—"A REIGN OF TERROR”
Following the trials of Roberts and McCreery, and
pending their appeals to the General Conference—a period of about two years—the
spirit of persecution, which had wrought like madness hitherto, was kindled to a
vastly higher pitch, even as the fiery furnace of Nebuchadnezzar was heated “one
seven times hotter” than its customary temperature for the reception of the
Hebrew children. In his “History of the Origin of the Free Methodist Church” the
Rev. Elias Bowen, D. D., referring to this period, says:
The spirit of persecution, already inflamed
against the so-called Nazarites, became rampant, and burst forth with a
violence which threatened their universal and speedy extirpation. The madness
of Saul of Tarsus in persecuting the saints of his time, even unto strange
cities, scarcely exceeded the rage with which the living portion of the Church
were hunted down by the secret society, worldly-minded, apostate majority of
the Conference during this period. The truly faithful, without respect to age,
sex, or condition, were brought before inquisitorial committees; and large
numbers, lay and clerical, were hustled out of the Church in some way, or
forced into the leading-strings of the dominant party. It was, indeed, a Reign
of Terror. Ridicule, disfranchisement, sham trial, and various other
contrivances, well known to the order of Jesuits, were put under contribution
for the crushing out of the life and power of religion; and wide-spread
desolation, as the result of these outrageous persecutions, was seen to
pervade the Conference throughout all its borders.
The author was old enough at the time to remember quite
vividly some of the stormy scenes which were then common, and the general and
intense agitation which they produced. His early religious training and
impressions were received amid those exciting scenes, in which he was
taught, both by precept and example, the nobility of sacrificing everything else
for the sake of righteousness and for fidelity to God.
In those days loyal Methodists were not infrequently
shut out of the church edifices their money had helped to build; and, when they
took to preaching in the schoolhouses, all usually went well until some
disaffected preacher or layman would incite the atheists, infidels, Roman
Catholics and Spiritualists of the community, and occasionally the members of
other Churches as well, to oppose the using of the schoolhouse for religious
services. Then these places would be closed against them, whereupon they would
betake themselves to private houses, the streets, the woods, rented shops,
farmers’ barns, occasionally to the Court-houses and theater buildings, and the
author recalls one instance of a large and excellent service being held under a
Church horse-shed, because of the Church building being closed and locked
against their admission. The people were seated in wagons and carriages, and
clinging to the timbers of the shed, while the rain was falling copiously
without.
But even in these places they were not immune from
the spirit of persecution that raged against them. Attempts would often be made
to break up their services; under false complaints the officers of the law would
be induced to interfere, and arrests and imprisonments would occur; and at other
times the worshipers would be made the victims of malicious mischief, their
harnesses being cut to pieces, or other property destroyed, while they were
engaged in the worship of God. They were also caricatured and basely
misrepresented by some of the secular papers, and occasionally were maligned
from evangelical pulpits. Even their children were in some cases the victims of
this spirit of persecution at the public schools, and instances could be related
of this character from the author’s personal knowledge which would seem utterly
incredible.
Of course some of the grosser forms of this
opposition and persecution emanated from the rowdy elements in the various
neighborhoods, and so are not to be charged directly to Church members; but the
spirit of religious opposition to the “Nazarites” was intense, and the spirit of
persecution against them ran high, on the part of the “Regency” element and
those who were its tools, and it was chiefly this that “stirred up certain lewd
fellows of the baser sort” to heap upon them some of the grosser indignities in
the foregoing count.
The following account of outrages perpetrated upon
unoffending members of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Niagara County, New
York, by the instigation of one of the Genesee Conference preachers, was
published in the Niagara City Herald of October 8, 1859; and so aptly
illustrates the spirit by which it was sought in those days to exterminate the “Nazarites,”
that it has seemed proper to insert it here:
RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION
Outrages at Cayuga Creek—Methodists Hand-Cuffed and sent to Jail on thc
Sabbath
The days of persecutions have returned. The spirit
of the old inquisition is among us. Our informants, who are some of the most
respectable citizens at Cayuga Creek, and wealthy gentlemen, witnessed the
strange spectacle of peaceable, devoted Christians, while quietly listening to
the preaching of an aged and honored local preacher of the M. E. Church, being
arrested, hand-cuffed as felons, and hurried away to jail, on charges
manufactured for the purpose. We could hardly persuade ourselves we were
residents of a free and enlightened country, in the 19th century. It would
seem as if the wheel of time had roiled us back to the Dark Ages.
