MORE PREACHERS ECCLESIASTICALLY BEHEADED
Before the time arrived for the second Laymen’s
Convention at Albion the Genesee Conference had sent a number more of its
preachers to the ecclesiastical block. Two of them, J. W. Reddy and H. H.
Farnsworth, were disposed of by locating them. Four others, namely, Loren
Stiles, Jr., John A. Wells, William Cooley and C. D. Burlingham, were
“expelled on trivial, trumped-up charges, after the mockery of a trial, at the
Conference held at Brockport, in 1859.”
This session of the Conference was held in
October, less than a month before the time fixed for the holding of the second
annual Laymen’s Convention. During the year no stone had been left unturned,
no opportunity had been unimproved, by the “Regency” faction to destroy the
influence of the men expelled at the preceding session. All these efforts,
however, had ended in signal failure. Notwithstanding the fact that those men
went forth to labor for God under the ban of Conference expulsion, and
stigmatized as both “unchristian and immoral,” they were never more cordially
received by the Christian public, nor did they ever have a wider and more
effective hearing, than during this year. The blessing of God followed them
wherever they went, and “the word of the Lord grew mightily and prevailed.”
The determination to crush out “Nazaritism” had
never been more manifest, or more iniquitous in its methods and measures, than
during this year. The Buffalo Advocate and the Northern Christian
Advocate more than maintained their usual reputation for the vilification
of all such as would not bow with servile deference to the will of the
dominant faction. Their columns teemed with articles of the most inflammatory
character appealing to their constituencies to make an utter end of the
Nazaritism” still remaining in the Conference. Hence, when the session met,
the majority had come together ready to execute any measures proposed by their
leaders, in order that the work of extermination might be consummated.
This spirit of bitter hostility was kindled to a
consuming flame by the demonstration which they witnessed on convening. The
Rev. Fay H. Purdy, a well-known evangelist of the Methodist Episcopal Church,
had pitched a large tabernacle in the outskirts of the town, yet within sight
and almost within hearing of the Church where the Conference was to be held,
and was engaged in a series of evangelistic services which were to continue
throughout the Conference session. The tabernacle would accommodate about
3,000 people. About it were several rows of family and society tents, occupied
by “a large number of intelligent, devoted, earnest Christians, who were
stigmatized by the dominant party as ‘Nazarites.’” This clearly showed that
“Nazaritism” was not so nearly extinct as its enemies had hoped and supposed.
It was not even weakened, much less destroyed.
The defenders of vital godliness in the Conference
were aware from the beginning that extreme measures would be adopted at this
session, and were ready to face whatever might be their fate. However, for
unblushing audacity, for Jesuitical diplomacy, and for Pharisaic madness, in
trampling upon the rights of members and dishonoring both human and divine
law, the action of the majority far exceeded their anticipations. The capacity
of the “Regency” for injustice in the name of righteousness had been
underestimated. It was supposed that they would at least feel under some
obligation to honor the Constitution of the Methodist Episcopal Church, yet
even this was ruthlessly overridden. That Constitution allows to the Annual
Conferences no legislative powers. The General Conference is the only properly
constituted law-making body in Methodism. The Annual Conferences may execute
such of its laws as, by constitutional provision, fall within their province;
but they can neither legislate, give to their own enactments the force of law,
nor affix penalties for their violation. To attempt any of these things is to
usurp the prerogatives belonging to the General Conference alone.
The Genesee Conference at this session, however,
usurped the authority of a law-making body, and, on the second day of the
Session, passed the following “resolutions,” the first four of which were
intended to force the preachers who sympathized with their expelled brethren
to cease from public manifestations of such sympathy, and the fifth of which
was designed to make any who should violate the enactments of the first four
answerable to the Conference therefor, and subject to expulsion:
Resolved, 1st. That the safety and prosperity of a Church can only
be maintained by a solemn deference to its council and Discipline, as
legitimately determined and executed.
2nd. 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.
3rd. 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.
