Walter Scott(1796-1861)
Walter Scott
• 1821-2 C. became acquainted with young Scot, Walter Scott (1796-1861).– Would become C’s closest fellow
worker.– Educated at U. of Edinburgh.– To U.S. 1818; to Pittsburgh 1819.– Taught in school operated by George
Forrester.
Walter Scott
• Forrester also preached for a Haldane church.
• S. learned of Rest. Move. & was immersed.
• When S. met C. 2 years later, he was already prepared to join in the work.
• When C. began CB in 1823, was S. who suggested the name.
• S. also wrote frequent articles.
Walter Scott
• S. made greatest contribution as evangelist of the Mahoning Association.– By 1823 C’s critics in Redstone Assoc.
were bent on excommunicating him.– C. joined Mahoning Baptist Assoc. in the
“Western Reserve” of Ohio.– Churches of Mahoning had been
receptive--several discarding creed for the Bible.
Walter Scott
• Mahoning churches weren’t growing--1826 the 16 churches lost membership though population was growing.
• 1827 Assoc. resolved to employ an evangelist to work among the churches.
• At C’s suggestion, S. was selected.
Walter Scott
• Years earlier, S. read a tract teaching baptism for the remission of sins.– Written by Henry Errett, elder in
Haldanean “church of Christ” in NY.– Made impression; evangelist role
provided opportunity to put it into practice.
– Faith, repentance, baptism, remission of sins, gift of HS--the “gospel restored.”
Walter Scott
• Result: great revival in Mahoning, but different from Cane Ridge.– None of emotionalism, exercises or
continuous camp meetings.– S. preached that anyone could act on
his faith and be immersed for remission of sins.
– Hundreds responded.
Walter Scott
• Scott said that the steps to salvation were like pointing to the fingers on your hand—
– Faith
– Repentance
– Baptism
– Remission of sins
– The gift of the Holy Spirit
Walter Scott
• When A.C. heard of revival, was concerned and sent his father to observe.– T.C. wrote back that though they had
understood gospel correctly for years, it was now being put into practice for first time.
– Mahoning Assoc. doubled within a year.– By 1830 was so transformed that it
dissolved.
Walter Scott• S’s “baptism for the remission of sins”
provided C. movement with an essential it lacked--dynamic & successful evangelism.– Was an evangelism that emphasized
reason rather than emotion--– NT testimony rather than direct working of
HS.
• Was this evangelism which strained relations between C’s “reformers” and Baptists to breaking point.
Walter Scott• S. made many other contributions.
– Preached 30 more years, often with eloquence few could equal.
– Edited several journals, including the Evangelist (1832-1842).
– 1836 served as first pres. of Bacon College in Georgetown, KY (first brotherhood college).
– But his unique legacy was proclamation of baptism for remission of sins, “gospel restored.”
The Separation
• Tension between “reformers” and Baptists led to breaking point between 1827 and 1830.– Actually, a gradual process and
began earlier.– As early as 1823, Redstone had
wanted to excommunicate C.– 1825 Redstone refused to seat any
church which didn’t accept Philadelphia Confession of Faith.
The Separation
• 1826 Redstone divided as 10 churches withdrew from 13 others that stood with “reformers.”
• This the 1st occasion of an Association taking action against the “reformers.”
• But this was just the beginning.
The Separation• In KY, several Baptist associations divided.
– 1827 North District Association charges brought against “one of the preachers” without naming him.
– Charges trivial compared to real differences.
– When charges read, Raccoon John Smith jumped to his feet and said, “I plead guilty to them all.”
Raccoon John Smith
(1784-1868)
The Separation
• Bitter debate ensued; charges tabled for a year.
• 900 baptisms that year, most by Raccoon, and “reformers” took firm control.
• 1831 Assoc. dissolved itself like Mahoning had done a year earlier.
The Separation• One of most imp. events of the
separation came in 1829, when the Beaver Assoc. (western PA) adopted an “Anathema” condemning Campbell & Mahoning Assoc.– B. Anathema pub. in many Baptist
journals.– Served as pattern by other assoc. in
withdrawing from “reformers.”– Errors condemned provide summary of
differences.
