
Introduction
The military conflict of the American
Revolution came to an end in March, 1783, when news reached America of a
preliminary peace treaty and armistice signed in Paris. Although six
years of political quarrels ensued before ratification of the
constitution brought the United States officially into being, few
doubted that the end of the war assured not only the birth of a great
nation, but a new era in the life of man. Both its leaders and their
European friends and admirers viewed the revolution not as a petty
struggle to determine which masters should rule America but as a
glorious attempt to establish the people as their own masters and light
a beacon of liberty to the world. The greatest experiment of freedom in
political history had begun. The experiment in religious freedom which
this book partially describes, while bravely endeavoring to sink down
roots to the eternal springs of unchanging truth, was profoundly
influenced by the soil in which it grew: the new American republic and
the character of its people.
The most obvious encouragement to the
rise of new religious movements in America came from the declaration of
absolute religious freedom contained in the first amendment to the
federal constitution and similar expressions in various state
constitutions. Although some states, such as Massachusetts, continued
for a time to support particular denominations, freedom of worship was
almost universally secured, and the last links between church and state
soon dissolved. European governments had often grudgingly suffered the
existence of religious splinter groups and sometimes used their
colonies, as Great Britain did America, as giant quarantines where they
might usefully employ unwanted fanatics; but Americans raised religious
toleration to the level of religious celebration, cheerfully proving
themselves to be wise by allowing their neighbors to be mistaken. This
attitude fostered the rise of an army of self-appointed prophets and the
proliferation of a bewildering variety of sects ranging from countless
religions that did not outlive their founder and never reached beyond
his native village, to the great Mormon empire of Joseph Smith and
Brigham Young. Even foreign idealists, such as the professedly
irreligious Robert Owen with his model community at New Harmony,
Indiana, naturally selected America as the site for their Utopias and
New Jerusalems. At the same time, the increasing fragmentation of
American religious life produced an inevitable reaction, as thoughtful
readers of the New Testament compared the teachings of Jesus and Paul on
church unity with the chaos of competitive strife between the
denominations. Men searched for some principle which would restore the
unity of God's people and still preserve the freedom of the individual.
The democratic ideal itself proved one
of the cornerstones of American religion. It took no great imagination
to progress from the idea that men should choose their governors to the
decision that they had an equal right to choose their ministers. The
doctrine that "all men are created equal" directly opposed the
hierarchical view of society that underlay the Episcopal Church of
England, which, until the revolution, had been the established church of
all the southern colonies and New York. Individuals on both sides felt
this philosophical tension. The Anglican rector of Trinity Church in New
York and his whole congregation chose to leave the country rather than
submit to republican rule; and most of his fellow ministers throughout
the colonies remained loyal to the king, the official head of their
church. After the war, when the remnant of American Anglicans organized
the Episcopal Church and requested the Archbishop of Canterbury to
consecrate their bishops, he refused, regarding even Episcopal Americans
as traitors to their God as well as to their king. On the other side,
radical Patriots, such as Tom Paine and Thomas Jefferson, detested the
clergy of all persuasions and viewed them as natural enemies to thought,
the hired apologists of tyrants, and parasitic leeches on a
superstitious public. This anti-clericalism ran deep in America,
especially on the frontier; and strong feelings against a "hireling
clergy" surfaced again and again in later debates on church
organization, when frontier churches grew prosperous enough to afford
the temptation. By the force of his remarkable personality, Francis
Asbury succeeded in forming the Methodists into a church on the
Episcopal model in the 1780's and had himself appointed bishop, but many
Methodists on the frontier rejected his authority and assumed the
significant name of Republican Methodists. Until the influx of Catholic
immigrants in the nineteenth century, American churches remained
overwhelmingly democratic.
More important, however, than any
influence of government or political philosophy, the very spirit of
adventure and boundless confidence which impelled Americans to
nationhood and forced them through the Appalachians to master the heart
of a continent inevitably led religious pioneers to explore the
frontiers of church and creed. It was a time for beginnings. Congress
had placed on the new nation's great seal the Latin motto, Novus Ordo
Seclorum, A New Order of the Ages. This phrase, taken from Virgil's
celebration of the Roman Empire's beginning at the time of Augustus,
shows clearly the grand vision which America's founders had of her
future, and it also expressed rich religious associations, since
well-educated Americans would have known that Christian writers had
regularly applied Virgil's words to the birth of Christ and the coming
of his kingdom. America was meant to be both New Rome and New Zion. The
task of reforming European churches to apostolic purity and simplicity
had proven impossibly difficult, but America offered the perfect
opportunity to make a fresh start and immediately restore the primitive
Christianity described in the New Testament. Still refusing to make the
break himself from the Anglican Church in which he was raised and
ordained, John Wesley hoped his American followers would “stand fast in
the freedom wherewith God has so strangely made them free.”[1]
Underlying the national optimism was
the belief of the average citizen that his individual life contained
promise of unlimited improvement. If America's old men dreamed dreams
and her young men saw visions, they dreamed above all else the American
Dream, and each frontier farmer had a vision, like the young Andrew
Jackson's, of a house with pillars in front. While he was dreaming, a
pioneer might live in a log cabin with no floor, work from dawn till
dusk at the backbreaking labor of clearing a farm in the wilderness,
endure the incredible harshness of a Vermont winter, and in every
material way fare much worse than the average peasant or servant in
Europe; but he lived, worked, and endured with hope that his hardihood
could realize the dream of wealth and respect. More often than not, the
dream killed the dreamer and died with him, but sometimes it came true.
Although rooted in the frontier, the American dream reached back into
the lives of the cautious citizens who stayed at home in Boston and New
York, as the opening of the West brought enormously increased wealth to
the cities, and every laborer could tell himself, no matter how low his
for tunes, that a whole continent of opportunities lay before him.
Because men expected and commonly experienced the fulfillment of
personal ambition for economic and social improvement, they more readily
believed that a successful revolution in religious life was possible,
both for themselves as individuals and for the church as a whole.
Thus, America offered liberty,
democracy, and hope. This story of the Christian Connection begins in
Vermont in the last decade of the eighteenth century, and it should be
noted that nowhere were these three great gifts more generously and
generally bestowed than in the green mountains of Vermont. Vermonters
vigorously asserted and defended their freedom against all comers,
including not only the British and Indians, but also their colonial
neighbors in New York, with whom they engaged in a long and bitter
dispute over land titles. Prevented by the quarrel with New York from
joining the infant United States, Vermont existed as an independent
republic for more than a decade during and after the Revolution. Along
with Pennsylvania's, its constitution was the most democratic of any
American state. Around 1800, it enjoyed a boom in population and
economic prosperity never equaled there since, and to many poor farmers
in Massachusetts and Connecticut, Vermont was the land of opportunity.
During this time, Vermonters acquired a bad reputation among religious
leaders in southern New England, who regarded them as mainly dangerous
free thinkers and irreligious barbarians. In 1784, Ethan Allen, the
greatest of Vermont's military and political leaders during the
Revolution, scandalized the clergy with a book modestly entitled,
Reason the Only Oracle of Man, or a Compendious System of Natural
Religion, in which he denied the authority of the Bible and the
truthfulness of Christianity. Although the great majority of his
neighbors wisely ignored Colonel Allen's theories, they did not flock to
the established churches either. The forces of the frontier had weakened
the hold of the old order and invited religious revolution.

Chapter 1
Beginning
For they that say such things declare
plainly that they seek a country. Heb. 11:14
Asa Jones was one of many poor farmers
in Massachusetts at the time of the Revolution. Aside from his
membership in the then small and despised sect of Baptists, not a single
recorded fact of character or circumstance distinguished him from his
neighbors. In the winter of 1780, Jones decided to seek a better life on
the frontier in central Vermont. Having bought land in the unsettled
area west of Woodstock, Vermont, Jones wanted to move in time to make
maple syrup, the most famous of all Vermont products, from the trees on
his new property, so he loaded up his family and their few movable
possessions into a wagon and headed north in early March. Only a very
hardy or a very foolish man would want to set up housekeeping in the
wilderness of Vermont in the winter, since the trip was long and
difficult, its destination wild and desolate. When the family reached
Woodstock, they had to unload the wagon and place their belongings on
sleds to drag them the last two miles across the snow to their new home,
high on a ridge to the north of the present village of Bridgewater. They
found the shell of a cabin built for their occupancy, which at least
preserved their lives from the elements, and they settled down to the
back-breaking toil of clearing the land for farming. Asa Jones's haste
to see his new home won for him a small token of immortality, for the
future citizens of Bridgewater long after erected a market in tribute to
the town's first settlers.
We have no record of how Asa Jones's
family felt about their removal to Vermont, but we can easily imagine
the mixture of excitement and fear in the heart of his youngest son
Abner, then not quite eight years old. The brooding presence of the
primeval forest, the harshness of the new home's climate and terrain,
the constant labor necessary to preserve life, the almost complete
isolation from other human companionship, all made deep and lasting
impressions in young Abner's mind, helping to give it an unusual depth
of thoughtfulness and intensity of feeling, hardening it with strength
of will and self-reliance, and filling it with dark and unreasoning
terror. During Abner’s first summer in Vermont, Indians raided the
neighboring village of Barnard and carried away four captives. The next
year, a large war party burnt the town of Royalton, killed some of its
people, and captured many more. Eight-year-old Abner feared death and
imagined it all around him. The religion which he learned from his
father, far from allaying his fears or offering any comfort, tortured
the little boy with the spectacle of the fires of hell that awaited him
after the flames of the Indians had done their work. Later, he wrote
concerning his childhood, “I do not remember that the thought ever
passed my mind that religion yielded any joy, or peace.”[2]
Abner went regularly into the forest to pray at a certain rock which he
had chosen as a secret altar, where he struggled to propitiate an angry
God.
In 1781, a Woodstock man was shot to
death in a hunting accident. This reminder of mortality triggered a
religious revival that swept through the town like a forest fire through
virgin timber, and the previously irreligious inhabitants flocked to
hear the itinerant preachers who warned them of judgement to come. The
Jones family began attending Baptist church services as part of the
revival, and Asa Jones occasionally even gave short talks of
encouragement to the congregation. For Abner, although public worship
provided a welcome and needed release for his religious feelings, the
preaching he heard in these meetings only magnified and embittered his
childish fears. His only view of Christianity was that contained in the
fearful doctrines of Calvinism; that all people are naturally and
completely evil from the moment of their birth, that God for no reason
other than blind caprice has chosen to save some souls and damn the rest
to an eternal hell, and that penitent human beings have no way to reach
out to God, but must wait in prayer to receive a gift of grace, an
emotional experience, that brings peace and confidence that God has
saved them. If the penitent never received this gift, then he knew that
God hated him and wished him in hell. Nine years of age, Abner saw
himself as the blackest of sinners and desperately wanted "to get
saved." Finally, after a year of struggle, he rose from his private
prayers one day with his mind strangely focused on the words from the
story of the prodigal son in Luke 15:24, "For this my son was dead, and
is alive again; was lost, and is found." Applying these words to his own
life, the little boy's conscience found a measure of peace and hope that
he was one of God's elect, although doubts concerning his salvation
plagued him for many years. As Abner remembered them, his parents seemed
unconcerned by their son's emotional turmoil, even ridiculing his
serious piety on at least one occasion. His mother thought he would make
a preacher.
Asa Jones died in October, 1786,
leaving his family in neither wealth nor poverty. After working on the
family farm for two more years, Abner Jones left to seek his way in the
world and worked in a variety of jobs in Woodstock and in New York
state. Although he had attended school for only a few weeks in his life,
he had somehow managed to learn to read and had acquired the habit of
reading voraciously any printed material that came his way. He thus
gained in time the reputation of a scholar, and his neighbors in
Woodstock persuaded him to accept a position as a teacher for their town
in 1793. At this time, perhaps influenced by his responsibility to be an
example to his students, Jones once more began attending church, a
practice he had neglected in his first years away from home. Jones felt
guilty over his previous laxness in religious matters and feared that
the members of the local church would despise and avoid him as a
notorious sinner, but he soon happily discovered that his neighbors
judged him much less harshly than he judged himself. Encouraged by the
attitude of those around him and more at peace within himself, he grew
more confident that God's grace was intended for him and decided to
commit his life publicly to Christ by being baptized and joining the
church. Elder Elisha Ranson, a Baptist preacher, baptized him in June of
that year. After his baptism, Jones expressed both his joy and his
commitment by going on an extended journey to visit various churches in
New Hampshire. Noteworthy in this trip was a short visit to the Baptist
church in New Salisbury and its young preacher, Elias Smith, whose name
will appear often later in this history.
In late autumn, Jones exchanged his
teaching job in Woodstock for a similar position in Hartland, a much
smaller village adjoining Woodstock on the east. As a natural
consequence of this move, he changed his church membership to the tiny
Hartland Baptist Church. Now a man of twenty-one years, with a secure
profession and place in society and relatively at peace with God and
man, Jones might have lapsed into a quiet respectability and spent the
remainder of his life bound by Hartland's obscure charms, but his
restless intellect continued to search and question the limited horizon
of books and conversation open to him, and he now turned to examine in
fatal earnestness the most disquieting and challenging book in the
world: the Bible. He discovered to his amazement and delight that the
Bible did not teach the terrible Calvinist doctrines that had made his
childhood miserable and wrapped in cloud the character of Cod. His
Baptist friends for a long while encouraged his studies and taught him
to believe that nowhere but in the Bible was eternal truth to be found.
He recorded later his feelings at the time:
I felt my mind much tried about what my
brethren called the great mysterious doctrines of the gospel, viz.
Election, reprobation, decrees, etc. for I plainly discovered that they
preached complete contradictions on the subject, and I read that no lie
is of the truth and contradictions be lies. Thus my mind was in great
perplexity concerning these things; which caused me to review them, and
compare them by the scriptures of truth, yea in short I took a review of
all that I had professed to believe before, and I found I had embraced
many things without proper examination. I then drew up a determination
to believe and practice just what I found required in the Bible, and no
more. There was a Baptist minister that occasionally preached with us in
Hartland who often made use of the following expressions. I have nothing
but what I can bring thus saith the Lord, and thus it is written. This
put me on search to compare what he preached and practiced with the
scriptures.[3]
His attempt to apply this principle
inevitably brought Jones into conflict with the Baptists. When next the
preacher visited Hartland, Jones respectfully asked him for Biblical
answers to a number of questions: Why did they call themselves Baptists?
If the Bible is a perfect rule of faith, why have a creed? Why did the
church accept converts only after they recounted their emotional
experience and the church voted on their membership? Why did the
preacher bless the congregation at the conclusion of services? The
preacher, instead of trying to answer the questions, astonished the
naive schoolteacher by furiously attacking him as a heretic and
troublemaker. More painful to Jones than the reaction of a relative
stranger, the other members of the Hartland church rushed to defend the
clergyman and did not hesitate to suggest that Jones was unregenerate,
not one of the elect, still possessed of a carnal mind, and, in short,
no Christian. Corresponding as they did to his own old fears, these
accusations had a shattering impact on the young man's fragile faith.
With no reason to believe in others and no confidence to believe in
himself, Jones quit the church, soon after gave up the job which he had
held for two years, and moved ten miles north to begin teaching in the
town of Hartford.
Jones had no outward involvement with
religion at all over the next five years. He refused even to discuss it
with friends. After teaching from 1795 to 1797 in Hartford, Jones
decided to change careers and studied medicine for a year in Grafton,
New Hampshire. This meager training was considered at that time and
place sufficient to make a doctor, and Dr. Jones began practice in the
town of Lyndon, in northern Vermont, some time around November, 1798.
Along with his acquisition of medical skills, Jones had gained a wife,
the former Damaris Prior. It is in his relationship with his new bride
that we glimpse the inner struggle that Jones was now undergoing, for,
although wishing to keep his religious sentiments private from all
others, he felt compelled to reveal them to one who would share his
life, and even warned her that religious convictions might some day
force him to give up medicine for the less lucrative profession of
preaching. Damaris agreed to run that risk, perhaps without realizing
how great it was.
Jones ended his self-imposed exile from
church in December, 1800, when he attended a revival in a village near
Lyndon. This revival resembled the far larger and more famous camp
meeting held the following summer at Cane Ridge, Kentucky; and, indeed,
it was but one of many such phenomena along the frontier in the first
years of the nineteenth century. While the preacher assaulted their
minds with fiery images of judgement and hell, his audience would
respond, as they imagine, to the promptings of the Holy Spirit and cry
aloud in ecstatic joy or grovel on the floor in ecstatic torment.
Impressed by the evident sincerity of the worshippers and their hunger
and thirst for righteousness, Jones still had his doubts whether such
displays were appropriate to the religion of Jesus. As he later wrote
concerning a similar revival, “I fully believe it was a good powerful
work of God. But whether the Lord called them to make quite so much
noise, I leave with him who knows all things."[4]
Yet, despite his reservations, the noisy faith of the assembly accused
his own silence, and finally caused him once more to own publicly the
name Christian. Although not giving himself up to the wild enthusiasm of
those around him, Jones confessed his sins to the congregation and
promised a life of repentance.
The two years of medical practice in
Lyndon had brought Jones a wide acquaintance and a certain measure of
prestige. When the town heard that its young doctor had "gotten
religion," the news excited considerable curiosity. The rougher and more
skeptical class of men in particular regarded with amazement the
conversion of one whom they had thought a reasonable and manly fellow.
In September, 1801, several such men asked Jones to speak to a public
gathering at one of their homes and give his views on the revivalism
still raging in a nearby town. While riding to the meeting, Jones
nervously opened his Bible at random in hope that he might obtain some
guidance on what to say to his irreligious friends, and his eyes fell
immediately on the words of Matt. 22:5, "But they made light of it";
describing how sinners rudely rejected the gracious invitation of God.
Believing that the Holy Spirit had miraculously directed his choice,
Jones took this text for his first sermon. His audience, none of whom
attended church, were somewhat taken aback. There were no instant
conversions, but neither was there outright rejection. Rather, his
friends told him, as the Athenians said to Paul, "We will hear thee
again of this matter."
Thus, Jones began preaching to small
groups in and around Lyndon. At first, he expected the Holy Spirit to
guide him in his sermon preparation as had happened before, but when
such attempts led to ridiculous failure, he soon learned to rely more on
intellectual preparation than mysterious moving of the Spirit, although
he never completely gave up the belief that Providence had guided the
selection of that first text. His messages were simple. He offered
salvation by the grace of a God who loved everybody, not just an elect
few, and wanted all men to have eternal life. He insisted on the need
for moral reformation, if Christianity were ever to be more than pious
talk. Above all, he called on all who would follow Jesus to give up
their party spirit and denominational strife, to avoid the useless
theological speculations that aimed at answering questions the Bible did
not address, and to become simply Christians, loyal to Christ alone,
content to trust the scriptures, and ready to obey their plain commands.