The history of this outrage is briefly as follows:
The Cayuga Creek Church forms a part of the Niagara Falls charge. The same
preacher officiates at the Falls in the morning, and at the Creek in the
afternoon of each Sabbath. Soon after Conference, the pastor went covertly to
work to carry out the anti-Methodist doctrine of the “Pastoral Address,” [1]
adopted by the stronger or “Regency” party of the Genesee Conference. The
faithful and efficient Sabbath-school Superintendent, and the Class Leaders
were changed, and persons whom the pastor could use, were appointed.
The key of the Church, up to February 15th, had
been in possession of A. M. Chesbrough, a trustee, also, hitherto a warm
personal friend of the preacher. Mr. C. always had the house open for
meetings, furnished lights, and had paid more for building and supporting the
Church than any other man. Mr. Simpkins, the preacher, obtained tile key and
gave it to another trustee, Who is not a member of any Church, and who had
been the chief agent of “the Regency” in these operations at Cayuga Creek. On
the eve-fling of the 16th of February, the Rev. John Cannon, who had been for
over thirty years a local preacher, and for some twenty-three years a member
of the M. E. Church at Niagara Falls, had an appointment to preach at Cayuga
Creek. When the time arrived for opening the meeting, the house was well
filled, and to the astonishment of all Mr. Simpkins, who knew of the
appointment, stepped in and took the control of the meeting, without
saying one word to Mr. Cannon. This created quite an excitement, for Mr. C.
had preached there often, and is highly beloved.
On the evening of the 23rd of March, when the
people met for prayer-meeting, the Church was locked. For the first time since
the Church was built, the windows were fastened down. Mr. Chesbrough pried
open a window, the door was unbolted, and a meeting was held. The Sabbath
morning prayer-meeting, which had for some months been held at an unoccupied
house in another neighborhood, had been removed to the Church.
Mr. Simpkins called a meeting of the trustees, two
of whom were under his influence. The question of opening the house for Sunday
morning prayer-meeting came up. One of the trustees, and not a professor of
religion, objected, that the “meetings were too noisy.” The newly elected
trustee said “the people could pray at home in their closets, or in their
fields, that they did not need to come to Church to pray.”
Mr. Chesbrough urged that the house should be
opened for prayer-meeting. From this time till the 17th of April, the meetings
were held as usual. On that day, Sabbath morning, the people met together at
the Church for their customary prayer-meeting. One of the Regency trustees
was posted outside the door with three or four hired men and dogs, to prevent
the people from going into the Church. Mr. Chesbrough asked him by what
authority he closed the door. Re said “by the authority of the preacher in
charge, and a majority of the [two] trustees.” He also said, “he was sent to
protect the door, and was going to do it at all hazards.” The people
becoming disgusted, returned home. For four weeks no prayer-meeting was held
on Sabbath morning. Mr. Chesbrough visited the preacher twice to get his
consent to have the house opened, which was refused each time, and the
preacher said that the trustee who guarded the door “knew his wishes.”
In the meanwhile the members became uneasy at
having no meetings during the long Sabbath mornings. No religious services
were held in the place save in the Methodist Church, and it was too far to go
anywhere else. An appointment was given out for Father Cannon to preach on
Sabbath morning, June 19th. Mr. Chesbrough having obtained a key, opened the
door. While he and two others were sitting in the Church waiting for the
congregation, the new trustee came up with another man and locked them in, and
said, “Mr. Cannon shall not speak here; Mr. Simpkins told me to protect the
door at all hazards.” His comrade said, “If there is any fighting to be done I
want a hand in it.” Mr. Cannon quietly held his meeting under a tree, and
appointed another In two weeks. When the time came the Regency trustee was at
the door with six or seven hired men, and said if they went into the Church
that day, before the regular time, they would walk over his dead body. Again
the meeting was held under the trees, and another appointment left for two
weeks.
When that Sabbath morning came the Regency
trustee, Samuel Tompkins, was posted at the door with eleven men—not one of
them, save his brother, ever paid one cent towards the erection of the
Church,—most of them hired men and boys, with five dogs. Seats placed beside
the Church were torn down, and a line was marked out, over which the people
were told they must not pass at their peril.
On the evening of the 28th of July, there was an
appointment for a prayer-meeting. Mr. Chesbrough had in the meantime put n new
lock upon the door, and by his authority the Church was opened. Before the
people had assembled, a hired man of the Regency trustee, stepped into the
Church and fastened the door by putting a brace against it. The members
assembled, but being told by the guard that they could not enter the Church,
they quietly dispersed. When they had gone some fifty rods or more, some boys
threw in a handful of firecrackers through a broken pane of glass at the man
who was holding the door. On Saturday night as the Regency guard were watching
the Church, that they might have possession Sunday morning, they said two
persons came up to the window and whispered, “There they lie near the door,”
and then broke some eight or ten panes of glass.
