THE GENERAL CONFERENCE AND THE APPEALS FROM GENESEE—
CONTINUED
Of the various reviews of the General Conference
action on the appeal cases, none has more ably and fairly presented the case
than has the Rev. William Hosmer, who wrote and published the following, in
the Northern Independent:
The General Conference
assumes powers
which do not belong to It, when they make the right to have an appeal
heard depend upon anything the appellant has done since the decision from
which he appeals.
In doing this, they must first try the appellant
upon his general conduct since his trial from the decision on which he
appeals, in order to determine whether his appeal shall be entertained or
not! But the Discipline does not give the General Conference original
jurisdiction over any of the ministers except the Bishops. They have no more
right than Judge Lynch has to try a preacher unless his case comes before
them on an appeal, and then they must be confined to the testimony taken in
the lower court.
If the conduct of an expelled preacher pending
his appeal has not been correct, let him, if unjustly deposed, be restored,
and then he is responsible to his Conference for his actions while
suspended. The General Conference is authorized to try appeal cases, but not
preachers. For them to undertake to do that, is an unwarrantable and odious
assumption of power.
What does the right of appeal amount to, if the
security of its exercise depends upon the prejudice or caprice of a majority
of a committee!
The appeal of Mr. Roberts should have been
heard, because the majority was committed against him BEFORE ANY
COMPLAINT WAS MADE OR CHARGE PREFERRED.
There is nothing guarded with greater jealousy
by the common law, than the impartiality of juries. A person put on trial
before its tribunals may challenge all day “for cause.” Let it be shown that
the jury had, by any acts, committed themselves before the trial, and the
verdict would be set aside.
The necessity of an Impartial jury is as great
In ecclesiastical as in criminal trials—when character, as when life is at
stake. The credit of religion as well as the security of the individual,
demands no less. A verdict obtained by connivance, or by partisan
excitement, is none the more to be respected because it was rendered under
religious forms, by men professing godliness.
It is well known that at the time of these
trials, the Genesee Conference was divided into two parties ;—that this
partisan feeling, which has existed for years, was wrought up to the
greatest intensity—that at the Conference which instituted the first of
these trials, the party opposed to the appellant for the first time became a
majority, several of the opposite party having been transferred to other
Conferences—and that it was by this accidental, excited and thoroughly
partisan majority that Mr. Roberts was tried. This being the case, and the
trial resulting as it did, if there ever was an instance where the
corrective agency of an Appellate Court was needed, that case was the one
under consideration.
If there is any analogy between an
Ecclesiastical Court and a Civil Court, then the necessity was even greater
than we have stated, and so far from not entertaining the appeal, the Court
should have annulled the previous trial, and sent the case back for a new
investigation, If a trial was judged to be necessary. But, admitting the
validity of the action of the Court below, we see not how it was possible
for this Appellate Court to refuse to entertain the appeal. The hearing of
cases is not optional with such a Court—an appeal always lies if the party
appealing gives due notice of his intention, and Is on hand to prosecute his
claims. Not to entertain an appeal is, therefore, a palpable dereliction
from duty; and, in this instance, it was equivalent to saying that, so far
as these expelled brethren were concerned, there should be no Appellate
Court in the M. B. Church—thus practically annihilating one of the most
important branches of our judiciary, and rendering it forever impossible to
correct the errors of the Court below.
Well might the appellant stand aghast at such
treatment, and make his appeal to God and the people. The judicial
infatuation which has rendered it necessary to transfer this and other like
cases, from an earthly to a heavenly tribunal, we deplore, but cannot help.
The deed is done, and, with all its appalling consequences, the record must
go up to God. We have the satisfaction of knowing that we have not been awed
by authority, nor terrified by threats, into silence in the presence of such
wrongs. The senseless, shameless cry of “Nazanitism,” we fling back with the
hearty contempt which it merits. Those who indulge in this low style of
abuse, should remember that there are people in the world who are not afraid
of slang, and who will not desert the innocent because malice, for the
accomplishment of its own purposes, heaps upon them disparaging epithets. To
defend the injured should be regarded as a virtue, not as a crime; and
whatever the meaning or the madness of persecution may inflict, we had far
rather share it with the oppressed, than betray them to the clutches of a
relentless tyranny.
Brave words of a brave man! When half a century and
more has passed since the events to which they refer occurred, any man may
utter his sense of righteous indignation at such travesties on justice in the
name of Christianity, and display no very great moral heroism in doing so. But
in those days, and under those conditions, to have written as William Hosmer
did, in registration of his protest against the crooked administration of the
Genesee Conference and the unrighteous support of that administration by the
General Conference, required and exhibited a degree of moral courage which
should class him with the Reformers of the sixteenth century for moral courage
and noble doing.