His preaching met with immediate and growing success. By the end of
1801, Jones and about a dozen of his converts felt it necessary to give
formal existence to the new religious movement and "covenanted together
in Church, by the name of CHRISTIANS only.[5]
As the circle of Jones' influence widened, over the next eighteen months
Christian churches sprang up in Bradford, Vermont, and Piermont and
Hanover, New Hampshire. The declaration of faith which the young school
teacher had sorrowfully kept to himself nine years before had begun its
triumphant progress: “As a denomination, I will own none but that of
Christian, the Bible shall be my only Articles of Faith, Christ, my only
head, and all true Christians my brethren.[6]
During this period, the various
denominations did not actively oppose Jones's work. The Baptists,
because he taught immersion as the correct form of baptism, looked on
him as an uncertain but perhaps valuable ally. Jones sought and obtained
ordination by the Freewill Baptists on November 30, 1802, although he
made it clear that he did not consider himself a Baptist and
acknowledged no claim on him by any denomination. Finding the practice
of medicine and the proclamation of the gospel duties impossible to
discharge at the same time, he accepted the generous offer of three
families in Lebanon, New Hampshire, to support him financially as a
preacher, with the understanding that he devote only such time to the
fledgling church in Lebanon as he thought appropriate and spend the rest
of his energies in wider evangelism. Jones now felt free to bring his
plea to the more populous areas of southern New England.
When Jones came to Portsmouth, New
Hampshire in June 1803, he found there his old friend Elias Smith
preaching for a small church in that city, and delightedly discovered
that Smith, totally unaware of Jones's work in Vermont, had
independently reached many of the same conclusions and had actually
organized a church under the New Testament name of Christian. Before
continuing the narrative of the progress of the Christians, let us turn
our attention to this second religious pioneer.
Elias Smith's early years closely
paralleled the childhood of Abner Jones. Born in Lyme, Connecticut, in
1769, Smith moved with his family to Woodstock, Vermont in 1782, or just
two years after the Jones family had first braved the wilderness in
Bridgewater. Unlike shy and quiet Abner, who then lived only a few miles
away, Elias vigorously expressed his opinion of the family's move: on
first sight of the unfinished cabin, he tried to run all the way back to
Connecticut. Quickly apprehended by his parents, he resentfully spent
his first night in their new home, along with the horse who grazed on
its grassy "floor." In later years, Smith remembered his adolescence
without fondness as a time of poverty, hardship, and unremitting labor.
Both Elias's parents were religious
according to their respective beliefs. His father, Stephen Smith, was a
Baptist; and his mother Irene, a very devout Congregationalist. While
still living in Connecticut, Mrs. Smith took advantage of a long absence
by her husband to have her children, including eight-year-old Elias,
baptized by sprinkling in accordance with her church's custom. Calling
on the assistance of one of her brothers, a Congregationalist minister,
she brought all her children to church without explaining the nature of
the service to her very suspicious son. When his turn came to be
christened, Elias bolted for the door, but was captured by the long arm
of his uncle, dragged to the baptismal fount, and forcibly converted to
Congregationalism. The next year, when the little boy witnessed a
Baptist minister baptizing his converts in the river, he became
frightened that the preacher might be working his way down to him and
wanted to leave. His mother's misguided zeal did not permanently drive
her son away from religion, however, although he had a long and quite
understandable reluctance to be baptized. Elias grew up fearing God,
respecting the church, and desiring righteousness.
Although he had only enough formal
education to learn to read and write, Smith had some of the same
intellectual drive and thirst for knowledge that formed so remarkable a
part of Abner Jones' character, and he began teaching in 1787 in
Hartland, Vermont, the same village where Jones later taught and began
to question the Baptist faith. Smith's early religious life contained no
such dramatic crises but rather a fairly steady process of more serious
and thoughtful commitment. In 1789, he overcame his childish fears and
resentment enough to be baptized and took his place as a member of the
Baptist Church. Showing both the strength of his mind and the depth of
his devotion, the new convert set himself to memorize the portion of the
New Testament from mans to Revelation, a task which he accomplished
within a year and a half. In 1790, Smith's religious convictions
impelled him to begin preaching, although he was not formally ordained
until 1792, and for the next dozen years he served as preacher for
various small Baptist churches in New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
During these years, Smith's restless
mind grew increasingly troubled at his denomination's doctrines,
especially the harsh teaching of Calvin that seemed to base God's
majesty more on brute force than on love. More even than Abner Jones,
Smith recoiled from the idea that God enjoyed the eternal torment of
helpless and innocent people. His anguish nearly caused him to embrace
the opposite extreme of universalism, the doctrine that God's grace will
ultimately find a way to save all those who have ever lived; but careful
study of the scriptures slowly established in his mind a more moderate
view. Smith also became soon convinced that the name "Baptist" and the
denominational attitude that divided the followers of the Prince of
Peace into opposing factions was unbiblical and wrong. He afterwards
wrote that as early as 1791, “I believed there would be a people bearing
a name different from all the denominations then in this country
different, but what they would be called, I then could not tell.[7]
A third major area of disagreement with
the Baptists arose out of Smith's strong oppostion to the growing
tendency of his denomination to become more tightly organized and
disciplined. Growing up during the Revolution, he acquired democratic
principles to match his personal love of liberty. His fiercely
independent spirit would not suffer his conscience to be bound by other
men's opinions, and, when the Baptists sought to bring order to their
denomination by forming associations, calling their ministers to attend
councils, and limiting the ministry to a professional elite, Smith
rebelled. Men an open break finally occurred, Smith listed the reasons
he left the Baptists:
-
Their name Baptists which is
unscriptural. One man was called a baptist, but no churches.
-
Articles, which are an addition to the perfect law of liberty; these they
held and I disowned them.
-
Association of churches,
which is contrary to the new-testament, and anti-Christian.
-
Holding to the necessity of a
college education to be ministers of the gospel. This is contrary to
the new-testament.
-
The Baptists held to missionary
societies, which is nothing more or less than the old Jesuits
plan, invented first by a monk.
-
The Baptists hold to councils to
ordain ministers and settle disputes. These are unscriptural.
-
They hold to installing, or
re-installing ministers, a practice not intimated in any part
of the bible.[8]
Note the lack of any overt reference to
his struggles with Calvinism and the overwhelming emphasis on issues of
religious freedom and ecclesiastical democracy.
By 1802, Smith had decided to cease
calling himself a Baptist and had discovered a name he could honorably
and scripturally wear.
In the spring of 1802, having rejected
the doctrine of Calvin and universalism, to search the scriptures to
find the truth, I found the name which the followers of Christ ought to
wear; which was Christians. My mind being fixed upon this as the
right name, to the exclusion of all the popular names in the world, in
the month of May, at a man's house in Epping, N.H. by the name of
Laurence, where I held a meeting and spoke upon the text, Acts 11:26, I
ventured for the first time, softly to tell the people, that the name,
Christian was enough for the followers of Christ without addition of the
words, Baptist, Methodist, etc.”[9]
He preached with this new emphasis for
several months in and around Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and that autumn
accepted an invitation by friends to become the regular minister for a
small congregation in Portsmouth who were receptive to his views. Almost
immediately after his move there, however, the building in which the
church met burned to the ground in a fire that destroyed a good part of
the city on the day after Christmas. This apparent disaster proved a
blessing, since it encouraged the little group of believers, as they
made a fresh start in a new church building, to examine carefully their
religious principles and make a new spiritual beginning. Smith later
described their study and his own excitement.
From December to March, the brethren,
five in number, held a meeting every Saturday evening, to examine our
articles, that we might be prepared to form ourselves into a church
according to the new-testament, and to be called Christians, without any
sectarian name added. So great was my desire to see such a church, that
I thought a labor of twenty years would be a pleasure, if in the end I
might see twenty united walking according to the new test.”[10]
Through the winter, Smith also kept a
"singing school" to teach religious people how to sing hymns.
Instructing the hearts and minds of his pupils as well as their lips, he
used the school as a way to contact and bring into the church new
converts. The goal for which Smith expressed his willingness to labor
twenty years was attained in only three months. In March, 1803, the
little congregation, now numbering nearly twenty, formally organized.
Smith happily recalled, “We agreed to consider ourselves a church of
Christ, owning him as our only Master, Lord, and Lawgiver, and we agreed
to consider ourselves Christians, without the addition of any
unscriptural name.”[11]
Such were the church and its preacher
that Abner Jones found on his visit to Portsmouth the following June.
The Portsmouth "church of Christ" continued to grow rapidly, if
unspectacularly, reaching a membership of 150 within one year, and part
of this growth can be attributed to the encouragement provided by
Jones's unexpected appearance and preaching that summer. This meeting
between Smith and Jones proved a decisive point in both men's lives. For
Jones, the knowledge that others had on their own recognized and put
into practice the lost principles of Christianity which he advocated
provided an almost physical relief from his recurrent self-doubts. From
his school teaching days in Hartland, he had tormented himself for
almost a decade with the question, "If what I believe is clearly right,
why do others not see it?" Now here were a group of believers who,
without prejudiced teaching from himself, had seen the truth. Although
his thoughtful and deep-wounded soul could never know the easy boldness
of Smith, he would henceforth have the confidence to face the trials the
future held in store. For Smith, contact with the far stronger intellect
and character of Jones helped transform what had started as a minor and
local struggle with the Baptists into a crusade for widespread revival.
Jones' ideas sent Smith's own very active mind driving off into new
directions, breaking much of what hold the old theology still held in
his life. Smith later called Jones the first free man I had ever seen"[12];
and now he sought that freedom for himself, his church, and all who
would listen.

Chapter 2 – Spreading The News
Wilt thou not revive us again: that thy
people may rejoice in thee. Ps. 85:6
Our world throughout its history has
known only one perfect human being, and the excellence of all other
individual characters has been merely comparative and partial. Just as
the worst of men have gentler emotions that restrain their ferocity, so
the best of men possess faults that prevent their virtues from full
accomplishment. For this reason, lasting and beneficial reformations in
the conduct of mankind are not effected by solitary genius and sanctity,
no matter how exalted, but rather by the cooperative effort of those who
can complement each other's virtues, and palliate each other's vices.
The alliance between Abner Jones and Elias Smith was more than a joining
of numerical forces; it was a partnership of character. Since their
partnership dominates the history of the first decade of Christian
churches in New England, it is appropriate to give here a fuller
description of the qualities and abilities which each man brought to the
joint endeavor.
Jones might have been the most
thoroughly and impressively self-educated man in America. With his
meager public schooling, he yet attained to a level of scholarship that
few college graduates (or even professors) could approach. In an age
when frontier preachers sometimes had difficulty in the use of English,
he drove himself to master Latin, Greek, and Hebrew. His son later
authored a Hebrew grammar. Jones, however, did not confine his attention
to any one academic discipline. He loved books, and his mind roamed
delightedly over almost the whole range of learning and imagination.
Near the close of his life, he described his attitude toward reading:
My library consists of everything in
nature, and in whatever knowledge and truth are to be found. I have been
captivated by books, since I was eight years of age. I am now
sixty-five, and yet I have never had one desire to be released from this
happy captivity. I am far from being satisfied; I am as eager as ever to
turn and see what the next page will tell me. I have read little, and my
stock of knowledge is consequently very contracted. The sacred Bible is
above all; I love to read it more than any other and all other, books,
and I suppose I have read as many hours in this precious volume of life,
as in all other books besides.[13]
We should be careful to realize that
when Jones wrote, "I have read little," he is judging by the standard of
his own insatiable thirst for knowledge. He loved poetry, and for many
years regularly expressed his feelings by composing poems. Although
undistinguished by any remarkable merit, his poems reveal at least a
high degree of literary and intellectual activity. He also loved music
and helped to edit a book of hymns. During long periods, he practiced
medicine and attempted to research cures. Perhaps the greatest proof of
his intelligence and learning was his conviction that he needed to know
more.
Although possessed of great natural
abilities and embarked on a revolutionary course in life that inevitably
brought him into the temptations of fame and the passions of
controversy, Jones retained the virtues of modesty, gentleness, and
sweetness of, spirit to such an extreme degree that he sometimes strayed
into the vices of despair, weakness, and self-deception. At the age of
thirty-five Jones made this gloomy assessment of his life: "On the 28th
of April, A.D. 1772, I was born into this world of sin and sorrow, and
so wicked have I been, that I have often wished that the day to me had
been darkness, wherein it was said, a man child was born."[14]
Thirty years later, after a lifetime of religious service, having
endured hardships, and having gained the respect and applause of
thousands who had come to share his faith, his judgement of himself
scarcely brightened.
More than fifty years since, I first
knew the sweets of pardon, and the perfect love of God shed abroad in my
heart. And for more than thirty-seven years I have been a preacher of
the gospel; and how little, very little, have I done in the vineyard of
the Lord. I am now in the going down of the sun, and so of course doing
less and less. 'Few and evil have been the days of thy servant.' And now
behold I am going off of the stage in the evening of my life, having
done a poor, very poor day's work. Yet I hope I may have possibly gained
one or two talents. 'Cast me not off from thy presence; uphold me by thy
free spirit.'[15]
No amount of labor or accomplishment
could appease a conscience that "knew the sweets of pardon," but had
daily fed since childhood on the bitterness of condemnation.
Men commonly judge others far more
harshly than they judge themselves, eagerly attempting to clean the
speck out of their brother's eye while blinded by the beam in their own.
Jones followed the opposite rule, and freely gave to others the
understanding and forgiveness which he denied to himself. He was always
ready to believe the best about anybody, and his too liberal charity
sometimes blinded him to the faults of his friends and the evil intent
of his enemies. In later years, he remembered with affection even the
"worthy ministers" who had opposed the Christians and tried to silence
their preaching. He saw clearly that the religious world continued many
errors that opposed and profaned the spirit of Christ, and he spent much
of his life trying to correct those errors and restore Christianity to
its pristine simplicity, but he had great difficulty accepting that men
sometimes hold wrong opinions, not because they have been misinformed
and are honestly prejudiced, but because they prefer falsehood to truth.
Some lost souls do not wish to be found, and Jones used much of his
energy lovingly exhorting those who only wanted to enjoy their hypocrisy
in peace.
Nothing could be less surprising than
that two men born in the same region within three years of each other,
from similar social backgrounds, raised in neighboring villages,
possessed of the same inadequate schooling, who both started their adult
life as teachers in the same school, both practiced medicine, both
became ministers, and who independently arrived at very close religious
positions should resemble each other in many points of interest,
ability, and character. Therefore, Elias Smith and Abner Jones had a
great deal in common. Yet, they also had radical differences.
Smith had a brilliant mind, but an
unsteady one. Where Jones sometimes let timidity prevent him from
forming a decisive opinion on a subject, Smith rashly adopted opinions
without sufficient knowledge or thoughtfulness. Over the course of his
life, he enlisted in a multitude of causes, both religious and
political. Three times he embraced the comforting doctrine of
universalism, and three times he repented and rejoined the Christians.
Whatever position Smith held, however, he supported with great ability
and indefatigable energy. He was a bold and eloquent preacher, adept at
the kind of fiery, revival sermons then associated with evangelical
religion. Of more long-term significance, he was a forceful and prolific
writer, whose many books and countless newspaper articles exerted a wide
influence within New England and provoked response from other areas of
the country.
While Jones's humility made him a man
of peace, Elias Smith was "a man of war from his youth up", embroiled in
a continuous series of conflicts from childhood to old age. He rebelled
against his parents, quarreled with the Baptists, caused turmoil among
the Christians, and engaged in a hundred unrelated business, political,
and religious disputes. Abner Jones's son somewhat unkindly, but
accurately, described Smith, “He was an exceedingly popular preacher,
but he did not wear well with his friends, and soon fell into disrepute
with his brethren. It was ever the misfortune of Elder Smith to be, as
Elder Jones used to say, 'in hot water.’”[16]
Nevertheless, despite the trouble it caused Smith himself and his
companions, his fierce love of liberty was his most valuable
contribution to the Christian cause. Religions commonly tend toward an
irrational authoritarianism. Preachers pronounce the gospel a mystery,
incapable of logical examination, and they demand that their fellow
human beings accept "on faith" the revelations of a "prophet" or the
dogma of a church. Smith adamantly refused to sell his conscience into
the keeping of mere men, and, what is rarer, did not wish to bind others
by his own opinions. He questioned many of the doctrines of
Christianity, but he never doubted that "where the spirit of the Lord
is, there is liberty." Thus, Smith and Jones enriched and balanced each
other's personalities. Smith's boldness encouraged his hesitant
companion, and Jones's gentleness soothed the passions of his friend. If
Jones's mind produced a wiser and clearer view of Christianity, Smith's
persuasive tongue and pen communicated that view far more widely and
effectively than its originator could have done.
In the summer of 1803, these two men
began preaching together in and around Portsmouth. As previously noted,
they achieved significant success, but they also provoked violent
opposition because of their criticism of the professional clergy, their
denial of the Calvinist theology that underlay the denominational
churches, and their attack on denominationalism itself as an
unscriptural and sinful division of the body of Christ.
In a public letter the next year, Smith
described the childish (but occasionally dangerous) behavior of their
opponents:
They have come round the house when we
were meet to worship, with drums, fifes, files, trumpets, and whistles,
they have fired guns by the house, and thrown through the windows, when
we were in the house, so that our lives have been exposed; they have
broken our windows when we were gone, broke down our gate, fastened our
meeting house door when we were within, and thrown in things of a
disagreeable smell, to disturb us, and insulted us as we passed the
streets.”[17]
Such opposition probably helped rather
than hindered the progress of their work, since it would excite sympathy
and inflame the judgment of the general public.
Smith and Jones soon expanded their
efforts outside of Portsmouth. At this time, the church in Portsmouth
still maintained a nominal affiliation with the Baptists and belonged to
an association of Baptist churches known as the Christian Conference. As
their organization's name suggests, these churches were already
beginning to seek a basis for fellowship as Christians rather than as
Baptists. At a meeting of the Christian Conference in Kennebunk, Maine,
Smith introduced Jones to his fellow ministers and endorsed his plea for
nondenominational Christianity. Several of those present expressed
interest in the new ideas, but most shared the feelings of one older
man, who complained, “It is very hard to give up so much all at once.”[18]
Undiscouraged, Jones and Smith continued their attempts to persuade the
members of the conference to reject denominations and creeds. Jones's
relationship with the Christian Conference serves as an example of his
early attitude toward church associations. He did not question their
piety or the seriousness of their religious convictions, gladly
participated in their meetings and contributed to their discussions, but
steadfastly refused to give allegiance to a human organization or to
bind himself by the articles of their creed. Within a year, patient
teaching persuaded the conference to surrender what had seemed so "hard
to give up", and, rejecting their creed, they agreed "that the New
Testament was the only and all-sufficient rule for Christians."[19]
In July, 1803, having heard of the
revival taking place in Portsmouth as a result of the preaching of Smith
and Jones, the Baptist churches in Boston invited the two men to preach
a series of lessons in their city. As later events showed, they did not
realize the distinctive nature of the Christians' plea for unity nor
their anti-Calvinist offer of salvation to all men who sought it.