Beaver Anathema
• They, the Reformers, maintain that there is no promise of salvation without baptism.
• That baptism should be administered to all who say they believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, without examination on any other point.
• That there is no direct operation of the Holy Spirit on the mind prior to baptism.
Beaver Anathema
• That baptism procures the remission of sins and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
• That no creed is necessary for the church but the Scriptures as they stand.
The Separation
• The C’s 17-year marriage with Baptists precarious at best.
• When divorce came, either party might have been charged with considerable mental cruelty.
• Union decidedly to “reformers” advantage--had allowed C. to sow his tares among the Baptist wheat.
The Separation• Scores of preachers, many churches,
and even entire associations had accepted C’s call and Scott’s evangelism.
• Baptists saw major surgery necessary but was hard to separate tares from wheat.
• When divorce was final after 1830, instead of Brush Run Church, C. move. had churches scattered over several states with well over 10,000 members, many ex-Baptists.
The Movements Converge• Separation from Baptists prepared way for
next event--uniting of S. & C. movements.– Movements spread thru same areas.
• Kentucky– Campbell vs. Maccalla, 1823.– 1824 C. visited and met Stone.– Christian Baptist soon had large circulation
in KY.
• Ohio– 3 “Christian” preachers present when Scott
appointed.– Joseph Gaston & others began preaching
“gospel restored.”
The Movements Converge• Similarities--
– Both accepted scripture as sole authority and denied binding authority of creeds.
– Pleaded for unity on basis of a return to Bible.
– Reacted against doctrines of predestination and limited atonement.
– Rejected infant sprinkling and practiced immersion of believers.
The Movements Converge
• Similarities (continued)--– Both refused to wear unscriptural or
sectarian names.– Both regarded denominational
organizations such as presbyteries, synods and associations as unscriptural.
The Movements Converge• Differences--
– They disagreed about names.• C. movement, though often called
“reformers,” preferred to be called “Disciples.”
• S. movement insisted on “Christian.”• Both names continued after uniting.• Hymn book (1835), The Disciples’ Hymn
Book.• Name changed to The Christian Hymn
Book after S’s protest.
The Movements Converge• Differences (cont.)--
– Differed on emphasis placed on immersion.
• S. practiced but did not insist on necessity.• S.--(baptism or remission of sins “had not
generally obtained amongst us, though some few had received it and practiced accordingly.”
• As result of disagreement, differed over communing with unimmersed.
• S. willing; C. not.
The Movements Converge
• Differences (cont.)--– Lord’s Supper.
• S.--“They insisted also upon weekly communion,”
• “which we had neglected.”
The Movements Converge• Differences (cont.)--
– Both evangelistic, but methods different.• S. preachers stressed emotional and
encouraged sinners to “weep & mourn as they sought salvation..
• S. stressed HS in conversion & feared Disciples were not explicit enough on HS’s influence.
• C. & Scott stressed role of reason.• Faith seen as act of the reason more than
the emotion and was defined as acceptance of NT message the Jesus was the Messiah.
The Movements Converge• Unity achieved.
– Similarities far outweighed differences.– After 1830 leaders of both groups began to
consider unity.– S., 1831: “The question is going the round
of society, and is often proposed to us, ‘Why are not you and the Reformed Baptists one people?’ or, ‘Why are you not united?’ We have uniformly answered, ‘In spirit we are united.’”
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.– Campbell--“I think the question of union
and cooperation is one which deserves the attention of all them who believe the ancient gospel and desire to see the ancient order of things restored.”
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.– Both stressed autonomy of each local church,
so unity had to come by congregations extending fellowship or merging.
– 1st merger, Millersburg, KY, April 24, 1831.• Church from each movement there.• Agreed were “one as far as faith and
practice” and began meeting together.
The Movements Converge• Unity achieved.
– John T. Johnson perhaps did more to bring unity than any other.
