Campbellism Exposed
or, A History of Clear Creek Church
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County, Pennsylvania, edited by Boyd Crumrine, 1882, " entitled,
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Preface
The following essay will be on points of order,
purporting in historic style, some uncommon things that have lately
taken place at Clear Creek Church, in Woodford county, near
Versailles, and in some other places. Discord and schism have torn
asunder the once happy church at Clear Creek, by what is now
vulgarly called Campbellism. Preachers have been the instruments of
this calamity. Four of them will pass in review, two of whom are of
the name of Jacob; the other two are named William, with some other
Campbellitish teachers.
Faithfulness in narrating will be attended to: yet taking the
liberty, as we go on, of making any remark that may seem pertinent
to the thing in hand, remembering our responsibility to both God
and man.
God informed Ezekiel, in his 33rd chapter, of the duty of a
watchman; and in 2nd verse, should the people call a man as their
watchman, his duty was to report to them when danger appeared - so
says the Lord to Ezekiel in 7th verse, I have set thee a watchman
to the house of Israel, and thou shalt hear the word of my mouth,
and warn them from me. On the point of being one of the sent of
God, to preach, I have always thought modesty was the best course
for me. But whether called of God, or man, as a watchman,
faithfulness is needful. Paul once said, and when speaking on the
subject of his ministry, Acts 20 c., 26 v., I am pure from the
blood of all men. So I willingly would be, whether called of God,
or the church, or both, I would, if practicable, be found faithful.
From my first interview with Campbell, I suspected him, as a
teacher of the Lord, which will appear hereafter. It may be I shall
offend some of my best friends in some things I have written, and
for which, as yet, I have no apology. I have steered on according
to the conviction of my own judgment, and that common something in
man called conscience - answerable, first to God, and afterwards to
man. It will be seen that I waited several years hoping to find
something better in Campbellism; but the further we progressed the
more dark, cold and freezing. This was often found in their
doctrines. In all this, perhaps, I should have been longer silent,
only for flagrant outrage on good order. Paul would have all things
done in good order - I. Cor. 14 c. 40 v. Let all things be done
decently, and in order. An entire lack of uniformity or decorum, is
found in all their movements. Confusion and anarchy mark their way
throughout. Paul says again - I. Cor. 14 c. 33 v. For God is not
the author of confusion, but of peace, as in all the churches of
the saints. Their work, in contending and in dividing churches, is
the worst kind of heresy; hence says Paul - I. Cor. 11 c. 16 v. If
any man seem to be contentious, we have no such custom, neither the
churches of God. And again, in 19 v. For there must be also
heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made
manifest among you. Here Paul would not allow a man to seem to be
contentious; and so far as he was contentious, Paul would call him
a heretick, in 19th verse. The worst of all heresy, is corrupt
views of the Scriptures, put into practice; and this is more seen
in Campbellites, than any other people with whom we are acquainted.
Their endless innovations, stir up endless contentions. Here seems
to lie their best services - in painfully working among many of
these poor little mean things. The only consolation I have, is the
fulfilling of duty as a watchman, in the church of Christ. I am not
interested in being on bad terms with any man alive. If I ever
censure any man, more than I pity him, that moment I condemn
myself. Unity, peace, and love, is my highest object among my
fellow beings. The divine book tells me, in Heb. 12 c. 14 v. Follow
peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man can see the
Lord. There is no implicated man in the following essay, but I
would offer the common hand of friendship, and, if possible,
reclaim them from the folly of their way, and reform those
hair-brained reformers.
JOHN TAYLOR.
History of Clear Creek Church, and, Campbellism
Exposed
"Is there no balm in Gilead? Is there no physician
there? Why then is not the health of the daughter of my people
recovered?" - Jeremiah, 6th chap. 22nd verse.
I have heretofore attempted to give a history of this church up to
the beginning of the year 1827, when Theodorick Boulware served
them as their stated preacher. In the following year, 1828,
intruders pushed in, and by their preaching, greatly divided and
distracted the church, so that at present, like many other
distressed places in Kentucky, two Baptist churches worship, or
keep up a show of worship, in the same house; forbear to commune
together at the Lord's table, and have less friendly conversation
together than thousands of men who know nothing savingly of the
meek and lowly Jesus. This surely must terminate in nothing less
than lamentation, mourning and woe: Ezekiel 2 c. 10 v.
In the beginning of the last year, 1829, the church, without a
dissenting voice, chose brother George Blackburn to serve at their
monthly meetings during the year. He had a hard tour, for the
contention was in high blast before he entered on the service. His
prudence and faithfulness deserve great credit; he probably has not
an enemy on either side of the contending parties, though he
generally acted as their moderator. The church had no communion at
the Lord's table during the whole year; indeed they were not in
circumstances so to do, and scarcely any has been baptized.
Towards the close of the year there was published in the Kentucky
Gazette, printed in Lexington, the following notice:
"There will be (Dei volente) God willing, a three day's meeting
held by the Baptist Reformers, at Clear Creek Meeting - house, in
Woodford county, two miles south of Versailles, commencing on
Christmas day, and will be continued Saturday and Lord's Day
following."
Although what are called Campbellites had hitherto manifested as
much brazen impudence as the race of goats generally do, I had not
known till this christening, in a public print, that they set
themselves up as Baptist Reformers.
It will be conceded that all sectarians have the right to assume to
themselves the name they would go by. It is supposed they have
obtained liberty from headquarters, or the grand master, thus to
style themselves, and could they do what they claim to be, they
might be of use to the Baptists in Kentucky.
All agree amendments might be made among them, and particularly in
points of order, this being the head under which I have thought
proper to write. But if a man, or men, do not come out with clean
hands, they will make but poor progress in reforming work. That
adage, "Physician heal thyself," will never be forgotten. Let us
calmly inspect the hands of these Reformers. Take them from the
great Master himself (Campbell,) down to the lowest teacher among
them, and what do you find. This high Master has been exhibiting
among us for seven or eight years on the subject of religion -
writing, preaching, and debating - and who can discover by the
utmost stretch of charity, that he has any saving religion, judging
from any thing he has said or done. Yet it is possible he might be
of use among men in some calling. It is to be hoped his situation
in the Convention of Virginia has increased his relish for
political life, which will much better suit him than the gospel
ministry. Let him leave that sacred trust, and religion itself, to
those who know more of it than he does, and let the church of
Christ go on in peace without him.
I attended the great meeting above alluded to at Clear Creek, held
by the Baptist Reformers, vulgarly called Campbellites. They had
expected many preachers, but only four of their order attended,
to-wit: the two Creath's John Smith, and young Hewitt. With all the
parade that had been made for two months, printing in different
papers, the house was not crowded even on Sunday, though the
admirers of this new sect had come as far as from Lexington and
Danville; well as I was acquainted at Clear Creek, a large portion
of those who attended were strangers to me. Much was said about
Campbell, and the ancient order of things, and the reform these men
are at; but these, with all the noise Campbell has been making
about the ancient order of things, are about one hundred years old,
that he has picked up from John Glass, and Sandeman, his
countryman. See Buck's Theological dictionary.
This new tribe of Kentucky Sandemanians are at a great loss what to
call themselves; no men seem to desire wealth and popularity more
than they do; it would no doubt please their grand master, to call
them Campbellites; but they look grum if you call them so, for each
scribe among them would be a leader. They are afraid to own the
late appellation given them in the public prints, Baptist
Reformers, lest it should turn out that they are no better than
other men; they therefore deny that they thus published themselves.
If this is a slander on them it is their place to find it out, and
prove to us that they are not thus proud and vain. Some of their
leaders say, the appellation of New Testament men will suit them
best; but this they area afraid of for several reasons: they know
other men have the New Testament, understand and observe it as
closely as they do. They know too, this would suppose laying aside
the Old Testament. Though they virtually do all this, they are
afraid to come out plainly. In this confused state, they had better
consult Campbell himself, or wait till his Millennial Harbinger
comes out, when perhaps they may take a name suited to their
"latter day glory." (All this folly is mainly among their
preachers.) They consider him the greatest and most happy man on
earth. He has won so many battles in public debate, that he is a
made man both in character and fortune. They are at a loss for
figures by which to compare him. A preacher lately compared him to
a Lion, the master beast of the forest, and one among the best
preachers in Kentucky, (though not one of the Reformers,) he
compared to a Monkey, that at the growl of the Lion would run to
save his life. I ask leave of the friends of Campbell to make a
comparison. Is he not more like a large he goat standing on some
eminence, looking more stout than any of his fellow animals, Dan. 7
c., 20 v. as if he would defy the Lion himself. In the 8th chapter
of Daniel, the Grecian goat is spoken of with a notable large horn
between his eyes, conquering all before him. It may be remembered,
that Daniel's goat was Alexander the great; the same goat pretty
well figures out our Alexander. Daniel's goat killed a ram with two
horns, and then conquered the world. Our goat, as he thinks, has in
public debate put two Presbyterian ministers to flight, and after
that, conquered the Infidel Owen - but I wish him invited to a more
decisive combat with another goat like himself, I mean Daniel
Parker, (living in Illinois) at some given time, on the Ohio
river.
That the subjects of debate be on points in which they disagree.
One we will call the East goat, the other the West goat. It is
probable these two great men will never see each other, except on
some occasion like this. Perhaps it will offend the East goat to
rank him with the West goat as a great man. I ask, why? If the East
goat has long edited a paper, called the Christian Baptist, the one
in the West now edits one called the Church's Advocate. If the East
goat has been in the Virginia Convention, the West goat has been in
the Illinois Legislature. If the East goat has travelled and
preached much, the West goat has done the same more. If the East
goat has made many books, the West goat has made a number too, and
put them all together, on each side, they are of about equal worth.
Romantic as this may seem melancholy have been the consequences.
Both these men are Baptists, and are now distracting the Baptists
in the Western country. They both live in the West, five hundred
miles apart, in about the same latitude. They have both passed the
same ordeal in coming into the Baptist society. They were both
supposed to be religious when they were baptized, though it is
possible neither of them is. Let the debate be friendly, on the
following subjects, viz.: 1st. The proper divinity of Christ. 2d.
Who and what the Holy Spirit is? 3d. The doctrine of election. 4th.
Regeneration, and how effected. 5th. Of what avail is water
baptism. 6th. What is the use of the law in the gospel day? 7th.
How a gospel church is to be governed? 8th. Call to the ministry.
9th. What is sanctification of the spirit? 10th. Effectual calling.
11th. What is the utility of creeds? 12th. The kingdom of Christ
and of God. Let this debate begin on Monday morning in long days,
and continue six days. On the seventh, both the men preach to the
same congregation, and neither of them exceed two hours in their
address. Let the only book used in this debate, be the translation
of the Bible, made under the reign of king James. If half the
Baptists of the western world, will be drawn off by Campbell and
Parker, the balance will refuse to be hoodwinked by either of them,
and will stick together as united Baptists, in the name of the
Lord.
I consider the extremes of those big goats, and those who adhere to
them, a great curse to the present generation of men.
This digression from the history of Clear Creek Church, may be
thought to require an apology, which I will now resume, under the
head of
POINTS OF ORDER.
I consider lack of good order, more than any thing else, has
brought about the destructive explosion that has lately taken place
in this church. There were some conspicuous instruments in those
breaches of good order; and what is more surprising, they were all
preaching men. Two of them by the name of Jacob, the other two by
the name of William. About two years ago, dead of winter, Jacob
Creath, Sen., and William Morton had, what was called a great
revival of religion at Nicholasville; more than one hundred were
baptized. In their zeal they came to Clear Creek preaching. One
thing their zeal prompted them to, was preaching against all creeds
and confessions of faith, except the scriptures.