Apparently expecting an emotional revival, they received instead
preaching that directly and powerfully challenged the fundamental
doctrines of their denomination and denied that denomination's very
right to exist. The infuriated Baptists closed the meeting, which had
attracted crowds numbering up to 3,000, and attempted to prevent Smith
and Jones from preaching anywhere in Boston. They found the latter
impossible to accomplish. A small number of Baptists and others accepted
the new teachings and organized a Christian church, which met in a
building at the corner of Sumner and Sea Streets. In June of the
following year, Jones decided to move to Boston as a new home base,
although he continued to preach over a large area of New England.
Jones's opponents in Boston, unable by argument to make the Christians
see the error of their ways, soon had recourse to more violent
expedients, and the Christians felt compelled to petition the Boston
board of selectmen in a letter dated September 16, 1804 for protection
from harassment by groups of young thugs. Years later, Jones regretfully
imagined that he could have avoided antagonizing the Boston church
leaders had it not been for Smith's abrasive personality, but he was
almost certainly indulging in wishful thinking. As both his co-worker
and his enemies clearly understood, Jones's teaching itself was
inevitably abrasive to any religious establishment that wanted to
preserve the ecclesiastical status quo.
While the work in Boston continued its
slow and uneasy progress, the Christians' cause in other places enjoyed
more rapid, though equally tumultuous, success. From 1803 to 1808, the
preaching of Elias Smith met with especially large and attentive
audiences in the towns surrounding Portsmouth. In the coastal region
extending from Kittery, Maine to Ipswich, Massachusetts, Smith and his
allies from the old Christian Conference of Baptists set the leaven of
their teaching to work, upsetting the quiet respectability of the
established churches and breaking out in great revivals that brought
hundreds of new converts into their faith. This period of growth had a
powerful impact on the history of the Christians, both because this
region became the area of their greatest numerical strength in New
England and because it was in these revivals that many of their future
leaders were converted, such as Mark Fernald in Kittery, the Plummers
and the Rands in Haverhill, and Elijah Shaw and Daniel Pike in
Kensington, New Hampshire.
Any attempt to chronicle exactly the
progress of the Christians during this time encounters insuperable
difficulties, for the Christians did not then regard themselves as in
any sense a denomination, nor did they despair of convincing entire
denominational churches to reclaim gospel liberty. Thus, those who
belonged to the denominations and accepted Smith's teaching often
remained in their churches, hoping to convert their friends from within
the religious system to which they were accustomed. In some cases, an
open break occurred only when the clergy attempted to silence or
discipline Christians among their flocks. Also, later historians
sometimes confused the Christians with other religious movements and
referred to them by a bewildering variety of names, including Free
Baptists, Freewill Baptists, Christian Baptists, and Restorers, all of
which have been more commonly applied to other religious groups. The
Christians did not wish to become a distinct class of Christians, but
simply Christians, followers of Jesus, nothing more nor less. This ideal
proved extremely difficult for them to preserve among themselves and
impossible for their contemporaries to understand.
Despite the attitude mentioned in the
preceding paragraph, the Christians occasionally found it either
necessary or expedient formally to organize themselves into local
congregations. One of the earliest such churches was established in
Hampton Falls, New Hampshire in 1805. The church drew its membership
from several nearby towns and had as its three principal supporters,
William Brown of Hampton Falls, John Lamprey of Kensington, and Theodore
Coffin of Hampton. The record of how they came to build a meeting house
hints at the kind of childish persecution their opponents directed
against them.
In the beginning of the year 1805 we
held our meeting on the Lord's day at our brother John Pike's house.
This being inconvenient, we have agreed with Mr. Aaron Wells for a house
to worship God in, and paid the rent in part. But four of the windows
were broken in one night, and said Wells forbid our meeting in such a
house. We then removed our meeting to the Widow Anna Brown's house in
Hampton Falls.[20]
On June 28, they raised their own
building at a cost of $360, largely contributed by Brown, Lamprey, and
Coffin.
The Hampton Falls congregation served
as a center of the Christians' work in that local area. Although the
membership of the church remained small, the extent of their influence
reveals itself in the large crowds that attended baptisms, ordinations,
and revivals. Often, as in the case of the ordination of Ebenezer
Leavitt in 1808, services were held in the fields, because the crowds
were far too great to meet in the building. Eventually, the Hampton
Falls church would produce sister congregations in every neighboring
town.
More typical of Christian institutions
in the first decade of the nineteenth century was the non-organization
that existed in the town of Andover in central New Hampshire. Those who
heeded the call for Christian freedom and unity in Andover worshipped
together in a group known simply as the "Monthly Meeting." They included
among their numbers individuals of sharply divergent views, who agreed
to disagree, with each side undoubtedly hoping to win the others to
their way of thinking. Finally, after nearly thirty years of such vain
expectations, it would give birth to two churches: a Christian
congregation and a Freewill Baptist one.
As the presence of Christians in
Andover indicates, the progress of the new movement in New Hampshire was
by no means confined to the south-eastern corner of the state. One of
the first Christian churches to be established in New Hampshire was
formed in 1808 in Boscawen, a small community near Concord. Chance has
preserved for us the agreement the members made with each other in
forming the church:
This church have agreed to lay aside
all the party names by which professors are called, with all such things
as are called Creeds, Covenants, Platforms, Articles of Faith, with all
the commandments of men, and to consider Christ their only master, and
the New Testament their only Rule, and to be known by the name given at
Antioch which is Christian.
The following are the names of the
Brethren and sisters who were Baptized June 16th and being united in
love, united in the above agreement and who stand ready to receive into
their y all who are willing to unite with them in the glorious name of
Christ:
David
Sweatt, Martha Corser,
James
Corser, Mecla Couch,
Petiah
Gookin, John P. Sweatt,
Joseph
Couch, jr., Mrs. Trumbull,
Martha
Gookin, Betsey Hobbs,
Hannah
Hobbs, Mrs. Corser.[21]
Of particular interest in this
statement is the reference to the baptism of all its signers.
Apparently, Boscawen was one place where the Christians found none of
their original adherents among the Baptists, since they never
re-baptized those who already had been immersed. Within a year, the
congregation has more than doubled its membership to 25.
Closer to the center of Elias Smith's
activities, the first Christian church in Maine was formed in the town
of Kittery on November 20, 1806, partly as the result of preaching by
Ephraim Stinchfield and Moses Safford who had the honor to be the first
preacher in his state to call himself only a Christian. To the south,
Smith's preaching helped establish a church in Chebacco, a community
within the town of Ipswich, Massachusetts. The Chebacco Christians
became embroiled in a controversy with Josiah Webster, the local
congregational minister. Continued even after Webster moved to Hampton,
this quarrel led to the most spectacular of all Elias Smith's
altercations, the riot of 1808.
Never a man to avoid opposition, Smith
decided to confront his adversary by holding a meeting of the Christians
on Hampton's public Green, just in front of Webster's house. On
September 8, as a large crowd gathered on the Green, several dozen of
Webster's supporters appeared armed with muskets. Smith and his fellow
preachers, unwilling either needlessly to provoke violence or to
surrender to the intimidation of hoodlums, decided to proceed with the
meeting at a less inflammatory site in a field some distance away, but
the self-constituted militia of religion marched to the new location and
started firing their weapons over the heads of the crowd. When the
preachers still attempted to address their audience despite all threats,
the defenders of the established order began throwing dirt and potatoes
at the Christians, overturned the makeshift pulpit, and finally silenced
the speaker by wrestling him to the ground. Pursued to the house where
he was staying, Smith had to escape out the back door and returned to
Portsmouth glad to be alive. No one was seriously hurt in this affair,
the only injury being to the cause of a religion so disreputably
championed. History provides few images of human folly so disgraceful
and ludicrous as men defending the dignity of their faith by throwing
potatoes at those with whom they disagree.
The efforts of the Christians in
Massachusetts prospered greatly during this period. Abner Jones had not
been idle, and his labors bore fruit in new churches that sprang up
around Boston. As early as 1804, Jones helped organize a church in
Nantasket, south of Boston, and several congregations began meeting in
the next few years north of the city, notably in Salem. However, the
greatest accessions to the Christians, both in numbers and in ultimate
importance, came as a result of their contacts with the Baptists in the
southeastern portion of the state. Both Jones and Smith had become
acquainted with Daniel Hix, the minister of the Baptist church in
Dartmouth, and Hix invited them to preach to his congregation. Although
he harbored private reservations concerning the stability of Smith's
personality, Hix recognized that these men possessed an insight into
Christianity that he had lacked. Greatly beloved and influential, Hix
led his whole congregation, one of the largest Baptist churches in
Massachusetts, to reject their denomination and its creed. Although he
continued in fellowship with his Baptist friends, he wished himself to
be only a Christian. The disaster to the Baptist cause was compounded by
the respect which Hix commanded among the other churches in the area.
Horrified at the spectacle of Hix preaching in company with Elias Smith
in many of their churches, the denominational leaders in 1807 summoned
Hix to stand trial for heresy before his fellow ministers, hoping to
discredit their former champion. Hix's answers to their questions give
eloquent testimony of his simple faith in the Bible.
On his trial for heresy before the
Warren Association, the moderator as usual proceeded to question the
supposed heretic:
Moderator.
Elder Hix, do you believe in salvation by faith along?
Hix.
I believe James, II, 24; Ye see then how that by works a man is
justified, and not by faith only.
Moderator.
Elder Hix, do you believe in the doctrines of foreordination and
predestination?
Hix.
I believe whom he did foreknow he also did predestinate to be conformed
to the image of his son. Moreover, whom he did predestinate, them he
also called; and whom he called, them he also justified; and whom he
justified, them he also glorified. Romans, VIII, 29,30.
Moderator
Elder Hix, do you believe in the doctrine of the trinity?
Hix.
I believe that there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father,
the Word, and the Holy Spirit; and these three are one. I John, v,7.
Moderator.
Elder Hix, do you believe in total depravity?
Hix.
Twice dead, and plucked up by the roots. That is as near total depravity
as anything I can think of. Jude, 12th verse.
Moderator.
Elder Hix, we are not satisfied with your answers.
Hix.
I did not expect the Bible would satisfy you.[22]
From this time onward, Hix worked in
open and unequivocal alliance with the Christians. At a meeting of
Christian preachers in 1808, he jubilantly reported the results of their
first year's work: 262 conversions in eleven towns of southeastern
Massachusetts. These were in addition to the more than 400 individuals
he had led out of the Baptists.
While engaged in his Massachusetts
efforts, Jones had neglected the small churches in Vermont and New
Hampshire he had helped establish during the first two years of his
ministry. As a consequence of this neglect, the churches died out so
quickly and completely that no mention of their existence occurs in town
records. Nevertheless, family ties, the scattered remnant of Jones's
supporters, and the natural desire to preach the gospel in their old
home state drew Jones and Smith inevitably back to Vermont.
Having been invited by some local
inhabitants, Smith visited Woodstock in February 1806. He preached at
various places in the town for the next six weeks and succeeded in
gathering thirty-six converts into a church, in the community of English
Mills. This congregation, which later moved into Woodstock Village, was
the first Christian Church in Vermont to last more than a few years.
Indeed, the Woodstock church was one of the last members of the
Christian Connection when the congregation finally disbanded in 1949,
nearly a century and a half after Smith's first sermon. In its first few
years, the church experienced steady growth both numerically and
spiritually. On April 20, 1808, they had the pleasure of ordaining Elias
Cobb, one of their first eight members, as an elder, and they also
benefited almost from the beginning from the preaching of Uriah Smith,
Elias's brother. In 1809, the Christians thought it desirable to express
in writing their commitment to God and to each other as members of the
Church:
In the 1806-09, a number of brethren
who were formerly connected with the Baptist and Congregational
Churches, together with a number of converts. . . have thought it their
duty and privilege to form themselves into a church, taking Christ for
their Master and Lord, and his rule for their guide and direction in all
circumstances until death, to love one another with a pure heart
fervently, and by the grace of God to shine as lights in the world.[23]
So far we have traced the beginning of
the Christians and their first growth and expansion. By 1808, just five
years after Jones and Smith discovered each other's faith in Portsmouth,
strong Christian churches existed in four New England states, and their
influence had spread from Cape Cod to Canada. Yet, beyond brief
statements of their principles, we have not considered in any detail the
beliefs of the Christians, nor attempted at all to chronicle their
doctrinal controversies. The next chapter will address this subject.

Chapter 3
Early Doctrinal Views
If thou seekest her as silver, and
searchest for her as for hid treasures; then shalt thou understand the
fear of the Lord, and find the knowledge of God. Prov. 2:4,5
Virtually all denominations profess to
find their religion commanded and exemplified in the pages of the Bible,
but they have claimed a scriptural foundation for such a vast array of
differing and contradictory dogmas that they bring the public to wonder
whether the life of Jesus could be so enigmatical or the teachings of
Paul so obscure as to leave man in such confusion regarding the divine
will. Whether we assess the blame for our doubts on the comparative
obscurity of revelation or the depravity of human understanding, it
seems a thing not easily reconcilable with a loving God that he who
called himself the light of the world should involve us in a perpetual
conflict of darkness, and that the one who promised, "Ye shall know the
truth, and the truth shall make you free," should abandon us enchained
by ignorance and error. A closer examination of religious diversity,
however, reveals that many doctrinal differences arise not from varying
interpretations of difficult scriptural passages but from loyalty to
other sources of authority outside the Bible, such as the visions of a
modern prophet, the pronouncements of an ecclesiastical synod, or the
personal mystery of emotional experience. Even among Protestants, who
have gloried in Stillingfleet's claim that "the Bible, and the Bible
along" is their religion, such influences have often obscured the
clearest Biblical commands. God has sent light into the world and given
to men eyes adequate to perceive it and walk in its direction; but if
men proudly shut their eyes and insist on feeling their miserable way
through life, they should not complain when they stumble and fall.
Following the Bible requires a reasonable intellectual competence, but
it demands uncommon virtue, lest divine words be used only to sanctify
human willfulness. When the New England Christians claimed to take the
Bible as their rule of faith, they said no more than the meanest of
their adversaries boasted of themselves. The test of such a claim is its
actual application to religious practice and everyday life.
The most fundamental and significant
departure of the Christians from common denominational teaching was
their insistence that every individual capable of normal reasoning had
both the right and the inescapable duty personally to study, understand,
and obey the Bible. They denied a place to any intermediary of creed or
clergy between a Christian and his Lord. Perhaps the fullest statement
of this cardinal principle is found in Elias Smith's defense of his
faith included near the close of his autobiography: (Note: Smith’s
italicizing of words for emphasis.)
I do in the first place publicly
declare, that the Holy Scriptures which contain a revelation of
the will of God, are the only sure, authentic, and infallible
Rule of the faith and practice of every Christian, by which all
opinions are to be fairly and impartially examined; and in
consequence of this, I do protest against setting up and allowing
the decrees of any man, or body of men, as of equal authority and
obligation with the word of God; whether they be councils, synods,
convocations, associations, missionary societies, or general assemblies;
whether ancient or modern, Romish, Episcopal,
Presbyterian, Congregational, Baptist, or Methodist, Popes, Fathers, or
Doctors of Divinity.
I do farther assert and maintain,
according to the doctrine of Christ and the Apostles, and
the practice of Christians in the first century; that in all
things essential to the faith and practice of a Christian, the
Scriptures are plain, and easy to be understood, by all who will
diligently and impartially read and study them; and that charging the
Scriptures with obscurity and uncertainty, is contrary to the plain
declaration of the Scriptures, and is an abuse of the rule
given for Christians to walk by, and insult upon that Holy Spirit
by which the authors of them were guided, and a wicked reproach
thrown upon them by ignorant, corrupt, and wicked
hirelings, to draw men into a slavish dependence on them;
that by thus representing the Scriptures as a dark book, they
have hood winked the followers of Christ, and others, that they
might render them implicit believers on their arbitrary
decrees, and make them without control, subservient to the views of
their ambition, avarice, pride, and luxury.
I do farther assert, that every
Christian is under an indispensable obligation to search the
Scriptures for himself, and make the best use of it he can
for his information in the will of God, and the nature of
'Pure Religion'; that he hath an unalienable right,
impartially to judge of the sense and meaning of it, and to follow the
Scriptures wherever it leads him, even an equal right with the Bishops
and Pastors of the churches; and in consequence of this, I farther
protest against that unrighteous and ungodly pretence of making
the writings of the fathers, the decrees of councils and synods,
or the sense of the church, the rule and standard of judging
of the sense of the Scriptures, as Popish Anti-Christian and
dangerous to the church of God.
[24]
The foregoing statement amounts to a
declaration of war against the traditional denominations of New England.
Although many of the Christians, led by Abner Jones, did not feel the
bitterness evident in Smith's attacks on the clergy, they shared the
views that underlay his attacks and make the Christians offensive to
their opponents. No matter how harshly or sweetly they said it, Jones
and his associates were calling for the destruction of
denominationalism. When they asserted that Biblical truths were so plain
that the common man could easily understand them, they implied, when
they did not openly declare, that the reason the common man had not
understood the simple teachings of Christianity was that he had been
misled by the folly and pride of his ministers. Not only did they accuse
the clergy of dishonorably misusing the trust placed in them by their
church members, however, they also insisted that committing the faith
into the hands of a professional elite was inherently wrong, even to
ministers of the highest character. Similarly, the Christians generally
opposed any intervention by the state into religious affairs, such as
the financial support of churches through tax revenues, a practice still
widespread in New England through the first two decades of the
nineteenth century. The faith of the Christians was an individual faith,
which church or state had no right to control.
Putting these principles into practice,
the Christians rejected all denominational organizations as both
unscriptural and inevitably tending to tyranny. During the first fifteen
years of their movement, they avoided even general meetings that might
give the appearance of a formal association between churches. Just as
the churches of Christ in the first century were bound together by their
faith and love and did not want or need any outward restraint to their
fellowship, the New England Christians endeavored to keep the unity of
the spirit by individual loyalty and obedience to the spirit. To quote
the famous words of John Milton, which Barton Stone used to justify the
Christian movement in Kentucky, the unhindered search for truth by free
men “makes up the best harmony in a church; not the forced and outward
union of cold and neutral and inwardly divided minds.”[25]
A serious problem connected with their
rejection of denominational organization was how or whether to ordain
ministers, which they called "elders", after the common practice among
Baptists. Their attacks on the denominational clergy clearly threatened
the very concept of ministers as privileged and authoritative class
separate from ordinary Christians; yet, Abner Jones's care to secure
ordination from the Freewill Baptists in 1802 demonstrates that, while
denying both the pretensions of the clergy to be lords over God's
heritage and the right of ecclesiastical authority to limit the work of
the ministry to a chosen elite, he still felt that preaching was a
special calling for which it was appropriate to have some formal
ordination. Smith also explained that his anti-clericalism did not imply
a complete rejection of an ordained ministry. When they attempted to
define who should choose and ordain preachers, or what, if any, official
rule preachers should play in the life of the church, however, they fell
at once into difficulties which they never resolved. The significance
and form of ordination differed widely from church to church. Often, the
local congregation chose its own elder with little or no involvement by
other preachers. Sometimes, a group of preachers would assume the right
to ordain an elder separate from the wishes of any particular church.