• KY preacher with C. movement.• (1788-1856), a lawyer who had served
two terms in Congress, 1820-1824.• Brother, Richard M. Johnson, became
V.P. of US.• A. C: “Sir, in descending from the forum
and legislative hall to proclaim the crucified Savior, you have ascended far above all earthly crowns.”
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.– Johnson & BWS both lived in Georgetown, KY
and were warm friends.– Nov. 1831 S. preached at J’s Great Crossing
church & discussed unity.– Raccoon John Smith & John Rogers joined
discussions and the 4 called a general meeting to see if members of two groups desired unity.
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.– Two meetings held.
• Georgetown, 12/23-26/1831.• Lexington, New Year’s weekend, 1832.
– Raccoon: “Let us, then, my brethren, be no longer Campbellites or Stoneites, New Lights or Old Lights, or any other kind of lights, but let us come to the Bible and to the Bible alone, as the only book in the world that can give us all the light we need.”
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.– Raccoon & BWS shook hands.– Several steps taken to encourage unity.
• Raccoon (Disciple) & John Rogers (Christian) travelled together in KY.
• BWS invited John T. Johnson to become associate editor of the Christian Messenger (begun 1826).
Raccoon John Smith(1784-1868)
“Raccoon” John Smith• Nickname given after a sermon at Tate’s
Creek Baptist Association at Crab Orchard, Kentucky ca. 1815.
• “I am John Smith, from Stockton’s Valley. In more recent years, I have lived in Wayne, among the rocks and hills of the Cumberland. Down there, saltpeter caves abound, and raccoons make their homes. On that wild frontier we never had good schools, nor many books; consequently, I stand before you today a man without an education.”
“Raccoon” John Smith• S. has been called the Peter Cartwright
and Lorenzo Dow of the Restoration Movement.
• A. C.: “John Smith is the only man that I ever knew who would have been spoiled by a college education.”
• Born 10/15/1784 in the state of Franklin, later to become Sullivan County, TN.
• His father, a Rev. War veteran, later settled his family in the Cumberland River region of Kentucky.
“Raccoon” John Smith• Late in 1814 S. bought land near
Huntsville, AL.
• S., away preaching, his wife caring for a sick neighbor, lost two of his children when their cabin burned.
• His wife mourned herself to death; in a matter of months S. sold his farm and returned to Kentucky.
“Raccoon” John Smith• March 1822 suddenly stopped preaching:
“Brethren, something is wrong—I am in the dark,--we all are in the dark; but how to lead you to the light, or to find the way myself, before God, I know not.”
• As S. searched, A. C. began publishing the Christian Baptist and S. became an eager subscriber.
• S. first met A. C. in Flemingsburg, KY.
“Raccoon” John Smith• After listening to C. preach, S. said, “Is it
not hard, brother Billy, to ride twenty miles, as I have done, just to hear a man preach thirty minutes?”
• “You are mistaken, brother John; look at your watch. It has surely been longer than that.”
• When S. looked, he found Campbell had preached two hours and thirty minutes. Two hours were gone and he knew not where.
Raccoon John SmithCabin
Monticello, KY
In Memory OfJOHN SMITH
An Elder Of TheChurch of Christ
BornOct. 15, 1784
DiedFeb. 29, 1868
True, genial and pious, the good loved, and all respected
him. Strong throughaffliction and wise
in the study of God's word.He gave up the creed of
his fathers for the sake of that word. By its power
he turned many from error. In the light he walked
& in its consolation he triumphantly died.
__________
In his sacrifices and service. His companion shared. She gave her life
to God & her deathwas precious in his sight.
_________________
NANCY SMITHBorn
Nov. 15, 1792Died
Nov. 4, 1861
John Rogers(1800-1867)
John Rogers(1800-1867)
Sacred to the memory ofJohn Rogers
After A FaithfulAdvocacy of the truth asit is in Jesus for 49 years.
