THE SUSQUEHANNA CONFERENCE ORGANIZED
The incidents heretofore related concerning the
early developments of Free Methodism occurred in Western New York and Northern
Illinois. Similar conditions, however, existed in other places, though
somewhat less aggravated in their manifestation. In the central and eastern
portions of New York State, as also in Eastern Pennsylvania, many were
becoming thoroughly tired and sick of worldly-conformed Methodism, and were
deeply desirous for something to occur which would afford them relief from
their bondage to formalism and spiritual death and open to them a congenial
Church home in which they could enjoy freedom and participate in spiritual
worship. Hearing of the organization of the Free Methodist Church, and hoping
to find it conformed to the original type of Methodism instead of partaking
the “New School” characteristics, they corresponded with General
Superintendent Roberts, and others prominent in the new movement, extending to
them the Macedonian cry for help. Letters were received from strangers in
distant regions like the following from the East to Mr. Roberts:
I see in your March number of the
Earnest
Christian an account of Brother Asa Abell’s Joining the Free Methodist
Church. His convictions of leaving the M. E. Church and Joining the Free
Methodist Church are the convictions of my heart, and doubtless those of a
great many; and when, oh! when can we have the opportunity of breathing free
air? His opportunity came. 0 Lord, give us an open door, is our prayer. I
know of many that never will be satisfied until they are free. This panting
to be free is like unto the soul panting for full salvation, and cannot any
more be satisfied without having its freedom. For a good reason Jesus has
made them free, and they must be free, indeed. Many in these far off regions
would be glad to get into your meetings and enjoy freedom with you in
worshiping God in spirit and in truth. We are like other bondmen down South,
in one sense of the case: they have an idea of the land of freedom, they
long to be free, but cannot tell when or how they shall obtain it. So in
regard to many out here. We hear of your freedom and of your joys and of
your people, but as yet we have no opportunity of tasting of freedom. But
our trust is in God. We do believe the time will come when God’s free ones
will be known all over the land. God hasten the time.
Superintendent Roberts, William Cooley and Zenas
Osborne appear to have pioneered the way for the introduction of Free
Methodism into the region now embraced within the Susquehanna Conference.
During 1860-1861 Mr. Roberts “held many meetings in New York, Binghamton,
Union, Syracuse, Utica, Rome, Rose and Clyde, besides being present at
grove-meetings and camp-meetings elsewhere in that part of the State that lay
east of the bounds of the Genesee Conference. One who knew him well writes of
these services, that “his preaching, his praying, his manner of conducting
meetings, was very acceptable, and made a deep and lasting impression upon his
hearers. This was especially true at Binghamton. [1]
The first Free Methodist society in this region
was organized by Mr. Roberts in a stone schoolhouse near Rose Valley, Wayne
County, New York, December 2, 1860. It was composed of the following members:
Josephus Collins, John Glen, Mr. and Mrs. William Glen, Mr. and Mrs. Harrison
Holcomb, Mr. and Mrs. John Barrett, Leonard Mitchell, Sarah Mitchell, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilham Sherman, Margaret Nusbickel, Elizabeth Finch, John Weeks. On
February 12, 1861, he organized a second society at the home of Aaron Winget,
in the town of Huron, same County, of which the following were the members:
Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Winget, Benjamin Winget, Lovilla Winget, Mr. and Mrs. John
B. Stacy, Hervey Perkins, Sophia Perkins. Among those who composed these two
societies three later became itinerant preachers in the Free Methodist
Church—John B. Stacy, and John Glen, both of whom witnessed a good confession
and finished their course triumphantly some years ago, and Benjamin Win-get,
who for about twenty years has been the honored, faithful and efficient
Missionary Secretary of the denomination.
From these points the work gradually spread abroad
in various directions under the faithful labors of such men as William Cooley,
Zenas Osborne and others, until finally those engaged in developing the field,
believing the interests of the work could be better conserved and promoted
thereby, began to urge upon Superintendent Roberts the importance of
organizing the work into a Convention (or Conference), similar to the Eastern
and Western Conventions already organized.