The church having been constituted on the Philadelphia Confession
of Faith, some of the members took alarm, thinking these men
designed a revolution in the church. Creath in former days had
served this church many years as their pastor, and knew all about
their constitution. Here is a point of order Creath must answer
for.
Of Morton the church knew but little, but many disliked the
preaching of both men. Though William Rice was a member among them
and a preaching man, the church was very destitute of regular
stated preaching. In the spring of the year, a motion was made and
agreed to by a majority of the church to call Creath to preach once
a month; a number of the members objecting to the call, he, to his
credit, refused to come.
The call of Creath made Rice quite outrageous, he openly, at their
May meeting, rose up and declared Morton a heretic; that Creath who
kept company and preached with him was no better; that two among
the most respectable members of the church, Lewis Sullivan and John
Mitchum, had invited and went to hear those heretics preach. The
moderator reproved, and tried to stop him, but all in vain. Here I
suppose the church gave up the reigns of government, for in place
of ruling Rice to good behavior on the spot, they suffered him to
take a course of dealing with those supposed heretics, according to
the 18th of Matthew, the then rule of the church. I was at their
June meeting, an almost silent, sorrowful spectator. The church had
now become divided into two great parties, and all of them dear to
me as my own life.
For about fifteen months, I was seldom absent, though most painful
days to me; I knew not where to touch without seeming to take
sides, while I evidently saw both were wrong. One on side some of
the brethren had caught too much of Rice's spirit; on the other
side, they were too apt to retort. This circumstance alone screened
Rice from merited exclusion. Though there is one thing in which
Rice deserves credit: when he dealt with those supposed heretics,
he chose none of his own party as helps, and a better choice he
could not have made than the two he selected from another church,
William Dale and Charles Barnes. These judicious brethren advised
Rice to go to the church, and confess his fault, which he very
sparingly did. But the church passed it over. After this, he became
so great a stickler for good order, that he kept the church as it
were in hot water about their records; some phraseology he would
find there, that must be altered; at length, to be at ease, the
church agreed to rescind their records for several meetings back to
gratify him. He then rose up and insisted the church could never be
at peace so long as heretics were among them; that they never had
permitted him to prove what he could now do, in a few minutes, for
he had all his witnesses at hand.
The accused brethren requested the church immediately to take it
up, in that crude way, though they knew it was out of order, for
they wished to hear all he could say about their heresy; and to
gratify them the church agreed to take it up, some asked to take
them both together, but Rice objected to that, and would take them
one at a time. Brother Sullivan's case was first taken up. Rice now
seemed at the greatest loss where to begin; at length began to ask
the accused some questions, such as, have you not gone to hear
Morton preach, or asked him to come here to preach, or, in my
presence, spoken against the Philadelphia Confession of Faith? and
the like.
Sullivan replied about to this amount: that he had been a Baptist
about thirty-seven years; that he became a member of this church
about thirty years ago; he presumed he had a right to hear whom he
pleased preach the gospel; he and Rice had talked of the
Philadelphia Confession of Faith, some things in it they both
disapproved of; he had once proposed to the church to lay aside the
discipline annexed to the Confession of Faith, to which the church
agreed; Rice not being present, when he met with him, Rice blamed
him because he had not gotten the whole book set aside, which Rice
did not contradict. He related to the church the ground of his hope
in Christ, and that he did not know of any change of sentiment
since he first received Christ. The humility and tenderness with
which he expressed all this, led me to wonder that Rice did not
rise up and give him his hand. But far from this, with the greatest
fierceness, he used what wit he had, to make the accused criminate
himself. What he told the church he could do in a few minutes, he
kept the church probably two hours before the question could be
taken. I looked on with surprise at the accuser and accused;
striking were the odds in age and behavior; one meek and gentle,
the other fierce and boisterous. Such a scene had never come before
me till now. I had read much of the bloody persecution of heretics
by the inquisition in Spain, and supposed no judge in this bloody
court ever looked with more disdain on a heretic brought before
him, than did the present accuser on the accused.
About sunset the question was taken, whether the charge of heresy
was substantiated. Every voice was in the negative, and even this
did not seem to make Rice blush. Every one would have thought he
would drop Mitchum's case; but that he would have laid over till
next meeting; when that came on, he proposed having it laid over
again, as he was not ready for trial; that he had a paper somewhere
that he had written himself, which he could not find, that would
show he had never called these men heretics; his speeches were long
and clamourous, and he beyond the control of the Moderator, yet he
complained much of violation of good order. Thus the church was
detained great part of the day, and knowing better what he had
openly said in the church against those heretics, than his paper
could tell them if he had it, they ruled him into trial, when he
entered into the same lame evidences against Mitchum, that he had
done against Sullivan, and the church voting unanimously in the
same way, put an end to his charges of heresy.
I have said more of Rice, and his contentions, than I should have
done, by way of introduction to what follows.
For six months the church had been overwhelmed with sorrow and
confusion with those contentions; till a number among their best
members had taken letters and gone elsewhere.
About this time, young Jacob Creath, after some years absence from
the State, came to the neighbourhood.
The church was now destitute of regular stated preaching. A
subscription was set afloat by some young men, who were not
Baptists, for Creath to preach at Clear Creek, the 1st Sunday in
each month, for one year. To this paper some of the members of the
church had put their names to the subscription, amounting in all to
about ninety dollars.
This produced a fresh source of contention in the church. This
young brother, a few years before had preached in Kentucky with
good acceptance among the churches. But now he would read and
preach from the new, or Campbell's translation of the New
Testament, cast contempt on the Old translation, that the Bible was
much corrupted by that translation.
He would preach too what some of the members thought rank
arminianism. This raised resentment against the members who had
employed him. About the beginning of the year 1829 as before
stated, the church agreed to call a preacher to serve them that
year at their monthly meeting. Brother George Blackburn was
ultimately chosen, who went on with good acceptance through the
year. But the strife kept up in the church, young Jacob constantly
crying out against every thing like creeds. Rice kept up his fire
of contention, till he was like to be excluded, for that kind of
behaviour in the church; but at length so far acknowledged his
fault that the censure was removed, and the same day he brought
forward a question, "whether it was according to good order, for a
few members to employ, or station a man in stated preaching in the
meeting house without consulting the church." This question was
laid over till next meeting, which gave opportunity to bring in
auxiliaries from home and abroad. Some art was used to prevent the
church from acting on this question as it stood, urging that it
ought to be a question of trespass, and not a question of order,
that if any was aggrieved they should deal according to the law of
Christ, and present complaint against the offenders. This artful
course was chiefly insisted for by members from other
churches.
Several preachers from abroad attended this meeting. Among them
young Jacob himself, who I think spoke more than any one else for
the good order of this thing. Josephus Hewitt plead much in favor
of this good order, and gave one good evidence, of himself now
preaching to a large and respectable church once a month, and
invited to this service only by a few members. But what was most
surprising, the Moderator of Elkhorn Association was there, and
plead with all his skill for the good order of a few calling to
stated preaching in a church, and urged as one of the best reasons,
that several years ago he met with a subscription paper with but
few names to it, for an individual to preach once a month in
Versailles, and he had heard no complaint in the church about it.
But he did not tell us that this subscription was for this same
young Jacob, and perhaps he did not reflect that all this had been
done by one of the foot-loose churches, that can scarcely allow of
a written constitution, rules of decorum, or a church record. There
was but little reply to these mighty reasons.
A motion was made by an individual on the other side of the
question, to lay it over till next meeting, urging that sickness in
the neighborhood, and a muster, prevented many of the members from
being at meeting; remarking that there were many there that day,
from other churches, who would not be there, but for the present
question; and, furthermore, that there were many negroes there that
day, who would not have been but for the same reason. This motion
was overruled, and the business went on. Young Jacob took his seat,
and stand, when up, near the negroes. The question was often called
for. The policy of Rice generally was, to have the last speech
before a question was taken, he threw out some hard things against
young Jacob, such as hireling and the like. The Moderator could not
stop him. Young Jacob rose to reply to Rice. The Moderator seeing
the disorder between these men, soon stopped Creath, who made an
appeal to the church, who, now prepared to carry all before them,
voted that he should have an opportunity to reply, which he did in
very reproachful style, as long as he pleased. He reproached Rice
for having lately been under the censure of the church; compared
him to a man he knew of, who was condemned to be hung. His counsel
told him he had no chance to save his life, but by turning
religious. He did so, and his life was spared. Thus he looked on
Rice's late repentance that saved him from exclusion. Just here,
though he seemed very resentful, he broke out in a loud dry laugh.
The vote was then taken, on the majority side, 7 white men, 12
negroes, the balance white sisters, to the amount in all of 26. All
these voted, that it is good order for a few to place a preacher in
stated preaching, without consulting the church.
The vote on the other side was, 13 white men, one black man, and no
female; some present, chose to be neutral, viewing the whole scene
with horror. From the last minutes of Elkhorn Association, it
appears, 14 had taken letters of dismission from Clear Creek
Church, chief, or all of them, to get out of the fires that kindled
there. At the time of this vote there were 186 members belonging to
the church, many of whom chose not to be at this meeting, feeling
as David did when he said, "woe is me! that I sojourn in Mesech,
that I dwell in the tents of Keder," or when he said, "my soul hath
long dwelt with them that hate peace." Young Jacob had gained a
triumphant victory over his adversaries, yet his mind appeared a
little interrupted, though he seemed to sit down with a joyful
calm; something had been remarked in the course of the day, about
the strength of a preacher's stomach, who could preach in a church
where the members were not all agreed. After thinking thereon for
awhile, he rose with apparent resentment, and said he would preach
no more in the meeting house; but that he would preach in the
grove, or at the rope walk, or at some private house. How vain is
this young man, to presume the people would follow, wherever he
might choose to lead them, to hear him preach. To say the least, it
evidences the good opinion he has of himself, or induces a belief,
that as he had preached half his year, he was unwilling to lose any
part of his ninety dollars.
If all this is good order, I hitherto had not known what good order
is, for no one had said any thing against his preaching in the
house.
His partisans put him up a stage in the woods, but a few hundred
yards from the meeting house. This oratory at once became so
sacred, they mut have the Lord's supper administered at it. To
cloak this thing up, it has been said the Versailles church
communed there. If this is true, what a dreadful mockery it was, to
use these measures to swallow up as far as they could, a mother
establishment of forty-five years standing, because their Young
Jacob was there. But I presume the Versailles church did not this
thing. If she did, then was there no wise, prudent, nor good man in
this church, to tell this giddy young man the folly of his way.
Shall we be told this is "the ancient order of things?" Paul's
ancient order of things was to give no offence to the Jews nor to
the Gentiles, nor to the church of Christ. I. Cor. 10 c. 32. v.
What does all this work do, but give just offence to the church of
God? I ask again, was there no wise, good and prudent man about
Versailles, to tell their young Jacob, that his course was
destructive? Where was the grey-headed Creath? Where was Bullock,
James Sullivan and others, who, for seven years past, knew the
painful evil of two churches in one house? Who ever complained more
than all these men did against the Particular Baptists, for setting
up a church in their house? Where was the orderly, God fearing,
Robert Scarce, at Clear Creek, who kept out of the snare awhile?