The ordination in Vermont of Jasper Hazen, one of the most prominent
Christian preachers, followed this second pattern.
Hartford, 26 Dec., 1810; Now there was
in the church of Christ at Hartford, Vt., certain teachers and
preachers, and they ministered to the Lord and fasted, and they felt an
impression of the Holy Ghost to set apart Jasper Hazen to the work of
the ministry. These are therefore to certify that he was this day set
apart publicly according to the New Testament, by fasting, prayer, and
laying on of hands of us — Elias Cobb, Uriah Smith, James Spooner, and
Frederick Plummer, Elders.
[26]
The filing of this statement with the
Hartford town clerk suggests that one reason for formal ordination might
have been to establish an individual's legal status as a minister, even
if it meant little or no change in his position within the church.
Certainly, the Christians did not limit preaching, serving communion, or
baptizing to those who had been ordained. Each congregation had its
leader or leaders, whether officially recognized as elders or not, whose
authority and effectiveness rested solely on the respect their character
could command from their fellow Christians. Only a few congregations had
a plurality of ordained elders, but more may have practically followed a
group leadership. Almost no elders were professional preachers. They had
no seminary training. A handful of well known preachers, such as Smith
and Jones themselves, visited widely among the churches-and gave some
leadership beyond the local level, but even they became increasingly
tied to the work of their home congregations and had largely to provide
their own financial support by engaging in business or the secular
professions.
The authors and enforcers of creeds as
a test of fellowship among Christians make two assumptions which Abner
Jones and Elias Smith were quite unwilling to accept. Regarding
themselves as wiser than their brothers, they assert the right to
dominate other men's consciences; and, claiming to be more eloquent then
the Holy Spirit, they seek to express the thoughts of God in language
clearer and more effective than God's own word. The latter of these
assumptions the Christians had little difficulty in despising; and, from
the time that Jones first convinced Smith and his friends in New
Hampshire to give up their creeds, they entirely avoided making any
human document the touchstone of their faith. The former assumption, so
seductive to human pride, has always proven a more formidable opponent
to religious liberty, because it continually produces unwritten creeds
that secretly but powerfully hold subject men's minds. Some of the most
intolerant religious groups have never formally committed their bigotry
into writing, but it has nonetheless crushed the spirit of Christian
liberty among them. It was this danger that made Elias Smith warn his
fellow Christians, "Though we have rejected all party names: yet my
brethren there is a danger of retaining a party spirit; let us guard
against this, by constantly following the Lamb, by owning all the Lord
owns, and endeavoring to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of
peace.[27]
The Christians made unusual efforts to
preserve their liberty in the Lord. So fearful were they of allowing
church tradition to become an authority that many congregations refused
to keep records of past church decisions. At business meetings, a clerk
would read the minutes of the previous meeting and then immediately burn
them. This practice is reminiscent of the opposition among early
churches of Christ in the South to the drawing up of membership lists,
lest the numbering of God's people be a prelude to their subjugation.
The New England Christians, while not hesitating to keep a record of
their numbers, allowed every Christian the utmost freedom of private
opinion. Although the churches required outward obedience to God in
baptism to become a member and evidence of character in a holy life to
remain one; they did not attempt to order the thoughts of their members.
They gladly welcomed into their fellowship unitarians and trinitarians,
Calvinists and Pelagians, the overly subtle and the childishly simple.
They even permitted the preaching of divergent views. In a noble
experiment that eventually failed with disastrous consequences, some
Christian churches opened their pulpits to anyone of any denomination
who bore the character of a good man and had a Biblical lesson to
deliver.
Although not presuming to judge the
thoughts and intents of the heart and allowing almost unrestrained
doctrinal discussion, the early Christian churches did not permit laxity
in regard to those commands of God which require outward obedience. A
man may hold an erroneous view concerning the nature of angels or the
origin of Cain's wife and no harm done; but if he believes in the virtue
of adultery and puts his opinion into practice, the peace of the church,
the honor of God, and the peril of his own soul demand that his fellow
Christians not acquiesce in open sin. What the Bible clearly teaches
must be plainly obeyed, if Christianity is to be more than empty words.
Therefore, the Christians heavily emphasized the duties of common
morality in their preaching and enforced their ethical standard by
strict church discipline.
The two areas in which their desire for
toleration and their need for discipline came into most severe conflict
were the questions of baptism and communion, the most important
ceremonies of Christianity. These were outward acts, clearly commanded
and exemplified in the pages of the New Testament. Going to their
Bibles, the Christians recognized immersion as the original and only
acceptable form of baptism. They did not find any justification for
infant baptism. Although they did not believe that baptism was necessary
to become a Christian, they regarded it as an essential duty of the
beginning of every person's life in Christ. Elias Smith wrote, "I do not
think that baptism saves people from their sins; I believe that it is to
show that a person is saved from his sins through faith in Christ,
previous to his being baptized.[28]
But what of those who claimed the title of Christians, yet neglected or
refused to show their forgiveness in baptism? At this early period, the
Christians gave to baptism such importance that they refused to accept
anyone as a member who had not been immersed.
The question of baptism inevitably
brought forward the issue of communion. Concerning the act and design of
communion itself, they knew little controversy, accepting without
dissent the views current among Protestants in New England at that time.
The difficulty arose over whether the Christians should share communion
with members of denominations who had not been immersed, and therefore
not demonstrated that they belonged to the Lord. The theoretical
question of whether the unimmersed were saved could be left to the final
judgement of God, but the practical problem of whether to invite or
forbid their neighbors to come around the Lord's table was an emotional
dilemma that divided the Christians among themselves. Elias Smith
originally believed in closed communion and wrote a tract in 1803
entitled "A Reply to this Question: 'Why Cannot You Commune With Us,
Seeing We Are Willing to Commune with You?'" Under the influence of
Abner Jones, Smith moderated his views and began practicing open
communion, at least to some extent. Where to draw the line remained
unsettled. The church in Dothan, Vermont, a village near Hartford that
has since disappeared, refused to admit the denominationalists as
brethren and withdrew fellowship in 1811 from some members who had
resumed attendance at a Congregational church. Not presuming either to
encourage or discourage others to partake, some churches left it
entirely to the individual conscience of visitors whether they should
commune.
The most serious doctrinal difference
in the eyes of the Christians themselves to arise among them in their
early years of growth centered on the eternal destiny of the lost.
Having already passed once through universalism while still a Baptist,
Elias Smith shocked the Christians by his preaching on the afterlife. As
Abner Jones later recalled, "Our trials and disasters have been many,
and not among the smallest, is the fact that some of the first leaders
in this cause, have made bad work: In 1805, Elder Elias Smith, according
to his luminous imagination had great and new light, insomuch, that he
(as he thought) saw the righteous, and wicked, sleeping all in their
graves until the resurrection; and at the resurrection, saw the wicked
raised, burned up—both soul and body.”[29]
Such opinions fell within the limits of the kind of theological
speculation that the Christians had purposed to de-emphasize in their
preaching and tolerate among their members, but Smith would not relegate
his views to a minor and relatively private part of his teaching, but
publicly proclaimed them with such vehemence and persistence as to
antagonize his friends, unsettle the churches, and give an unnecessary
occasion for scandal among the denominations. His conduct especially
offended Jones, partly because Jones felt tempted to embrace any scheme
which would extinguish the fires of hell from the doctrine of Christ,
but had struggled to submit himself to the overwhelming weight of
Biblical evidence that testified of eternal punishment for those who
rejected the Lord. Having barely managed to overcome his own doubts and
emotions on this awful subject, he had little calmness or patience to
tolerate Smith's aberrations. Smith later ruefully acknowledged that
"Elder Jones was some hurt respecting the end of the wicked”;[30]
and their relationship became increasingly strained. However, this
controversy had more basic and ominous implications for the future, for
it warned the Christians that the distinction they made between
uniformity of action and liberty of thought and speech could not always
be honored. Free expression, if unguided by wisdom and unrestrained by
love, became an action too offensive and destructive for tolerance.
More perilous for the Christians' cause
than their disagreement over the destiny of the wicked was their almost
unanimous acceptance of certain speculations concerning the nature of
Jesus and of God. As one of their leaders recalled in 1827, “At first we
were all nominally Trinitarian, being educated in that doctrine. The
doctrine, however, was soon canvassed, brought to the test of
revelation, and universally rejected as unscriptural and anti-Christian,
with all its concomitant doctrines.”[31]
If they had rested from their intellectual labors when they had thus
examined and refused the orthodox definition of the divine personality,
they would have acted in perfect accord with their original resolve to
declare to the world the clear and essential message of the Bible,
unencumbered with superfluous theology, and to "strive not about words
to no profit"; but many of the Christians proved unwilling to resist the
temptation to devise their own descriptions of divinity and became
vigorous combatants in the age-old dispute, so useless to morality and
so destructive to religious peace, over the exact nature of the manhood
and divinity of Christ, the relationship of Christ to his father, and
the personality and origin of the Holy Spirit.
The Christians did not stray so far
from their fundamental principles as to make a correct view on these
questions a test of fellowship, nor did they reach any great degree of
agreement among themselves as to what the correct view was. Elias Smith
typically held the most extreme opinions, asserting “that Christ had no
existence until he was born of the virgin Mary”[32]
and denying altogether the personality of the Holy Spirit. Other
preachers advanced more modest theories, admitting the eternal divinity
of Christ, yet denying his equality with the Father. Both extremists and
moderates were branded by their denominational opponents as unitarians
and engaged in a bitter controversy which the Christians had not the
wisdom or the patience to let die away. Even their finest and most
effective preachers, such as Frederick Plummer, allowed themselves to be
diverted from preaching the gospel into pointless debates with the
foolish and the violent. In The Mystery Revealed, Plummer's
account of a farcical dispute in 1813 with a Methodist preacher named
Samuel Lockey, this young preacher acknowledges the divinity of Christ,
although not recognizing the Holy Spirit to be more than a divine
influence, and pleads for Christians to accept the express statements of
scriptures as the ground of their belief. As the later alliance in the
West between Barton Stone, who held a similar position, and Alexander
Campbell demonstrates, Plummer's views could have been practically
reconciled with those of more orthodox brethren if he and his associates
had been willing to lay aside their controversial opinions and build
fellowship on justice, mercy, and truth. But they would not. They
allowed their opponents to mark them as unitarians, and, with the
passing of years, came to accept the stigma as a badge of honor. Having
set out to be the champions of piety and love, they degraded themselves
to serve as the advocates of a sect.
In their first decade, the Christians
passed through many storms of controversy and persecution. Some they
weathered strongly, and others they permitted to deflect their course
and bring them into dangerous waters. Yet, more perilous to their cause
than any wind of doctrine or wave of violence was a strong and deep
current that silently threatened to bear them far away from the beacon
of truth they sought.
No question can be more important for
an attempt at religious reformation than the question of authority.
Abner Jones recognized this truth even before he left the Baptists, and
the religious movement which he came to lead was founded on the
acceptance of the Bible as the standard of authority for Christians; but
Jones also believed that God might speak to his people in modern times
quite apart from the scriptures, by the direct influence of the Holy
Spirit on their hearts and lives. In his own life, as in the case of
learning not to trust to miraculous divine guidance in sermon
preparation, Jones wanted to feel that the Holy Spirit was working in
his everyday actions, but he had the wisdom to doubt his own emotions
and to follow the rule of the Bible. Many of his fellow Christians had
the same emotional longings, but not the wisdom to restrain them. Long
centuries of human folly have abundantly demonstrated that when men
persuade themselves that God speaks to them through mysterious emotions,
they usually cherish the mystical relationship more than the written
word of God, preferring the licentiousness of superstition to the
discipline of faith. In the first years of their growth. in New England,
the Christians only flirted with the goddess of emotionalism, but she
was an increasingly seductive temptress, who could destroy the very
basis for their plea.

Chapter 4
The Herald And Contact With Christians
In The South
I will say to the north, Give up; and
to the south, Keep not back: bring my sons from far, and my daughters
from the ends of the earth. Isaiah 43:6
No later than 1805, Elias Smith had
become heavily involved in two enterprises that have often fascinated
ambitious Americans: journalism and politics. Already the author of
several pamphlets, Smith began in that year the publication of
The Christian's Magazine, Reviewer, and Religious
Intelligencer, a quarterly priced at 12 ˝ cents per copy. He also
greatly accelerated his literary efforts outside the magazine. His works
from this period include published sermons on The Day of Judqement
and The Doctrine of the Prince of Peace and his Servants,
concerning the End of the Wicked, and A Discourse Delivered at
Hopkinton, in which he gave the first public description and defense
of the Christians' plea to return to New Testament Christianity. He soon
followed these works with an extended pamphlet entitled The
Clergyman's Looking—Glass, a stinging attack on the denominational
ministry that resembles Alexander Campbell's The Third Epistle of
Peter both in its doctrine and its tone.
Smith's interest in politics first
appears clearly in The Whole World Governed by a Jew; or the
Government of the Second Adam, as King and Priest, a sermon preached
March 4, 1805, to celebrate the beginning of Thomas Jefferson's second
term as president. As strange as it may seem to a modern reader, New
England religious divisions were closely associated with party politics.
The Federalists were the party of the "ins," the rich, the
establishment, the cities, and Congregationalism. The Republicans, the
party which evolved into the later Democrats, found their adherents
largely among the "outs," the poor, the restless, and those on the
frontier, and included a large majority of Baptists and members of other
smaller religious groups. Thomas Jefferson in
particular excited admiration and opposition on religious as well as
political ground. In the campaign of 1800, the New England Palladium
voiced the fears of Congregationalists when it warned, "Should the
infidel Jefferson be elected to the Presidency, the
seal of death is that moment set on our holy religion...[33]
To religious independents such as Elias Smith, however, Jefferson was
the great champion of religious liberty, a second Cyrus, who had been
prophesied and raised up by God to bring freedom to his people. The
Virginia Statute of Religious Liberty, which Jefferson had authored, had
broken the power of established religion in his home state in 1786, but
its greater significance lay in the example it provided for national
policy. To Jefferson went much of the credit that the Federal Bill of
Rights began with the words, "congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion..." Elias Smith exultingly claimed that
although some might call him "enthusiastic" for believing Thomas
Jefferson to be one of the angels prophesied in Revelation, "future
generations will see that this is true."[34]
Smith thought that the established religions of his day had depended so
much on the power of the state to force people to attend church and to
pay taxes for their support, that the triumph of Jeffersonian
Republicanism and its separation of church and state would mean the
denominations' inevitable ruin. He boastingly warned his opponents,
Federalists... You are to be pitied,
you have worked against yourselves. Your cause was bad, and could not
prosper. Cease to oppose the kingly government of Christ, which is
founded here on liberty, equality, unity, and peace, for you
cannot overthrow it.
Clergy, your plan is so united with
that which is called
federalism, that it will go down with monarchy to perdition.
Your popularity is failing daily, and soon God will make you
contemptible and base before all the people. Your conduct in ten
years past in writing and speaking against the government, and those in
authority, will nearly overthrow your order in this country in ten years
more, if it goes on as it has for a few years past.[35]
Against this backdrop of Smith's
passionate political involvement, we must place the unusual proposition
made to him in 1808 by Isaac Wilbour, a congressman from Rhode Island.
Wilbour, along with some unnamed associates, offered to finance the
publication of a newspaper, with Smith as editor, to advance the cause
of religious liberty. Since Wilbour did not share Smith's religious
views, the congressman's motives may have had more to do with political
ambition than pious zeal. Although nominally a Federalist, Wilbour came
from a state that had the oldest and strongest tradition of religious
freedom of any American unit of government. Exactly how he planned to
employ Smith's formidable talents as a controversialist will never be
known, because Smith, although pleased and flattered by the offer, had
the good sense to decline an arrangement that would have obligated him
to write only what his political employers approved.
Having rejected Wilbour's offer, Smith
was still intrigued with the idea of publishing a regular newspaper to
advocate his religious beliefs in general, and the cause of religious
liberty in particular. Christians in large areas of New England, notably
in Massachusetts and Connecticut, deeply resented the insult to their
consciences caused by having to support Congregationalism with their tax
dollars, a requirement that Jefferson termed "sinful and tyrannical."
Smith proposed to become their editorial champion, but he carefully
emphasized the religious nature of his plea, and avoided open political
advocacy. In the first issue of the new publication, he went so far as
to claim that it was the first purely religious newspaper in the history
of the world.
Smith called his new paper the
Herald of Gospel Liberty. Issues appeared every two weeks, beginning
on September 1, 1808. Each issue had four pages, filled mainly with
editorials by Smith, correspondence from readers, and items copied from
other papers. Priced at one dollar per year, it initially managed to
attract a respectable 274 subscribers, which grew to around 1500 in a
few years. Nevertheless, the paper did not prove a profitable venture,
keeping just one step ahead of bankruptcy until Smith finally sold it in
1818. No one could accuse Smith of giving up on the paper too easily,
for he had several times sold what few private possessions of value he
owned, including even his wife's silverware, to pay the printer's bill
for the Herald. Originally published in Portsmouth, the paper
followed its editor to Portland, Philadelphia, and Boston in vain
attempts to find stable financial support. Ironically, after having such
a precarious existence in its first decade, the paper eventually
survived bankruptcy, moves, changes in format, name changes, and mergers
to become the Christian, presently the official magazine of the
United Church of Christ. The newspaper thus outlived not only its first
editor, but the religious movement which it had been intended to assist.
Under the editorship of Elias Smith,
the Herald had a powerful influence on the progress of the
Christians in New England. Smith used the paper both to continue his
attacks on denominationalism and to explain what he believed to be the
true doctrine of Christianity, but he was a much better publicist than a
teacher, and gave a large amount of space in the paper to glowing
reports of revivals and baptisms by the hundreds that were resulting
from the Christians' efforts. Unlike Alexander Campbell's Christian
Baptist and Millennial Harbinger in the Midwest, the
Herald did not succeed in giving intellectual leadership to a
religious movement, but it helped bring the Christians closer together
emotionally and think of themselves increasingly as a distinct body of
believers, separate from all denominations and opposed to them. When
Christians in Vermont read of Daniel Hix's great success in
Massachusetts, or those in Connecticut learned of the revival in the
Saco valley in Maine, they identified themselves with the labors of
their brethren, and they were encouraged to hope for similar progress in
their locality.
In addition to strengthening the ties
of fellowship among the Christians in New England, the publication of
the Herald soon resulted in contact with similar religious groups
in other parts of the country. Smith already knew of the existence of
churches in Kentucky that had seceded from the Presbyterians and had
assumed the name Christian. The most prominent preacher among these
churches was Barton W. Stone, a great revivalist from Cane Ridge,
Kentucky, who united in his personality a fine classical scholarship
with a fervent love for the souls of men. Like Smith and Jones,
horrified at the Calvinist picture of helpless men in the hands of a
capricious and malevolent God, Stone resolved to remove this "dark
mountain between heaven and earth" and to proclaim the gospel of God's
offer of salvation to all men. He found a ready audience for his
preaching in frontier Kentucky and Ohio, and eventually led thousands of
Christians in support of the gospel cause. How Smith learned of Stone
and the churches in the West is not known, although he may have read
An Apology for Renouncing the Jurisdiction of the Synod of Kentucky,
a defense of their action in leaving the Presbyterians published in
Lexington in 1804. The first issue of the Herald carried a reprint of
the "Last Will and Testament of the Springfield Presbytery," the key
statement of their beliefs which is appended to the Apology. In
this famous document, they urged "that the people henceforth take the
Bible as the only sure guide to heaven."