Accordingly, on April 10, 1862, Mr. Roberts
organized what was then known as the Susquehanna Convention (now the
Susquehanna Conference) of the Free Methodist Church, with a membership of six
ministers. Like the Eastern and Western Conventions at their organization,
this was an out-of-doors deliberative body, holding its sittings upon a
rail-pile in an apple orchard. The following list of appointments was made:
Union circuit, James Guion; Madison and Otsego, J.
Olney; Rose, W. Cooley; Hudson River Mission, A. B. Burdick; Susquehanna, T.
F. Johnson; White Haven, to be supplied.
The organization of this small Conference later
became a source of much unpleasantness within the infant denomination, which
apparently came near effecting a division. The circumstances which led to the
unpleasantness were as follows:
The Book of Discipline which had been adopted at
the organization of the denomination made no specific provision for the
organization of new Conferences in the intervals of the General Conferences.
It did, however, specifically state that the General Superintendent was to
travel through the connection at large, and labor for the advancement and
upbuilding of the work. Regarding it as his right and duty according to this
Disciplinary requirement, Mr. Roberts, in response to the call from those
directly interested, organized the Susquehanna Convention. There appears to
have been some previous dissatisfaction on the part of a few who had regarded
the organization at Pekin as premature, as also with others who evidently felt
a measure of disappointment with the action of that Convention regarding the
General Superintendency. A respectable minority were opposed to any General
Superintendency, preferring the election of a President each year, as is the
case with the Wesleyan Church of England, and with the Wesleyan Methodist
Connection of America. Moreover, this was the year that had been designated
for the first General Convention to hold its session, and it may have been
that some were anxious to accomplish what they had failed to accomplish at the
Pekin Convention—the defeat of the General Superintendency—and that they
regarded the formation of the Susquehanna Convention as rendering their
success in that direction less probable than it otherwise would be.
Being aware that this feeling existed to some
extent regarding the Superintendency, Mr. Roberts had studiously refrained
from any reference in the Earnest Christian to his advancement to that
office, as also from everything that could reasonably be construed as
regarding himself in any sense superior to the humblest of his brethren. He
published accounts of the Conventions, without the slightest reference to
himself as presiding over them, lest he should give offense to any that might
be sensitive over the decision of the Pekin Convention.
His having organized the Susquehanna Convention
was destined, however, to make him considerable trouble in the near future,
and to give him an appreciating sense of the fact that advancement to office,
even in ecclesiastical bodies, is no security for an easy passport through
life. The question as to whether he had a legal right under the Discipline to
organize an Annual Convention or not, was one about which equally good men
might differ. But when some assumed that he had transcended his authority as
overseer of the denominational interests, and began to talk about the exercise
of “one man power” invidiously, though their number was small, it grieved him
to the quick. It was a serious disappointment to him to lose in any degree the
confidence and sympathy of brethren whom he loved, and with whom he had
suffered in the fiery trials which came to him in the Methodist Episcopal
Church. He did not allow this to deter him, however, from what he conceived to
be his duty as an administrative officer in the Church, nor to chill or sour
his spirit toward those who differed from him, nor to damp his zeal toward the
work of God. He pressed on in his work with all possible earnestness, and with
a holy cheerfulness prosecuted the manifold duties of his calling as the
Church’s chief administrative officer, as editor of the Earnest Christian,
and as a preacher of the gospel, with his heart on fire with zeal for the
conversion of sinners and for the sanctification of believers. He found the
work prospering wherever he went within the newly organized denomination, and
saw numerous new charges raised up and added to those already existing, while
the preachers and members were greatly strengthened everywhere under his
ministry as the result of his simple, pointed and earnest proclamation of the
truth.
At the fall Conventions of 1862 delegates were
elected to the ensuing General Convention, to be held in St. Charles,
Illinois, beginning October 8. Hence the Susquehanna Convention, which was
organized in April, held its second session in September, and regularly
elected delegates to the General Convention. In a brief report of this
gathering in the Earnest Christian Mr. Roberts said, “There are nine
preachers belonging to the Convention— all of whom we believe are wholly
devoted to God and His work, enjoying the clear witness of entire
sanctification. We trust that through their labors a great impetus will be
given to the cause of holiness in all the region where they travel.”