We have already seen that the General Conference
made an exception in the case of the Rev. C. D. Burlingham, and entertained
his appeal. The final action of that body in his case, however, was such an
insult to justice and common sense as to merit universal condemnation. The
case was remanded for a new trial. Mr. Burlingham admitted, on his trial, the
facts alleged in the bill of charges, but pleaded certain other facts in
justification of his conduct. Thus, it will be seen, the General Conference
took no action regarding the merits of his appeal, but dodged the issue by
sending it back for a new trial, when there was absolutely nothing to try!
Here again we quote the editorial comments of the Northern Independent as
apropos to the situation:
That the Court of Appeals, constituted by the
last General Conference, did not do its work so as to secure either divine
or human respect, is a conclusion forced upon us by every view we have been
able to take of the subject. Gladly would we pass by these judicial
proceedings without further notice, if it were allowable, but they are of
too serious a character, and will be found too far reaching in their
consequences, to admit of silent acquiescence. Ecclesiastical Courts are not
famous for liberality and justice, but we believe the Courts of Methodism
have not generally sunk to the level indicated by the trial of these
appeals.
First in order, was the case of Rev. C. D.
Burlingham. He was expelled from the Genesee Conference, and from the M. B.
Church, for doing three things:
1st. Admitting B. T. Roberts into the Church on trial.
2nd. Licensing him to exhort.
3rd. Officiating with expelled preachers at a General Quarterly Meeting
held in a Wesleyan Church, at the same time that his Presiding Elder was
holding a regular Quarterly Meeting in the same charge, about three miles
distant. Mr. Burlingham admitted the facts alleged, but pleaded other facts
in justification.
These were the only offenses with which Mr.
Burlingham was charged.
After his expulsion, he waited silently for the
General Conference. He did not preach, nor lecture, nor exhort—did not
attend meetings held by expelled preachers—but did penance up to the
session of the General Conference. He should have been restored on the
ground of having expiated his guilt, if he were guilty of any ordinary
offense, if on no other. When his appeal came up, Mr. Fuller, who has been
chief prosecutor in all these trials, challenged several of the committee
who had manifested a desire to have Genesee Conference matters fairly
investigated. Though the General Conference, in constituting the committee,
or Court of Appeals, had given to parties the right to challenge for
cause, yet Mr. Fuller, after the first instance, was not required to
give cause, but challenged as many as he chose, and they were set
aside. He simply said of the challenged, that “he considered them
prejudiced.”
Mr. Olin, of the Oneida Conference, managed the
case for Mr. Burlingham with consummate tact, and great ability. His plea
was a masterly effort, and carried conviction to the minds, we believe, of
all who heard it, except the committee. They sent the case back to the
Genesee Conference for a new trial. This we regard as a remarkable
decision. Neither party asked for it. We never heard before of a case being
remanded for a new trial, unless there was some alleged informality in the
Court below, or defect in the record, or unless one on the other of the
parties claimed to have new testimony which could not be introduced into the
first trial. But nothing of the kind was intimated in this case. There can
he no new testimony, for Mr. Burlingham admitted nil the facts with which he
was charged.
Do these facts, mentioned above, constitute a
crime, for which an able minister, of spotless reputation, who has served
the Church for over twenty years, devoting the vigor of his manhood’s prime,
in self-sacrificing efforts to promote her interests, should be expelled?
Then let the General Conference say so, that all who henceforth enter the
Methodist ministry, may understand that they are expected to lay their
manhood in the dust, part with the right of private judgment, and yield a
servile, unquestioning obedience to all the behests of their ecclesiastical
superiors.
Was Mr. Burlingham, through party malignity,
treated unjustly? Was he wrongfully deposed from the ministry, and excluded
from the Church? Then the General Conference should have restored him. This
was due to him; it was due to outraged justice—it was due to the M. B.
Church, whose Discipline, confusedly more susceptible of abuse than that of
any other Church in this country, has been used for the purpose of
inflicting ecclesiastical oppression without a parallel in the nineteenth
century.
But the General Conference, through its
committee, on Court of Appeals, after gravely listening to the testimony and
pleadings, sent the case back for a new trial, without a motion to that
effect, from either panty. What, we ask, is there to try? There can
be no issue on the facts—these are admitted.
But Mr. Burlingham contends that these facts do
not constitute a crime for which he should be deposed from the ministry, and
excluded from the Church.
The Genesee Conference has said that they do.