Through contact with the Stone
movement, Smith may have heard of yet a third group of Christian
churches who pleaded for a return to New Testament Christianity. These
churches in North Carolina and Virginia came out of Methodism,
originally as a protest against Francis Asbury's autocratic rule as the
first bishop of the Methodist church in America. They shared Smith's
preoccupation with religious liberty, and at first called themselves
Republican Methodists as opposed to the Episcopal Methodists who
followed Asbury; but their revolt against Methodism, once begun, went
far beyond the question of denominational structure, and resulted in
their rejecting denominationalism in favor of becoming simply
Christians.
Whatever private reports or rumors of
each other's existence may have circulated among the Christians in New
England and those in the South, the first public exchange between the
two groups occurred in the pages of the Herald. In the issue of
November 10, 1808, Smith printed a letter dated October 24, from Robert
Punshon, who preached for a small band of Christians in Philadelphia.
The church in Philadelphia had originated the previous autumn through
the efforts of Virginia Christians, and Punshon delightedly claimed
fellowship with his newly discovered brethren to the North. He gave
Smith the following account of the origin and progress of the Southern
Christians:
In Virginia about 16 years ago it
pleased the Lord to call out from the body of Methodists, Baptists, and
Presbyterians, a people into gospel order, laying the foundation on
Moses and the Prophets, Jesus Christ being the chief corner stone...The
church has spread through Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia,
Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and the Western part of the State of
Pennsylvania, where there are thousands united in the same spirit
worshipping the Lord."
As the quote shows, Punshon liberally
admitted Stone and Western Christians into the fellowship of the
Christians in the South. With the discovery of the New England group,
the cause of simple nondenominational Christianity promised to become a
truly nationwide movement.
After Punshon's letter, other
Christians in the South began correspondence with the editor of the
Herald, and Smith duly printed their letters, which familiarized his
New England readers with the history and doctrine of the church in the
South. In turn, some of the correspondents asked for more information
concerning Smith and the churches in his region. The Herald of
December 8, 1808 contained a letter from William Lanphier of Alexandria,
Virginia, who wanted to know the "name, discipline, form of
Church-government, doctrine, and extent" of the New England Christians.
Smith delightedly supplied news of the cause in New England, and was
enough satisfied with his correspondents' reports from the South that in
the two January issues of the Herald he printed a lengthy "Plan
of Union" by James O'Kelly, the first leader and still the most
prominent preacher among the Southern Christians. In
response, Smith offered "An Overture for Union" in the Herald of
February 16. Smith wrote, “I really hope the time is near when something
will be done to bring about an union among those who believe in the same
Lord, and law."[36]
Typically impetuous, Smith was hoping
and planning for religious union with a church, none of whose members he
had ever met, which he probably did not know existed until a few months
before and concerning which he still knew very little; yet, even
assuming that other Christian leaders shared his desire for a joining of
forces, how to bring the two groups together posed serious practical
problems. Consistent with their principles, neither group could have any
authoritative organization to speak for the churches. The Southern
Christians did hold an annual General Meeting, which served as an
emotional revival for their preachers, provided a forum for doctrinal
discussion, and gave opportunity for the ordination of ministers and the
public acknowledgement of new churches in their fellowship. Since the
New England churches did not at that time allow such formal meetings,
Smith resolved to take the opportunity of the Southern Meeting as the
best place to begin personal contact between the two movements. For this
purpose, Smith sent Frederick Plummer, a brilliant young preacher from
Massachusetts who was to play a prominent role in the later history of
the Christian Connection. Although he carried a letter from Christians
in New England to the Meeting, he was by no means an official
representative of the churches in his region, and he could not have
hoped to accomplish much more than simply make the friendly acquaintance
of the Christians in the South.
The Meeting took place on May 26, 1809,
at Shiloh, in Pittsylvania County, Virginia. Officially, Plummer's
mission went smoothly. The assembly cordially accepted the letter that
he brought from New England, and they entrusted him with a formal reply
that recognized the common ground which they shared. They wrote:
We feel thankful to God that on these
points we may agree with you. 0 that the Mighty God of Israel may
out his Holy Spirit upon us! We do love you and most ardently desire
your prosperity and happiness.[37]
Unofficially, Plummer got himself into
some trouble. Joseph Thomas, one of the signers of the letter just
quoted, bitterly recorded his complaint:
At candlelight I was set forth to
preach. I did so, to the joy of my own soul, and thought to the comfort
of others. But E. Plummer (from New England) immediately rose up in the
congregation, and in his discourse observed, such preaching (alluding to
mine) was not fit for God, men nor Devils." This, with some other
impertinencies, disgusted the most of the preaching brethren, so that he
was but coolly received. Though he came to open a communication between,
and to unite the Christians in the East and South together, he did not
succeed in his mission.[38]
This account, though obviously slanted
and full of the resentment of a boy (Thomas was then eighteen years old)
who had been publicly humiliated, still shows that the first impressions
the two movements gained from this meeting were far from uniformly
happy. Only twenty-two himself, Plummer may be partially excused for his
foolishness, but tactfulness never became one of the strong points in
Elias Smith or the preachers he influenced.
A more formidable barrier to union than
a young preacher's rudeness, however, was the emerging disunion among
the Southern Christians themselves. James O'Kelly either neglected to
attend the 1809 meeting, or refused to sign the friendly letter to New
England. In either case, O'Kelly nurtured a growing resentment against
the tendency among the Christians in the South to incline toward the
acceptance of immersion as the correct form of baptism, and to reject
infant baptism as unscriptural. He argued that sprinkling or pouring
were not only acceptable forms of baptism, but that they were the only
valid forms, and that it must be administered to children. At the
General Meeting of 1810 in Pine Stake, Virginia, he tore the churches
apart by attempting to bind his beliefs on the whole movement. Although
they reverenced him as a leader, a large majority of the churches
refused to follow O'Kelly in this matter, some because they favored
immersion or the baptism solely of believers, others because they felt
the issue should be left to the judgement of the individual conscience.
When the decision became apparent, their old leader withdrew from
fellowship with those preferring immersion, never again attended any
General Meeting or conference, and spent the remainder of his life in a
voluntary but sad obscurity as a local preacher. The defection of
O'Kelly was the single greatest catastrophe that befell the Southern
Christians.
Delayed and frustrated by the
controversy surrounding O'Kelly's actions, Elias Smith did not give up
trying to effect a union with the churches in the South. Such a union
would probably not have meant any organizational tie, for the New
England Christians at least still opposed any meeting or conference that
had the slightest official character, and their Southern counterparts
had rejected O'Kelly in part on this very issue, preferring to keep all
authority of church government within the local congregation. Instead,
Smith sought mainly to increase the ties of fellowship and form an
intellectual union of teaching and an emotional union of interest,
effort, and encouragement. Because the two movements covered different
geographical areas, the actual merger of congregations did not arise as
a major issue.
No New England preacher attended the
disastrous General Meeting of 1810, but Smith himself journeyed to
Salem, Virginia, for the 1811 Meeting. At this time, Smith encouraged
his would-be brethren to visit in New England on a regular basis, and
Northern visits to North Carolina and Virginia became longer and more
frequent. Probably because of their advocacy of immersion, O'Kelly,
absent from the Meeting but still a powerful disruptive influence in the
church, opposed stronger ties with the Christians in the North. Smith
later reported to the readers of the Herald:
The following from a brother in
Virginia to his friend in Philadelphia, will give them some idea of the
state of affairs there, since that meeting. It is stated that Mr.
O'Kelly endeavored to prevent a union between the brethren in the North
and South. The brother says, “The church near me, is in peace; Mr.
O'Kelly has written them a letter, but they pay no attention to it. -
Wherever the Christian name is professed, the churches prosper; but
where Mr. O'Kelly prevails, they are cold as ice, and hard as stone.[39]
The "friend in Philadelphia" to which
this passage refers may have been the editor himself, for Smith had
moved to that city in the preceding winter. His preoccupation with
building a relationship with the Southern Christians undoubtedly grew
partly from living in a city where he could enjoy personal fellowship
with one of their congregations. On the other hand, he may have
originally moved to Philadelphia in the hope that from such a central
location he could better work for unity among the Christians, and also
build a national readership for the Herald.
During these years, dissension among
the churches in the South grew, and the lines of division became more
distinct and harder for any peacemaker to cross. William Guirey, the
second most influential Christian preacher in the South, had opposed
O'Kelly on the baptism issues. Even though O'Kelly's proposals were
defeated, Guirey also withdrew in 1810 from close fellowship with the
main body of the Christians, and the churches which shared his views
came to be known as the Christian Baptists. The remaining churches, that
chose not to follow either leader, divided among themselves, mainly on a
regional basis, as area conferences began to compete with the General
Meeting.
These divisions plagued the Southern
Christians for an entire generation, and rendered impracticable Smith's
dream of a united church. Nevertheless, various groups did develop
closer ties with the New England Christians, and certain New England
preachers had an influence on events in the South. Naturally allied to
the cause of those who favored baptism by immersion, Frederick Plummer
joined with John Gray in a preaching tour of North Carolina in 1812,
which, Gray wrote from Raleigh, "caused a general stir among the people;
not only in this City, but in the vicinity."[40]
Since many of their beliefs, including immersion, rejection of infant
baptism, and denial of the Trinity, ran counter both to O'Kelly's
influence and the general religious views of the denominations, one can
easily believe that they caused a "stir," especially since Plummer's
preaching style was anything but subtle. Although Elias Smith soon
returned to live in New England when his plans for himself, the
Herald, and the church did not prosper, Plummer moved to
Philadelphia and spent most of the next forty years preaching in its
vicinity. An interesting highlight of Plummer's later life was a debate
on the trinity with William McCalla, a Presbyterian preacher better
known for his earlier debate on baptism with Alexander Campbell.
By the 1820's, the tie between the
Christians in the various parts of the country had become strong enough
so that others began to consider them, if they did not always consider
themselves, as one religious movement. At the same time, they began to
be called the "Christian Connection," perhaps alluding to churches from
different regions having "connected" in one fellowship. Yet, despite
partial successes, their effort at unity must be finally adjudged a
failure. The connection proved too loose to bind men's hearts. The
"Christian Church, South" developed a sense of its own separate
identity, and the Christians in the West never became even well
acquainted with the churches in New England. Superficial communion never
deepened to spiritual brotherhood.
Among the reasons for this failure, one
is clearly that Smith and his associates made contact with the O'Kelly
movement at a time of approaching internal crisis that demanded
virtually all the attention and energies which the Southern leaders
possessed. The New England movement was then at the flood tide of
success, and the zeal of its preachers naturally sought to overflow into
new territory; but the churches in the South had seen their own tide of
progress, so strong for the first decade of their existence, turn now
against them, and threaten to sweep away what they had thought was
founded on the rock. Smith saw fellowship with new brethren as a
wonderful opportunity, while too many of the Southerners viewed the
newcomers as a disturbing peril. In contrast with the attempts by
Plummer and others to influence the doctrinal discussions in the South,
it apparently never occurred to the Southern leaders to journey and
preach in New England, because they were fighting for the very survival
of the churches in their home area. When Smith decided that the
Southerners were in error on some points, he wanted to teach them. When
O'Kelly decided that the New Englanders were in error, he just wanted
them to go away.
Also, the appearance of Elias Smith as
the chief advocate of the New England churches did not help the case for
unity. Brilliant but unstable, holding increasingly extreme doctrinal
views, and harassed by financial pressures that soon forced him into
bankruptcy and selling the Herald, Smith did not well represent
the strengths and virtues of his fellow Christians. At his best, his
sharp wit and bold heart made him a great preacher and formidable
antagonist to foes; yet, the work of conciliation and creation of unity
among strangers requires more prudence than brilliance, and more
patience than courage. However, Smith was far from at his best during
this period. Not long after ending his attempts to attain fellowship
with the Christians in the South, he left the fellowship of Christians
in the North to become a Universalist.
Finally, it seems extraordinary that
the New England Christians did not make early attempts to form closer
ties with Barton Stone and the churches in the West. Although separated
from them by a greater distance and the Appalachian mountain range, they
had numerous and increasing personal contacts with them, since many
pioneers from New England followed the frontier and settled in the
regions of the Midwest where Stone's influence had penetrated. Yet,
Eastern Christians who united in Stone's fellowship seldom returned to
New England, and not until rumor of the Western churches had been heard
in the East for twenty years, and the progress of evangelism from the
two groups met in Ohio and New York, did leaders of the New England
movement journey to the West. Elias Smith, Abner Jones, Daniel Hix, Mark
Fernald—in short, the first and greatest preachers among the
Christians—never met Barton Stone, who was eloquently pleading for the
same goal they sought, a return to Christianity firmly and entirely
based on the word of God. Had they reached out and discovered, instead
of O'Kelly's tired bitterness, Stone's magnificent love, his clear
intelligence, and calm sweetness of spirit, it might have made a
difference in their history.

Chapter 5
The Movement At Flood Tide: Southern
New England
One shall say, I am the Lard's; and
another shall call himself by the name of Jacob; and another shall
subscribe with his hand unto the Lord, and surname himself by the name
of Israel. Isaiah 44:5
During the years from 1808 to 1832, the
Christian cause experienced phenomenal growth throughout New England,
and its evangelists spread their message across the opening frontiers of
New York, Ohio, and Ontario. At the beginning of this period, the
Christians had to overcome their own poverty of resources, the contempt
of their neighbors, and the violence of their opponents. By its
conclusion, they faced the subtler and more perilous trials of wealth,
respectability, and ease.
While Elias Smith was giving most of
his time and energy to writing and editing the Herald, Abner
Jones devoted himself to the less glorious, but necessary, task of
preaching for the small churches in Eastern Massachusetts. Having helped
to establish the churches in Boston and Nantasket, Jones moved in 1809
to Salem. Salem was then a busy seaport, and Jones made many converts
among its restless citizens. The plea of the Christians usually found
its most eager listeners along the western frontier, but Salem faced a
different frontier: the sea. All along the coast, Christian churches
sprang up in the seaports that handled the ever growing trade of the
young United States.
Jones did not confine his labors to
Salem, but worked also with other new congregations in nearby towns. In
addition, Christians in many distant places naturally looked to Jones as
a leader, and he accepted their invitations to visit them. Throughout
his career, the churches valued his preaching, but they more highly
esteemed his character; they enjoyed the encouragement of his presence
as much as the instruction he gave them from the pulpit. Jones's
influence helped the area stretching northward from Salem to Kittery,
Maine, to remain a stronghold of the Christians.
In 1811, Jones began preaching in
Assonet, a village not far from Dartmouth, Massachusetts, where Daniel
Hix preached for his large and prosperous congregation. Just as in
Salem, area churches were growing and united, and Jones had a strong
local base from which to carry out his evangelistic efforts. His first
stays in Salem and Assonet were perhaps the least troubled time in his
life. Always a very sensitive man, he gained strength from the
Christians around him; and the steady stream of converts that poured
into the churches because of his preaching gave a constant reassurance
that the Christian message could and would change men's lives. He felt
such horror at the eternal punishment awaiting the lost that each soul
"saved" came as a deep, personal relief. To Jones, the great revivals in
which he participated proved the existence and love of God, because they
demonstrated God's spirit moving in the hearts of men.
This was a dangerous attitude, which
caused Jones severe problems later in life. By claiming outward success
as proof of God's presence in his work, he undermined the foundations of
faith for times of adversity, when converts were few. When his preaching
did not "work", he despaired. Further, judging preaching by the false
standard of how many people respond leads quickly to the temptation to
change the gospel into a message to which more people will respond. The
word of God sometimes finds little or no acceptance in a community; and
only religions tailored for human pride can promise invariable success.
Jones's preaching gradually lost its challenge to the world. He gave up
the demanding intensity of a prophet for the emotionalism of a
revivalist. Thirdly, to accept a large number of converts as proof that
God approves of a particular church implies that other growing churches
must also be pleasing to God. If the Christians made one thousand
converts, but the Baptists made two thousand, it seemed that God had
given the Baptists a double blessing of his spirit. Experience became
the test of truth instead of the Bible. The unique doctrinal basis for
God's people was lost. The more Jones valued and emphasized experiential
religion, the more he damaged his original plea for Christianity based
on the New Testament.
Jones moved in 1815 to Hopkinton, a
town approximately thirty miles west of Boston. The Christians were not
numerous in Hopkinton, nor did the surrounding towns have Christian
churches at all. Jones hoped to establish and build up congregations,
just as he had in Salem several years before. He completely failed. In
1817, Elias Smith's announcement of his conversion to Universalism
staggered the Christian cause in Massachusetts and the coastal areas of
New Hampshire and Maine, where Smith had done most of his preaching.
Although few Christians followed Smith out of the church, his defection
marked the beginning of a decade of slow growth in Massachusetts. The
church in Hopkinton did not prosper: and the meager financial support
which it provided Jones soon added the pressure of poverty to his other
discouragements. When an epidemic struck the town, he heeded the pleas
of his neighbors and took up again the practice of medicine, thereby
relieving his family's financial distress while helping to ease the
physical distress of others. After six hard years, he moved back to
Salem in 1821. What remained of the church in Hopkinton gave up the
struggle and joined the Baptists.
During his stay in Hopkinton, Jones
took his first stand on two issues that later became important among the
Christians generally. He decided that drinking alcoholic beverages, even
in moderation, was a sin. This may not seem a strange or daring position
to modern Christians, but it provoked a great controversy in New England
of the 1820's. Especially along the frontier, Americans loved their
liquor, and alcoholism was a far greater problem in 1820 even than it is
in 1980. Preachers joined in the social drinking of their congregations
without a second thought, and, when Jones refused to drink at all, he
amazed his friends and enraged his enemies. Also at this time, Jones
joined the Masonic Order. The Masons had not yet aroused the fears of
their fellow citizens, and still enjoyed the prestige of having numbered
among their members most of America's founding fathers, including George
Washington. Yet the order's social exclusiveness, its vaguely deistic
religion, and above all its secrecy came to appear un-Christian and
un-American to many people, and eventually produced a violent reaction
that resulted in major political parties being formed whose chief goal
was the destruction of the Masons. Because of this controversy, Jones
later left the Masons, but he never believed them to be subversive to
either Christianity or democracy.
When Jones returned to Salem, he found
the church there in nearly as deplorable a condition as the one in
Hopkinton. A large portion of the congregation enthusiastically believed
that the Holy Spirit was working miraculously to guide them. They prized
emotional display and had little patience with rational discussion of
the Bible. They naturally regarded those who did not share their
enthusiasm as second-class Christians. Any caution or warning they
dismissed as unspiritual. Jones wrote, “They professed to be governed by
the Spirit, and a most perverse spirit it was.”[41]
This spirit divided, embittered, and eventually destroyed the
congregation.