He fell asleep while engagedIn the work at Dover, Mason
Co, KY, Jan. 5, 1867 in the 67 yearOf his age. His abundant and Suc-
cessful labors had earned forhim the esteem of all the
ChurchesThey that turn many to
righteousness shallshine as the stars
forever & ever
Carlisle, Kentucky Cemetery
John T. JohnsonJohn Telemachus Johnson
(1788-1856)
John T. JohnsonLexington Cemetery
ELDER
JOHN T. JOHNSONDied
Dec. 18, 1856Aged 69 YearsAfter 25 Years
Devoted Service To His Savior's Cause, His Whole Life Was Truly A Labour
Of Love. And His Works DoFollow Him. Long Well He
Lives In The Hearts Of Those For Whom He
Laboured. Thanks Be To God Who Giveth Us The
Victory Through Our Lord Jesus Christ.
SophieWife Of
ELDER J.T. JOHNSON:Born Oct. 13, 1796;
Married, Oct. 13, 1811;Died, Aug. 23, 1849
"She Left To The World A Strong
Example Of Christian Piety, Fortitude And Resignation.
May We All Profit By It."Buried At Lexington, Kentucky
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.
• Johnson in Messenger: “What could we do but unite? We both compared notes. We found ourselves congregated on the same divine creed, the Bible. We had the same King--the same faith--the same law....We could not do other wise than unite in Christian love.”
The “Right Hand ofFellowship” as depictedin stained glass at Cane
Ridge
The Movements Converge
• Unity achieved.• Stone later: “This union ... I view as the
noblest act of my life.”• Significance--demonstrated validity of
their goals.– D&A--unity and restoration.– What D&A envisioned was achieved
when Christians and Disciples merged.
The Movements Converge
• Quest for NT pattern has sometimes led to controversy--– Instrumental music.– Missionary societies.– Orphan homes.
• But is not true that the restoration principle is always divisive.
The Movements Converge• A Decade of Growth.
– 10 yrs. following union a period of growth and consolidation.
– The many religious journals contributed.• At least 28 journals published during 1830s.• Millennial Harbinger (1830)led the field.• Christian Messenger (1826-1844)--“Let the
unity of Christians be our polar star.”• Evangelist (1832 for more than 10 years) by
Walter Scott.
The Movements Converge
• Growth reflected in est. of first colleges.– Bacon College (1836), Georgetown,
KY--Walter Scott first president.– Bethany College, A.C. in 1840.
• “Not a theological school.”• Only “literary and scientific” college
in world “founded upon the Bible as the basis of all true science and true learning.”
The Movements Converge• Colleges.
– Bethany imp. for the leaders it trained--
• J. W. McGarvey• Moses Lard
– Franklin College, Nashville, Tolbert Fanning, 1845.
• Only lasted until the Civil War.• But trained many preachers who
would be prominent in South after the Civil War.
The Movements Converge• Debates.
– 1829 C. defended Christian faith which brought him national prominence.
• Robert Owen, social reformer and atheist.
• Founded utopia at New Harmony, Indiana.
• Owen charged that all religions had hindered the progress of civilization.
Robert Owen (1771-1858)• Welsh-born social reformer.• Organized a model community around the
New Lanark cotton mills in Scotland.• Instead of working children, he built
schools for them.• Kept his mills in good repair and tried to
take care of his laborers’ needs.• Founded the New Harmony utopian
community in southern Indiana.• New Harmony failed because some would
not work.
Robert Owen (1771-1858)• O. lost popularity because of his
antireligious views.
• A.C. finally responded to O’s widely published challenge that all religions were false.
• Debated in Cincinnati in 1829.
Robert Owen(1771-1858)
Robert Owen (1771-1858)• A village boy who hobnobbed with royalty,• A shop assistant who became a factory
manager,• An educator with little education,• A rich man who fought for the poor,• A capitalist who became the first
“socialist,”• An individualist who inspired the
Co-operative movement.Museum website, New Larark
Francis Trollope’s drawing of the Campbell-Owen debate.
From: Frances Trollope, DOMESTICMANNERS OF THE AMERICANS (London:
Richard Bentley, 1839).
