THE FREE METHODIST CHURCH ORGANIZED
We have already seen the important part the
Laymen’s Conventions played in those providential steps which prepared the way
for the formation of the Free Methodist Church. The Laymen also were largely
instrumental in its final organization. The Rev. A. A. Phelps, who was present
and participated in the proceedings, has given the following brief account:
“In accordance with the provisions of the last
Laymen’s Convention, a Delegated Convention was called at Pekin, Niagara
County, N. Y., August 23rd, 1860, to confer as to the best mode of extending
the work which God had so graciously begun among them. The Convention was
called to order, and opened with devotional exercises. Isaac M. Chesbrough, of
Pekin, was elected Chairman, and Rev. A. A. Phelps, Secretary. The body, duly
organized, was composed of sixty members—fifteen preachers, and forty-five
laymen. [B. T. Roberts, in an editorial account of the Convention in the Earnest Christian, gives the number as “eighty laymen and fifteen
preachers”— W. T. H.] Most of the business was transacted on the camp-ground—a
spot newly consecrated by the outpouring of God’s Spirit and the salvation of
precious souls. The deliberations of the Convention resulted in the
organization of the Free Methodist Church, and the adoption of their first
Discipline. [1]
The call for this Convention read as follows:
A Convention will be held at Pekin, for the
purpose of adopting a Discipline for the Free Methodist Church, to commence
at the close of the camp-meeting, August 23rd. All Societies and Bands that
find it necessary, in order to promote the prosperity and permanency of the
work of holiness, to organize a Free Methodist Church on the following
basis, are invited to send delegates:
1. Doctrines and usages of primitive Methodism, such as the witness of
the Spirit, entire sanctification as a state of grace distinct from
justification, attainable instantly by faith; free seats, congregational
singing, without instrumental music in all cases; plainness of dress.
2. An equal representation of ministers and laymen in all the councils of
the Church.
3. No slaveholding and no connection with secret, oath-bound societies.
Each Society or Band will be entitled to send
one delegate at least, and an additional one for every forty members.
There were grave doubts in the minds of some who
participated in this Convention as to the expediency of proceeding to organize
a new Church at that time. The matter was freely discussed, however, after
which a considerable majority voted in favor of proceeding with the work of
organization. The Rev. S. K. J. Chesbrough, who had hitherto taken a prominent
part in the Laymen’s Conventions, has expressed his attitude at that time in
the following statement:
“At the time of the Convention I was not clear in
my own mind that the time had come for us to organize, and, therefore, I
refused to be a delegate to that Convention. I took no part whatever in the
proceedings. In fact, I was not present at the Convention on the camp-ground.
All I remember of it is this: Before the Convention was called, B. T. Roberts
and several others—I can not remember distinctly who they were, but they were
the principal preachers and laymen who were active in the matter— came
together under an apple tree right back of our kitchen. I sat in the kitchen
door looking at them. They were nearly all seated on the grass under the tree,
and it was voted that they proceed to organize the Church. They then arose and
went over into the grove, where the Convention was held and the child was born
and named. This will account for my want of recollection in the matter. It was
but a little while afterward that I felt the wisdom of the brethren was better
than mine, and I joined the organization in a few weeks. [2]
Elsewhere Mr. Chesbrough says: “I well remember
the Sunday after the organization, when my wife and eighteen others answered
the questions in the Discipline, which Brother Roberts had written on a piece
of paper, and formed the first Free Methodist class ever formed under the
Discipline.”
A further account of the differences of opinion
existing between brethren at this Convention regarding the expediency of
proceeding to organize at that time, and as to the result as well, has been
given by the Rev. M. N. Downing, who was present, but who finished his earthly
course in 1913. Mr. Downing says:
I was a delegate to the Convention at which the
Discipline was decided upon at Pekin, N. 31. At this Convention Rev. Joseph
McCreery, W. Cooley, Alanson Reddy, and, I think, a Rev. Mr. Farnsworth, and
several laymen opposed the immediate organization of a new denomination, on
the ground, as they believed, that It would be premature; but it would come
[later] in a greater swarm from the M. E. Church. They would in the meantime
substitute Bands.