The probability is that it was done by some of the
Regency party, in order to make out as bad a story as would best suit their
side, for in fact, they did not even go to the door to see who was there
breaking the windows.
The Regency trustee obtained warrants of a
Justice, a special friend, and business partner of his. They were kept through
the week, and on Sabbath morning, August 7th, as Rev. John Cannon was
preaching in a grove, some four or five constables armed with revolvers,
clubs, and shackles, led on by the Regency trustee, came to the congregation,
and arrested one of the members of the M. E. Church, and a respectable
citizen. They then sent to the house of another member, tore him from the
bedside of a sick wife, took him near the meeting, and hand-cuffed him
with the other. . They were left in irons near the meeting until
a part of the constables could go to the village and arrest some five or six
more. They were put in shackles and then driven in the hot sun, through
the dust about a mile. They were crowded into an old lumber wagon used for
hauling brick, and hurried to jail. While they were kept near the meeting,
some of the most responsible men in Niagara County offered to give any amount
of security required; but nothing would answer—to jail they must go.
The form of an examination was gone through with,
and though no evidence of guilt was adduced, yet the Justice, to screen his
friend, as is supposed, bound them over for trial.
Thus have our free institutions been disgraced by
an act of religious persecution that would be better befitting Italy or Rome.
The Christians arrested are as quiet and inoffensive men as can be found.
Their real offense consists in their unwillingness to put their
conscience in the keeping of their pastor, and in their earnest endeavors to
gain heaven. In short, they are old-fashioned Methodists, designated by their
opposers in the Genesee Conference by the persecuted name of Nazarites.
Another and a favorite species of persecution in those
days consisted in subjecting those who would not tamely submit to the Regency
power to the ecclesiastical guillotine. It was perilous then for a man or woman
to have a quickened conscience and the courage to obey its dictates. Such a
person might about as well have lived under Roman Catholic rule in the days of
the Spanish Inquisition, as to have been a member of the Methodist Episcopal
Church in the Genesee Conference. The machinery of the Church would be made
quickly effective for his ecclesiastical decapitation. As a specimen of the way
in which this was done, even in the case of laymen who had ever been devoted to
God and loyal to the Church, we herewith reproduce excerpts from an article
which originally appeared in the Olean, (N. Y.) Advertiser, of April 26,
1860, and with no other apology for the length of the quotation than its
pertinency to the subject under consideration:
METHODIST CHURCH DIFFICULTIES
Solemn Mockery of a Trial—Ecclesiastical Guillotine on the neck of Seymour
J. Noble!
Mr. Editor: After your very appropriate remarks
and suggestions upon this trial, it might perhaps, by some, be thought
advisable to allow this matter to rest without further comment. But there are
some features of the case that demand the attention of the public, and which
concern every man who has a reputation that he would preserve, and place
beyond the reach of injury, from such assaults and with such means as were
employed in this case.
On Friday, April 6th, at nine A. M., the component
parts of an Inquisitorial Court were assembled in due order, In the basement
of the church edifice. The judge appeared, solemnly grave. The minister in
charge seemed complacently satisfied as he viewed the arrangements, and the
jury expressed a “certain conviction” in their countenances, as they
eyed the accused, standing before them, conscious of his own rectitude, and
surrounded by his many friends and sympathizers.
A hymn was read in slow and measured terms. Then
all kneeled in prayer, while the Rev. Mr. Hammond, of Portville, who was to
preside as Judge, supplicated the throne of grace for wisdom from on high, to
direct aright the duties imposed upon him; and as the words—”let no act stand
in the way of the salvation of souls,” broke in upon the silence, one long,
loud, earnest Amen was the response, bursting involuntarily, as it were, from
the lips of the kneeling victim of their displeasure.
The religious exercises being closed, the
Inquisitorial character of the Court began to develop itself by the Presiding
Elder rising in his place, and going through the transparent farce of formally
deposing W. C. Willing, from his official position as Pastor of the First
Methodist Episcopal Church of Olean. No reason was given for this summary
proceeding, but it was easy to conjecture why It was done. He had made out the
charge, selected the judge, empanelled the jury, and summoned the witness, but
there was as yet no prosecutor! The arrangement would not be complete, unless
he performed the part of that functionary! The whole Court was the creature of
his making, carefully selected and brought together for the arraignment,
trial, and certain expulsion of one of the members of the M. E. Church.