Frances Trollope
(1780-1863)
Frances Trollope (1780-1863)• Mother of novelist, Anthony Trollope• In 1827, after her husband had failed at various
business ventures, she came to Cincinnati to open a dry-goods shop (bazaar) for another son.
• It failed and the family returned to England in 1831.
• She began writing at age 50 to support the family.
• Her caustic Domestic Manners of the Americans (1832) made her famous and highly unpopular in the U.S.
Frances Trollope (1780-1863)• She wrote more than 100 books.
• Chapter XIV of Domestic Manners describes her impressions of the Campbell-Owen debate.
• Her parting comment: “All this I think could only have happened in America. I am not quite sure that it was very desirable it should have happened any where.”
The Movements Converge
• Debates.– 1837 C. championed Protestantism
against the Catholic bishop of Cincinnati, John B. Purcell.
– Issues:• Catholic church “catholic, apostolic
and holy.”• Purgatory and transubstantiation.• Catholicism anti-American.
John Baptist Purcell(1800-1883)
The Movements Converge
• Debates.• Owen & Purcell gave C. national prestige
and set pattern of “contending for the faith” which encouraged a controversial spirit in the movement.
• Later generations have engaged in thousands of debates.
• Only in mid-20th c. have debates declined in popularity.
The Movements Converge
• Growth.
• Between 1832 and Civil War remarkable optimism, vitality and numerical growth.
• Geographic center Ohio Valley, but spread rapidly in every direction.
• 1832 probably 20,000-25,000.
• 1860 yearly 200,000.
The Movements Converge
• Growth.
• 1860 17 states with at least 1,000.– KY--45,000 VA-8,430 CA-1,223– IN---25,000 NY-2,500 GA-1,100– OH--25,000 NC-2,500 MI-1,000– MO--20,000 TX-2,500– IL----15,000 AL-2,458– TN---12,285 MS-2,450– IA----10,000 AR-2,257
Missionary Society
• 1830s time when seeds of later controversies were sown.
• Saw appearance of “cooperation meetings.”
• 1840s saw organization of American Christian Missionary Society (1849).
Missionary Society
• The Cooperation Meeting.
• 1831-1832 C. pub. series of 7 articles in Millennial Harbinger on “The Cooperation of Churches.”– Believed world would never be
evangelized unless churches cooperated.
– The 7 articles a plea for cooperation.
Missionary Society• The Cooperation Meeting.
• C. argued that NT gave e.g.s of churches cooperating (II Cor. 8), so authority.– Exact details as to how left to discretion of
every generation.– E.g., churches in his home county might
have annual meeting.• Plans made.• Evangelist selected & support provided.
The Missionary Society• The Cooperation Meeting.• Thru 1830s chs. in many areas began to
organize “cooperation meetings.”• Wellsburg, VA, 4-12-1834 (near C’s home).
– 13 chs. employed 2 evangelists, chose treasurer and set committee of 13 to supervise work.
– Opposition & a year later dissolved.– Decision--limit cooperation to number of chs.
necessary to sustain one evangelist.
The Missionary Society
• The Cooperation Meeting.
• Moved slowly in 1830s; gained momentum in 1840s.– State-wide meetings began--IL,
1834, Barton Stone present.– 1840 Millennial Harbinger
announced meetings in 6 states: IL, VA, MO, OH, KY, IN.
The Missionary Society• “The Burnt Child Dreads The Fire.”
• Some viewed the meetings with misgivings.– T. M. Henley, VA, wrote C. in 1836
that it seemed to him “like a departure from the simplicity of the Christian institution to have cooperation meetings with Presidents and Secretaries, calling for the Messengers of churches, and laying off districts.”
The Missionary Society
• “The Burnt Child Dreads The Fire.”• Henley recalled that this was the
way that Baptist associations had originated in VA.
• And, remembering how Christians had been treated by VA Baptist associations, he commented, “The burnt child dreads the fire.”
The Missionary Society• The burnt child.
• Henley proposed an alternative--cooperation through a local church.– A church unable to support an
evangelist alone could invite other churches to assist.