Dr. Redfleld was present to represent the West.
He arose and said, “Brethren, when fruit is ripe, it had better be picked,
lest on falling it bruise. In the West we are ready for an organization. If
in the East you are not ready, wait until you are.” Mr. Roberts arose and
remarked: “We are ready, and the West and the East should move in the matter
simultaneously.” The majority prevailed, and the organization was effected,
taking the name, The Free Methodist Church.
The minority withdrew, and were after that known
as the Nazarite faction of the salvation movement, though the name Nazarite
was well known among us before that crisis came. [The author understands
that those who withdrew chose to accept the name, “Nazarite Bands”.]
The Nazarite faction went to seed completely at a camp-meeting in East
Shelby, N. Y. Rev. W. Cooley and wife were at this meeting, and seeing the
fanaticism in some of its wildest features coming in, fled to the Free
Methodist Church for refuge, and were useful workers therein. Afterwards
Brother McCreery joined on probation; but never seemed to be fully in
sympathy with the Church.
Brother L. Stiles desired a clause inserted in
the Discipline favoring a gradualistic as well as the instantaneous view of
entire sanctification. Dr. Redfield arose and remarked substantially as
follows: “Brethren, I would not make a threat, but unless we go straight on
the question of holiness in the Discipline, we had better halt where we are.
The gradualistic theory is what has made so much mischief. We are John
Wesleyan Methodists. We must not dodge that point.” This view prevailed.
The organization of the Free Methodist Church having
been effected, the Convention proceeded to elect the Rev. B. T. Roberts as
General Superintendent of the same. The following from his private journal is
of interest, because of certain light which it throws on the proceedings in
addition to the statements in the foregoing quotations:
August 23rd, 1860.—Convention at Pekin to form a
Free Methodist Church. There were present delegates from Genesee Conference:
one, Daniel Lloyd, from St. Louis, and Dr. Redfield, from the West. Rev. J.
McCreery was very much opposed to forming a close organization of a Church.
He said that many of the sheep in the Methodist fold had been so starved by
the Regency preachers that they were unable to jump the fence, and he wished
to remain in a position where he could salt them through the rails. Brother
William Cooley was also opposed to organizing a formal Church; but a
majority of the delegates thought that the interests of the cause of God
required an organization. The vote stood forty-five for organizing and seven
against it. I felt, for the following reasons, that it was best to organize
a Church:
1st. We had been—six preachers of us—wickedly
expelled from the M. B. Church, and two other preachers had been located In
the same way. Many pious members had been expelled and read out for
sympathizing with us. The General Conference, though petitioned by fifteen
hundred members, refused to grant us any redress, or even to investigate our
grievances.
A. W., who was expelled for licentious conduct
with several young ladies, was restored by the same General Conference,
though his character for fourteen years at least has been regarded as bad.
In nearly every place in which he has preached within that time similar
reports of licentious conduct have followed him.
Mr. -------- , of New York East Conference, who
admitted that the husband of one of his members—coming home unexpectedly—
found him hid away under the bed, and the brother’s wife was in the room,
was also restored. But the General Conference would not hear our appeals.
A memorial stating our grievances was presented
to them, but was not, as far as we can ascertain, even read. This memorial
was signed by Rev. Asa Abell, John P. Kent, and other members of Genesee
Conference.
2nd. The M. E. Church has gone so far from its
original position, and has become so involved In formalism, secret-society
influence and pro-slaveryism that there is no hope of its recovery.
3rd. There is no existing Church that makes the
salvation of souls its prominent and main work. We had to form a new Church
or live outside of any and have no place to put those that God converts
through our instrumentality.