Despite his own emotionalism and
uncertain views on the work of the Holy Spirit, Jones retained enough
common sense and humility not to trust wild enthusiasm; and he detested
the self-righteousness with which the enthusiasts looked down on their
calmer brethren. Unable to prevent the breakup of the church, he began
patiently to pick up the pieces and build a new congregation. To support
himself, he practiced medicine, taught school, and gave instruction in
singing. All these expedients did not save him from poverty, partly
because his generosity sometimes exceeded his prudence. Once he gave his
last dollar to a beggar, and then worried how to provide food for his
own family's supper. When a townsman gave him five dollars later that
day, he accepted it as a providential reward for his liberality. Such
unselfishness and faith, no matter how misguided, makes a strong
impression; and Jones slowly but surely reformed the church until its
numbers and prosperity reached an all-time high. By 1828, they had grown
enough to build a new meeting house on Herbert Street. When Jones
finally left Salem two years later, he could look with pleasure on a
difficult job well done; but he yearned again for the excitement of
revivals, and he moved west to New York State in search of greater
evangelistic opportunities.
Next to Abner Jones, the second most
important figure in the history of the Christians in Massachusetts was
Daniel Hix, the former Baptist preacher whose conversion to the cause
greatly strengthened the Christians' ranks, Honored and beloved in his
lifetime, Hix has been almost completely forgotten in history, but his
unique personality deserves a record.
He was born in about 1755 in Rehoboth,
Massachusetts, a village in the southeastern portion of that state. His
father had a few years before emigrated from England, from which he
brought his religious faith as a Baptist. Having founded a Baptist
church in Rehoboth, the elder Hix served for many years as its preacher,
although he was never a professional minister. Limited by the village's
tiny population, the congregation grew humbly and slowly; but it became
the most influential religious group within the community. So greatly
did they come to esteem their preacher that, when old age and its
attendant illness finally rendered him incapable of fulfilling his
office, they chose his oldest son, Jacob, to take his father's place.
Thus, Daniel grew up under the shadow
of his father's reputation and position in local society. Like many
preachers' sons, he felt pressured by, and rebelled against the
assumption by other people that he shared his father's faith and would
naturally follow in his father's footsteps. Jacob's decision to become a
preacher did not help. For a brief time, Daniel indulged himself in
adolescent riot, and took malicious pleasure in the embarrassment which
his conduct caused his older brother; but this stage passed with his
coming to maturity. His resentment against his father turned to loving
admiration; and he settled down to respectability, then grew to a life
of religious devotion, which soon flowered in religious service. Around
1780, he began preaching for a Baptist church in the nearby town of
Dartmouth. He remained the minister of this congregation until a short
time before his death nearly sixty years later.
For the first quarter of a century of
his work in Dartmouth, Hix built up one of the largest and strongest
Baptist churches in New England. By 1805, when he first met Abner Jones
and Elias Smith, the membership of his congregation exceeded 400, an
amazing total for a small town church in a state where Congregationalism
was the official religion. As already described in chapter two, Hix
accepted the plea to restore Christianity by the standard of the New
Testament and left his denomination to become simply a Christian. For a
man of his age and position, this decision required unusual courage, for
it" meant not only bitter conflict with family and friends, but a
repudiation of some of the principles by which he had lived all his life
and which he had taught to others for so many years. He was the only
prominent denominational preacher who ever dared to join with the New
England Christians.
Hix's preaching brought hundreds of
converts into the Christian ranks. Through his labors, churches were
established throughout the area from New Bedford north almost to Boston,
and some of these congregations grew to have hundreds of members. Often
working in concert with Smith or Jones, he regularly toured the region
and preached to crowds that at times numbered in the thousands. The
Christians had a fine sense of drama, and sometimes staged great
processions in which they marched singing through the streets to church
with Hix in the lead. Hix always led in whatever he did. His strength of
character helped give the churches in his area the stability and peace
which the Christians so sadly lacked elsewhere in Massachusetts and in
the South.
He was a man of extraordinary courage,
both physically and morally. Once, when he was visiting, the roof of a
house suddenly caught fire. Quieting the panic of the other people
present, he commanded them to bring buckets of water, scrambled up on
top the house and coolly put out the flames with the water that was
handed up to him, ignoring frightened pleas for him to jump down and let
the house burn. He went about saving souls with the same fearless
determination with which he saved that house. No criticism or threat
ever moved him to change his course. Whether before the Baptists at his
trial for heresy, or in confrontations with violent opponents of his
preaching, or in disputes among the Christians, he followed perfectly
Kipling's famous advice to "keep your head when all about you are losing
theirs and blaming it on you." When the War of 1812 broke out, sixteen
members of the Dartmouth church who opposed the war imprudently decided
to blackmail Hix by threatening to leave the church unless he preached
that Christians could not fight for their country. New Englanders
generally hated the war so much that they seriously debated seceding
from the United States, and perhaps the group of dissidents felt that
Hix would not dare to refuse them on such an unpopular issue. He dared.
No pacifist, and not pleased with the attempt to pressure him, he calmly
told those who said they would walk out that they could go out the same
door they came in. That was the end of the problem.
More than any other prominent Christian
preacher, Hix held his mind clear from the blind emotionalism that
plagues religion. Even while enjoying the enthusiastic revivals that
characterized the Christian cause, he kept his feelings under the
guidance of his principles. The following story of how he once briefly
gave himself up to play the part expected of a revivalist illustrates
both his wisdom and his humor:
I was feeling pretty well, and the
people soon began to respond, "Amen!' So I thought I mould see what
Daniel Hix could do. I stopped and clapped my hands and shouted "Glory!"
and such another shout you never heard. Mary got scared and went over
into another pew with an old acquaintance. When I came down from the
pulpit, they gathered round me, saying, “Elder Hix, you are full of the
grace of God.” “Oh,” said I, “full of Daniel Hix.” And if you think I
ever got a chance to preach there again you are mistaken. That effort
was Daniel Hix — poor stuff.[42]
When nearing the end of his long life,
he was asked to preach at the installation of his young successor in the
pulpit of the Dartmouth church. He chose for his text, "Preach the
word." As he told George Kelton, another young preacher, "Now, George,
if you are going to preach, don't preach Kelton, - it will be poor
stuff; don't do it." For Daniel Hix, the only thing ever worth preaching
was the Word.
His loyalty to the Bible caused Hix to
go beyond even Smith and Jones in rejection of Protestant theology. He
despised Calvinism as a poison that destroyed the souls of men. In
particular, he denied that faith without works can save men from their
sins. Jones understood Biblical teaching on this point, but, in
practice, allowed the testimony of emotional conversion to overshadow
the need to obey God's commands. Hix's preaching, therefore, even more
than Jones's, emphasized the practical duties of a holy life. With his
own character as sterling proof, he insisted that being a Christian
meant living a special kind of life. The Christian movement at its best
resulted in the moral reformation of thousands of lives, because men
such as Hix preached that Christianity brought not only forgiveness from
the guilt of sin, but freedom from the practice of sin.
By 1823, when the Christian Register
and Almanac listed thirteen Christian churches in Massachusetts,
nine of those congregations owed their existence, at least in part, to
the work of Daniel Hix. A comparison of the Christian Register
with other sources demonstrates that many small groups of Christians
were not included in the formal list of churches, either because they
had no official organization or had little contact with the main body of
the movement. A higher percentage of these informal assemblies may have
originated apart from any contact with Hix, because they were often
located in areas other than the southeastern part of the state. Yet,
Hix's influence on the course of the Christian movement in Massachusetts
as a whole was unmistakably great. Although far less important a figure
in history than Abner Jones, he made a larger direct impact on the
growth of Massachusetts churches than any other man.
From Hix's work in the area around
Dartmouth, the Christian cause naturally entered neighboring Rhode
Island. Elias Smith also had contacts in Rhode Island, and his second
wife was a native of the state. One of the first congregations to be
established was in Cumberland. About the same time, Christian influence
from Connecticut resulted in the organization of a church in Westerly,
in the opposite corner of the state from Cumberland. From both
directions, the Christian churches spread until they geographically
covered the state, but they remained few in number and mostly small in
size, although a congregation in Coventry reached a membership of 450 by
1842, and the little town of Portsmouth could boast two Christian
churches in that same year.
The most prosperous and enduring
Christian church in Rhode Island arose, as one might expect, in
Providence. As early as 1815, Christians had regularly met for worship
in Providence, but this first effort died out. By 1835, however, a new
church had grown up sufficiently strong to build a meeting house at the
corner of Pawtuxet and Fenner streets. Their building activities over
the next few years clearly indicate increasing numbers and prosperity.
In 1838, they enlarged their original building so it could seat 250
people. Three years later, they felt compelled to move to a new church
building at the corner of Broad and Fenner streets. The new building had
a seating capacity of 700, although the church numbered around 200
members. Not only had they grown, but they were expecting and planning
for greater growth.
Christian churches spread rapidly
through eastern Connecticut in the movement's first two decades. The
1823 Christian Register lists twelve congregations in the state,
only one fewer than in Massachusetts. Most of these churches were in
small towns in an area of east central Connecticut, centered around
Windham. However, the early success did not lead, as in Massachusetts,
to strong and lasting presence. One can advance several reasons for this
failure. First, and perhaps most importantly, no leading figure among
the Christians invested his life in building up the Connecticut
churches. Enduring strength elsewhere in New England largely sprang from
the efforts of a few remarkable individuals. No men of the character of
Daniel Hix, Abner Jones, Mark Fernald, and Elijah Shaw arose to lead the
Christians in Connecticut. Partly as a result, no single congregation in
the state attained the level of prosperity and stability to serve as a
base for evangelistic efforts. In Massachusetts, the churches in
Dartmouth and New Bedford provided constant leadership for decades. One
such strong congregation gives more support to the long-term progress of
a movement than a dozen smaller, weaker churches. Also, the Christians
never gained a firm foothold in central and western Connecticut, where
the great majority of the state's people live.
Of the dozen congregations in 1823, all but one was located east of the
Connecticut River. Elias Smith's defection to the Universalists and his
long service as a Universalist minister in Hartford may have discouraged
Christian attempts to establish churches in that part of the state.
Whatever the full reasons, the Christian connection declined and
virtually died in Connecticut at a time when it was still growing
vigorously in the other New England states. The 1842 Christian
Register counted only four churches with a total of 207 members.

Chapter 6
The Movement At Flood Tide: Northern
New England
Thou hast multiplied the nation, and
not increased the joy. Isaiah 9:3
While establishing a significant number
of churches in the southern New England states, the Christians enjoyed
their greatest successes to the north, in Vermont, New Hampshire, and
Maine. The small towns of this region proved a fertile field for
Christian preaching from 1810 onwards, just as they had provided the
birthplace of the movement a decade earlier.
Early efforts in Vermont centered
around Woodstock, the boyhood home of both Abner Jones and Elias Smith.
Woodstock at this time contained more than 3000 souls. Although this
made it the largest "city" in the state, it might better be described as
a booming village. In September, 1810, four years after Smith started
the church in Woodstock, Frederick Plummer moved into the area at the
invitation of some Christians in the south part of town. He found
several small groups of Christians meeting in the vicinity, with a total
membership of around 100. In partnership with Uriah Smith, who continued
to live and preach in Woodstock, Plummer began touring the area,
preaching every day to whatever audience would sit still and listen.
Only twenty-three years old, he gathered a small harvest of converts by
his youthful energy and piety, but nature (or, as Plummer would have
insisted, Divine providence) soon gave his preaching terrifying
assistance.
An epidemic broke out that November.
The town was overcome "by the prevalence of the spotted fever, which
swept many inhabitants into the grave as with a broom of destruction."[43]
The townspeople began looking to their eternal welfare. Plummer's bold
preaching had not accomplished much good the previous year in the
delicate business of attempting to unite with the Southern Christians,
but now his was the perfect voice, when death and hell pressed close, to
call men to repentance. Standing in Oil Mill Brook, while he waited for
someone to come forward for baptism, he cried out, “Woe, woe to
Woodstock!"[44]
Over the next year and a half, the
Christians baptized 367 people in Woodstock and surrounding towns.
Baptisms sometimes occurred in the middle of the night, even in winter,
just as Paul and Silas baptized the Philippian jailor at night in the
Bible. Even some of the leaders of the Congregational church asked
Plummer to baptize them, although most continued to attend their old
church. Having thoroughly won the respect of the town's citizens,
Plummer obtained the free use of the Court House for the Sunday worship
services of the Christians, and two of the little groups of Christians
in town merged into the church meeting at the Court House. This
congregation soon reached a membership of 160. Outside Woodstock,
several new congregations sprang up, notably in Hartford and Hartland,
the two towns where Abner Jones had taught school fifteen years before.
In a letter dated January 1, 1812, Uriah Smith happily informed the
readers of the Herald of Gospel Liberty that the Christians had
"collected several Churches by the New Testament name—two in this town,
and one or more in almost every town round about this." In regard to
Smith's mention of "the New Testament name," it is interesting to note
that the Woodstock congregation called itself a Church of Christ.
Plummer left Woodstock in the summer of
1812 to embark on another attempt to join forces with the Christians in
North Carolina. The church suffered from a lack of leadership for the
next three years, until Jasper Hazen, a young farmer from nearby
Hartford, moved to town and began preaching regularly. Ordained in 1810,
Hazen had preached for the tiny church in his home town for five years,
but the move to Woodstock brought him far greater opportunities for
evangelistic service.
Hazen, like most Christian preachers,
was not a professional minister. In addition to farming, he taught
school and authored or edited a varied assortment of books and
magazines, ranging from religious literature to an elementary spelling
book. He tried his hand at tanning. He served as the Register of
Probate. During his long stay in Woodstock, he prospered both
financially and socially, acquiring a modest fortune and a host of
friends. In 1823-24, he represented the town in the legislature. The
Christians thus had for their preacher a leading citizen of the
community, and they enjoyed the mixed blessings of respectability. The
church grew, no longer with the fiery revivals that had characterized
Plummer's ministry, but with the calm, slow progress of Christians
patiently winning their friends. Over the next quarter of a century, the
church gained approximately 400 converts, and its membership reached the
400 mark in 1843. Over almost this entire period, it was the largest and
strongest Christian church in northern New England.
The Woodstock church continued to meet
in the Court House until November, 1825, when Episcopalians began to
hold Sunday services there as well, and the Christians felt a need for
their own building. Hazen purchased a lot on Pleasant Street, the main
road through town, for the considerable sum of $200 on August 1, 1826.
He must have been in a hurry to have a new meeting house, because within
two weeks they laid the cornerstone, and they completed the entire
building by the end of the year. Abner Jones preached the dedicatory
sermon on January 18, 1827.
The building was a very imposing brick
structure that seated approximately 600 people. The belfry contained a
Paul Revere bell, with which Hazen called his congregation to worship.
The face of the steeple carried a clock, which marked time for the
citizens of Woodstock for half a century until it finally broke in 1876.
Curiously, the building did not include a baptistry. Instead, Hazen dug
an outdoor baptistry in the back yard of his house on Elm Street, where
he baptized many of his converts. Hazen paid for the building out of his
own pocket, although he was partially reimbursed by families in the
church who "bought" pews at prices ranging from $25 to $100.
Nevertheless, the project must have been a staggering blow to his
finances, for the building could not have cost less than several
thousand dollars. Hazen retained title to the property for many years,
but eventually his heirs gave it to the church. The building is still
standing in 1980.
While the Christians were growing so
successfully in Woodstock, they were also spreading throughout most of
northern Vermont. Although the original church in Lyndon had soon died
after Abner Jones moved away in 1802, the seeds of faith which Jones had
sown remained in the minds of the local people, ready to burst forth
into new life when Jones and other Christian preachers again visited the
area around 1808 to 1810. About this time, a church began meeting in
Charleston, a village north of Lyndon and the home of Jonas Allen, a
shadowy figure concerning wham we know nothing except that some of his
contemporaries ranked him with Jones and Elias Smith as one of the three
"founders" of the Christian Connection. From Charleston, Allen brought
the Christians' ideas to Danville, a town west of Lyndon, in 1810. The
fact that Jones had published a book, The Vision Made Plain, in
Danville the previous year suggests Christian activity in town even
before Allen formally organized a church. To the south of Lyndon, the
Christians established a congregation the same year in the Goshen
community in the town of Bradford, another location where Jones had
started a church some years before, only to have it fail while he
preached in Massachusetts. The Goshen church resulted partly from a
preaching visit by Elias Smith. Also in 1810, the Calais Church of
Christ began its long history as one of the strongest small town
churches in the Christian Connection.
New congregations continued to spring
up over the next two decades in Orange, Washington, Lamoille and
Caledonia counties. Jones and especially Hazen still aided the growth of
the churches by evangelistic tours, but the congregations depended
mainly for leadership on their local ministers, including Isaac
Pettingill, Abel Burk, John Capron, Benjamin Putnam, Edward Rollins, and
Jehial Hendee. As elsewhere among the Christians, these men were not
generally professional ministers, nor could the churches have supported
them financially, for most congregations remained quite small in size,
rarely reaching 100 members. Their small size resulted largely from the
sparse population and rugged geography of that part of Vermont. Seldom
did a church have a population base of more than a few hundred people
from which to draw its membership. Consequently, the Christians, though
numbering only 50 or 60, were often nevertheless the largest religious
body in their community. By 1823, the same Christian Register
which listed only thirteen Christian churches in Massachusetts contained
the names of thirty-four congregations in Vermont, the great majority of
them in the region just described. One researcher has found evidence
that at least sixty-six Christian churches existed at one time or
another in the state.
The early Christian churches in Vermont
did not rush to construct church buildings, but commonly met in private
homes for a decade or more before erecting a permanent meeting house.
This complicates historical research into their beginnings, because
later town historians rarely mention religious groups except those who
owned buildings. The ownership of property at least leaves a definite
record that a church existed at a particular time, but many smaller
groups of Christians never did possess church buildings. In regard to
those congregations that did build houses of worship, the ones in Peth,
Goshen, and Calais hold a special interest, partly because they remain
standing today, and partly because the history of these buildings
provides insight into the history of the people who worshipped in them.
Christians began meeting in the
vicinity of Randolph around 1815. Those in the village of Peth, a few
miles outside of Randolph, erected a small meeting house in 1817, where
they assembled for worship for two decades. Unfortunately, the
population of Peth declined and in time virtually disappeared, drawn
away by western migration and the rise of new cities in Vermont. In
1840, the church disbanded and gave its building to Christians in the
Snowsville community, who moved it to their village in 1844-45. However,
when a railroad came through Randolph and bypassed Snowsville, that
village also vanished just as Peth had done twenty years earlier. The
church declined along with the community and eventually died, and the
building is now known as the East Braintree Congregational Church. Its
steeple still leans back, a sign that carpenters failed to assemble it
correctly when they moved the building from Peth 135 years ago.