– The elders of one would oversee, receive funds and report the use of the funds.
The Missionary Society
• The burnt child.
• Many examples of this plan of cooperation.– 3 KY churches 1842.– Georgetown church took responsibility
and employed John T. Johnson.– When others followed, Johnson
commended them for following “the same scriptural principles” of cooperation.
The Missionary Society
• Campbell’s Call.• 1841 C. began a 16-article series, The
Nature of the Christian Organization.”– When finished 2 years later, C. proposed
a “general organization” be established.– C. argued the church was the “body of
Christ” and a body must necessarily be organized.
The Missionary Society• Campbell’s call.
• Admitting NT did not provide for any general organization, C. concluded it was left to the judgment of the churches.
• Proposed a convention to create organization.
• Would leave churches free to manage internal affairs, but would enable them to concentrate resources in preaching.
The Missionary Society
• Walter Scott opposed C’s plan.– S. said churches were not “deficient
in organization.”– When a church had elders &
deacons, it was “already organized.”– This the view of the entire
brotherhood, he said.– Asked, “Who made brother Campbell
an organizer over us?”
The Missionary Society
• 1st brotherhood organization--American Christian Bible Society, Cincinnati, 1845.– D. S. Burnet, Cincinnati, took lead.– Purpose: “to aid in the distribution of the
Sacred Scriptures” throughout the world.– Constitution (Burnet) called for officers, an
annual meeting, and auxiliary societies.– Burnet, the president, called it a “holy cause”
which should “enlist all our affections.”
D. S. Burnet(1808-1867)
The Missionary Society• Society got support from most
periodicals, but C. opposed it in the MH.– Reason: Was organized by a few Cincinnati
brethren rather than a general convention.– Arthur Crihfield later said that if it “had
commenced at Bethany,” C. would not have opposed.
– Controversy among periodicals.– C and B friends, but C. did not relent in
opposition.
American Christian Missionary Society
• 1849 C. renewed efforts to persuade brotherhood of need for “a more efficient organization.”
• Obviously serious problems in proposal.– How could independent churches
hold a convention?– Who could call it?– Where would it be held?– Would the brotherhood accept it?
ACMS
• Periodicals discussed the issue through 1849.
• Gradual consensus--– General convention at Cincinnati
10/23/l849.– Held in conjunction with the annual
meeting of the Bible society.
ACMS
• 10 states, 156 present--many prominent preachers, but not Campbell.
• C’s views presented by his son-in-law, W. K. Pendleton.
• Generally understood that one action of the convention would be the organization of a missionary society, but how it would be related to Bible society not clear.
ACMS• Reorganize Bible society to include
a “missionary department.”– would not have won C’s approval.
• Pendleton proposed independent missionary society as “chief object of importance.”– this would have offended many
who supported Bible society.
ACMS
• Solution: compromise.– Missionary society to be organized.– Bible society would be commended
to brotherhood for support.– The two societies would be
instructed to work together.
ACMS• D. S. Burnet presided and helped draft
the constitution for ACMS.– No surprise that constitution was patterned
after that of the Bible society.– Consisted of Annual Delegates, Life
Members and Life Directors.– Life Member=$20; Life Director=$100.– Pres., 20 vice presidents, two secretaries,
treasurer, managers, an annual meeting and an executive board.
ACMS• Final action was to authorize letter to
A.C. informing him he was president.– C. answered that his expectations
were “more than realized.”– Withdrew objections to Bible society
now that it had been endorsed by the brotherhood.
– C. also accepted pres. and served in the office for the rest of life (1849-1866).
ACMS• 1st work of society--sent Dr. James T.
Barclay, Scottsville, VA, to Jerusalem.– Walter Scott--“magic in the name of
Jerusalem.”– Brotherhood responded eagerly.
• Barclays arrived in 1850.– Work discouraging.– Discontinued in 1853 as Crimean War
loomed.
• Alexander Cross, freed slave, to Liberia, and J. O. Beardslee to Jamaica.