Where was the well-meaning Lewis Sullivan, the Mitchums, McQuatlies
and others, that they did not tell this young passenger, that his
course was disorderly, and that his object seemed to be, rent and
schism; one of the greatest evils in a church. From my boyhood, I
have taken much notice of both spiders and flies - the most general
food of spiders are flies. The spider having no wings, art must be
used to catch its prey; art without means would be of no avail. The
spider in its own bowels, has a kind of glutinate from which it can
spin a web, and stick it where the insect pleases, and in as many
directions as suits its convenience or advantage. Thus do I look on
young Jacob's course at his oratory. As a spider, he spreads his
traps, one of which (horrid to think of) was the sacred symbols of
our Lord's death; he sets up the Lord's supper to catch the
heedless ones. I have often heard of abuses of, and by the Lord's
supper, but none ever seemed to equal this. I cannot forbear
thinking of Paul's warning the Ephesian elders, that there should
men of themselves rise up, speaking perverse things, to draw away
disciples after them. Acts, 20 c. 29 and 30 verses. In what
perverse language did he speak to Rice and others in the meeting
house! With what emphatic wrath did he exclaim, "I will preach no
more in this house, &c." Is there any reason to conclude, his
temperament was changed when he administered the Lord's supper? The
prophet Isaiah, in his 59th chap. 5th verse, speaks of spiders and
their webs; and with them connects cockatrice eggs, more poisonous
than any thing else.
At the August monthly meeting at Clear Creek, things bore a more
favorable aspect than they had done for many months; the question
was taken up again, "Whether it was good order for a few members to
place a man in stated preaching, without consulting the church."
Without much debating, they voted without an open voice against it,
not good order; but there were a few neutrals.
Another question was brought forward, viz: "Shall we stick to, and
abide by, our original constitution?" All agreed so to do, except a
few neutrals; but all seemed to mingle and part as if they were in
peace. Brother John Mitchum, one of the dissenters from creeds, who
was not at this meeting, told me he hoped the church would now be
at rest. Young Jacob was not at this happy meeting; and perhaps
fearing all he had gained would be lost, two weeks after, came on
to his oratory. This gave time for his cockatrice eggs to hatch.
With great vehemence he exclaimed against all creeds; ranked them
all with the corruptions of the mother of harlots, and that the
Philadelphia Confession of Faith, was the abomination of
desolation, &c. After which, he spread his table again, and the
unwary ones are caught in the trap once more. A number of the Clear
Creek members, having communed at this disorderly table, gave
dissatisfaction to the church, which they declared, and recorded at
their next meeting. The reason I call it a disorderly table, it was
known that Creath was obnoxious to far the greater part of the
church; that they never had called him to administer among them;
that it was quite an outlandish thing to go into the woods to
commemorate the death of Christ. Blackburn, by the call of the
church, ready at all times, for that or any other service,
acceptable to them and the churches of his acquaintance; so that it
must have been a wanton and aggravating thing in the members thus
indulged. This young man though he had so publicly avowed, that he
would preach no more in the meeting house, about the beginning of
frost, returned to the house whence he came out, (so did an unclean
spirit once before,) but how he can recommend himself to men
hereafter, as a man of his word, he must see to himself. He has
since, set up a church in the same house, as they say, according to
"the ancient order of things;" and if they act at all, as a church,
we shall see how they act, if they will let us see. It was an
ancient question, who can bring a clean thing out of an
unclean?
Under the head of "points of order," I have endeavored faithfully
to exhibit the order of one of the greatest BAPTIST REFORMERS now
in Kentucky. If I have fallen short in his morose temper, and
vulgarity of manners, when by ourselves, if he choose, I can give
him other items. We have two kinsmen in our country, named Jacob,
the greatest Baptist Reformers among us; so says Campbell
somewhere. The Creaths are of the first grade of Baptist preachers
in Kentucky. The old brother seems to think, from what he commonly
says of himself, that he is one of the most peaceable men in the
world. King Saul once said "I have done all the Lord commanded me;"
but when Samuel asked the meaning of the bleating of the sheep, and
the lowing of the oxen, that he heard, Saul had this come off: That
other people had done all the mischief that the prophet complained
of. Will our old brother take the same course? He ought to admit
what others say, that for near thirty years, since he has been in
Kentucky, there has been but little of that time, that he has not
been in conflict with somebody; but perhaps his lot is cast among
the worst of men. We well remember, his name is Jacob. It is
probable his father was a religious man, and loved the man that God
himself loved, the old Patriarch, Jacob, and named his son after
him; and that young Jacob was named after his uncle. We well
remember too, that the old Patriarch was a twin brother, and before
their birth (strange to tell, for Rebecca could not account for
it;) there was a struggle between the boys, which should be first
born. Esau was born first, and called by that name on account of
his redness. Jacob had fast hold of his brother's heel; he was,
therefore, called Jacob, which means supplanter or beguiler. Though
Esau was a cunning hunter, in many things Jacob was more cunning
than he. We know his cunning tricks in first obtaining the birth
right, and after that, his father's blessing.
When our Jacob first came to Kentucky, by some means,
many of the old preachers had a bad opinion of him, and sought to
bruise his head; but he never failed to get hold of their heel. So
then he is cunning - he looks cunning - he loves to be cunning -
and one of his great luxuries is, to sit in company, and tell of
the cunning tricks he played, to get the victory over the old
preachers. And if you wish to please him uncommonly well, break out
with him in a loud laugh at his feats of war and victory. How far
this comports with a meek and quiet spirit, which in the sight of
God is of great price, the reader will judge for himself. I some
how think, old Jacob had heard so many complaints from his brother
Esau, about his name and nature, that he desired to have another
name before he met his brother. Though he had used some of his
cunning ricks with his father-in-law, Laban, in pealing his rods
when he watered his cattle, the time came that he must meet his
brother, and the Lord gratified him with another and a better name.
For when he wrestled with the angel, he asked his name, and he
owned it was Jacob. We know what a change this God angel gave to
his name just before he met with his brother Esau. It cannot be an
unfriendly prayer, and to which both these Jacobs should say, amen.
Oh! Lord God of Israel, turn both these Jacobs into Israelites
indeed, in whom there is no guile. But if the cunning of one Jacob
could beguile, and obtain the birthright from an elder brother; by
deceit obtain the blessing from a Patriarchal father, and overreach
a wary father-in-law, what has not religious society to apprehend,
from the combined cunning of two Jacobs? I have numbered old
brother Jacob with the intruders at Clear Creek; this I regret to
do, as both of us in past years, at different times, have served
the church there. When I heard, about two years ago, the church had
called him to preach once a month, it gave me pleasure, not knowing
he had changed his opinions. Those revolutionizers, Creath and
Morton, preach vehemently against creeds of all kinds. What was
this but to break the order of the church, that had stood more than
forty years on their constitution? In this perhaps, Creath slipped
along and said less than Morton, but he was his full abettor, and
much most to blame, for he had served the church thirteen years
under its present constitution. Here was the beginning of the
trouble that has brought about the fatal effects we now see in this
church. I have named Morton as one of the intruders. It may be, he
is the most innocent man among all the intruders at Clear Creek;
for it is probable, he knows no better; for, being very self-willed
and self-conceited, he only takes notice of one side of the
question, and should he never have felt the power of Godliness, he
is more to be pitied than blamed. From all that I can hear of him,
he deports himself well, so that I am willing to consider him a
well meaning man, with all the chaff that is about him.
I think he can say this for himself, that none of the Campbellites
can say; for he needed not Campbell's contaminating principles to
corrupt him; all this he had before he saw or heard of Campbell.
Should he ever see this, he will know what I mean, by a
conversation we had at an association one Sunday morning, more than
ten years ago. In 1825, a complaint was exhibited against him in
Elkhorn association, from the church where he was a member, called
Bethlehem, about false doctrine. A committee of eight mn were
appointed; only six met, viz: T. Bullock, James Johnson, J.
Darnaby, P. Higbee, James Fishback and William Suggett. The points
complained of, were in relation to the imputation of the first
man's sin to his posterity - the helpless state of man by the fall.
What influence from God was needful in the conversion of a sinner.
All this committee, considered Morton not sound in the faith, and
thus reported to the church, in writing, with each man's signature.
The church, it seems, was fifty seven members. A brother Syms, who
was there, acted an artful part - said to the sisters, you all
ought to vote; do you not see if you receive this report, it will
stop brother Morton from preaching, and then what will you do? The
sisters all voted, perhaps one man with them, and I think a
majority of only one vote, shut out the report; all this I lately
had from William Suggett. In all this, there was one thing in
Morton's favor, his preaching pleased the sisters and his brother
Syms; but what will his brother Bullock do? whose signature is to
the report, and is now so very fond of hearing him; no change it is
presumed in Morton. Has Bullock changed since that time? I highly
esteem Bullock, and am afflicted that he should be a man given to
change. But, if it is a fact that he has changed, since he put his
name to that report, he ought to acknowledge the wrong to his
brother Morton, and the committee men with whom he was associated.
Some men seem to glory in changes, and as if highly to their
credit, run after every Jack that springs up with his lantern, and
nothing but whim attends them all their days, and bless themselves
that they are no bigots. But says James, "the double minded man is
unstable in all his ways," and no man ought to put confidence in
him. I take it for granted, when God converts a sinner's soul, he
does it well, and that it is not a half-handed work; that all
articles of a sound faith are embraced in this sound work of God on
his soul. That there is an unction from the holy One, and they have
no need that any man teach them; that this holy spirit guides them
in all truth; that false teachers can do but little with them, for
they know not the voice of strangers, being the sheep of
Christ.
The whole book of God is the food of their souls, and should they
never see that book, Christ himself is their leader, and the bishop
of their souls - they mentally feel his love. Among these Baptist
Reformers, you see much zeal, but little apparent devotion to God.
Last Sunday evening we had a prayer meeting at Buck Run meeting
house. A company of Baptist Reformers rode up into the yard about
the beginning of singing; one of them slipped into the house, and
whispered brother Wilson out, inviting themselves to his house to
stay all night - all his entreaties could not prevail on them to
come into the house, and join in the devotion of the evening,
though a find, warm, moonlight night; their excuse was, great
fatigue - they had travelled seven miles after preaching that day -
they were five able-bodied men, in the prime of life - two of them
were preachers, John Smith and young Jacob Creath, they took off
one of our devotional men from meeting. I had seen a tall young
man, with his face partly hid, whisper to Wilson, and he go out in
haste, and not return; loss of his services in meeting, was felt by
us all. When meeting broke, I went to Wilson's to see what was the
matter in his family, and found these gentlemen enjoying themselves
by a good fire. Here are men zealous in trifles, or what is worse,
with but little apparent piety and devotion to God. Why not spend
an hour or two in prayer, and praise to God, with their brethren,
when there was so fair an opportunity? I was a little the more
surprised at this, as John Smith was in company. I have long known
him, and had a high opinion of him as a minister of Christ. We have
often preached together as fellow-laborers, but he has raised far
above me, or any other men we know, except Baptist Reformers. Time
will prove whether all this is any thing more than mere swagger.
Some time ago, this brother Smith had a meeting appointed at a
church that did not cordially receive him; they were not willing he
should preach in their meeting house.
Smith held up his New Testament, saying, this book directs me to
wipe off the dust of my feet as a witness against you, and walked
out, wiping his feet on the floor, and went to the woods to
preach.
This John, I suppose, walked out with all the indignant feeling
that the Apostle John ever could have done. This tale I have from
Mr. Smith himself - the reader will judge of the order of this
action, seeing this John was not an Apostle, except self-conceit
made him so. This man has a commanding voice, ready to communicate
and preach - is very acceptable when he happens to be right.
In what he would have the North District association to reform,
none can tell; for the chief of his reform is to cast away all
creeds, and take the scriptures for our only guide. This
association never had a creed, except the scriptures, with rules of
decorum to do their business by, when in session, which they can
change when they please.