He had done all he could in his official position without infringement upon
the “Discipline,” and hence this “deposition” to enable him to do, what no lay
member of the whole society was willing to perform—prosecute SEYMOUR J. NOBLE,
on the charge of “IMMORAL AND UNCHRISTIAN CONDUCT! ! !“
Mr. Noble plead a general denial and requested the
Court to allow him the assistance of Wm. Culver and Doctor Bigelow as counsel.
The Court decided the latter gentleman
would not be permitted to take part in the trial, as he was not a member of
the society.
Dr. Bigelow arose from his seat in a retired part
of the room, and said it was unnecessary to make any ruling so far as he was
concerned, for before such a Court he should be like a “sheep dumb
before its shearers.”
Mr. Noble objected to W. C. Willing acting as
prosecutor, on the ground of his not belonging to the society.
The Court, with a distinction so delicate
as to make the difference not discernible to ordinary minds, ruled precisely
the reverse of its last decision, and W. C. Willing was allowed to act.
Mr. Noble objected to Hiram Webster sitting as one
of the jurors, for having said “he would not believe a Nazarite any quicker
than he would the devil.” He called one witness who testified to Webster’s
assertion, and offered to bring more, telling the Court, that in his defense
he would have to rely upon the testimony of those stigmatized as Nazarites,
and if men were to sit upon the jury, who would not believe them quicker than
they would the “father of all lies,” it looked to him as if the case was
already prejudged.
The Court, with a coolness challenging
precedent, very blandly decided Mr. Webster competent.
Upon the declaration of this decision, the
accused, acting under the impression very naturally made upon him, held the
Court for half an hour, with an earnest, heart-felt speech; telling them that
he could hope for no justice at their hands—that this trial was decided upon
long before the alleged consummation of the act for which he stood
arraigned—that it was a foregone conclusion, he must be expelled from the
Church, and these forms and ceremonies were only designed as an outside show
of justice. The flushed countenances, bowed heads, and averted faces of all
connected with the Court, told how pungently these scathing truths were
realized.
When the accused had stepped from the threshold,
his friends followed him, leaving the inquisition comparatively alone. It
began its work, and with indecent haste, hurriedly consummated it. A few
witnesses were hurriedly examined—the prosecutor hurriedly summed up the
case—and the jury rendered a hurried verdict
The verdict was precisely what it was intended it
should be, and what every one conversant with the proceedings had very clearly
foreseen, and SEYMOUR J. NOBLE,—a man whose heart and purse, for the last
eighteen years, have been open to the requirements and necessities of the
Church—whose hard-earned substance during all that time has constantly flowed
into her treasury, and whose prayers have been regularly offered up at her
sacred altars, is pronounced by a foreign emissary, * * * * * * * as no longer
deserving of association. Though his heart yearns for the Church as that of a
tender child for its mother, he is not allowed to bend the knee there, but is
sent forth into the world with a stigma upon his name, and a reproach upon his
Christian character.
In view of all this, may we not reasonably ask, of
what value Is human reputation in a community where such high-handed efforts
to blast and destroy it can be successfully indulged? If such attacks
upon private character can possibly injure the object aimed at, it shows the
necessity of some legal enactment to protect honest men from the operations of
such machinery, and from the Influence of a spirit that, in other countries
and in other ages of the world, has sent men to the rack and to the scaffold,
for alleged or suspected heresies.
But in this particular instance, and in this
immediate community, the malice that originated these proceedings, and set
them in motion, is comparatively impotent and harmless. Mr. Noble has lived
here too long, is too well known, and his position as a sincere, earnest
Christian, too well established to suffer any permanent injury from such
persecutors. It may have some effect abroad, where the parties are unknown;
but here, it is looked upon as a farce, and only injures those who have been
engaged in the transaction. The charges do not in any way refer to any act of
his, as a citizen, a man, or a Christian. In order to have a semblance of a
charge against him, his accusers were compelled to fasten upon what has ever
been regarded in all civilized communities, as a privileged proceeding. He was
engaged as counsel for JAMES H. BROOKS, when arraigned before a similar
tribunal, and defended him with a zeal and ability that before any other body
of men, would not have been without a saving influence. In the excitement of
debate, and the earnestness of his argument, he undoubtedly used strong
expressions, and characterized the proceedings as they deserved. It is for
language used under such circumstances, that he has now been accused,
arraigned and expelled from his Church.