ACMS• Decade of opposition.
– ACMS never had support of all brotherhood.
– Jacob Creath, Jr. the most outspoken early critic.
– C. in 1823 in CB said NT churches “were not fractured into missionary societies.”
– “Knew nothing of the hobbies of modern times.”
Jacob Creath, Jr.(1799-1886)
ACMS
• C. also--they dared not “transfer to a missionary society, or Bible society, or education society, a cent or a prayer, lest in so doing they should rob the church of its glory, and exalt the inventions of men above the wisdom of God. In their church capacity alone they moved.”
ACMS
• Creath reminded C.of these earlier views.– “If you were right in the Christian
Baptist, you are wrong now. If you are right now, you were wrong then.”
– Creath also said supporters of society had “totally abandoned” the rule that “the Bible alone is the religion of Protestants.”
ACMS• Were chs. & groups of chs. which
adopted resolutions opposing the society.– Connelsville, PA--the ch. “not a
missionary society, but emphatically and pre-eminently the missionary society--the only one authorized by Jesus Christ.”
– If ch. the divine society, “all other societies for this purpose are not only unscriptural, but they are unnecessary and uncalled for.”
ACMS• Connelsville also objected to provision
that membership was based on money.
• Also charged that the society was “a dangerous precedent--a departure from the principles” of Restoration Movement.
• VA Christians held meeting at Emmaus in May, 1850.– Resolution: would not work through
society.– Would support Barclay by independent
effort.
ACMS• Most imp. opponent in pre-CW years
was Tolbert Fanning.– F. (1810-1874) spent adult life in
Nashville.– Most influential preacher in South in
1850s and 1860s.– Talented, with diverse interests.
• Founded Tennessee Agricultural Society.• Edited the Agriculturalist.
Tolbert Fanning(1810-1874)
ACMS
• Founded Franklin College, trained many preachers, and edited journals.
• When ACMS founded, Fanning was elected a vice-pres., though not present in Cincinnati.– Supported society during early years.– Gradually came to question it.– Founded Gospel Advocate 1855 with “chief
purpose” to examine the subjects of church organization and Christian cooperation.
ACMS• Spirit of early articles in GA strikingly
similar to C’s CB.– F. “The Church of God is the only divinely
authorized Missionary, Bible, Sunday School and Temperance Society; the only institution in which the Heavenly Father will be honored . . . and through no other agency can man glorify his Maker.”
– Wrong for Christians to “do the work of the church through merely human agencies.”
ACMS
• In years before Civil War a majority of Southern Christians came to share F’s views.– But as yet no sense of alienation from
society.– 1859 F. attended annual convention in
Cincinnati.• Invited to address convention.• Described mission work in TN.
ACMS• F. took opportunity to say that many
Southern Christians could not conscientiously support society.– Described how TN churches cooperated
“as churches, without the aid of a Missionary Society” to support J. J. Trott in work among Cherokee Indians.
– “But I am happy to say, that from what I have heard on this floor, we are one people. With us all there is one faith, one God, one body and one Spirit.”
ACMS
• As Civil War loomed, Restoration Movement had also reached a crossroad.– Christians North & South held opposing
views on an important doctrinal issue--• Whether missionary society scriptural.• But as yet, these differences had
produced no sense of division.
Civil War• Outbreak of CW a test of whether the
RM could endure as one people.– 1860 1200 churches in North & ca.
800 in South.– Many in Ohio Valley and border
states like KY and MO where loyalties divided.
• Brother against brother.• Father against son.
Civil War• Thomas Munnell, Mt. Sterling, KY to David
Oliphant in 1862.– In KY Union & Conf. sympathizers trying to
worship together, sing same songs, drink same bread & wine, & say “Amen” to same prayers.
– Atmosphere so tense that if preachers had supported either side, would have destroyed half the churches in KY in a month.
– “We hope not to divide into North and South churches as other large bodies have.”
– “Brother should not go to war with brother.”
Christian Pacifism
• Except for Walter Scott, all early restoration leaders had been pacifists.