The form of Discipline which I had prepared
under, as I believe, the influence of God’s Spirit, was adopted with but
slight alterations. I proposed to have a Standing Committee who should have
the general oversight of all the interests of the Church. But the Convention
judged best to have a General Superintendent. To my surprise the choice fell
on me. Lord, give me heavenly wisdom to guide me! It was a heavy cross to
accept the appointment, but I did not dare to decline, because of the
conviction that God called me to this labor and reproach and responsibility.
Yet, oh, to what calumny it will subject me! Lord, I will take the cross and
the shame. Let me have Thy presence and help, O God of power. [3]
Had Mr. Roberts’s proposition for a Standing Committee
to supervise the affairs of the Church at large prevailed, doubtless the
history of the Free Methodist Church would have been very different from what
it has been, in various particulars. He appears to have been thoroughly
convinced at last that the decision of the Convention was wisely made.
From the foregoing chapter it appears that, for a
year or two prior to the General Conference, those members who were “read out”
or expelled from the Methodist Episcopal Church because of their sympathy with
the proscribed ministers, had been forming themselves into either Bands or
independent Churches. Bands were formed in numerous places, and Churches had
been organized at Albion, New York, St. Charles, Illinois, St. Louis,
Missouri, and possibly at two or three other places. These persecuted ones,
excluded from the Church they so dearly loved, were passing through a
transition state, as to Church membership, though TO what they did not know.
They went forth cheerfully “without the camp, bearing His {Christ’s] reproach
;“ and, having no surety of an abiding Church home, they became fond of
referring to themselves as “Pilgrims,” a name quite common among them, even in
their denominational capacity, to this day. The organization of these small
societies seems to have been providentially ordered, as well for their own
preservation in unity, as for the better advantages it gave them to labor
effectively for the salvation of others, and for the general promotion of the
work of God.
Those who formed independent Churches took to
themselves various names, but into several of these the words Free Methodist
Church entered. As to who originated this name we have been unable to
ascertain. The reader will recall, however, that the little society which Mr.
Roberts found in Buffalo, N. Y., after his expulsion, worshiping in a building
on Thirteenth street, the use of which was granted them by a Congregational
brother, was then known as the Free Methodist Episcopal Church. It was a
Church in which the seats were all free, and which stood for freedom in
several other respects. Presumably the name Free Methodist Church is an
adaptation from that of the Buffalo Free Methodist Episcopal Church, the word
Episcopal being omitted, because of the Democratic rather than the Episcopal
form of government having been adopted. Mr. Stiles had also organized a
Congregational Free Methodist Church at Albion, New York, a year or two before
the new denomination was formed. Two hundred members of the Methodist
Episcopal Church followed him into the new organization.
As finally characterizing the new denomination the
name, Free Methodist Church, is significant. In the first place, the term
Church indicates that this people from the beginning believed in Church
organization, and were no mere anti-sect society, reform organization, or
holiness association. They were organized as a permanent branch of the Church
militant, and proposed, so far as possible, to honor both the name Church and
that for which it stands.
Then the name Methodist was assumed because they
claimed to be Methodists—of the original type—in doctrine, usages, experience
and practice. They were and are John Wesley Methodists.
Finally, as to the prefix Free, it signified
freedom from ‘(Episcopal domination, from which they had suffered in the
Church which cast them out; freedom from Lodge rule or interference, which had
wrought so disastrously in the troubles which led to their expulsion; freedom
from those discriminations in favor of the wealthy and aristocratic in the
house of God, which are engendered .by. the renting or sale of pews; the
freedom of the Spirit in personal experience, accompanied by freedom on the
part of all, in the public worship of God, to give such outward expression to
deep religious emotion as the Holy Spirit may inspire or prompt.
A little over a year after Mr. Stiles organized
his Church at Albion, New York, the Rev. C. D. Brooks withdrew from the
Genesee Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and one hundred sixty of
his members with him. Later they united with the Free Methodist Church. This
was the largest number that ever joined the Free Methodist Church at one time
except when Mr. Stiles and his newly organized Church united in a body.