The ruling powers in the Methodist denomination,
have by this act proclaimed that no man can remain in their midst who has the
courage to assert his manhood and independence; and that no brother in the
Church shall defend another accused of heresies, without subjecting himself to
the risk of being also expelled, if he employs language that is offensive to
the Inquisition before which he appears. In all other tribunals, where men are
charged with offenses, the counsel who appears on behalf of the accused Is
permitted to express his honest convictions of the case, in such terms as his
judgment shall dictate; and he is nowhere, and under no circumstances, liable
to be called to account, or even censured for a choice of adjectives that the
case or the evidence may suggest When a man joins the M. B. Church, is it to
be understood that he surrenders all his rights and privileges in this
respect, and if accused of offenses, is the method of his trial, the character
of the evidence he offers, and the language he employs in his vindication— all
to be dictated and prescribed by those who may be constituted his judges? If
this be so, it is well to let the community know It, that they may govern
themselves accordingly.
Instances of maladministration like the foregoing were
then the order of the day; and not only did they pass unrebuked by those who
held the reins of authority, but were gloried in, even as Romanism once gloried
in the blood of the martyrs, and would still glory therein over most of the
world, did not the civil powers restrain its persecuting spirit.
Churchism had largely taken the place of primitive
Christianity, and denominationalism had lamentably supplanted the fervid
simplicity and spirituality of the earlier Methodism. Loyalty to the Methodist
Church, as represented by a denominational platform, interpreted and enforced
“by ‘Conference resolutions,’ Episcopal decisions, the precedents of sham
trials, and the like, arbitrarily administered,” practically constituted the
only authoritative system of ecclesiastical jurisprudence in the Methodism of
that day. Under this régime, law could be pleaded—either constitutional,
statutory, or constructive—for almost any course of administration one might be
inclined to pursue, no matter how repugnant to common sense and common justice
such course might be. Comparatively little attention was paid to the
Constitution, or to the statute laws of Methodism; they were practically
obsolete. Special legislation had largely taken the place of that equal
legislation for all, which should be the glory of any ecclesiastical body, so
far as it engages in legislative functions.
The administration now had for its general objects
the securing of personal interests, partisan ends and ecclesiastical popularity,
rather than the conservation and promotion of “righteousness and true holiness.”
Measures were adopted which conscientious brethren could not subscribe to, and
then for their refusal to support them, the machinery of the Church was put in
motion, by corrupt administration, for their punishment by defamation and
expulsion from the Church.
Dr. Bowen has given us an excellent illustration of
the working of this principle in the following paragraphs:
The clergy, who constitute both the legislative
and executive departments of the Church, aware of their gross departure from
God and Methodism, and the hopelessness of obtaining their support, on the
voluntary principle, from a people who had lost all confidence in them as
Christian ministers, resolved upon coercive measures; and to insure a support
they could not otherwise receive, made it a condition of membership. This new
law, introduced into the Discipline in so clandestine a manner as to leave the
people unconscious, at least for a while, if not of its existence even, yet of
its true import and bearing, was thenceforth to be regarded as a test of
loyalty; its one great object being to compel the people to support the
preachers sent to them by the Conference, whatever their character might be;
or, in case of failure, to authorize the expulsion of all non-paying members.
Many have already been expelled from the
Church—ostensibly for something else, but really for their neglect or refusal
to support a Christless, persecuting ministry. Of late, however, the guise has
been thrown off, and members have been expelled for the avowed reason that
they declined to support the preacher who had been placed over them by the
Conference.
The events narrated in this chapter show the spirit
that prevailed in the Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church prior
to that rupture in the Methodist communion which led to the formation of the
Free Methodist Church. This spirit led to and instigated the trials of Roberts
and McCreery, and was chiefly responsible for the final split in the Church and
for the organization of another Methodist communion. The spirit of persecution
continued against the representatives of vital godliness until hundreds were
driven from their Church home, and hundreds more were so cruelly oppressed
within that body which they supposed to be a Church home, that they chose to
separate from it, and “go forth without the camp bearing His reproach,” rather
than to make those compromises of principle that were demanded of them in order
that they might have the fellowship of their brethren.
Those were times that tried men’s souls and tested
their spiritual mettle. In the midst of all these unpleasant and cruel things,
however, the persecuted ones generally possessed their souls in patience, and
even rejoiced that they were accounted worthy to suffer reproach for their
Master’s name. The word of the Lord mightily prevailed, the work of the Lord
greatly prospered, and the persecuted people of God were filled with peace, and
love, and holy joy, and were enabled to say, in the words so often on the tongue
of John Wesley, while wicked persecution raged about the heads of the early
Methodists, “The best of all is, God is with us.”
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