The General Convention was one of much disharmony,
due chiefly to the delegates from the Eastern (or Genesee) Convention opposing
the admission of the delegates from the Susquehanna Convention, on the ground
that the Susquehanna Convention had been irregularly and illegally organized,
and therefore had no proper standing, and was not competent to elect delegates
to the General Convention. The purpose of the Genesee delegates was to refuse
the Susquehanna delegates admission, and the feeling was so intense over the
matter for a time, and the contention was so sharp, that serious results were
threatened. In the Biography of B. T. Roberts his version of the case is
given, from his own handwriting, as follows:
The delegates appointed by the several Annual
Conventions of the Free Methodist Church met at St. Charles on the 8th of
October, 1862. We were called together at two o’clock. One of the delegates
from the Illinois Convention, B. Hackney, was absent on a jury, and could
not be present at the General Convention until the next day. It was proposed
on that account to organize temporarily, and defer a permanent organization
until all the delegates could be present. Rev. L. Stiles opposed an
adjournment. He said that the mere matter of organizing was not of
sufficient importance to occasion any delay. We should organize, he urged,
and be ready for business when all the delegates are present. Other of the
Genesee delegates said their time was precious, they were anxious to get
through as soon as they could. An attempt was made at organizing. When the
credentials of the delegates from the Susquehanna Convention were read, Rev.
A. Abell said that at the proper time he would object to their admission. An
issue being raised, an adjournment was made until ten o’clock the next day,
that all the delegates might be present. In the evening, O. P. Rogers, the
reserve delegate of the Western Convention, arrived.
In the five o’clock morning prayer-meeting, all
the delegates, except the Genesee, being present, it was thought best, to
accommodate them, to call the service at half-past eight. A preacher was
accordingly dispatched to them by seven o’clock, informing them of the
change of time. Word was brought back that they said: “We have adjourned to
meet at ten, and we will not meet till then. One man has not the power to
call this Convention together.” At ten we met. The Genesee delegates wished
to have the delegates from one of the Conventions admitted by virtue of
their credentials, and regarded as the nucleus, and then they vote in the
rest. The President decided that all who came with proper credentials were
prima facie members, and should be so regarded for the purpose of
organizing. After we were organized, if any one held a sent improperly he
could be deprived of it by the General Convention. Every organized body must
be a judge of the qualifications of its own members. In this view of the
case the Western delegates concurred. They urged that if there was any good
reason for excluding the Susquehanna delegates, once organize and they would
then exclude them. They pressed this point. They said repeatedly and
emphatically: “Come ia with us and organize, and then if the Susquehanna
Convention is not a legal Convention, or if there is any personal reason why
the Susquehanna delegates should not have a seat, we will help you put them
out.” But the Genesee delegates refused to organize, though on the vote for
secretary two of them put in ballots. After the secretary was elected and
the General Convention organized, Rev. L. Stiles whispered to G. W. Holmes,
a lay delegate from the Genesee Convention, and Mr. Holmes moved, “That the
Susquehanna delegates be admitted.” The President decided “That the
delegates have already been admitted by virtue of their credentials,” and
that the proper form of the motion would be to move, “That they are not
entitled to seats as delegates.” They refused to make the motion in that
form. They talked the matter over at length. They said the only thing that
divided us was the formation of the Susquehanna Convention. When the
president remarked that that was not the main difficulty, that there were
other things that lay back of the Susquehanna Convention that were the real
cause of the difficulty, Mr. Stiles resented the remark, and asked, with a
good deal of spirit, “if their veracity was called in question.” He said
that the only thing that divided us was the Susquehanna Convention. Mr.
Hartshorn also said the same thing. The Western delegates urged that they
should take their seats, and then make a motion to exclude the Susquehanna
delegates, and if there was any good reason for excluding them, they, the
Western delegates, would help them out.