• When war began, A.C., B. Franklin, J. W. McGarvey, Moses E. Lard, Robert Milligan, Tolbert Fanning, David Lipscomb, and others, counseled non-participation.
• McGarvey said he would do anything he could to keep brethren from enlisting.
J. W. McGarvey(1829-1911
Christian Pacifism• M.: “I would rather, ten thousand times,
be killed for refusing to fight than to fall in battle, or come home victorious with the blood of my brethren on my hands.”
• Asked what 12 apostles would have done--6 in North & 6 in South.– Would they have urges Christians to
enlist?– Saw himself “standing in between my
brethren and the battlefield, with the NT in hand, warning them, as they hope for heaven, to keep the peace.”
Christian Pacifism• Robert Milligan another pacifist.
– Became Pres. of Transylvania College in KY in 1859.
– Managed to keep college open through war--only college in KY to do this.
• McGarvey & 13 prominent MO preachers signed a plea calling upon Christians not to fight.– Plea published in many journals.
Christian Pacifism• McGarvey.
– Preachers warned those who engaged in “fratricidal strife” would incur God’s displeasure.
– Pleaded church should remain unified.• TN: elders & evangelists of several TN
churches met at Beech Grove in 1862.– Drafted a letter to Jefferson Davis requesting
Christians be exempt from service.– South’s draft law would bring “indescribable
distress.”
Christian Pacifism• Confederate govt. granted conscientious
objector status.• After war, Lipscomb claimed TN Christians
had been “almost a unit” in refusing.• But--1000s on both sides enlisted.
– A.C.’s son & BWS, Jr. wore Conf. gray.– Some preachers supported war in each
section.
Christian Pacifism• James A. Garfield, Union Colonel--
– Made recruiting speeches on church steps.– Persuaded many of his former students at
Hiram College to join his regiment.– Fought from Shiloh to Chickamauga.– Was elected to Congress.– Finally became President of United States.
James A. Garfield(1831-1881)
Christian Pacifism
• In the South, these wore Conf. gray:– T. B. Larimore.– B. F. Hall.– Addison & Randolph Clark.– Austin McGary.– General R. M. Gano.
B. F. Hall1803-1873
General R. M. Gano(1830-1913)
(Richard MontgomeryGano)
T. B. Larimore(1843-1929)(Theophilus
BrownLarimore)
Mars Hill
Christian Pacifism
• Two men illustrated the tension many felt between the demands of God and Caesar--Benjamin Franklin and Tolbert Fanning.– Each man the most popular preacher in
his section throughout 1860s.– Each a pacifist.– But when war came each felt strong
sectional loyalties.
Christian Pacifism
• F. criticized for not allowing political issues to be discussed in his journal, the American Christian Review.– Protested he had not “one spark of
disloyal feeling toward the Union.”– But he loved it “next to the
government of God.”
Christian Pacifism
• Tolbert Fanning believed just as strongly in the Southern cause.– Believed war caused by “infidel
preachers”--he named men like Theodore Parker, Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Ward Beecher--
– Who “trampled under foot the word of God and the constitution.”
Christian Pacifism
• Was South justified in resisting Union?– F: “If people were ever justified in
resisting encroachments, we conscientiously believe the citizens of the Confederate States are.”
– But he hastened to add, “All this we have spoken as a citizen of the world, and not as a member of the family of God.”
Christian Pacifism• F. & F. both believed that the Christian
had a higher obligation, and this demanded that he stand aloof from war.– Franklin: “We will not take up arms
against, fight or kill the brethren we have labored for twenty years to bring into the Kingdom of God.”
– Fanning: “Both parties claim the sanction of Heaven, and very earnestly call upon God for help. Both cannot be right.”
Christian Pacifism
• Fanning: “It may be that God intends to prove his people, and...the war may be the occasion for the test.”
• 4 years later a man from the North also noted sadly that N & S both prayed to the same God and read the same Bible.– He also saw the war as God’s judgment.– “The judgments of the Lord are true and
righteous altogether”--Abraham Lincoln.
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