Here is the issue—who shall decide? The Discipline vests the power in the
General Conference—the body to try appeals. The case was properly brought
before them, and they have sent it back, for the Genesee Conference to
decide over again. What an absurd decision! What an insult to Mr. Burlingham,
and to common sense! Suppose the views of law and justice entertained by the
Genesee Conference remain unchanged, and the same sentence be again
pronounced against Mr. Burlingham, and he again appeals. After waiting four
years for another General Conference, if he still survives, there will not
only be the same reason for sending the case back for a new trial as now,
but the additional one of precedent. Thus, this mockery of justice may
continue ad infinitem.
This looks more like the tiger playing with the
victim he Intends to devour, than like a body of Christian ministers, bound
by every consideration that can influence to right action, to “judge
righteous judgment.”
Another fact is worthy of especial notice.
Though the decision in the case was not asked for in Court by either
party, yet it is precisely what partisans of the Regency I)arty of the
Genesee Conference have been endeavoring for months to persuade Mr.
Burlingham to consent to. These efforts were continued up to the morning of
the day on which the appeal was heard. Yet neither in their pleadings, non
at any time while the appeal was being heard, did the counsel for the
Conference signify their wish that the case might be remanded for a new
trial. At whose suggestion was It done? When was the suggestion made? Was
there any collusion in the matter? It is impossible for us to answer these
questions. View it in whatever light you may, the whole case has a dank and
suspicious aspect.
Perhaps some clue to an explanation of the
strange proceedings in relation to the Genesee Conference appeal cases may
be found in the action had upon the slavery question.
The Genesee Conference has heretofore been one
of the strongest anti-slavery Conferences in the connection. The proscribed
party have, from the first, been uncompromising in their hostility to
slavery in the Church and in the State.
The Genesee delegates to the late General
Conference were once regarded as anti-slavery; what they are now their votes
will show. We asserted last fall that the Conference had become pro-slavery,
and gave as proof the fact, that while it condemned this paper, it refused
to take any action against slavery. The truth of our inference was denied by
some, but the recent course of their delegates has made our words good. When
the important question was decided In the General Conference upon a change
of Constitution, so as to prohibit slave-holding in the Church, the
delegates of the Genesee Conference voted against a change, and their
vote turned the scale. And when the Genesee Conference matters came up,
the border pro-slavery delegates voted solid with the representatives of
the majority of the Genesee Conference. This may be nfl fair. It may be
that men who, four years ago took the stump to keep slavery out of the
territories, have suddenly become convinced that it should be nestled and
fostered in the bosom of the Church! We should like to know by what
arguments they were converted, and when it was done! Was this a part of a
scheme to keep slaveholders in the Church? Did the border delegates
understand that if they voted as desired by the Genesee delegates, they
would reciprocate the favor, and assist them in their extremity? Or did this
strange coincidence come about by chance?”
If the foregoing comments appear to be somewhat
caustic, we ask, Does not the case deserve the stinging rebuke therein given?
Could timidity and tameness be more out of place anywhere than in an editorial
review of such action on the part of a General Conference? Were not those
brave words of the Northern Independent worthy of general commendation?
And were not the men who dared to speak and write thus plainly in defense of
righteousness, and in condemnation of wrong, even though that condemnation was
necessarily a reflection upon the Church and likely to incur ecclesiastical
wrath, the salt that preserved the Church itself from moral putrefaction?
The question will naturally arise, What were the
reasons why the General Conference took such unwarrantable action in dealing
with the appeal cases. This question has been so clearly answered in “Why
Another Sect ?“ that we reproduce the answers here:
1. The charge of doing any specified wrong Is not met by claiming or
conceding general respectability for the body which did it. The Congress
which passed the Fugitive Slave Law was a highly respectable body. President
Fillmore, who signed It, was a highly respectable man. Yet that law made
every free man at the North liable to become a slave-hunter or a
law-breaker.
2. This General Conference had in it a large number of Masons and
Odd-Fellows. When it is known beforehand that the Secret Society question is
to be made an issue it Is an easy thing for those belonging to these
societies in the various Conferences of the M. E. Church to send an
unusually large proportion of their friends to a General Conference.
3. In the Discipline of the Id. E. Church are important rules which the
preachers not only openly disregard, but teach the people to disregard. On
dress, their rule forbids “the putting on of gold and costly apparel ;“—in
practice they generally put on both,—of ten beyond their means,—and many
preachers defend the practice. In Church building, the rule required them to
be plain and cheap ;—the practice was to build as expensively as credit,—
and means not infrequently obtained by pew-selling and Church-gambling,
would permit. The result of “holding the truth in unrighteousness” is the
demoralization of the conscience. The law of present expediency comes to be
the rule of conduct. Policy takes the place of conscience.
4. The General Conference at Buffalo was held just before the breaking
out of the Civil War. The Nation and the Church were greatly agitated on the
Slavery question. With many, it was the great question before the General
Conference of 1860. The Genesee Conference had for years been classed as a
radical Abolitionist Conference. The Baltimore Conference was considered on
the point of religious experience committed to old-fashioned Methodism, but
was at the same time the champion of the slaveholders in the M. B. Church.