Since next to the foregoing paragraph was written
the following letter has been received from Mr. Brooks, which throws
additional light on the origin of the name Free Methodist Church:
GENEVA, N. Y., May 19, 1913.
DEAR BROTHER:
I have been thinking lately that I ought to
write you, and mention a matter of fact about the organization of the Free
Methodist Church. As I suppose you purpose to bring out a history of our
Church, you may wish to give the item of which I now write you.
I am now nearly eighty-eight years of age, and
the only mister still living of the old Genesee Conference of the M. E.
Church, who passed through those unrighteous trials that prepared the way
for the organization of the Church that is still doing faithful work and
seeing many souls clearly saved every year.
Now for the item, the name given, etc. The
second year of expulsions, at Brockport, in 1859, Rev. Loren Stiles was the
first one of the four that was excluded. In fact one hour after the Masonic
party of the Conference voted him out of the Conference and membership of
the Church, that noble man, of precious memory proclaimed publicly, with
great emphasis, “I’ll take my appeal to God and the people.” He soon left
and went back to Albion, where he had been pastor two years. I then fore-saw
that he would probably organize a new Church; and after thinking the matter
over for a day or two, I wrote him, in case he organized a new Church, a
good name for It would be
THE FREE METHODIST CHURCH
And I further suggested that I hoped the
position of the new Church would embody the following principles, viz.:
Free from slavery,
Free from secret societies,
Free seats In all Churches.
Free from the outward ornaments of pride, and
Free in Christ.
I soon learned that Brother Stiles at once
organized a new Church in Albion, and nearly 200 people joined it, and that
the name and principles were indorsed, as I had given them.
And, further, when nearly a year later, in 1860,
at Pekin, N. 1., the general Church was organized, August 23, the same name
and principles were embodied in the Discipline of the Church; and one
chapter of the Discipline, as adopted at Pekin, was in my handwriting,
though I was still a member of the Genesee Conference of the M. E. Church.
Perhaps you had never previously known that your
humble servant had such a share In shaping things in those strenuous times.
Your fellow-laborer of many battles during the
fifty years past, still after souls,
C. D. Brooks.
No sooner was the infant organization born and
christened than the scattered remnants of Methodism—scattered by the hand of
ecclesiastical tyranny and despotism —began to turn toward the new church as a
place of refuge from oppression, and as an organization specially committed to
the work for which John Wesley said the early Methodist societies were raised
up—”to spread Scriptural holiness over these lands.” One after another the
Bands, Societies, and Churches which had been organized here and there as a
temporary expedient, united with the new denomination by the adoption of its
Discipline, no longer to be mere fragmentary and isolated groups, but
societies of a regularly constituted Christian Church, united in one body,
laboring together for the advancement of the kingdom of God under one and the
same ecclesiastical organization.
The Discipline adopted was based largely on the
Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church. All but four of its “Articles of
Religion” were adopted. Articles xiv., xix., xxi. and xxiii. were
appropriately omitted, and two others were added—one on “Entire
Sanctification,” and the other on “Future Rewards and Punishments.”
As the M. E. Church borrowed her “Articles of
Religion,” in the main, from the Church of England, which had so lately
broken away from Romanism, says Dr. Bowen, It is not strange that she should
have guarded against the errors of Popery, in imitation of the mother-creed,
by retaining the “Articles” on “Purgatory,” “Works of Supererogation,” the
“Marriage of Ministers,” and the like; but who is not surprised that she
should have omitted to introduce the doctrine of “entire sanctification,”
and of “future rewards and punishments,” which she has always at least until
lately, deemed fundamental? These doctrines, so clearly taught in the
standards of the Old Church, and made to enter into the confession of her
ministers—the former especially—upon their admission into full connection,
the Free Methodist Church has most appropriately incorporated into her
creed—her life and teaching eminently corresponding thereto. [4]
The Free Methodist Church also at its organization
adopted the “General Rules” of the parent denomination unmodified, except
that, where the Rule on slavery in the Methodist Episcopal Discipline was
absurdly ambiguous, the Rule on the subject in the Free Methodist Discipline
distinctly forbade “The buying, selling, or holding of a human being as a
slave.” This it should be remembered was adopted while American slavery was
still in existence. “The ‘Rule,’ as adopted by the Free Church, is too full
and explicit in language to be evaded in any way; and is, in fine, as it was
intended to be, the very synonym of anti-slaveryism in all its moods and
tenses.”