Having passed the foregoing resolutions, the Conference
proceeded to make them a test in examining the characters of the preachers.
The characters of such as would promise to be governed by the resolutions were
passed, while those who would not so promise were put on trial and expelled,
unless they chose to locate. Bishop Simpson presided over the Conference
session, and was reported as having given the test resolutions his emphatic
approval. Having passed these enactments, and that with the Bishop’s approval,
the Conference was now prepared for desperate measures in dealing with
“Nazarites” and “Nazaritism.” As to what those measures were to be, the sequel
will unfold.
Acting in harmony with the spirit of the test
resolutions the Bishop ordered a number of preachers who had come from other
Conferences to assist Mr. Purdy in his meetings to refrain from taking further
part in them. Some of them did as ordered; but the Rev. D. W. Thurston, a
Presiding Elder from the Cortland district of the Oneida Conference, still
continued to labor with Mr. Purdy as before. The Bishop called him before a
committee and admonished him, but the admonition was unheeded.
It was evident that the test resolutions had been
adopted as a convenient measure for bringing “Nazarite” preachers and their
sympathizers to punishment. Accordingly, under their operations, J. W. Reddy
and H. H. Farnsworth were located, while Loren Stiles, Jr., John A. Wells,
William Cooley and Charles D. Burlingham, refusing to submit to such
tyrannical rule as the Genesee Conference had assumed, were placed on trial
and expelled from the Conference and from the Church.
The following is a copy of the bill of charges
prosecuted against the Rev. Loren Stiles, Jr.:
I hereby charge Rev. L. Stiles, Jr.,
I. With falsehood.
In testifying in the case of B. T. Roberts, at
the session of our Conference held at Perry, October 6, 1858, that he did
not receive or read the proof sheet of a document printed at Brockport,
signed George 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.
II. With contumacy.
1. In receiving into his pulpit, and treating as a minister, an expelled
member from this Conference.
2. 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. WENTWOETH.
The first of these charges was evidently made as an
attempt to smirch his reputation and “blacken his character.” For lack of
evidence, however, it could not be sustained, and the majority were
constrained to vote him acquitted of that charge. Thus was he providentially
preserved from having the stain of falsehood put upon him by his enemies.
Regarding the prosecution of the second charge and
its specifications General Superintendent B. T. Roberts has left on record the
following, the truth of which has never been called in question so far as we
can ascertain:
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 defense 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 smaller 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 preacher’s 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 ? [1]
The Rev. Charles D. Burlingham was another who was
required to answer before this session of the Genesee Conference to a charge
of “Contumacy,” under which were three specifications, intended to sustain the
charge. The charges were preferred by the Rev. D. F. Parsons. Mr. Burlingham
prepared a paper and presented the same to the Conference as his defense
against his accusers. It was entitled, “A Statement by C. P. Burlingham to the
Gene-see Conference, responding to a charge and specifications, preferred
against him by Rev. D. F. Parsons.” The following extracts from it are
submitted as giving the best available light on the case:
BROCKPORT, October 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, November 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.
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. 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 hounds, and after receiving all the light then
accessible to me, I received him on trial. 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. lie appealed. The
quarterly conference, for some informality, sent the case back for a new
trial, lie 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 The fifth point, in connection with all the
others, furnishes evidence of net 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 can not 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 f or 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.
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.
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 Ransomville, 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 be at 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 Ransomvilie, 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. 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.
Does not the foregoing commend itself to the reader as
an admirable and complete defense? Does it not breathe the spirit of candor
and genuine piety, as well as of loyalty to the Church? Would not such a
statement have cleared him before any unprejudiced deliberative body, secular
or religious? And yet such was the state of things in the Genesee Conference
that his defense was listened to as an idle tale; and, having predetermined
him for judgment, and also having the votes with which to execute their
purpose, the majority voted him guilty, and then inflicted upon him the
severest punishment within their power—expulsion from the Conference and
from the Methodist Episcopal Church! How much further they might have gone
had the law permitted, can only be conjectured.
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