The following papers were offered and adopted on
the 10th and 11th of October:
“The Free Methodist Church as a body, as well as
this General Convention, is organized on the basis of the Discipline adopted
at Pekin, August 23rd, 1860, and printed at Buffalo in 1860, under the title
of ‘The Doctrines and Discipline of the Free Methodist Church.’ This
Discipline is the outward, visible bond of union among us as a people.
“The delegates from the Genesee Convention are
dissatisfied with the admission of the delegates from the Susquehanna
Convention and refuse in consequence to participate in our action, and have
expressed an intention to leave and go home.
“Therefore, we propose that inasmuch as we have
come together on the basis of the Discipline that we act together on the
same basis, make such changes as can be agreed upon by all, and where all
cannot agree upon any change, then no change shall be effected.
“Adopted October 11th, 1862.”
“Whereas, the delegates from the Genesee Annual
Convention handed in the book of records of said Convention certifying to
their election as members of this body; and whereas a part of them
subsequently voted for secretary, and after we organized made a motion and
speeches; and whereas they subsequently declared that they were not members
of this body, and have accordingly absented themselves, and continued to
absent themselves; and whereas they have withdrawn their book of records;
therefore,
“Resolved, that we, the General Convention of
the Free Methodist Church, consider them as withdrawn from this body, and
that we proceed to the discharge of the duties assigned us by the Church,
whose representatives we are.” [2]
After having continued in session from October 8th to
October 16th, at St. Charles, Illinois, the General Convention adjourned to
meet at Buffalo, New York, on the 4th of November following. At the adjourned
session, inasmuch as some of the Genesee delegates who were in attendance at
St. Charles were absent, the reserve delegates were allowed to take their
places. The Rev. Levi Wood was thus seated in the place of Loren Stiles, Jr.,
and Titus Roberts in place of George W. Holmes.
The Rev. Moses N. Downing was at the time pastor
of the Free Methodist Church in Buffalo, and from his pen the following
account of this adjourned session of the General Convention appears in the
Life of B. T. Roberts:
A number of delegates of the Genesee delegation
declined to take their seats unless the General Convention would organize
without the Susquehanna delegation, inasmuch as they believed the latter
delegation was illegal, maintaining that the Superintendent had no right to
organize the Susquehanna Convention, stipulating, however, that if the
General Convention would thus organize without the Susquehanna delegation
they would consent that the legality of the organization of the Susquehanna
Conference should be passed upon by the General Convention. Benjamin
Hackney, delegate from the West, a man of prominence who had been a member
of Congress, arose and said that much as he loved the Free Methodist Church,
he would see it split in two in its infancy before he would compromise on a
principle of righteousness. He maintained that the delegates from the
Susquehanna Convention were legally elected, and that in the absence of any
specific law governing the organization of Annual Conventions, the General
Superintendent had the right to organize the Susquehanna Convention, and
that the Susquehanna delegates on presenting their credentials should be
admitted. Thereupon, Rev. Loren Stiles and Asa Abell, ministerial delegates,
and the lay delegates withdrew, the reserve delegates taking their places. [3]
The foregoing action caused decidedly intense feeling,
which was destined to manifest itself in very positive form at a period some
time subsequent to the adjournment of the General Convention.
[This body met under the designation of General Convention, but before
its final adjournment it wisely changed its name to that of General
Conference. Following the example of the General Convention the Annual
Conventions also soon changed their names to Annual Conferences, and they
will be thus designated henceforth in this volume.—Author].
The sequel to the story of the trouble occasioned by
the organization of the Susquehanna Conference is thus told in the Life of B.
T. Roberts, by his son, B. H. Roberts, A. M., and chiefly in his father’s own
words:
THE LAST OF THE SUSQUEHANNA QUESTION
The Genesee Annual Convention, that was held at
Albion, the 18th and 22nd of September, was a somewhat stormy time; the
principal occasion being with reference to the admission of some to the
Convention. Because of the dissatisfaction, emanating largely from the
Susquehanna matter, confined, however, to a small minority, an attempt was
made to call a second session of the Genesee Convention, to meet at Perry,
4th of November. This call was issued by Rev. Loren Stiles, Asa Abell, G. W.