At an early period following its organization, the
Free Methodist Church also modified the rule against “softness and needless
self-indulgence” by the addition of a clause making it apply especially to
“the use of tobacco for the gratification of a depraved appetite ;“ and at a
still later period it was again further modified so as to make it forbid “the
growth, sale or manufacture” of the commodity.
Another feature of the Discipline of the new
Church which differentiated it from that of the parent Church was that of the
conditions of membership. Persons have always been received on probation in
the Methodist Episcopal Church on profession of “a desire to flee from the
wrath to come.” As a result vast multitudes have thus entered the probationary
relation who, if they ever had such a desire, failed to manifest it for any
length of time by keeping the General Rules and pressing on until thoroughly
converted; but at the expiration of their probationary period they have been
recommended for membership in full connection, and accordingly received. In
this way the Church has become largely filled with unconverted members—with
those who are as much in love with worldliness and sin as they ever were, who
ignore the restraints of ecclesiastical rules, and propose to have their fill
of pleasure at the card-table, in the ball-room, at the theater, or wherever
else they please, and in any and all kinds of worldly-conformity that is to
their liking.
Warned by this, the Free Methodist Church from the
beginning has received persons on probation only upon their giving affirmative
answers to the following questions: 1. “Have you the assurance of sins
forgiven?” 2. “Do you consent to be governed by our General Rules ?“
The object has been to keep unconverted persons
from becoming members of the Church. Unless the bars are kept up at this
point, there is every likelihood that sooner or later some of the Churches, if
not the Church at large, will fall entirely under the control of unsaved men,
and be conducted merely as clubs or social centers, with little or no regard
to spiritual things. Who of us have not seen the practical out-working of this
principle repeatedly in those bodies which receive probationers on a mere
profession of “desire to flee from the wrath to come”?
It may be asked, however, “Did not Mr. Wesley
receive persons on probation on this condition ?“ We answer, Yes, into his
“United Societies,” but not into the Church. The “societies” of early
Methodism did not compose a Church, in the technical sense, but were
“societies” within the national Church, designed to help such as were
desirous of escaping the wrath of God in finding peace and assurance, and then
to build them up in that “holiness without which no man shall see the Lord.”
Mr. Wesley did not recognize the Methodism of his time as a Church, but simply
as a union of “societies” within the Church of England, in which he himself
was a regularly ordained priest, and from which he never separated. Nor did
the Methodist “societies” separate from the Church of England until some time
after Mr. Wesley’s death. It should also be borne in mind that those who
continued in these societies under Mr. Wesley’s superintendency were expected and required
to keep the General Rules as an evidence of their
desire to “flee from the wrath to come.” Under this régime they either
experienced genuine conversion, or soon ceased from their relation to the
Methodist “societies.”
Members were to be received into full connection
in the Free Methodist Church only upon giving affirmative answers to the
following questions, and upon consent of at least three-fourths of all the
members present at a society meeting:
1. Have you the witness of the Spirit that you are a child of God?
2. Have you that perfect love which casteth out fear? If not, will you
diligently seek until you obtain it?
3. Is it your purpose to devote yourself the remainder of your life
wholly to the service of God, doing good to your fellow men, and working out
your own salvation with fear and trembling?
4. Will you forever lay aside all superfluous ornaments, and adorn
yourself in modest apparel, with shamefacedness and so-briety, not with
broidered hair, or gold, or pearls, or costly array, but, which becometh
those professing godliness, with good works?