But these Reformers must have a contentious noise, from mere love
to that kind of noise. Does it not seem these noisy Reformers, have
more zeal to carry points, than love to God and men. What higher
devotion can we render to God in a social way, than in praise and
prayer? This exercise seems to have no charms for those five men
passing by Buck Run meeting house; but they must call away a
brother from perhaps the act of singing at the beginning of
worship, to accommodate their bodily convenience. What happifies
good men more than love and fellowship one with another; all this
happiness is broken up by these Baptist Reformers wherever they go.
Witness North District Association, where Smith has great
influence. Witness Clear Creek and many other places. Let us take a
temporary walk with these gentry, to the church on South Benson. To
this place I have not been for a long time, but I hear they are
trying to get foot hold there. The most I know of Benson affairs at
present, is an extract from a letter sent to the editor of a paper
printed in Lexington, styled "the Christian Examiner," signed J. H.
which I presume is Josephus Hewitt. He tells us about the time that
business opened, his old brother Creath made his appearance. I
would ask him how it came to pass his brother Creath was there, and
why was he there himself? Did the church at Benson send for either
of them? Till I know that, I shall think them both intruders, and
especially as he tells us his brother Creath opened a fiery debate,
and he, himself, closed it, which brought on the dark of evening.
Who can look on this youngster's parade but with disgust? Farther,
says he, I had appeared myself, and gave them a brisk fire for
about an hour, and was told afterwards, that I did not disgrace the
cause; but some present, thought he ought to be taken out of the
house." Who told him afterwards, that he did not disgrace the
cause? I suppose his brother Creath told him so. Who thought he
ought to be taken out of the house? I suppose, members of the
church on whom he was intruding. Does his brisk fire, which he bo
boasts of, look like piety of mind, and devotion to God? This is
the same young man, who preached to a large and respectable church
at Shawnee Run one year, by the invitation of a few members.
I am told lately, the same church of three hundred members, gives
him a vote of 58, and the opposite side is 50 with the pastor. But
he goes on, thinking he has a majority, though fifty members, with
the Pastor, are against his coming. It is probable he will shortly
get such a nest for himself at Shawnee Run, as young Jacob has at
Clear Creek, and who knows but such another may be gotten at South
Benson. I would ask Silas M. Noel, if this young man is not a
turncoat, for he was one of the men who assisted in his ordination,
and examined him closely on doctrinal points; and as I would not be
behind hand, in good will to this sprightly minded young man, I
would advise him to remember his youth, and tarry at Jericho till
his beard be grown.
What I have been writing for an hour, is a confirmation of the
positions taken, that their zeal is a mere tinsel of show to carry
points, and get something to themselves, more than to glorify God
and be of benefit to their fellow-men. We will take some notice of
the last Elkhorn Association.
Why was it, that three churches, to-wit: Versailles, South Elkhorn
and Providence, under the pastoral care of these Reformers,
altogether but little over four hundred members, should send
twenty-four messengers to the association of more than four
thousand members?
This was such pitiful selfishness, that I am ashamed to write it.
Who would do this but brazen faced Baptist Reformers? Will they try
to make us believe, this was the "ancient order of things?" Can we
be led to believe, that these men either fear and love God, or
regard men, except for their own interest? By this course, with a
little log-rolling, in filling the pulpit on Sunday, and this to go
out in the minutes of the association, might serve to gratify their
vanity.
What is all this but disgusting bravado, a mere puff of filthy
scum? When, and where, will those follies end? O! my God, hasten
the time. Well might Jeremiah say, 9th chap. 1st verse, "O that my
head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might
weep day and night over the slain of the daughter of my
people."
O, when will the Baptists, behave more like christians?
We may take it for granted, it is not that they are thus scrupulous
about creeds, that keeps the Campbellites locked up so closely on
that subject; but instability of mind, not knowing what they
believe themselves; so they are not so much to blame in that
particular, as some may imagine. Let them pause and make up their
minds, before they speak or write. Campbell will help them after a
while, if he can - he has many queries to answer - he will strike
on something in process of time.
It is his interest to scatter the Baptists awhile, that he may rake
up all he can. Let him know his own creed, before he pours it
forth; and let those young gaping birds wait till he is
ready.
They complain much of being misrepresented by others, and of being
greatly persecuted. Let them tell their master, Campbell, of all
this, and in due time, he may carefully, or cunningly, relieve them
from all their difficulties.
But O! Let them cease to inflict wounds on that society to which
they profess to belong.
I had supposed I was done with young Jacob Creath, but he has
lately presented himself in a new style, in the "Christian
Examiner," a paper published in Lexington, through which he has
thought proper to address me a letter, of which at the present (as
I have already given some account of his movements at Clear Creek,)
I shall only take a passing notice. In that paper he has published
a piece on creeds. To which, if I may be so bold, I would make a
short reply. But in this, no doubt, he will think of me as the
young giant did of David, when from age, he waxed faint in battle.
This young giant, having a new sword, had nearly taken David's
life. 2 Sam. 21 c. 16 verse. It is really a little amusing to look
at this young giant, (Jacob,) brandishing his sword at his outset.
"He has been a close observer of creeds for several years." But now
rises up in the majesty of his strength, and with one stroke,
smites to the earth, Doctor Miller, of Princeton; Doctor Noel, with
all Franklin association, and all other creed holders on the
continent of America and settles the creed question forever.
But the first thing he presumes is evidently wrong - "that a
majority of the Baptists in Kentucky, is opposed to creeds." Has he
yet to learn, that the terms of union among the Baptists, both in
Virginia and Kentucky, is as much a creed as any thing that can be
adopted? And to my knowledge of Baptists, there is not one church
in ten, but has what may properly be called a creed. His first
figure to describe creeds by, (Kings of Israel,) is a badly chosen
one, and especially when applied to dissenters from established or
national religion. Moreover, God told Abraham, that kings should
come from him; and in the case of David, God himself chose him, and
continued the kingdom in his family for twenty generations, and yet
exists in a more exalted style, in the person of Messias.
His next figure of a calf, I wish he had not used this figure, for
I am obliged to apply it to himself, more than I can to a creed of
any kind; for who but a calf could have committed the blunder he
has done about this very calf. He tells us first, "it was a most
beautiful creature." We will not object to this, though neither of
us ever saw it. But many have seen young Jacob, and all agree he is
well favored. He tells us further, "this beautiful creature, became
a great curse to the people." I wish with all my heart he may not
become the same, yea, what a curse has he been to the people
already! witness his open vow in the meeting house, that he would
preach there no more, perhaps in the hearing of a hundred people.
He left the place like the unclean spirit which went out of the
man. He walked through dry places about three months, preaching at
his oratory, on the top of a hill.
There his unhallowed abuse of the Lord's supper, proved a great
snare and curse to a number of the members at Clear Creek. He
returns to the meeting house again, in breach of his vow; and like
the unclean spirit of old, committed seven times as much disorder
as he had done before he left the house, in setting up a new church
in the house, contrary to good order. witness his course at South
Benson, in the same kind of disorder, where, since writing the
foregoing, another church is set up by the Reformers. So that this
most beautiful creature, (young Jacob,) has proved a great curse to
the people.
By the direction of God, Moses ground this calf to powder, and cast
it on the waters. If this young man prospers in the gospel
ministry, he must repent of these, his disorders.
He tells us too, it was the first idol the Jews ever had, and that
the Egyptian Apis was the first idol that was ever made. Ah! me,
who but a calf could have thought this? It required no great
presence of mind to have thought of the idol gods that Rachel stole
from her father Laban, that the Patriarch Jacob, buried under an
oak.
After they were God's chosen people, and were practicing hundreds
of years before they came out from the Egyptians, whose gods
consisted of thousands. Why could not this young man have thought
of Nimrod, who was the first born of Cush, who was the first born
of Ham. In this NImrod, idolatry first began, about the time of the
confusion of tongues, and the building of Babylon.
The first idolatry, men were tempted to, (and which was more
rational than any other,) was that of the sun and the heavenly
bodies; and next to that, their heroes. We know what great things
are said about Nimrod, a mighty hunter before the Lord, and after
conquering wild beasts, he used his power and skill on men, and
made himself master of the world, so far as to set up the first
kingdom that ever was on earth, which stood longer than any that
has ever been since, and Babylon was the seat of his empire. Moses
says, Gen. 10 c. 10 v. the beginning of his kingdom was Babel in
the land of Shinar. The best historians say he was worshiped as a
god under a variety of appellations, as Belus, &c.
I think Rollin tells us when Cambysas, (an idolater himself,) the
Persian king, conquered Egypt, he very much reproached the
Egyptians for their foolish worship; and to prove to them their
bull was not a god, he killed him, which goes to prove that the
worship of the bull was then a modern thing. But the most calf-like
communication this young man makes about his calf, is, when Moses
was receiving the written law from God, he has Aaron there too,
taking private instruction from God, and at the same time, making
the golden calf among the people; and then fancies he finds all
this collected into a book, called the Nishna, by Rabbi Jahoda. He
must be a very superficial reader, and this communicated to Aaron,
to hand to the next priest, before Aaron was consecrated a priest
himself; all this he applies to creeds, see page 33. I know not
that Aaron was in the mount to receive any thing from God. The
first time Moses was there, he was making the calf; only Joshua was
with him. The second time, God commanded no man to be there, but
Moses himself. Exo. 34 c 3 v. I am surprised at this young man's
positive assertions, when they are so very incorrect. For, says he,
page 33, "during the three first centuries, there were no human
creeds, nor till the year 325." All the proof he brings for this,
is Mosheim, vol. 1, page 5. Has he ever read Mosheim beyond this
fifth page? Here he stops, and boasts of his plenty of proof. Let
him read again, and read Mosheim, his own witness, and in the first
century. In page 114, he gives us what is called the Apostle's
creed, (which we call human,) which so universally prevailed, that
those who were baptised, were required to repeat it at the time of
their baptising, through the whole of the second century, page 206.
Until about the middle of the second century, the churches were
independent of each other. Each church governed by its own laws,
page 174. What were those laws and rules, but their creeds, and
government, agreed on among themselves? About this time,
associations were formed, with delegates from each church. The
decisions of these councils were made binding on the churches, and
were called laws, cannons or creeds, page 175. Where is Jacob now,
with his three first centuries?
This youngster promises submission, if scripture authority can be
brought for creeds, page 31. I ask him, how readest thou, in Acts,
15th chapter? This I as much call a creed for the benefit of a
certain class of men, as any that ever was formed by any
council.
In the next chapter, the same instrument is called the decrees
delivered to the Gentile disciples to keep. Moreover, at the same
time, the Jewish christians had a separate creed; which the
apostles indulged them in awhile. This creed is set forth in the
6th chapter to the Hebrews, called the principles of the doctrine
of Christ - six (6) articles in all, chiefly on doctrine, beginning
with the first verse. Long after this, Paul advised leaving or
laying aside those doctrines, having so great a show of Judeaism in
them. What is the Lord's prayer but a written creed on the subject
of prayer? Or, what is brother Creath's three points of faith,
knowledge, and opinion, but a creed, while he is fighting against
creeds? The great objection to creeds by those mighty Reformers, is
mostly from a propensity to quarrel.
Chief, or all of them, have been creed-holders, and do they, or any
body else, think they are better men than they were before?
In one thing I think them worse than other men, that is, sowing
discord among brethren, which God says he hates. Prov. 6 c. 19
v.
If I can do no good in the church of Christ, I pray God to keep me
from doing harm.
That there are extremes among the Baptists in the west, both in
doctrine and order, I have no doubt; and nothing is more common
than for one extreme to produce another, taking men the world over.