Holmes and H. Harts-horn. The evidence in hand as to its existence is the
copy of the following letter, addressed to these brethren, which reads as
follows:
“TO THE MINISTERS AND MEMBERS OF THE FREE
METHODIST CHURCH, CONVENED AT PERRY, NOVEMBER 4TH, 1862, AT THE CALL OF REV.
L. STILES, JR., AND REV. A. ABELL, G. W. HOLMES AND H. HARTSHORN.
“Dearly Beloved Brethren:
“I should have been glad to have met with you,
and should have made arrangement to do so, had I known in time that you had
been called together. I was in the same village with the brethren who called
you together at the time when, I suppose, they decided to do so. They said
nothing to me about their intentions; nor did I learn that they had issued a
call until one week ago last Saturday. I learned the fact incidentally. My
engagements are such— the General Convention having adjourned to meet at
Buffalo the same day—that, very much to my regret, I cannot meet with you.
From what I have heard, I gather that the object of those who have called
you together is to procure a condemnation of my official action. If such is
the case, it appears to me that I should have been consulted in reference to
the time. ‘Doth our law judge any man before it hear him, and know what he
doeth ?‘—John 7: 51. Does Christian candor require any less than that you
should suspend, not only any formal decision bearing upon my official acts,
but even the formation of your own private opinion, until you bear what
explanations I have to make? Could common candor, to say nothing of
brotherly love, ask you to form and express your judgments upon matters
affecting deeply the interests of our infant Church upon one-sided
representations? I am aware of the successful efforts that have been made
among you to excite prejudice against me; but you owe it to yourselves, as
well as to the cause of God, to lay aside all prejudice as far as possible,
and to defer all action in the premises until I can have a fair and full
hearing. “Precipitous measures will sensibly injure the cause of God,
whereas no possible harm can come by your waiting until the regular session
of our Convention, acquainting yourselves in the meantime, as far as
possible, with all the facts of the case. ‘He that believeth shall not make
haste.’ I have endeavored to perform all my official duties as
Superintendent of the Free Methodist Church with fidelity and love, in
meekness and humility. I have studiously avoided everything that could
excite envy or jealousy in any one. I have never published myself in any of
the periodicals as occupying an official position, and have been careful not
to injure the feelings or reputation of any among you in organizing the late
General Convention, I took the only course that, as it seems to me with my
limited knowledge of parliamentary usages, it was proper for me to take. The
Discipline (Chap, 2, sec. 2, par. 1, p. 34) prescribes how the General
Convention shall be composed. Persons coming with credentials duly certified
are, as it appears to me, entitled to a seat until an organization can be
affected. Then, if any one holds a seat to which he is not entitled, the
General Convention can deprive hint of the seat improperly held. I so
decided. In this decision I am sustained by the highest authority on
parliamentary usages. The Constitution of the United States says: ‘Each
shall be the judges of the election returns, and qualification of its own
members (Art. 1, see. 5, par. 1).’ The president does not say who shall have
a seat in the Senate; nor the Senate who shall sit in the House. The
representatives from New York do not, in their local capacity, say whether
the representatives from Illinois shall be admitted or not, but all who hold
certificates of election are enrolled, and the house is organized, and then
after the organization is effected, if any one hold a seat improperly, he Is
excluded. I am charged with ‘an usurpation of power, such as was never
exercised by any Bishop, or by any number of Bishops, in the history of
Methodism,’ whereas the real ground of complaint is my refusal to usurp the
power belonging to the General Convention alone, and on my own prerogative
exclude from their seats persons whose credentials as delegates from an
Annual Convention had been presented and read. This power, I believe,
belongs to the General Convention alone; but because I did not usurp this
power I am held up in an odious light, and charged with unprecedented
usurpation. After we were organized, Brother Stiles whispered to Brother
Holmes, and the latter made a motion: ‘That the delegates from the
Susquehanna Convention be admitted.’ The motion I decided to be out of order
in this form, as they had already been admitted by virtue of their
credentials. I stated that a motion to the effect that the delegates from
the Susquehanna Convention are not entitled to seats would be In order. But