The Goshen meeting house dates from the
1820's. Like the one in East Braintree, it is a small, white-frame
structure, but its Greek Revival style has a touch of elegance.
Preserved by the state and local historical societies for its
architectural beauty and historical significance, it is today the only
acknowledged physical memorial of the Christian Connection in Vermont
amid wooded fields that bear little once surrounded the meeting house.
It stands on a secluded hilltop amid wooded fields that bear little
trace of the numerous farms which once surrounded the meeting house. As
in Peth and Snowsville, the people of Goshen long ago all went West or
went to Town.
The Calais Church of Christ did not
choose to build its own place of worship, but instead joined with the
various denominations in town in the construction of a “union” meeting
house, which they all shared, being given the right to use the building
a certain number of Sundays each year in proportion to their financial
involvement in the project. At first, the Christians only worshipped in
the building six Sundays per year, but their use later increased, as the
Christians grew to become the strongest religious group in the
community. The building was finished in November, 1825. Although it now
contains a wood stove, the original congregations worshipped without
benefit of any heat. Yet, even when the temperature dropped to twenty
below zero, the people crowded into their new church building,
apparently delighted to sit and freeze to the glory of God. The building
is now known as the Old West Church and is well-preserved, but no crowds
gather there for worship. Only a handful of people now live close by.
Despite their success in certain areas
of Vermont, the Christians never made comparable progress in the
southern and western portions of the state. Two of the earliest Vermont
congregations were established in Springfield in 1811 with a total of 71
members. They struggled on for years, but did not grow numerically, nor
did they spread their faith to surrounding towns. About 1830, the
Springfield church finally died out completely, and it marked the
southernmost progress of the Christians ever in Vermont. To the west,
the Christians founded congregations in Georgia, Milton, Shelburne,
Lincoln, and North Shrewsbury. None of these churches ever had a
membership over one hundred. More important than the list of small towns
that had Christian churches in them is the list of larger towns that did
not: St. Albans, Burlington, Middlebury, Rutland, and Bennington. This
illustrates the fact that, except for the churches in Woodstock and
Randolph, the Christian Connection in Vermont was overwhelmingly a rural
phenomenon. In 1824, when Zadok Thompson published his Gazetteer of
the State of Vermont, he reported Christian churches as existing in
only four of the nineteen then largest towns in the state.
During their years of growth, the
Christians in Vermont published at least two religious periodicals.
Abner Jones and Jasper Hazen collaborated to bring out in Woodstock the
Gospel Banner, a semi-monthly first issued on August 4, 1827.
This paper continued for only one year. The history of the other
periodical, the Christian Luminary, is both longer and far more
complicated. Edward Rollins began the paper in Danville in January,
1831. He was a prominent leader among the Christian Brethren, a group of
approximately twenty-five very small churches in upper New England that
had a short life as a denomination in the 1820's and 1830's. Rollins
believed that churches should have creeds, and he attempted to introduce
what was called the Rollins Discipline among the Christians, without
much success. Instead, the Christian Brethren eventually abolished their
creeds and merged with the Christians in 1836. As part of the growing
cooperation between the two groups, Rollins transferred the Christian
Luminary in 1832 to the editorship of Jehial P. Hendee, a Christian
preacher in Stow. Hendee, whose son George later became governor of
Vermont, published the paper for about two years.
While the Christian Connection was
building to its high tide in Vermont, Christian preachers were also
streaming across neighboring New Hampshire. Not only did they enjoy a
similar degree of success, but the pattern of their progress closely
resembles the development of their sister congregations in Vermont.
From the beginning, the coastal region
remained a stronghold of the Christians in New Hampshire. The Christians
managed to establish congregations in virtually every town in the area:
Durham, Portsmouth, Greenland, Stratham, Rye, Exeter, North Hampton,
Hampton, Hampton Falls, and Kensington. Six churches in these towns
reached memberships of over one hundred, including two congregations in
Portsmouth. During most of its history, the Herald was published
either in Portsmouth or Exeter, and the paper and its editors provided
leadership to the local churches. This was not an unmixed blessing, for
the erratic behavior and eventual defection of Elias Smith had a greater
impact in these churches than anywhere else in New England. When Smith
left their ranks, it helped cause more than a decade of turmoil in which
the churches ceased to grow and struggled merely to stay alive. By
around 1825, however, the Christians began again to make many converts
to their cause, and the churches reached a peak of prosperity in the
1830's and early 1840's. In 1838 alone, the churches in Strathan, Rye,
Hampton Falls, and Kensington all built new meeting houses. By 1842,
churches in the coastal region had a total of more than a thousand
members.
Just as the strong church in Woodstock
served as a base for Christian evangelism in Vermont, the influence of
the coastal churches spread the Christian message northwestward across
New Hampshire. As mentioned in chapter two, a church was organized in
Boscawen, near Concord, in 1808, and Christian preaching in the area
probably dates back to before Abner Jones and Elias Smith joined forces
in 1803. The original churches which Jones founded in Piermont, Hanover,
and Lebanon did not survive, but a later Christian church in Grafton,
where Jones lived while studying medicine, may have included in its
ranks members of an earlier group gathered by Jones's preaching. As in
northern Vermont, the villages and small towns of this mountainous area
proved especially receptive to the Christian's plea. Perhaps their call
for unity made more compelling sense to people divided into tiny
denominational churches in communities that could scarcely support one
church, much less five or six. In any case, rural communities such as
Groton, Danbury, and Sanbornton had solid Christian congregations for
many years. The 233 members which the three churches just named had in
1842 made up a larger percentage of the general population than the
Christians reached even in their coastal stronghold.
One of the preachers instrumental in
the expansion of the Christians into upstate New Hampshire was young
Elijah Shaw, who later became a prominent national leader in the
Christian Connection, and his history provides an example of how they
achieved their remarkable success in the area.
Shaw was born in Kensington on December
19, 1793. In the revival of 1810, he and his parents were baptized along
with twenty-five other converts in town. Almost immediately, he began
preaching. Though only seventeen, he went on long trips through the
small towns in the central part of the state during which he encouraged
the scattered Christians and preached to the handfuls of people who
would listen. As he matured, Shaw soon grew from youthful exhorter to a
dynamic evangelist. Instead of worrying about how to attract an
audience, he had to preach in barns and the open fields because no house
could hold the crowds that gathered to hear him. Not long after his
ordination in March, 1814, he began preaching regularly in Sanbornton at
the invitation of two deacons in the Baptist church. He baptized many
converts, including the daughter of one of the deacons, and organized a
Christian church in October. Five years later, this church appointed two
"ruling elders" to govern its affairs. Shaw married in 1818 and moved to
New York State, but his work in rural New Hampshire lived on in the
congregations he helped establish.
The Christian churches around Lake
Winnepesaukee in eastern New Hampshire owed their existence largely to
the efforts of Mark Fernald, perhaps the most colorful of all the
Christian preachers. A native of Kittery, Maine, Fernald grew up in the
established Congregational Church, but the hypocrisy and moral laxity of
the Congregationalists in Kittery so disgusted him that he came to
dislike organized religion of all kinds. In later life, he indignantly
remembered singing in the choir at age eighteen, when many of his fellow
“worshippers” were drunk around him. Soon afterwards, he went to sea and
served as a sailor for several years. The violence and majesty of the
sea made a powerful impression on his mind, and he felt inwardly an
increasing attraction to Christianity. His life remained outwardly
irreligious, but not spectacularly sinful. As an old man, he ruefully
recalled that “card playing for amusement was another fearful evil which
I was led into,” along with drinking dancing.[45]
When he came in contact with the Christians in 1807, the combination of
their serious call to a holy life and their rejection of established
religion won him permanently to their cause, and he was baptized on the
ninth of December in the ocean at Kittery.
Like Elijah Shaw, Fernald began
preaching almost immediately after his conversion, although he was not
ordained until nearly two years later. He had almost no formal
education, and the only educational text he ever owned was a spelling
book; but he schooled himself to become a clear and compelling speaker.
John Hayley, the aged town historian of Tuftonboro, still remembered
many years after Fernald's death how as a child he loved the old
preacher's sermons with their bold simplicity and many illustrations,
which were often drawn from sailing days long before. To use Hayley's
picturesque phrase, Fernald “never knocked off the corners of the
truth.”[46]
He preached lovingly, but plainly and without compromise. He had unusual
self-possession. When a crowd of opponents in Salem, Massachusetts,
interrupted worship by attempting to drive a cow into the church
building, he charged the door and routed both the cow and the crowd.
When, at the conclusion of a sermon in Mill Village, some young toughs
threw a stray cat into his arms, he calmly extricated himself from the
terrified animal and went on with the invitation.
Fernald spent most of his life building
up the Christian churches in eastern New Hampshire and western Maine. In
more than forty years of preaching, he traveled 100,000 miles, delivered
over 12,000 sermons, and baptized more than 6,000 people. Partly as a
result, the Christians established a dozen congregations in the small
towns around Lake Winnepesaukee, including particularly strong churches
in Wolfeboro and Tuftonboro.
The Christians failed to penetrate
extreme northern New Hampshire, and they established only one
congregation in the southwestern portion of the state. This was at
Gilsum, where Edward Rollins began preaching in 1818. Rollins'
evangelistic labors founded a church, but his theory of “discipline”
kept it in turmoil for most of its history. Whatever tie existed between
Rollins and Jehial Hendee drew Hendee down to Gilsum in 1835, where he
preached the next three years, but to no avail, for the church dissolved
shortly thereafter. Although not as pronounced as in Vermont, the
Christian movement in New Hampshire outside the coastal area had a
strongly rural cast. Most of the large mill towns in which the state's
industry centered in the nineteenth century never contained Christian
churches. Despite these limitations, Fernald, Shaw, and their brethren
managed to form more than sixty congregations in the state with a total
membership that reached a peak of over 3,000 in the early 1840's.
The Christians also achieved great
success in Maine, but they did not form as distinctive a religious
movement there as in the rest of New England. Many of their preachers
worked in such close alliance with the Freewill Baptists that one cannot
tell concerning certain revivals or even churches whether they belong to
the history of the Christian Connection. In many places, the Christians
followed the pattern familiar from New Hampshire of working with
denominational groups in an attempt to win them over to a
nondenominational Christianity, then gradually separating themselves
from them if denominational loyalty persisted. Elsewhere, separation
never occurred or, if it did, happened so late in the day that the
Christians meanwhile had forgotten their nonsectarian plea and formed
merely another denomination among denominations.
Christian activity in Maine naturally
spread first north along the coast from Kittery. Elias Smith invested
some of his early zeal in establishing churches in towns such as York,
Berwick, and Wells. In 1810, Smith even moved to Portland, helped start
a congregation in the town, and began publishing the Herald of Gospel
Liberty there; but he departed in December of that same year to
Philadelphia, partly because he desperately needed more financial
support for the paper, and partly to pursue further his contacts with
the Southern Christians. Despite the exodus of its first preacher,
however, the Portland church grew to become the largest of all the
Christian churches in the state. Beginning with only twelve members, it
reached a membership of over 300 by 1827. Even north of Portland, the
Christians very early made their presence felt. The first issue of the
Herald contains an anonymous letter dated June 20, 1808, which
reports 170 baptisms in the towns of Lincolnville, Hope, Cambden, and
Thomaston, and exultingly continues,
Upwards of one hundred in each of these
towns have professed to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ since last
spring, and the work is now spreading marvelously....May God have mercy
on such ministers as are found fighting against the work of God, when it
does not come in their own way.
Although this particular revival did
not result in the establishment of enduring congregations, other
evangelistic efforts did have lasting success and dotted the state with
Christian assemblies. As early as 1811, Christian preaching reached the
northern frontier town of Canaan, where eventually four congregations
arose as a result.
Unlike in the other New England states,
the Christians managed to-penetrate with their ideas every major
population region of Maine at one time or another. They found the most
fertile field for converts in the small towns and farming country
between Rumford and Bangor, but isolated Christian churches sprang up
all the way from Sanford, near New Hampshire, to Eastport and Monticello
on the Canadian border. In 1842, there were at least 72 congregations in
Maine, more than in any other New England state.
By the early 1840's, after forty years
of outward prosperity, the New England Christians numbered more than
12,000, in approximately 200 congregations, and they were still
increasing at a remarkable pace, with more than a thousand converts in a
single year. The spectacle of apparent progress, however, could not
wholly disguise the growing sense of uncertainty as to the direction the
movement was going or should go. They had come a long way since Abner
Jones's first plea to return to New Testament Christianity, but the plea
itself had grown faint and indistinct in their minds; and “if the
trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the
battle?” The Christians were no longer quite sure who they were as a
religious people, and they had almost completely forgotten who they had
once wished to be.

Chapter 7
Doctrinal Developments And Problems
Woe to them that
are at ease in Zion. Amos 6:1
Abner Jones and Elias Smith had called
for a restoration of Christianity according to the clear teachings of
the New Testament. They did not seek originally to found a denomination,
but to call all men to live simply as Christians in the one church of
Christ. The denominational world often despised and opposed them, but
the fire of persecution only made their vision shine clearer. Yet, when
opposition gave way to success, the years of prosperity which followed
proved more destructive to their ideals than the years of struggle.
The first abandonment of their original
goal occurred, however, not as the direct result of prosperity, but
rather in response to a crisis which seemed to threaten the survival of
the Christian cause. When Elias Smith first broke publicly with the
Christians and embraced universalism in 1816, the defection of their
leader caused panic in many congregations and grave concern among the
Christians throughout New England. Seeing whole churches either follow
Smith into Universalism or disintegrate in confusion and despair, many
Christian preachers decided that they must take concerted action to save
the movement from destruction. That same year, the Vermont Christians
held a "denominational meeting" in Woodstock to discuss the crisis, and
from this meeting developed a yearly general conference, to which most
of the churches sent delegates. During the next few years, the
Christians in other states formed their own conference and this
naturally led to the formation of a national conference. Although the
delegates at these meetings had no authority to bind legislation on the
churches, they did occasionally take doctrinal positions and urge their
brethren to accept the conference's decision. Also, the conferences
ultimately gained practical control over the three leading religious
newspapers among the Christians: the Christian Herald, the
Christian Palladium, and the Gospel Luminary. The last two,
although published in New York, had a considerable readership in New
England. These papers came to speak with an official voice as
denominational organs. The conferences also held effective control over
most of the schools and colleges which the Christians established in
later years. To sum up, in their reaction to the threat of disunion
caused by Elias Smith, the Christians formed organizations which did
preserve union, but at the final cost of creating precisely what Smith
and Abner Jones had originally sought to avoid: a new denomination.
Beginning about 1825, the Christians began to refer unashamedly to
themselves as a denomination among denominations, still pleading for
unity among all the followers of Christ, but no longer insisting that
unscriptural human organizations must be abolished to achieve that
unity. Elijah Shaw wrote in 1842, “Lest should grow up into a sect,
many, for a season, opposed all organizations, but... organizations are
now becoming universal."[47]
In addition to the formation of
denominational conferences, the Christians gradually changed their
teaching concerning the organization of the local church. They had never
achieved unanimity on this subject, but leadership in individual
congregations had generally resided in the “elders,” who might or might
not be preachers, but were overwhelmingly non-salaried citizens in the
local community, rather than professionals hired from outside to come
preach for the church. Some congregations, although not a majority, had
more than one elder. As prosperity caused the Christians to develop a
professional ministry; they increasingly looked to the preachers as the
true leaders of the church, and elderships began to disappear. As late
as 1846, Jasper Hazen still insisted in the Christian Palladium
that every congregation should be governed by a plurality of elders, but
his influence did not even preserve the eldership in the Woodstock
church, where he had just completed thirty years as minister and one of
the elders.
A symbol of the change in church
leadership was the introduction of the term “reverend” as a title for
Christian preachers. Early Christians in New England had indignantly
rejected the term as being both vain and unscriptural. In 1813,
Frederick Plummer refused to address his Methodist adversary in a debate
as “Reverend,” not, as he explained to his opponent, out of disrespect
to him, but out of proper respect for God. Elias Smith scornfully
referred to “the- Reverend D.D.s” who regarded themselves as the
guardians of other men's consciences. By around 1840, the Christians
began to acquire such “Reverend D.D.'s” among themselves. The change is
sharply illustrated in the Woodstock church, where Elder Jasper Hazen
was succeeded as preacher by his son-in-law, who styled himself Reverend
Moses Kidder. The distinction between the two men endures today in the
cemetery in which their bodies lie buried, where one stone proudly
guards Kidder's reverend remains, and nearby another marks the resting
place of "Jasper Hazen, Preacher of the Gospel."
One unusual development in the history
of the Christians was the very early ordination of women. By around
1810, the practice of allowing women to “witness” during revivals
concerning their own spiritual experience had expanded to include more
general exhortations by women. This raised the issue of whether women
should be allowed fully into the ministry and other leadership
positions. On this point, two fundamental themes in the Christian
movement clashed. On the one hand, a return to the New Testament as the
perfect foundation for the church would make female preachers
unthinkable, since the apostle Paul expressly forbade women “to teach,
nor to usurp authority over the man.” On the other hand, the Christians’
zeal for open democracy in the church and their willingness to allow
almost anyone to preach naturally extended itself toward female
participation in the pulpit. The Christians chose to ignore Paul and
ordain women. Not surprisingly, given the role of women in American
society at large at that time, women ministers remained a small
minority, and no woman became a major leader among the Christians as a
whole. A few women attained good success as revivalists. David Millard,
who later became one of the foremost Christian preachers and teachers,
owed his conversion to the preaching of Nancy Cram in New York in 1814.
Along with problems of church
organization, issues arose over the proper worship of the church. Just
as they inevitably brought the temptation of forming a “respectable”
clergy along denominational lines, success and prosperity led
congregations, especially the larger churches in the cities, to desire
“respectable” worship. In particular, instrumental music began to be
heard in the churches instead of the a cappella singing which had first
comprised the only music of the Christians. The change did not occur
without a fight. The largest congregation in Maine, the Casco Street
church in Portland, split down the middle in 1829, when a majority of
the church introduced organ music into the worship. More conservative
members left and formed the Temple Street church. The breech was never
healed. In the minutes of their 1832 annual meeting, the preachers of
the New Hampshire Christian Conference gave the following warning to
their churches:
We would also let you know that it is
our general opinion that the use of instruments of music in public
worship are so far from being conducive of good that they are contrary
to the spirit and genius of the Christian religion as revealed in the
New Testament, and highly detrimental to the progress of holiness and
spirituality in the church of God; we therefore recommend that
scriptural liberty, divine spirituality, and primitive simplicity be
conscientiously observed in all our churches.
Yet, departures from “primitive
simplicity” continued to increase. As long as the first generation of
leaders retained their influence in the churches, instrumental music
found a place only in a few congregations, but new leaders were coming
forward who rejected the “primitive” past. When Jasper Hazen left
Woodstock, Moses Kidder soon filled the worship with the sounds of “the
double bass, bass biol, flute, and clarinets."[48]
Mark Fernald, who detested instrumental music, could not persuade some
of the churches in his home area not to use it, but they respected him
enough to put up their violins when he visited to preach. Yet, even this
limited personal consideration did not continue. When speaking once at
an instrumental church, Fernald's eye disgustedly lighted on the organ,
and he with heavy sarcasm announced to the crowd that they would “now
sing and play to the glory of God.”