At the General Conference at Buffalo, the delegates from Baltimore and the
delegates from Genesee, when these issues came up, talked and voted lovingly
together. Herod and Pilate became friends. Baltimore helped Genesee to
dispose of the “Nazarites ;“ and Genesee helped Baltimore to substitute for
the rule against slaveholding, some good, but powerless advice. We do
not say there was any bargain to this effect—we have no proof of
it—but we do not believe that at that late day the Genesee delegates were
really converted to pro-slavery doctrines. Nor do we believe that the border
delegates were converted to the religious theories of the Genesee delegates.
They still invite Fay H. Purdy, who was called the ring-leader of “the sect
called Nazarites,” to labor in that section.
The appeal cases were referred to a committee.
Thomas Carl-ton had visited the Conferences as book agent, and was
acquainted with the delegates generally. That he could exercise an
influence in the selection of the Committee of Appeals is easily seen. That
he would not scruple to do it is evident from the case mentioned by Dr.
Bowen, in which Thomas Carlton bore a prominent part, as counsel for a
so-called Regency preacher, accused by one of the members of the Church of
gross, intentional dishonesty. Before the trial commenced, Mr. Carlton had
the parties agree to abide by the decision of the arbitrators. Each party
was to choose two, and the four were to choose the fifth. Mr. Canton
selected two preachers; the other party, two highly respectable laymen. They
could not agree upon the fifth. At length Mr. Carlton suddenly remembered
that he had seen on the hotel register (it was at Niagara Falls), the name
of a preacher from New York. He would help them out. All agreed upon him.
The case was heard and the preachers gave a most unrighteous verdict against
the laymen. This fifth man was afterwards found out to be Thomas Canton’s
brother-in-law, whom he had brought there on purpose.
Of the truth of what is here affirmed there can
be no question. Yet, in that case there was nothing like the inducement to
unfairness that there was in the cases appealed from the decision of the
Genesee Conference.
In the absence of any other solution of the problem,
the foregoing furnishes a key to its solution. At all events it is evident
that the delegates from Genesee were afraid to have the appeals come before
the General Conference for a hearing. It is also equally evident that no stone
was left unturned by them to defeat their entertainment, as also the measures
by which it was sought to have a full and impartial review of the Genesee
Conference difficulties with a view to correcting the administration by which
so many worthy members had been unjustly proscribed. Moreover, judging from
their past record, are we not warranted in believing that those same delegates
resorted to most unrighteous measures for the accomplishment of their ends,
whereby the majority of the General Conference were influenced, either
wittingly or unwittingly, to unite in such action as can by no means be
justified?
It will readily be seen that the slavery question
must have figured largely in the final determination of the appeal cases. It
should not have done so, but it did. As touching the far-reaching effect of
this action of the General Conference of 1860 on the slavery question, the American Wesleyan
of March 27, 1861, contained the following eminently
pertinent criticism:
OFFICIAL EXPOSITION OF LAW.
In the Baltimore Conference, recently in
session, the following questions were proposed to Bishop Scott, and answered
by him. We are glad that after so much evasion as has filled up the history
of the M. E. Church upon the anti-slavery attitude of this body, we are at
last in possession of an official decision, too plain to be misunderstood.
Here are the points—look at them! A slaveholder can be admitted a member of
the Church, ordained, and hold slaves for gain, and there is no
Discipline in the Church by which to arraign him, or object to him. Can
anything be more abhorrently plain than this?
The following questions were presented to the
chair, and promptly answered:
1. Is there anything in the Discipline which, in your judgment, would be
a bar to the ordination of a local preacher holding slaves? Answer—No.
2. Anything in the Discipline which, in your judgment, would operate
against the admission of a slaveholder into the Church? Answer—No.
3. Anything in the Discipline that would justify an administrator in
arraigning a slaveholder? Answer—No.
4. Is there any process authorized in the Discipline by which a member
can be brought to trial who holds slaves for gain? Answer—I know of no such
process.
Corrupt as was the action of the General Conference
regarding these cases, God in His wise providence overruled it for good in the
end, causing to issue therefrom a stream of “living waters”—a river whose
onward flow should broaden, deepen, increase its momentum and bless the world
to the end of time. “The so-called ‘Nazarites,’ who never thought of a
separate existence before, now losing all hope of reconciliation with the old
Church, resolved upon an independent organization. They felt they were shut
out from all sympathy on the part of a Church which had thrust many from her
bosom—their leaders in particular—with such illegal and malignant violence;
and that they had no alternative left them but to provide for themselves.” [1]
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