5. Will you abstain from connection with all secret societies, keeping
yourself free to follow the will of the Lord in all things?
6. Do you subscribe to our articles of religion, our General Rules, and
our Discipline, and are you willing to be governed by the same?
7. Have you Christian fellowship and love for the members of this
society, and will you assist them, as God shall give you ability, in
carrying on the work of the Lord?
It will be seen from the foregoing that candidates for
full membership in the Free Methodist Church must publicly declare that they
have the witness of the Spirit to the fact of sonship in the family of God;
that they have experienced perfect love, or entire sanctification, or will
diligently seek until they do experience it; that they will conform to the
apostolic advice regarding dress; and that they will abstain from connection
with all secret societies; four things not substantially covered by the
conditions of membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church.
It was venturing much for the infant Church to
erect such a standard of membership, and such a course would never have been
dictated by worldly policy. Those who were instrumental in starting the new
movement were led to the adoption of such measures by the things they had seen
and experienced under the more liberal policy of the mother Church. They had
learned much by the things they had suffered. The wisdom of their measures was
problematical at the time, and multitudes there are who question the saneness
of such a policy to-day. For fifty-five years, however, the Free Methodist
Church has maintained this standard in the face of fearful odds, and though
her growth has been slow, it has been constant, and her influence for good has
extended in manifold ways far beyond her own pale, having been largely felt by
practically all ecclesiastical bodies in the country.
The following editorial
resumé of the
doings of the Convention at which the Free Methodist Church was organized, and
which appeared in the Earnest Christian of September, 1860, shows that
the adoption of a Discipline was not inconsiderately done, and also furnishes
some of the reasons that determined the brethren in favor of some of the new
provisions adopted:
About eighty laymen and fifteen preachers met in
Convention, at Pekin, Niagara County, N. Y., on the 23rd of August, to take
Into consideration the adoption of a Discipline for the “Free Methodist
Church.” Quite a discussion took place as to the propriety of effecting, at
present, a formal organization. When the vote was taken, all but seven—five
preachers and two laymen— stood up in favor of organizing immediately.
In considering the provisions of the Discipline
presented by the committee, every new feature was scanned most closely and
critically. The deep interest and close scrutiny of the intelligent laymen
who were present as delegates must have convinced anyone that that Church is
a great loser which excludes them from her counsels. After a careful
examination, item by item, the Discipline as agreed upon was adopted with
singular unanimity. It was as surprising as delightful to notice the
similarity of views entertained by men who think for themselves coming from
different parts of the country.
The doctrines agreed upon are those entertained
by Methodists generally throughout the world. An article on sanctification,
taken from Wesley’s writings, was adopted. As a difference in views upon
this subject Is one cause of the difficulties that have occurred in the
Genesee Conference, it was thought best to have a definite expression of our
belief.
The countenance given of late by Methodist
ministers In this region to Universalists, by affiliating with them,
supplying their pulpits, and going without rebuke to their communion,
rendered It necessary, in the judgment of the Convention, to have an
article, drawn from the Bible, on future rewards and punishments.
The Annual and Quadrennial Conventions are to be
composed of an equal number of laymen and ministers. The Episcopacy and
Presiding Eldership are abolished. Class-leaders and stewards are chosen by
the members, and the sacred right of every accused person to an impartial
trial and appeal is carefully guarded.
Several searching questions relating to personal
experience, and the purpose to lead a life devoted to God, must be proposed
to every individual offering to join the Church; and, upon an affirmative
response, he is to be admitted with the consent of three-fourths of the
members present at a society meeting.
It is not the intention to try to get up a
secession. On the contrary, as much as in us lies, we shall live peaceably
with all men. The wicked expulsion of several ministers for no other crime
than simply trying to carry out their ordination vows, and the cruel refusal
of the General Conference to grant us the hearing of our appeals, guaranteed
to us in the most solemn manner by the Constitution and Laws of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, and the violent ejection from the Church of many
of its pious and devoted members, whose only offense was that of
sympathizing with us, as we are trying to endure “the affliction of the
Gospel,” have rendered it necessary to provide a humble shelter for
ourselves and for such poor, wayfaring pilgrims as may wish to journey with
us to heaven.