I have spoken, somewhere in this essay, of two men, who embrace the
outer limits of those extremes. One I style the Eastern Goat, (A.
Campbell,) the other, the Western Goat, (D. Parker.) Campbell's
course, is, Phariseeism gospelized. Parker's course is christianity
heathenized; both of which, I think, should be set aside by orderly
Baptists. Though I know nothing against the moral deportment of
either of these men; the Pharisee's plan for acceptance with God,
was to keep the law of Moses, and begin with circumcision.
Campbell's plan is, to keep the law of Christ, and begin with
baptism; and his personal actions to the law of Christ, brings his
soul to heaven - precisely so with the Pharisee, his personal
actions to the law of Moses, brought his soul to heaven; but
Campbell says, he has faith, so did the Pharisees, and precisely
the same kind of faith by which Campbell admits a man to baptism.
If the faith of one was in a Messias already come, the other had
the same historic faith in one to come. One great default in the
Pharisee's religion, is named by the Saviour in Matthew, 23 c. and
23 v. "Though ye you tithes, you omit the weightier matters of the
law, judgment, mercy, and faith - this ought you to have done." The
same thing is repeated in Luke, 11 c. 42 v. with this exception,
"ye pass over judgment and the love of God."
This judgment and the love of God, or judgment, mercy and faith,
takes in precisely what I call vital religion in the soul of man;
and nothing short of it, will admit a man into the church below, or
heaven above. This I call being born again. All this, the poor
Pharisees, and Campbell's plan leaves out, or passes over. By
judgment, I understand, the righteous decision a sinner makes of
his own state before God; being self-condemned for the sin of his
heart, as the publican in the temple, smites on his breast, and
dare not look up; but cries to God for mercy. All this the Pharisee
passed over, and all this poor Campbell calls metaphysical whim -
religious legerdemain, see C. Baptist, vol. 6, No. 8, page 186. One
of these men went down to his house justified; the other remained
as he was, a boasting Pharisee. Thus I look on Campbell's whole
plan; with this odds, one goes by the law of Moses, the other goes
by what he calls the law of Christ; but each one, like a spider,
spinning his covering out of his own bowels. The Pharisee begins
with this circumcision, and works up to it afterwards by the law of
Moses; the other begins with baptism, as a regenerating ordinance,
and by which remission of sin is obtained, and by his new law works
into heaven. Which of the two is most sure of heaven, as the whole
is of the works of man, leaving out the atoning righteousness of
Christ, and its application to the soul, by the spirit of God,
through faith in His blood. We will suppose two proselytes coming
over, one to a Scribe among the Pharisees, to be circumcised; the
other coming to the Scribe, Campbell, to be baptised, each I have
called his extreme, christianity heathenized - I now refer to his
books on seeds; for otherwise, Parker is a good, experimental,
preacher; but in his eternal evil, or God eternally having an
opponent, is quite heathenish. His saying that God did not make all
mankind, is worse than heathenish; but few heathens ever propagated
this. I wonder the man does not look at what God said to Noah, or a
little before the flood, Gen. 6 c. 7 v. I presume he will think
these were the Devil's seed, as much as any were that was ever on
the earth. I have compared these two extreme men to goats. If
fighting mus be done among the Baptists, as they love it, let
others barely look on, and whoever joins them in this battle, I
would not abuse, but turn them over to Paul, in Philippians, 3 c. 2
v. "Beware of dogs, beware of evil-workers, beware of the
concision." The word concision, means, to cut, slash, and divide.
Baptists in the west have been full of this. It may be, that the
extremes in the particular baptists, has pushed Campbell to where
he is, and set afloat these hair brained reformers, in all their
extravagant folly, and wicked disorder, in tearing churches to
pieces. May the Lord stop their mad career. I never was a violent
creed man, but have always thought, that some given principles, in
a summary way, should be well understood in every church in its
constitution.
Between those extreme points, I believe, unhesitatingly, that there
is a middle ground, most fit to occupy in the gospel ministry. This
middle way is plainly dictated in the scriptures, both by precept
from God, and the examples of his holy prophets, and apostles, and
impelled on by the tender bowels of Christ. Paul says, Phil. 1 c. 8
v. "God is my record, how greatly I long after you all in the
bowels of Jesus Christ." Without these tender bowels, preaching is
of little use; and I am sure, while a man is fighting in the
pulpit, he seldom has those tender feelings to any body. I hear
very lately, in the midst of this day of dreadful clamor, that
brother Vardeman, is determined to take this middle ground - God
bless the man. If I was not so old and worthless, I should desire
to be with, and help him all I could. May the Lord give to all his
true gospel ministers, those tender, sympathizing, sounding bowels
of Christ, to fit them for his work; and as the concision men love
it better, let them fight on till they die, and abide their
fate.
I have just been saying some things of the particular baptists, and
what I considered extremes among them. They have always known my
views: that it did not correspond with good order, to set up two
baptist churches in one house; but this to my recollection, they
never did do when they were in legal correspondence. But what have
these disorderly Creath men done? They have cut asunder not only
the staff beauty, Zech. 11 c. 10 v. but also the staff bands, verse
14. They have disorderly, and wantonly, broken the covenant with
churches in their own close communion. What will Elkhorn
association do at their next session? Shut them out from a seat,
and the church to which they belong, except they use their
discipline; and cut them off, except they repent and restore that
which they took away. What will Franklin association do at her next
session? Break off her correspondence with Elkhorn, except she rid
herself of such filthy lumber. How is all this to be done?
Precisely as Elkhorn rid herself from the Cooper's Run heresy; for
I consider this to be about the same thing, only more glaring in
point of order. What animals in nature, incline to destroy their
own species? A rare thing for hogs, to destroy their own young. The
most base of all human beings, is what is called cannibals,
man-eaters; and such, it seems, are found; and to me, it seems,
here they are. With what face can either of these Jacobs take a
seat in any association, where they have committed such abuses on
her churches? Nothing is considered more mean, than robbing of
churches. Paul calls it sacrilege, Rom. 2 c. 22 v. What dreadful
plundering has been at Clear Creek, and South Benson? These men
seem to be very church hungry; if they cannot get a whole one, they
will put up with a scrap. It will be a hard matter, to convince the
world, that the good of the people is their object; they may please
themselves, that they are only doing as the particular baptists
have done before them; but here is a mistake, for the particular
baptists always had too much dignity of character, to waste a
church anywhere, who was in correspondence with them. Moses speaks
largely on the uncleanness of all creeping things, see Lev. 11 c.
31, 41, 43, and 44 verses. All these creeping things, to a Hebrew,
was unclean; they should neither eat nor handle, but hold them in
abomination. Paul tells us of men, preaching men, 2 Tim. 3 c. 6 v.
who crept into houses, to lead away silly people. What point of
good order, could lead John Smith, and several other preachers, to
go to Hillsborough, when they knew the church had interdicted their
preaching in the house? Why did they slip about, and creep into
worship, without leave from the church, who had locked the doors to
keep them out? This would seem to be an unclean, creeping thing.
Much of this low kind of creeping, from place to place, is found in
these baptist reformers.
I well remember, and I find it recorded in the minutes of Elkhorn
Association of 1786, that when a church refuses to take the advice
of the association, she shall be denied a seat there; rpvoided the
advice is not contrary to the terms of the general union. This
decision was founded on the belief, that an association had a right
to govern themselves, and say who should compose their body. Who
can now object to this, provided such a body may exist at all; but
Elkhorn yet exists. I have Doctor Noel's "Gospel Herald" before me,
he gives a short history of Elkhorn, for 25 years from the
beginning. In 1801, they had forty-six churches, 4,488
communicants. We suppose, without doubt, that Elkhorn has more
members in her body, than any other association in this State. Why,
then, should she not be equally respectable, as any sister
establishment of the kind, and act as decisive as she ever did. We
see that she claimed, in 1786, a right to govern herself, and say
who should compose her body. She has treated with, and dropped a
number of churches, from her communion, for either bad doctrine, or
disorderly practice.
I ask, will she now suffer herself to be imposed on by a few head
long, or head strong men? The two Creaths have lately acted the
most distant from good order, of any men we ever knew, of the
baptist name; by tearing down, as far as they could, mother
churches, of long standing, and in the closest communion with
themselves, and setting up scraps of churches, according to their
own whim, to suit their own convenience and interest. Clear Creek,
is one, belonging to Elkhorn association; South Benton, is one,
belonging to Franklin association. These men, both belong to
Versailles; should that church approve of their conduct, she no
longer should keep her seat in Elkhorn association. Is this
flagrant outrage on good order, what is to be done? Let each
church, who feels aggrieved, (no doubt many will,) make themselves
well acquainted with this affair, and send on a request, and the
association act on it promptly. Or, perhaps the better way would
be, according to the law of Christ, for an aggrieved church, to
send chosen men, and treat with the aggrievers, before their own
church; and if satisfaction is not obtained, lay it before the
association. But I am very sure, should every other thing fail,
that Clear Creek church, who is the aggrieved party, will not fail
to send their request to the association. So that these Creath men
may calculate to face a charge, at the next session of Elkhorn.
They may fancy that 400 men, can hoodwink 4,000, as in the case of
their last year's representation; but Elkhorn has already guarded
that spot; so that the three churches that last year had 24 votes,
will this year have about ten. All common sense men look ahead, act
with design, and expect consequences to attend all their actions.
Hence, says Solomon, "the prudent man foreseeth the evil, and
hideth himself; but the simple pass on, and are punished." There is
very little doubt, these men meditate an escape from the Elkhorn
baptists, and will give what is called leg bail, and scuttle off,
before the association acts on their case; and take all they can
with them. This I calculate from the native folly and pride of the
men. But the grey headed man is most of all to be pitied, for it is
probable he imagines there is scarcely such a man in the world, as
his cousin Jacob. But how much more happy should I be, if these men
could be turned to a right mind, and use their best endeavors to
harmonize the churches again, at Clear Creek, and South Benson; but
for this, from what has passed, I cannot hope. I have seen a
communication from a listener, at South Benson, to the "Christian
Examiner," in Lexington; from the native bombast of this piece, I
take this listener to be young Jacob himself. The parade about the
constitution of the church, the handing the lively oracles, first
to John Brown, as the bishop, and then to other men as deacons. At
their next meeting, the same Brown yields up the charge, and young
Jacob accepts it, as Brown's successor. It looks very strange,
under existing circumstances, that young Jacob should accept that
charge. I know of but one man, that was ever on the earth, besides
young Jacob, that would have done it. The man I have in view, is
spoken of in the 8th and 9th chapters of the book of Judges. He was
a bastard son of the good old Gideon. His name was Abimelech - he
was the first man who was called king, in Israel. This was a
self-sought thing by him; he had about the same desire to be a
king, as young Jacob has to be a bishop. He was much of a stranger
in his father's family. Young Jacob must be much of a stranger at
Benson. He killed seventy of his father's sons, before he obtained
the kingdom. Young Jacob fought his way for several months, before
he gained his ill-gotten office; how many people he killed, or
crippled, in gaining his point, we cannot say. Gideon's youngest
son hid himself, and escaped the slaughter. This godly young
Jotham, from an eminence out of danger, uses a fit parable, and
prophesies Abimelech's downfall. The parable was, the trees went
about to make a king. The olive, the fig tree, and the vine, all
refuse to be king over the trees. The bramble was the last choice
of the trees, yet the bramble agrees to reign. Young Jacob was the
last choice of the people at Benson, yet he agrees to accept the
office. Abimelech reigned but a short time, and a woman, with a
piece of mill stone, broke his skull, and he died, according to the
word of the Lord by Jotham. I ask young Jacob to read this whole
story, that he may see his own likeness. I look for nothing better
between him and the men that chose him bishop, than between
Abimelech and the men of Shechem; who chose him to be their king,
and I look for the same sort of thing to turn up at Clear Creek. My
reason is, I consider God both just and holy. Some things seem to
be new under the sun! For a long time back, there has been much
apparent dislike between the grey headed Creath, and William Rice;
but of late, considerable social intercourse. Creath's object, it
seems, is to stir up Rice's resentment against the church, calling
Dillard to preach at Clear Creek, the present year. On this head,
it seems, Creath has been busy with some of the male members of the
church. Why should Creath be thus mischievous? But I did not know
before, that my old brother Creath, was so near a kinsman, or so
much like Jereboam, the son of Nebat; for I have never seen this
wicked man, and his sin, so fully exemplified, as in the present
case, see I. Kings, 12 c. 25 v. to the end. One sin of Jereboam was
making priests of the lowest of the people. However acceptable,
Rice as a preacher may be to others, Creath knows he is not so to
him. Can this be common honesty? Jereboam did not follow God's
direction in priest making. The tribe of Levi was quite overlooked
by him - the only tribe from which the priests were to come.