no one would make it. The Genesee delegates argued the case at length, but
failing to carry their points they left. Before they left, however, I
presented to them in open Convention the following proposition: ‘The Free
Methodist Church as a body, as well as the General Convention, is organized
on the basis of the Discipline adopted at Pekin, August 23rd, 1860, and
printed at Buffalo, in 1860, under the title of “The Doctrines and
Discipline of the Free Methodist Church.” This Discipline is the outward
visible bond of union among us as a people. The delegates from the Genesee
Convention are dissatisfied with the admission of the delegates from the
Susquehanna Convention, and refuse in consequence to participate in our
action, and have expressed their intention to leave and go home. Therefore,
we propose that, inasmuch as we have come together on the basis of the
Discipline, we act together on the same basis, make such changes as can be
agreed upon by all, and where all cannot agree upon any change, then no
change shall be effected.’ The Genesee delegates took no notice whatever of
this proposition. If they had desired the preservation of the Free Methodist
Church, essentially as organized, would they not have accepted this
proposal? Any small, needful changes would, no doubt, have been acquiesced
in unanimously by men of piety and love of peace. But under this proposition
an attempt to revolutionize the Church could not have succeeded.
“The ‘usurpation of power’ complained of may
refer to the organization of the Susquehanna Convention. But was this any
usurpation? The first to be settled is this: ‘Had the Superintendent, prior
to the meeting of the first General Convention, the right to organize any
Annual Convention? The Discipline does not in express words make it the duty
of the Superintendent to organize Conventions. Nor does it say he shall not.
Nor does it make it the duty of any one else to organize Annual Conventions.
In the M. B. Church Annual Conferences are made by the General Conference.
But this usage could not obtain in our case, for we had no General
Convention, nor could we have any until Annual Conventions were formed, as
the General Convention Is composed of delegates elected by the Annual
Conventions. The General Convention could not organize Annual Conventions in
the first instance. Who, then, should do it? The Discipline does not say in
express terms, but it makes it the duty of the Superintendent to preside
over the Annual Conventions. It is a maxim In the interpretation of law,
that a requirement to do anything carries with It the right to do everything
that is essential to the doing of the thing required. This is common sense
and common law. A command to a general to lead an army across a river
implies the right to bridge over if there is no other way of crossing.
“The Discipline says (Chap. 3, sec. 1, par. 2,
p. 46) that it shall be the duty of the Superintendent to preside at the
Annual Conventions. But how can he preside over an Annual Convention until
it Is organized? It seems plain, then, that in the absence of any other
provision for organizing an Annual Convention, the Superintendent has an
unquestionable right to do it. Nor can this with any fairness be said to be
setting a dangerous precedent, for the first General Convention could, and
undoubtedly would, make provisions for organizing Annual Conventions in the
future. The Superintendent organized the Genesee Convention in the same way.
Some brethren presented credentials as delegates from Free Methodist
Societies, or from persons who desired to be organized into Free Methodist
Societies. By virtue of their credentials they were organized as members.
They then by vote admitted the preachers. The Western Convention and the
Susquehanna Convention were organized In the same way. In no case did the
Superintendent say what preachers should, and who should not, belong to an
Annual Convention; nor, as we judge, has one Annual Convention the right to
say what preachers shall belong to another Annual Convention. Some have
assumed that when the Discipline was formed, it was contemplated by those
adopting it to have only two Annual Conventions until after the General
Convention. But this is mere assumption without the shadow of proof. Nothing
of the kind is In the Discipline. Nothing of the kind was said in the Pekin
Convention. The Discipline plainly implies that there might be more than
two. It says (Chap. 2, sec. 2, p. 34): ‘Each Annual Convention.’ Had
only two been meant it would have read ‘both’ Annual Conventions. The small
number of delegates of which the General Convention would be composed, on
the supposition that there are to be but two Annual Conventions, plainly
shows that in the judgment of those who formed and adopted the Discipline,
there would be more than two Annual Conventions prior to the first General
Convention.