We are very firm in the conviction that it is
the will of the Lord that we should establish free Churches—the seats to be
forever free—where the Gospel can be preached to the poor. We have this
consolation, and it is a great one, that if our effort is not for the glory
of God, and does not receive His approval, It cannot succeed. And If it is
not for His glory, we most devoutly pray that it may fail in its very
incipiency. We would rather be covered with any amount of dishonor than have
the cause of God suffer. We have no men of commanding ability and influence
to help on the enterprise—no wealth, no sympathy from powerful
ecclesiastical, or political, or secret societies; but all these against
us—so that if we succeed, it must be by the blessings of heaven upon our
feeble endeavors. We can not avail ourselves of any popular excitement in
favor of a reform in Church government— or against slavery; but we are
engaged in the work, always unpopular, and especially so in this age, of
trying to persuade our fellow men to tread the path of self-denial—the
narrow way that leadeth unto life.
That the founders of the Free Methodist Church were
devotedly attached to Methodism is evident from the fact that the Articles of
Faith adopted by them were all borrowed from those of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, except two,—that on Entire Sanctification, which is a reproduction of
the words of Wesley, and reiterated in the chief doctrinal works of the
Methodist Church, and that on Future Rewards and Punishments, which also is in
full accord with the teaching of Methodism’s doctrinal standards—as also from
the fact that they adopted most of the usages of early Methodism, and so much
of the polity of the Methodist Episcopal Church as could be utilized
consistently with their purpose to conserve more fully the rights of laymen in
their ecclesiastical proceedings. The life tenure of the Bishopric was
discarded, but an elective Superintendency, limited to four years, unless
extended by reelection, was substituted therefor. The Presiding Eldership was
not retained, but a District Chairmanship, which included the same idea of
district supervision, though with less authority attaching to it, was adopted
in its stead. The term District Chairman was changed to District Elder by the
General Conference of 1894. The power of the ministry in the General
Conference, and also in the Annual Conferences, was abridged by the adoption
of lay delegation, thus anticipating by nearly fifty years the action of the
Methodist Episcopal Church in regard to the admission of laymen to its General
Conference. The Free Methodist Church from the beginning admitted lay
delegates to the Annual Conferences, as well as to the General Conference, and
that in proportion of one lay delegate to each regularly stationed preacher or
supply. In respect to their admission to the Annual Conference the mother
Church has not yet followed the example set by her offspring, though the call
for it is in the air, and may yet materialize.
In the Free Methodist Church, as in the parent
body, there is a General Conference, which meets quadrennially; there are also
Annual Conferences, Quarterly Conferences and Official Boards; and the various
Church officials are in the main called by the same names. For the ministry
the two ordinations—as Deacons and as Elders—are retained. Also the Free
Methodist Church retained the Methodist system of local preachers, exhorters,
class-meetings and class-leaders. Its methods in its Judicial Proceedings are
much the same as those of the Methodist Church, except that it is somewhat
more simple, and that the effort has been made to guard more sacredly and
securely the rights of individual members. In regard to Temporal Economy,
Educational matters, Ritual, and other things of less importance, the new
Church has been largely modeled after the pattern of that from which she
sprang. These differences have characterized it from the beginning, however:
free seats in all its Churches; simplicity and inexpensiveness in the erection
of Churches; no kind of entertainments allowed for the purpose of raising
funds for religious purposes; neither instrumental music nor choir singing
permitted in public worship.
It will readily be seen, therefore, that the
founders of the Free Methodist Church were much more anxious to build up a
Church of earnest, humble, self-denying and devoted souls than to bid for the
patronage of the rich, or to secure the following of the multitudes who, while
professing godliness, fall under the apostolic classification— “lovers of
pleasures more than lovers of God.” |