It is a universal trait in Campbellism, that God, by divine
influence, makes no preachers in the present day; hence, they set
men to baptising, who do not preach at all. This is Jereboamism,
connected with Campbellism. Thus, would Creath, like Jereboam of
old, set up preachers of his own choosing, and have the impudence
to do it for Clear Creek church. Another sin of Jereboam was,
making two golden calves; in this, no doubt, he plead, as Campbell
now does, the ancient order of things. I did not know so well till
now, that it was old Jacob, (by his sly counsels and actions,) that
set up young Jacob as golden calf at Clear Creek; I have elucidated
his calfship before. The two Jacobs have lately set up another
golden calf at South Benson; for Jereboam set up two, one at
Bethel, and the other at Dan. How many more these men will try to
set up, at other places, time will prove. But enough is already
done, to put every orderly church on their guard. They make free in
many churches, under this plea: we belong to Elkhorn. Every church
should ask them, are you the men who have committed such disorders
at Clear Creek, and South Benson; and then say, we have no use for
you disorganizers - you deformers - and not reformers - for they
who bids them God speed, partake of their guilt.
Another wicked thing in Jereboam was, he made a great feast, and
sacrificed to these new gods, verse 32. The Creaths make feasts
too, to their new whims; one of them was at Clear Creek last
Christmas. How many of these they have had at South Benson, we do
not inquire. Edmund Waller calls those kind of meetings,
war-dances; nothing can be more pertinent, for the whole of these
movements are war measures.
But the worst of all Jereboam's sin, was the motive that led to all
that is named above. His object was, to prevent the ten tribes from
going back to Jerusalem to worship, lest they fell away to the
house of David, and thereby lose his own head. He cared more for
himself, than all the rest of mankind; and so it evidently appears
in both the Creaths. This no doubt, induces old Jacob, to wish Rice
to be the preacher at Clear Creek; for he knows Dillard - his
talents and respectability otherwise. He fears the calf he has set
up at Clear Creek, will be treated as Moses treated the calf that
Aaron made, ground to powde, and scattered abroad. This is one
ground of my hope, that Dillard will greatly succeed at Clear
Creek; the fears of these men, that it will be so. I never an feel
at ease, while two separate communities of Baptists, are in one
house at Clear Creek. O, let not my friends think hard of me, in
the plain course I take, with the men I think have seduced them,
and are not their true friends. I never expect to mingle much with
the people again at Clear Creek; so that it cannot be worldly, or
personal interest that prompts me to what I now say. I could get
through the world with more ease, could I flatter more; but the
expense would be a wounded conscience.
I hope my brother Creaths will not be displeased with
the plain course I take with them. I call them brothers, because we
are yet in legal union, as they yet belong to the Elkhorn baptists.
As we are on points of order, I consider they have committed the
greatest outrage against good order, of any men who ever came under
my notice. If they are men of common sense, they will immediately
withdraw from the Elkhorn people, and make to themselves, friends
of the mammon of unrighteousness, wherever they can; for at next
Elkhorn session, they will be sure to be put out of their
stewardship. They may take my essay to recommend them, should they
be in a strange place. All may see, I put them among kings of
Israel - I know they love to rank with great people. My young Jacob
I have ranked with king Abimelech; of whom he has a great favor. My
gray headed Jacob I have connected with king Jereboam. While I am
writing, a kind of imagery will spring up in my mind, of how
Jereboam looked; very thick, black hair, and eyes, long face, and
at times, could make it look longer than common - a little
stoop-shouldered, as if a man of business; very large, thick,
lowering eye brows, and they bent up to a point, when he was
irritated; a mouth well shaped for speaking, of ready utterance, a
commanding voice, highly capacitated to deceive the people, and
much disposed to do it; beguiling thousands, never to go again to
Jerusalem to worship. Should he now step in, I should, perhaps
unwittingly say, howdy, brother Jereboam Creath.
At my birth, and in the early part of my life, my lot was cast in
the backwoods of Virginia, where Indians often killed people, not
far from where I was. My parents, who were of the church of
England, told me, I had been christened when young. Being taught in
all the rules of the old prayer book, I had my partialities that
way; but we lived so frontier, I never heard any man preach, till
about 17 years old; this was a baptist (William Marshall.) My
awakening that day, was so striking, that I was won over to
Marshall, and the religion he taught. A little more than two years
after this, by the conviction I had from the New Testament, I was
baptised, and became a baptist from principle. To this way, and
cause, I have had my warm and decided attachments ever since. I
would not be hard or unfriendly, to other christian societies; but
I am a decided, full bred baptist, and till I have cause to the
contrary, uniform fellowship is extended to baptists. The first
knowledge I had of A. Campbell, a friend handed me a book,
containing his debate with Walker, on the subject of baptism. I
looked over the work with pleasure, exulting, that the baptists in
the west, had such a man as Campbell among them. My desire to see,
and be with him, was greater than to see any other man living. Soon
after his debate with McCalla, he had an appointment in Lexington;
I rode twenty miles to be there. At a candle light prayer meeting,
the evening before, I met with Doctor Noel, who had come to
Lexington on the same errand myself had. We had a happy interview
with our brethren, at the prayer meeting, and again on Sunday
morning at sun rise; after which, we went early to the meeting
house to meet with and receive our great and new brother; for
Doctor Fishback was called away to his stated meeting at Vernon.
When our brother came, we were in the pulpit, we invited him up,
introduced ourselves to him, and welcome him to the services of the
day that was before him. The house was much crowded. He began at a
given time, and continued about three hours. His subject was the
last chapter of the gospel of Matthew. He began well, as I thought;
he soon led on to the day of Pentecost, and touched a string,
always the most sensitive to my heart, the conversion of many
sinners. In sweet tenderness, the tears trickled from my eyes
awhile; but when he began on his full explanation of religion, he
dried me up as barren as the heath of the wilderness. He began his
religion with matrimony, and the duty of parents to breed up their
children as believers in Christ. What belonged to the vital part,
or religion begun by the Lord himself, by an immediate influence
from above, he left out; but did not speak against it, as he has
done since. Meeting with a number of the brethren, after preaching,
they were exclaiming against it, asking my views of it; to whom I
replied, we would hear him again at night - yet hoping he would do
better next time. We were all kindly invited to dine, and tarry all
night, at Doctor Fishback's; but from more private converse with
our great brother, I had less appetite for preaching at night, than
I had at the beginning, so that I don't remember what his subject
was at night; these were all the times I have heard Campbell
preach, or wasted my time that way.
That night, after preaching, we sat up very late - had much
conversation, and next morning till after breakfast, when we
parted. Brother Noel and myself slept together that night; at which
time, we gave exchange of thoughts, about the new preacher. We
strongly suspected he was deeply tinctured with Unitarianism; in
which we became more confirmed afterwards, by the friendship, and
great cordiality there was between him and Stone, and all Stone's
followers.
I had a short interview with Campbell, one morning, in Frankfort;
after that, about one day and night at Doctor Noel's. All this was
the first time he came to Kentucky. It has been said, and I think
in print, but I think with great impertinence, that when Campbell
first came to Kentucky, that Noel was his great admirer, &c. At
our last interview at Noel's, Campbell had appointments at
Shelbyville, and Louisville, and put warmly at Noel to accompany
him, but Noel seemed to decline it altogether; myself, by
ourselves, endeavored to prevail on Noel to go with Campbell, that
it was an act of courtesy due to a stranger; reasoning thus, I am
just from a long tour of preaching - have not been at home one
night for near two weeks, or I would go with him myself. I could
only get this from Noel, that he would go to Shelbyville, but no
further; though not expressed by plain words, fairly insinuating,
that it was not to his credit, to associate much with Campbell. I
had heard a number of things from Campbell, that made me stare, in
some of which, I withstood him. My ears much deceived me, if he did
not say, that Christ was no other way the son of God, only as he
was the son of man; and in a conversation with preacher Chilton,
who was speaking in commendation of a work he had seen in a
congregation, (sin was weeping and crying aloud for mercy,) and at
his close, I know my eyes and ears are not deceived, when I saw
Campbell raise his hand, and with a loud crack of his finger, and a
scornful look on Children, say, "I would not give that for it," and
said, if a sinner weeps when I preach, I know I have some way
deceived him, and then added, every sinner that hears the gospel,
his countenance should brighten up, and he leave the place with
joy! this he stood to, and contended for afterwards. This I suppose
Campbell spoke, according to his own experience; that as he never
had repented and wept for his own sins, others should take the same
course; this is precisely what the Saviour would describe false
religion by. Witness the stony ground hearers, who receive the word
with joy; but when the time of trial came, having no root in
themselves, died away; or Herod, who heard John gladly, and did
many things, but after all, was pleased with the dancing of a girl,
and cut John's head off. This, I suppose too, is the reason why
Campbell is better pleased with his new translation, for the word
repentance is rarely seen in the whole work. The old translation
mingles too much godly sorrow with gospel religion, for Campbell's
use. May the good Lord have mercy on him, and give him repentance
unto life, while he is in life, though he so little desires it. The
evening we parted, we all set out together from the Doctor's; Noel
and his family, going with Campbell to Frankfort to hear him
preach, and though in company with them, and riding two miles out
of my way, I could have heard Campbell preach again; but becoming
so sick of what I had heard from him, while being in his company,
we parted, and I took my own road home. Our parting was with this
amount of friendship, a kind of prayer for each other. He took hold
of my hand, with his saying, "May your last days, be your best
days" - holding his hand, and looking in his face, said I, "May you
preach, and sinners weep; and when you net preach, use this text,
and do it justice, James, 4 c 8 and 9 verses, "Cleanse your hands,
ye sinners, and purify your hearts, ye double minded, be afflicted,
and mourn, and weep, let your laughter be turned to mourning, and
your joy to heaviness." He stared at me without reply. I did
suppose he pitied my weakness, and from my soul, I pitied his
state, much fearing the root of the matter was not there. But I
thank God, he has not made me, his, or any other man's final judge
- to their own master they stand or fall. Had I known (at the time
I looked in his face, and took leave of him,) what the prophet
Elisha knew, when he settled his countenance on the face of Hazael,
and wept, 2 Kings, 8 c. 11 v. I should have wept too. This Hazael,
was servant to the king of Syria. The prophet knew he would be
king, and greatly afflict Israel, therefore he wept. The first
exploit done by Hazael, was to kill his master, and then much
overturn the kingdom of Israel. What mischief Campbell did before
he left the Presbyterians, I am not fully apprized; but that he has
been a second edition of Hazael, among the baptists, we know at
least. Should Campbell ever see this, it will please him as well to
be classed with a king of any sort, as it has pleased the two
Jacobs heretofore; for greatness, more than goodness, is what they
are in quest of. Some years back, I thought the best way to treat
Campbell was, to say but little about him any way; but I did not
make proper allowance for the itching ears of men, and the natural
sweep of novelty. I had thought, all experienced Christians, would
condemn his whims, as fast as they heard them; but I find baptists
are not to be depended on, so much as I expected, and I marvel most
at the half-witted preachers.