“The Susquehanna Convention was formed in good
faith for the purpose of spreading the work of God, and for good and
sufficient reasons, as I believe I can satisfy any unprejudiced mind. But
suppose there had been any irregularity in forming this Convention, is it
not fully justified by the fact that we are in a formation state? Many
irregularities have been tolerated among us, and justified on this ground.
The Church at Albion was formed without asking of those received as members
the questions required by the Discipline (Chap. 1, sec. 3, p. 32). The
delegates to the General Convention elected by the Genesee Annual Convention
were elected contrary to the express provisions of the Discipline. The
Discipline (Chap. 2, sec. 2, par. 1; p. 341) requires that the ministerial
delegates should be elected by the ministers in full connection. But
probationers and supplies were allowed to vote. The Discipline says that the
ministers should elect their delegates and laymen theirs. But all voted
together. If the plea that we are in a formation state may cover in the
administration at Albion, and in the action of the Genesee Convention
irregularities, that were not necessary, and that are in conflict with
express provisions of the Discipline, shall the benefit of that plea be
denied to me when I organized Annual Conventions in the only mode in which
under the circumstances they could be organized? Will you justify others in
violating plain provisions of the Discipline when there is no necessity for
it, and then in order to procure my condemnation, have recourse to the
usages of another Church which has long been in existence? Where is the
justice, the charity, of such a course? Can men of God act thus
inconsistently and uncharitably?
“I have only touched upon a few leading points
bearing on this matter. I have written in great haste, surrounded with
company and crowded with cares; but I trust I have said enough to lead you
to pause in your verdict until you have heard the matter presented on both
sides.
“May the Lord bless you and lead you aright, and
send peace and prosperity in our midst. “Yours affectionately in Jesus,
“B. T. ROBERTS.”
This clear and courteous presentation of the
case had weight. The matter of a Convention was dropped. Surely the infant
Church had no quiet birth, nor gentle cradling; foes without and dissentions
within must alike be met, and in a Christlike spirit, exemplifying the grace
that was preached.
This disturbing Susquehanna matter was not,
however, allowed to drop just yet. One more trial must be had before this
question was settled. The Genesee Convention in 1863 met at Parma, N. 1.
Because the Discipline had been amended at the General Convention In the
year preceding, in which the delegates from Susquehanna had a seat, a
minority headed by John W. Reddy, objected to having the~ Superintendent
preside over its sittings. But how to organize legally they did not know,
for he was present It was a curious sight, doubtless, to see him sitting
quietly by and submitting In meekness to have his position canvassed
publicly. Finally John W. Reddy ventured the astounding request: “Would he
not permit the Convention to do its work without him in the chair?” A
gentle, but firm, “No, sir,” made it manifest that meekness and strength are
not incompatible. To appease the minority he consented to a compromise, as
he knew how to do when there was no principle at stake. He soothed their
ruffled feelings by consenting to use the Discipline as originally adopted,
not as amended by the General Convention, of which the obnoxious Susquehanna
delegates were a part. This action, I believe, ended this incident. [4]
One more reference to the case is on record, however;
and that is in the printed minutes of the Genesee Conference of 1864. The
Conference record says:
The following document was presented and
adopted:
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ILLINOIS AND SUSQUEHANNA ANNUAL CONFERENCES:
Dear Brethren: At our last session the points of
difference between us were candidly considered. We were willing to accord to
you the most perfect honesty, and claimed the same for ourselves. Acting on
this basis, we unanimously agreed to concede half the ground, and requested
you to make an equal concession and meet us at the middle point. We felt
that this would be mutually just and generous. But as you refused to accept
our proposition, we still desire to be “of one heart and one mind.”
Therefore, maintaining the same view of our case as before, we agree to give
up the whole ground of controversy, and to adopt the new edition of the
Discipline.
Adopted, 35 to 2.
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