THE SECOND LAYMEN’S CONVENTION
The second Annual Laymen’s Convention was held,
pursuant to call, in the Baptist Church at Albion, N. Y., November 1 and 2,
1859. At the permanent organization the Hon. Abner I. Wood was reelected
president; George W. Holmes, John Billings, Jonathan Handly, Edward P. Cox and
S. C. Springer were chosen as vice-presidents; and S. K. J. Chesbrough,
Stephen S. Rice, William Hart and Thomas Sully were chosen secretaries.
The following was adopted as the Declaration in
part of the Convention:
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 have 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 offenses 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 emphatically: “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 anywhere 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
quietly to acquiesce in such decisions. It is urged that we must respect the
action of the Church. But what is the Church? Our XIIIth 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 expulsion, 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 peaceable 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 It. 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, creates 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 authorities therein quoted.
In connection with the foregoing, and as a part of its
Declaration, the Convention adopted eleven resolutions. The first of these,
which was adopted unanimously, expressed the utmost confidence in the expelled
preachers, commending them to the confidence and sympathy of the children of
God wherever they might go.
The second affirmed their adherence to the
doctrines and usages of Methodism, but also declared their unwillingness to
recognize the oppressive policy of the “Regency” faction in the Genesee
Conference as the action of the Church, and their refusal to submit to the
same.
Resolution 3 recommended that all the preachers
who had been expelled, and also the two who were located under the test
resolutions at the Brockport Conference, “continue to labor for the promotion
of the work of God and the salvation of souls, by preaching, exhorting,
visiting and praying as they have opportunity,” and assuring them that, “while
they shall thus devote themselves to the work of the ministry, we will
cheerfully use our means and influence for their support.”
Resolutions 4, 5, and 6 provided for the
districting of the work, gathering those who had been unjustly deprived of
their Church home into Bands, in order to keep them from being scattered and
so lost to the Church, and for regular collections from the various Bands a~ a
means of securing adequate support for the brethren in the ministry.
The seventh resolution set forth the determination
of the lay brethren to refuse their support to any member of Genesee
Conference who assisted, either by his vote or influence, in the expulsion of
the preachers charged with “contumacy,” except upon “contrition, confession
and satisfactory reformation.”
The eighth had to do with repudiating the course
of certain preachers whose action out of the pulpit was regarded as
inconsistent with their utterances from the pulpit; while Resolution 9
declared against the five test resolutions of the Brockport Conference as
“anti-Methodistic and Popish, the merest ecclesiastical tyranny,” and
recommended “that the preachers remaining in the Conference, who have the work
of God at heart, repudiate in theory and practice the aforesaid resolutions.”
Resolutions 10 and 11 provided for memorializing
the General Conference to the effect that that body should set aside the
action of the Genesee Conference in the alleged cases of “contumacy,” and
restore the six expelled preachers to their former Conference and Church
relation.
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