The man who would have Campbell as his warm friend, must remember
two things: he must be both fool and hypocrite, before friendship
can be gained. Two other things are needful, to keep up the
friendship, to-wit, flattery, and submission. I gather all this
from personal acquaintance, and his writings. In former days, in
his Christian Baptist, he had respectable correspondence with
others; but where are they now? Gone forever, because they are not
willing to handle kitchen furniture. Who writes to him now, but
cringing flatterers, which he soon hurries abroad, however foolish
the communication may be. Egotism seems to be the reigning passion
of the man. What fulsome praises goes from his own pen, in favor of
his publication of the debate with Owen, and all his other bombast
about himself; and indeed, all his admirers in Kentucky, seem to be
of the same cast; for in proportion as they can be vain, so they
imagine they do honor to the Campbell cause. There are two traits
obviously in their character, one is, to innovate, and wrangle
much, on their novel points; the other is loud laughter, as if
there was no fear of God before their eyes. Humility is the last
trait to be found in their whole composition; and yet they have the
vanity to call themselves reformers, though but little appearance
of common seriousness among them. Their whole religion seems to
consist of mirth and ease. They can wipe away their foulest guilt
by their own actions, beginning with their baptism. Sorrow for sin,
is the last thing they seem to think of - and repentance seldom
named by their preachers. Paul says, "knowing the terrors of the
Lord, we persuade men." Having not felt the weight of their own
guilt, they seem to see but little odds between heaven and hell,
and say but little of either. I am constrained to think of the
whole plan as infidelity under a mask. I call it an apostacy, such
as we never have before known among the Baptists, and a prelude to
their own eternal overthrow! But I consider them hardened against
all reproof of this kind, as much as the Jews were who put the
Saviour to death. Piety to God, and good order in a church, they
have an aversion to; anarchy and confusion, seems to be their
element. They talk of government by the scriptures, deluded
mortals! What scripture teaches them to commit the disorders they
have in many churches? God may justly challenge them, as he did the
same kind of people, in the 50th psalm, and 16th verse. Their
defiled hands and polluted lips should not handle, nor name th
statutes of the Lord, after so much unparalleled disorder in the
churches of Christ.
I am about to close my points of order; I have dwelt on them with
great anguish of heart, having no desire to say an uncharitable
word of any soul alive. I can have but little hope, that what I
have said, will be of use to any body; but my mind is more at rest,
than before I began to write. I can, therefore, die more peaceably,
than to die in silence under existing circumstances. May that God
who rebukes the storm when he will, bring order out of all this
confusion, that his church may prosper again, is my prayer to
God.
MEASURE FOR MEASURE.
"A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
penny, and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine" - Revelations 6
c. 6 v. An exposition of this text of scripture, is not the design
of its citation; but its application to the present state of the
baptists in many places. Retribution seems to be the natural cast
of the text, with a charge not to hurt the most precious things,
the oil and the wine. One of the purest lessons ever given to men
on earth, is in the Saviour's sermon on the mount: "As ye would
that men should do to you, so do ye to them;" Matt. 7 c. 12 v. and
Luke 6 c. 31 v. But in the same sermon, retribution is not
overlooked, Matt. 7 c. 2 v. "With what measure ye mete, it shall be
measured to you again;" here is measure for measure. The law of
retaliation ever should be attended to with the greatest care,
least the corrective be over severe; for oft times, individuals are
compelled to resort to this summary way of decision, without either
judge or jury, in their own defence; so that the law of
retaliation, or measure for measure, will never fairly die, so long
as men in their present state, are on the face of this earth. God
himself, who knew every thing relating to men, and their vengeful
tempers, made provision against abuses, in the cities of refuge set
up in the land of Canaan, that delinquents might flee to, till they
could have a fair trial, according to law, and after the rage of
the avenger was abated.
Father Hickman and myself have lately returned from a painful
visit, we have made to South Benson. There these Creath men, with
others, have lately made great havoc in the church. This church is
of about 29 years standing; has never has but one pastor, and he
raised among them, (William Hickman, Jr.) Other preachers have been
ordained in the church, a few years back. The church began with
very few, and with their beginning, Mr. Hickman began to preach.
They grew on in steady prosperity, and have had several remarkable
revivals. Their number of members was about 300. They had built,
and finished a large, commodious, framed meeting house. Faction,
for some time past, has been found in some of the members, and a
preaching man at the head of them; and bitter conflict began. Those
buzzard-men, smelled the putred carnage of contention, and flew
with speed, perhaps 20 miles, across the Kentucky river, having a
particular pleasure in mingling in this kind of filth, hoping
profit would arise to them in some way, for their service. They
effected their object. The church is torn asunder, and they have
set up something they call a church, of 60 or more members, in the
same meeting house. In this they glory much, as may be seen in the
communications of a listener. The church is left as Rachel was,
weeping for her children, and refusing to be comforted, because
they are not, while the murderers, (as Herod) are exulting. The
whole place bears the appearance of desolation and sorrow. I had
not been at Benson for perhaps a whole year. We were received by
our brethren who had not gone astray, with uncommon cordiality;
very few of the others came to any of our meetings, and I do not
recollect whether more than one of them, voluntarily gave me their
hand, though I had been intimately friendly with many of them. That
there is a change in these out-landish renegadoes, is evident; but
whether for the better is another thing. They look shy, and if you
speak to them, they seem to be cocked and primed for war. I would
recall what I have just said, only Jeremiah asked a home question,
2 c. 36 v. "Why gaddest thou about so much to change thy way?" I
consider the whole affair of Campbellism, a mere fantastical
gadding and gaping about after something new. But I would not
forget the oil and wine, spoken of in our text; figurative terms by
which to describe the grace of God in the heart and soul of a
sinful human being. We know, thought the foolish Virgins had lamps,
they had no oil in their vessels. I have been often at Benson, in
their revivals, and heard many heaven-born experiences related;
should any of these be drawn off, I pity them from my soul, for
their preachers will do all they can to make them forget that they
were purged from their old sins, and tell them, as their master
Campbell does, that there is no faith but what is historic; and
that their baptism will wash away the sins of their souls. What
they call metaphysical whim, or religious legerdemain, I call the
highest enjoyment we can arrive at, this side of heaven. While at
Benson, we met with a brother who has lately been at Shawnee Run,
and in the company of old brother John Rice, one of the best and
most loving men we ever knew on the face of the earth. He has lived
where he is about 40 years, and as an instrument, that long back,
built up a flourishing church among his neighbors - many hundred of
them has he baptised. They are, it seems, now a church of about 300
members. These revolutionizers have so far broken up this once
happy church, that they are about equally divided; one part falling
in with all the fooleries of Campbell; the other standing where
they were, but in high contest with the other, for which the old
brother's gray hairs is like to be brought down with sorrow to the
grave; who says for weeks together, he can neither sleep, nor
partake of the common sustenance of life, with satisfaction to
himself; while the young preacher, who is the instrument of this
trouble, in great mirth, says, in all these storms I intend to be
as merry as a cricket. Will not that God of equity, who says a
measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a
penny, deal out, in just retribution, measure for measure, to all
who are like this young man?
Paul's eye, or finger or tongue, if he was here, could not describe
these Campbell-men more to the life, than he has done in Rom. 16 c.
17 and 18 verses, he begins: "Now, I beseech you, brethren, mark
them which cause divisions and offences, contrary to the doctrine
which ye have learned, and avoid them; for they that are such,
serve not our Lord Jesus Christ, but their own belly; and by good
words and fair speeches, deceive the hearts of the simple." I say,
could any limner that was ever on the earth, draw his paintings
with more exactness, than Paul has marked these men, and beseeches
us to mark them ourselves, and avoid them. He marks both their
negatives and affirmatives: "They serve not our Lord Jesus Christ,
but their own belly." To serve themselves is their sole object; and
this is obviously seen in all the movements of Campbell's
preachers, for they seem more to belong to him, than they do to
Jesus Christ.
One intuitive injunction above is, to mark and avoid them. How
shall we avoid them? I answer, in the present state of things, give
them no place in our meeting houses; and should they complain, let
them use the common rules of society for redress; and if they
disdain to use those society rules, let them share the fate of
other vagrants. If they can do no better, let them go with Cain,
and dwell in the land of Nod, and build what cities they please;
for it is evident, where they are treated most kindly, they are the
more bent on mischief. What I mean at present, is only a kind of
stay waste, till the law of God, and society can be brought to bear
on them; for this, they may surely look. Perhaps they will whine a
little about persecution; but let them remember, there is a wide
odds between buffeting for faults, and persecution. See I. Peter 2
c. 20 v. Our object is retribution, according to the laws of both
God and man, measure for measure. The church of Christ on earth is
his dominion here, and every separate, organized church, apart from
others is furnished with the laws of Christ to govern themselves. A
coalition of those several dominions, or churches, makes an
association, such as the baptists have. Among the associations in
Kentucky, Elkhorn stands in the first rank, both in age and
numbers. Those bold intruders plume themselves highly, saying,
wherever they go, we belong to Elkhorn, thinking this will give
them intercourse in all the churches, though they are committing
depredations wherever they can, by drawing off disciples after
them; and the Lord knows where He means to lead them; for it is
probable they do not know themselves.
In former days, Virginia had a frontier on the Ohio river, of near
a thousand miles; west of that contained many nations of hostile
Indians, with one exception, a tribe near the Ohio, called the
Delawares. They were always professedly at peace with white men,
but yet sly and cunning as Indians commonly are. The Moravian
missionaries lived among, taught, and civilized them. They could
talk English, and had much commerce with the white people; but in
time of war, some of their young men would come in with other war
parties and do mischief. White men would often follow them, defeat,
kill, or recover the plunder they had stolen. I am informed, a
Delaware, when he was hard run, or like to lose his scalp, would
cry out, 'me Delaware, me Delaware, me friend,' &c. But there
never was an instance, in which that kind of cunning saved one of
them; till at length, the white people considering them the
greatest enemies they had, sent an army and broke up the nation.
Retribution was administered, and they received measure for
measure. What can have a greater likeness than these Indians and
the two Jacobs, with others of these deformers? "Me Delaware, was
the watch word of the Indians." "Me Elkhorn," is the watch word of
the Creaths. What will be their watch word in Elkhorn, when the cry
is heard from Clear Creek, of the mischief done among them, robbed
of forty members by their breach of good order? Will they then rise
and say, "me Delaware, or me Elkhorn, me friend?' What will Elkhorn
say? By an act of disorder, you have committed sacrilege on one of
Christ's dominions on earth; connected with us, and a seat with us,
you can have no longer. Should Versailles uphold the disorder, she
will share the same fate as one of the Delaware villages, if just
retribution is dealt out, measure for measure. But the oil and wine
at Clear Creek must not be hurt. The people there have the warmest
seat in my affections; I long for their return from the seduction
that I think has carried them away. Let me repeat a saying of my
old namesake, John, first epistle, 2 c. 26 v. "These things have I
written unto you, concerning them that seduce you." I have written
an essay of some length; I am apprised too, some will think that I
have handled some individuals rather harshly; if so, it has not
been of choice, but of necessity. I never wrote to the same amount
in my life, with equal sorrow of heart. I remember the happy hours
I have seen with my brethren at Clear Creek, which now seem gone
forever. O, that it was with me as in months past. I believe the
candle of the Lord has shone upon me at Clear Creek, and when the
same light shone also on others; but now am I mistaken, or has the
gold become dim? Alas, woe is me! If I am mistaken in all
Campbell's plan for salvation being nothing but filthy lumber, I am
as much to be pitied as blamed; for my decision has not been
hastily made up. Any man who inclines to hide himself, as much as
he generally does, reminds me of Adam when skulking among the trees
of the garden, after he fell from his high standing; and where
Campbell does come out, it is under a fig leaf dress.
Some, perhaps, may think I have departed from my own choice rule of
discipline, the 18th chapter of Matthew, in spreading all I have
said of some men on paper; but let it be remembered I have not been
on points of trespass, but on points of order, and indeed, good
order is a great barrier against trespass; and we know Paul direct
for all things to be done decently, and in order. The Lord is a God
of order, and not of confusion.
CHRISTIAN SCRIPTURES.
Christian Scriptures is a very common by-word with Campbellites, in
which they have a particular meaning, by which to set aside the Old
Testament; but here they practice their usual cunning, fearing to
come out plainly, yet some of them are less reserved. But there is
too little uniformity of sentiment among them, as for any two or
them to agree in judgment, or for any one of them to have a
settled, made up judgment, on any point in divinity. The chief
uniformity seen among them, is a jangling spirit for Campbell's
jargon, calling it a reform. But when this mighty reform is reduced
to practice, (as it is in some places,) it is the greatest
deformity we have ever seen among baptists. Should you cite a text
from the Old Testament, you may see a quick snivel, or turning up
the nose, with this scornful reply: "That is Jewish." Among the
Jews, there were often warm debates about the sacredness of the
scriptures. The Sadducees denied any part of divine authority,
except the five books of Moses. The Pharisees received them in the
aggregate, but had much corrupted them by false glosses, and the
traditions of the Elders. But yet the book of God stood as
untarnished, until the Saviour, early in his ministry, gave it that
sacred touch, and enlargement, in his sermon on the mount, Matt. 5,
6, 7, chapters. He there tells us plainly, that he came not to
destroy, but to fulfill the law; and that every jot and tittle of
it stood more firm than the heavens or the earth, and that it was
dangerous to teach anything contrary to it; and so runs all
Christ's, and Apostolic preaching and writings. Therefore, says
Paul, I consent to the law, (by which, he means the Old Testament)
that it is good, and he further says, Rom. 7 c. 12 v. "The law is
holy, and just and good," and again, 7 v. "I had not known sin, but
by the law, nor lust, except the law had said thou shalt not
covet." And again, 14 c. "For we know that the law is spiritual;
but I am carnal, sold under sin." Let Campbellites look through
this chapter, and set the law, or Old Testament, aside if they can.
I suppose there is no chapter they would be more willing to blot
out of the book, than this 7th chapter of Romans. In 9 v. "I was
alive, without the law once; but when the commandment came, sin
revived, and I died." No doubt, with me, Paul here refers to the
time of his conversion near Damascus, where he was crucified with
Christ, but lived afterwards. The 3,000 on Pentecost, was goaded in
their hearts, and died the same death. Campbell, from every thing
we can hear from him, has always had the art of dodging his neck
from God's killing knife, (the law,) and no wonder that men should
shun this deadly blow; for a common hog will dodge his throat from
the killing knife, and except it go to the heart, you will not hear
the dying groan. The want of this in the beginning of Campbell's
religion, is perhaps the reason why he is such a dreadful shuffler
in religion to this day. I consider him, and all his followers, but
particularly his preachers, to be perfect dodgers, and wrangling
shufflers. I would warn the baptists, and all other men, of the
malignant tendency of this deadly evil; but we are on the Christian
scriptures. How highly does Christ, with John the Baptist, and all
the Apostles, recommend the Old Testament, the only scriptures then
among the people? With what pleasure did they confirm what they
taught the people, by the then scriptures? Who would teach
otherwise now, but dodgers, shufflers, and wranglers. But should it
be said, we are not under the law, but under grace, remember no man
of mature reason was ever under grace, till he was first killed by
the law, for we are so wedded by nature to the law of works, or to
live by doing, that nothing will sever us from it but death; for it
was through the law that Paul was dead to the law, witness the
woman bound by the law to her husband, so long as he liveth, Rom. 7
c. 1 v. Should any say the Gentiles were not under the law, that
would be a very gross mistake. None will deny that God gave Adam a
law when he made him. All we find on record, is one short negative
precept, but a high rank in which he was made lord over all other
creatures on earth. They were made in the image of God, both male
and female; but a little below angels, those pure, intellectual
spirits. Though Adam had an animal body, he had an angelic soul. I
do not doubt, but that God had spiritual demands on him; so far at
least, as the two tables afterwards given to Moses, and explained
by the Saviour, in a summary way: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God, with all thy heart, and thy neighbor as thyself." Adam's fall,
with all the debility it brought on him, could not lessen his, nor
the obligation of all his posterity, who fell in him. This I gather
from the natural impress of the law in the hearts of the Gentiles,
who had not the law of Moses literally given to them. See Rom. 2 c.
14 and 15 verses. If these views are correct (as I presume they
are,) then all mankind are under the law. Hear what Paul says, Rom.
3 c. 19 v. "What the law saith, it saith to them who are under the
law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become
guilty before God." Why should Paul bring all the world guilty
before God,if they were not all under the law, seeing, where there
is no law there can be no guilt? Were men not under the law, there
could be no Redeemer for them, see Gal. 4 c., 4 and 5 verses. "God
sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem
them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of
sons." As there can be no redemption, for men who are not under the
law, so there can be no adoption as children; we may turn them over
at once, to damnation, by wholesale. There are certain elements,
and Jewish ordinances, which Paul calls carnal, and worldly things,
that was never binding on any other nation but the Jews, and which
Christ "nailed to his cross, and took them out of the way himself."
Gal. 2 c. 14 v. But the Campbellites shall not take from us the Old
Testament, nor the moral law, written by the finger of God, on
tables of stone. And though we know not, nor care not, where those
literal tables are, for their purport is impressed on every man's
heart, in the law of nature; and I consider the law of nature, as
certainly come from God, as the law of Moses. David says, Psalm 19,
7 v. "The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul." Paul
says, "the law is spiritual," Rom. 7 c. When the Lord pleases, he
uses whatever law he has given, as the instrument of converting the
sinner's soul, whether the law of nature, the law of Moses, or the
law of Christ, the gospel of His grace. But none of those laws
operate to that blessed effect, but by an immediate influence from
God himself. This gives me great pleasure that God uses what star
of the east he pleases, to bring heathens home to heaven, out of
every nation, kingdom or language. By imagination, I almost see the
Campbellites pirting up, when I give validity to the tables of the
covenant; they spring up, and go to their book afresh, 2 Cor. 3 c.
7 v. to the end. Nothing proves to me more clearly, that these
people would set aside the whole Old Testament, as having their eye
intensely fixed on this part of the scripture. They seemed
dreadfully afraid of Mount Sinai, and especially these two tables
of the law; for they are the ministration of death. They are afraid
of being killed; they do not know that they must die by the law,
before they live in Christ, or repent for their sin of heart and
nature, before they are rejoicing believers in Christ. It may be,
that Campbell himself, in his young days, had some distant smell of
the fire of Sinai, took the alarm, and ran off as Adam did, to hide
among some fig trees, and make a covering of the leaves, to face
his offended God; but some day, he will be called forth to take his
trial; for God sees the painted hypocrites through all the disguise
they wear. When this part of scripture, just named above, in Cor.
is looked over with care, it remains doubtful, whether the glory
that was to be done away, designs the face of Moses, or the tables
of the covenant. But if the tables were designed, it only related
to where they were in the days of Paul; for neither he, nor any
other man, could tell where they literally were. Whether the King
of Babylon had destroyed the sacred ark, with all its contents,
to-wit: the tables of the covenant, the golden pot of manna, and
Aaron's rod that budded; or whether some zealous prophet, or
priest, had hid it in some dark cave. But the substance of what is
called the decalogue, is engraved in the conscience of every child
of Adam; and is never done away, in the condemnation it holds him
under, until relieved personally by the blood of Christ. The
fourth, among the ten commands, relating to the Sabbath day, is
thought by some to be ceremonious, and done away, with other Jewish
rites; but there is some mistake here, for the Son of man, who was
the Lord of the Sabbath, did make a change, by which the Jewish
rigor of the Sabbath is softened, but the Lord's day should be kept
holy to the Lord, and in his holy service. Poor baptists, in this
reform your ways, shake off your idle visits, and other wicked
things on the Lord's day. The old question who shall be the
greatest, is yet in progress among the preachers; even among the
poor baptist preachers, who get so little money for their
preaching, the question is not so much, who shall be the best man,
or the best preacher, as who shall be the greatest. I wonder we
preachers cannot think what kind of a being the Devil is, for he
desire to be great, bad as he is; and to us it looks surprising,
that God himself, should in any way, indulge him in it. We
remember, the Saviour spoke of Satan, as a strong man armed. Paul
and others, speaks of him as the god of this world, prince of the
power of the air, and Beelzebub, prince of the Devils, &c.
Should any ask, who shall be the greatest man among the baptists in
the west, for one, I shall answer, A. Campbell, and hereafter all
his admirers in future seek to him for counsel, for by the
disorderly movements of a number of preachers for several months
past, in Kentucky, I consider they do not deserve a better master
than Campbell. Let the man be thus rewarded for his great services
in America. Here let him give name to a number of faithful
followers, whose actions is worthy of him, as if cast in the same
mould. For the future, I shall venture to call them Campbellites.
In Elkhorn Association, there is about 12 ordained ministers, four
of these are Campbellites, if a brother Gates in Paris is one; the
other three is in one church together; Versailles, Woodford county.
There also, is the worthy Tho. Bullock, the moderator of Elkhorn
Association, perhaps as great a Campbellite as any of them, another
preacher Thomas Minzey has lately joined the church at Versailles;
he is a kinsman of mine, a man of good fame, but in religion he gad
about a little too much. This is the third church he has joined,
and has not moved from his same family dwelling. From his upright
deportment, his studious mind, and capacities to communicate, no
doubt, he will soon be ordained. Some time past, a worthy brother
at Versailles, invited me to come and worship among them; my reply
was, in negro dialect, there are too many Jackamelantons there. He
urged for an explanation - I only answered, there are two churches
in one house; but one other reason would have been, your preachers
are so much of Campbellites, that they only shine with a dancing,
fluctuating light. There are three preachers, perhaps four, now in
Versailles, mounted on one large Camel, shining as they go, with
their dancing light; for they give us no scrape of a pen, to inform
us what doctrine they hold, or what is their order. We can only
judge from what we see, which we are compelled to mark with the
strongest disapprobation. In what dismal Arabian swamp this swift
dromedary will land these giddy men is unknown; but as likely under
the wing of the Arabian prophet, as any where else. Jude calls
these sort of men, 13 v. "Wandering stars, to whom is reserved the
blackness of darkness forever." By those wandering stars, Jude no
doubt describes what we call a shooting star, or those meteors that
are seen shooting about in the air, being of the same nature with
Jack and his lantern. I must now escape in the best way I can, from
among these Jackamelantons-men.
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