Another disturbing trend which
continued among the Christians was the introduction of political
controversy into the church. Just as Elias Smith had used his sermons to
champion Thomas Jefferson along with Jesus Christ, all the most
prominent Christian preachers at least dabbled in the muddy waters of
politics, and some waded recklessly in, pulling their brethren after
them. E.B. Rollins devoted much of his life to attacks on the Masons and
Catholics in politics. Even so sane and fine a man as Daniel Hix helped
publish a paper in Massachusetts that supported the beginnings of
Know-Nothingism, the strange and disgraceful political movement that
offered no policy to the American people except to fear and hate whoever
differed from them in creed or color. Many Christians became involved in
the temperance movement, and a few won election to state legislatures on
the single issue of prohibition of alcoholic beverages. The most
widespread and impassioned political involvement came, however, in the
cause of the abolition of slavery. Mark Fernald and a great many others
did not scruple to use the pulpit to proclaim the gospel of abolitionism
along with the gospel of Christ. Such political issues were charged with
emotion and caused inevitable tension within the church. Especially in
regard to abolition, some thought Christians who disagreed with them
were unfaithful to the Lord. Thus, the Christians found themselves in
the unusual position of making political views a test of fellowship, at
the same time as they tolerated almost any religious view. This built a
wall between the New England Christians and their brethren in the South,
and threatened to secularize their movement until it lost its
distinctive religious identity.
Participation in the abolitionist cause
brought the Christians into increasing contact with the Unitarians, a
liberal denomination centered in Boston. Although largely holding
unitarian views on the nature of God, the Christians had carefully
distinguished themselves as evangelical unitarians, quite different from
the liberal Unitarians. The foundation stone of Christian doctrine had
been what is now called a "fundamentalist" view of the Bible as the
all-sufficient, verbally inspired word of God. By the late 1830's, the
theological liberalism of the Unitarians, who regarded the Bible as a
precious but fallible document of human literature, had begun to
challenge the Christians' faith. As early as 1834, Hendee's Christian
Luminary bore the ominous slogan on its front page, "Devoted to the
cause of Liberal Christianity"; and, by 1845, at least some Christians
had become comfortable enough with Unitarian doctrine to support a joint
seminary at Meadville, Pennsylvania, where both professors and students
were divided between the two denominations.
Perhaps the most serious problem facing
the Christians by the 1830's was not a particular false doctrine, but
rather an absence of doctrine at all. Although Smith and Jones had from
the first valued morality more than theology, they also believed that
the Bible contained certain essential principles, which were “plain, and
easy to be understood.” They felt that honest readers could find in the
pages of the Bible a clear and certain standard of conduct; but, with
the passage of years, the Christians grew increasingly reluctant to hold
themselves or each other to the biblical standard. Jones's belief that
toleration in matters of opinion could lead to unity in scriptural
action gave way to vague appeals to every man to do “that which was
right in his own eyes.”
The Christians continued to grow in
numbers, even while the meaning and purpose of their movement appeared
steadily more uncertain. Eventually, growth became an end in itself.
From Abner Jones on down, the Christians had accepted their remarkable
success as proof of divine favor. They saw the flood of converts as only
the beginning of a gathering of all believers in Christ into one united
church. Whatever brought men together in the church must be right, and
whatever separated them from each other must be wrong. It was a very
American failing, which we still have with us today, to regard bigger as
necessarily better.
This cult of church growth caused
several disastrous consequences in the history of the Christians. First,
it brought down the level of piety and commitment within the church at
large. New “converts,” who believed nothing and continued to live as
they pleased, might swell attendance at worship, but they added nothing
to the real strength of the church. They tended to demoralize the more
dedicated Christians and degrade the standing of the church within the
community. E. B. Rollins chided his fellow ministers,
If their ambition be chiefly to swell
their numbers, they certainly much mistake their calling. The
multiplication of church members, unless they be such as God approves
of, holy in heart and life, weakens instead of strengthens the church.
It is but loading it with useless lumber, or building “with hay, wood,
or stubble,” all of which will be burned up in the day of the Lord.[49]
Unfortunately, many preachers did
mistake their calling, and one of the worst effects of the mania for
numerical growth was the prestige it gave some of the most unstable and
unprincipled ministers among the Christians. When religious leaders are
selected, not on account of their character and learning, but by their
ability to draw a crowd, it is no wonder that soon the blind are leading
the blind. As their first generation of great leaders grew old and died,
the Christians began to listen to a class of preachers who were more
showmen than saints, more publicity agents than biblical scholars. The
Christians felt their loss, but did not know how to repair it.
The Christians' obsession with
numerical growth also dangerously deflected them from other matters
which required their most serious attention. Large congregations and
exciting revivals gave such a glittering illusion of progress that many
Christians simply ignored the gathering storm of problems which would
shortly sweep away the work of decades. The building of their movement
looked so imposing, they did not worry that it was built on sand. Part
of the tragedy of the Christian Connection is not just that they failed
in a crisis, but that they never even faced the true crisis of faith.
The few voices among them who raised a warning were ignored or dismissed
as negative and not properly enthusiastic.
Closely associated with their passion
for outward success was the fundamental problem of emotionalism. In a
self-sustaining, vicious circle, emotionalism both caused the distorted
emphasis on numbers and resulted from that emphasis.
As mentioned earlier in this book,
Abner Jones had wanted to believe that the Holy Spirit would give
miraculous guidance in life. A few failures convinced him that he could
not depend on such guidance, but he still thought that the Holy Spirit
might choose to intervene on special occasions. Also, Jones believed
that God was constantly working in the world through his divine
providence. He saw in every important event a divine purpose. If he
injured his foot while cutting firewood, God must want him to lie idle
for a while and think on eternity. If sickness broke out near where he
was preaching, God must want him to practice medicine. Whether such
occurrences actually arose from God's providential care or not, Jones's
faith in them was entirely emotional and quite beyond the judgement of
reason. Only his belief in the Bible anchored him intellectually and put
limits on his imagination.
Jones' emotional faith did not differ
very much from the attitude of famous Christian leaders in other parts
of the country. Barton Stone in Kentucky, for example, as a young man
went farther down the road of emotionalism than Jones ever did. However,
Stone allowed his understanding of the Bible steadily to enlighten his
faith and control his emotions, while Jones permitted his emotions to
cloud his understanding of the scriptures.
In no aspect of religious life did
emotionalism cause greater difficulty for Jones and the New England
Christians than in evangelism. It debased their motives for evangelism.
Because they prized outward results as proof of God's grace, they sought
new converts out of a need for personal reassurance, rather than from an
unselfish love for souls. It debased their methods of evangelism. The
emotional pleas of revivalism, always a part of Christian preaching,
became almost the whole of their message, displacing the appeal to turn
back to the New Testament. Preachers found it easier to frighten or
excite people into the church than convince them. In 1842, Elijah Shaw
boldly claimed, “Such revivals have ever been the life and soul of the
Christian Connection. Their whole growth and prosperity have depended on
them.”[50]
Another of their writers summed up this attitude in a single sentence,
and thereby unknowingly provided an epitaph for his church. He wrote,
“The spirit of the Christian Connection is the spirit of revivalism.”
Emotionalism finally debased the results of evangelism. Converts won by
motional appeals often fell away when the emotions died out. This
problem existed in all the revivalistic churches on the American
frontier. One of the most depressing phenomena in American religious
history is how whole areas of the country became “burned over” spiritual
wastelands, where people had listened to a fiery revivalist, felt the
flame of excitement blaze up in their hearts, then faced the cold
realization that their experience lacked any substance or lasting
meaning, and learned. to despise religion of any sort. Preachers who
needed the constant excitement of revivals to keep their own faith up
should not have been surprised when the churches they left behind
withered into ashes.
By 1840, the Christians had had ample
warning that the path which they were taking might lead to disaster.
Although the total number of their churches and members kept climbing,
even their outward success showed ominous signs of strain. While gaining
a host of new members, they were losing many older ones. Approximately
half of all congregations founded since the beginning of the movement
had ceased to exist. More importantly, the Christians felt their loss of
direction and the growing lack of any doctrinal standard. As far back as
December, 1831, Mark Fernald confided in his diary his fear “that while
we had enlarged our borders we had lost sight of some of the landmarks.”
The fear would grow, until it became a terrible certainty.

Chapter 8
The Emergence Of Alexander Campbell
And they were not
able to resist the wisdom and the spirit by which he spake. Acts 6:10
Quite apart from the Christian
Connection, other religious groups in America, and even in New England,
were pursuing the goals of Christian unity and the restoration of the
New Testament church in all its simplicity. Before we can begin the next
chapter in the history of the Christians, we must first turn our
attention to these efforts.
Robert Sandeman emigrated from Scotland
to America in 1765. Under the influence of his father-in-law, John Glas,
Sandeman had developed in Scotland an unusual religious view, which,
like Abner Jones's, emphasized the New Testament as a practical standard
of conduct, rather than as a subject for theological speculation. Having
settled in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Sandeman began a church that put
his ideas into practice. James Bailey quotes Webster as describing
Sandeman's position in the folowing words:
He held that faith is only a simple
assent to the divine testimony concerning Jesus Christ as set forth in
the Scriptures. His followers hold to a weekly administration of the
Lord's supper; to love feasts, which consist in dining at each other's
houses in the intermission of public worship; to the kiss of charity on
the admission of members; to mutual exhortation; to abstinence from
things strangled, and from blood; to the washing of each other's feet;
to a modified community of goods; to a plurality of elders, pastors, or
bishops in each church.[51]
Although one may disagree with the
inclusion of some of these practices as part of Christianity, the list
clearly shows Sandeman's determination to follow the New Testament
pattern as he understood it. Even though Sandeman soon moved to Danbury,
Connecticut, the church which he founded in Portsmouth endured until
1820. Elias Smith could not help but have known of this church, but
whether contact with them influenced the development of his own
religious views remains a mystery.
In addition to the church in
Portsmouth, Sandeman established congregations in Boston; Taunton,
Massachusetts; and Newton, Connecticut. These churches proved relatively
short-lived, but his work in his new hometown of Danbury had lasting
significance. Arriving there in 1767, he quickly organized a
congregation. Although encouraging correspondence with the local
Congregational minister had helped originally persuade Sandeman to come
to America, Danbury's establishment on closer inspection did not extend
a cordial welcome to the religious revolutionary. In 1770, a judge
ordered him out of town as an undesirable vagrant. When Sandeman refused
to leave, he was brought into court and fined the appalling sum of L40,
equal to well over a thousand dollars in 1980 purchasing power, and an
absurd penalty for vagrancy. Sandeman pleaded that the law was not
intended against harmless strangers hut against persons of ungoverned
and dishonest conversations."[52]
Perhaps he persuaded the judge, for the sentence was never executed; but
Sandeman died the next year anyway. Half a century later, Alexander
Campbell reminded the readers of the Christian Baptist how
Sandeman and others had tried to restore the New Testament church,
although he made it clear he did not think they succeeded. He paid
Sandeman this tribute:
Sandeman was like a giant among dwarfs.
He was like Sampson with the gates and posts of Gaza on his
shoulders...Yet I now believe not one of them was exactly on the track
of the apostles.[53]
The Sandemanian church in Danbury long
survived the death of its founder. After many years of growth and
prosperity, a dispute arose in the church in 1817 over infant baptism,
which the Sandemanians had always practiced. Since they could not find
infant baptism in the New Testament, two families refused to baptize
their children and left the church. Not knowing quite where to turn,
they contacted Henry Errett, the preacher of a “Church of Christ” in New
York City. Errett journeyed to Danbury, baptized the adults who felt
that their baptism as infants had not been scripturally valid, and
helped form them into an independent congregation. They were known as
Reform Baptists, or Osbornites, after one of their leaders, until 1853,
when they took the name “Church of Christ.” During the first quarter
century of its existence, this church remained very small, never
numbering more than fifty members. The main body of the Sandemanians
remained true to their old faith, and their church endured all the way
into the twentieth century.
In 1823, a new influence began to be
felt in New England religious circles. Alexander Campbell began the
publication in Virginia of the Christian Baptist, which gained a
large number of subscribers, including a few in New England. Campbell
used the paper to launch a frontal assault on denominationalism and
called for a restoration of “the ancient order of things” in the church.
Article after article hammered at religious practices which he regarded
as unscriptural, such as infant baptism and denominational organization.
A brilliant man with an encyclopedic knowledge of the Bible and church
history, Campbell scornfully attacked the ignorance and pretensions of
the frontier clergymen. Never one to "suffer fools gladly," he battled
against a host of foes from across the whole spectrum of religious
opinion. The paper, along with its successor, the Millennial
Harbinger, helped make Campbell one of the most controversial
figures in America, revered by his associates, hated and feared by his
opponents.
A copy of the Christian Baptist
found its way into the hands of Francis Emmons, a college student from
Vermont. Emmons grew up in the town of Georgia, where there was a strong
Christian church; but he himself was a Baptist. In 1826, while attending
Columbian College, he landed the unusual summer job of preaching for the
Female Missionary Society of Richmond, Virginia. Disregarding his
mother's advice to “be anything but a poor Baptist preacher,” he set out
on the circuit of poor, struggling Baptist churches in western Virginia
to do his duty. During his visits, he began to hear of an arch-heretic
named Alexander Campbell, who was disturbing the peace of the church.
Securing his first copy of the Christian Baptist, he was outraged
by Campbell's doctrine and decided to challenge him to debate, if the
Baptist leaders in Virginia refused to do so. To prepare himself for the
debate, he sent along with his challenge to Campbell an order for a
complete set of Campbell's writings. By the time he received the books,
summer had ended, and Emmons had to go back north to school at Brown
University, where he had decided to finish his education.
At first, reading Campbell's works made
Emmons miserable. They challenged the young man's whole view of
Christianity, and their arguments proved impossible for him to answer.
Yet, he fought against accepting them. After graduation from Brown in
September of 1828, he took a position as minister of the First Baptist
Church in Eastport, Maine. There, his mind was thrown into further
turmoil by contact with William Ashley, the preacher of the Eastport
Christian Church, to whom he showed the Christian Baptist. Ashley was so
impressed that he decided to start putting some of Campbell's into
practice. In place of the usual text-preaching, in which the minister
took a single verse out of the Bible and developed his sermon from that
verse alone, Ashley began lecturing on the New Testament in earnest,
calling on the members of his church to study their Bibles as they had
never studied them before. Emmons, pricked in his conscience by Ashley's
willingness to act, tried to follow suit, but found himself miserably
incapable of teaching the Bible as he realized it should be taught. At
the end of 1829, he gave up in despair and moved to Killingworth,
Connecticut, to teach school.
Ashley, however, did not give up.
Continued study of Campbell's writings and the Bible convinced him that
the controversial Virginian was teaching scriptural truth. In a letter
to Campbell, he explained how his faith had changed.
When I first read some of the numbers
of the Christian Baptist, I saw many things which I believed and
admired — some that I disbelieved — and others, the truth of which I
doubted.
As I had, for same years, been in quest
of truth, I thought it would be nothing but reasonable that I should
read the whole of your writings, before I made up my mind respecting the
correctness or absurdity of your sentiments. I accordingly obtained a
copy of your works, through the agency of brother Emmons and have given
them an attentive perusal; and I can assure you in the sincerity of my
heart, that my present views of the Christian religion are (in many
respects) very different from what they were before I became acquainted
with your writings; and I consider that my reading of them forms a new
epoch in the history of my inquiries and efforts.[54]
In the same letter, “wishing to see the
‘ancient order of things’ established in this place,” Ashley ordered
complete sets of the Christian Baptist for a number of the
members of his congregation. Distribution of Campbell's writings at
Eastport had the desired effect, to bring some of the readers to share
his views; but it also provoked a storm of controversy, which resulted
in Ashley's dismissal from the pulpit of the Christian church. This did
not end the call for change among the Christians, for a sizeable portion
of the congregation remained convinced that weekly observance of the
Lord's Supper, baptism for remission of sins, and genuine Bible study
were necessary for a true restoration of the New Testament church. After
nearly a decade of trying to persuade their fellow Christians, they
formed a separate church that put these principles into action.
Although Ashley himself moved to New
Brunswick, where he helped establish the restoration movement in Canada,
he left behind in New England W.W. Eaton, a young convert who became a
significant figure in the American restoration movement. Eaton began
issuing the call for a return to the New Testament in 1833. Meanwhile,
Benjamin Howard, a noted Christian Connection revivalist, had
independently come in contact with Campbell's ideas and accepted the
crucial doctrine of baptism for the remission of sins. When Howard's
first convert, William Hunter, met Eaton in that same year, the two
young men decided to join forces, and toured New England, spreading
their new understanding of the scriptures among the Christians. To them
goes the honor of having laid the foundations for churches in Boston and
Salem, Massachusetts; and they were also mainly responsible for
nurturing the seeds planted by Ashley at Eastport. Together, they
published the first newspaper in New England that championed in its
entirety the restoration plea. This was the Christian Investigator,
first issued from Eastport in May, 1835. Eaton later distinguished
himself as a professor at Bethany College.
The further career of Francis Emmons
comprises one of the most frustrating chapters in restoration history.
After his arrival in Connecticut in 1830, Emmons combined his work as a
schoolteacher with preaching for a local Baptist church. When a few
unguarded expressions revealed Emmon's “Campbellite” leanings, the
Baptists fired him as their preacher, which did not injure him very
much, since he had been preaching for free. However, they also raised a
hue and cry among the townspeople and persuaded parents from the various
denominations to remove their children from school. Later, Emmons
ruefully recalled that only four or five “Universalists or Infidels”
trusted him to educate their children.
Forced by poverty to move elsewhere,
Emmons visited Campbell at Bethany, West Virginia, in the summer of
1830. Probably because of Campbell's influence, he moved the following
spring to the Midwest, where he preached for churches of Christ over the
next twelve years. During this time, Campbell employed him at odd
editorial jobs, including a second edition of Campbell's Living
Oracles and as one of the secretaries for the debate between
Campbell and Bishop Purcell. In 1842, he moved back to New England and
practiced medicine in Boston. Astonishingly, he placed membership with
the First Baptist Church, even though he not only still claimed to
oppose denominationalism but continued to write regular articles for the
Millennial Harbinger. He spent the rest of his life in the quiet
respectability of useless scholarship, receiving honorary degrees,
dabbling in politics, and denying by his life the principles he defended
with his pen. Alas, Emmons was but the first in a long line of Christian
intellectuals in New England who admired the New Testament church, but
declined to work in building it up in their own community.
At the same time as Emmons, Ashley, and
Howard were first discovering the plea for “the ancient order of
things,” individuals in other areas of New England were also coming in
contact with Campbell's writings. Worden Reynolds, a Baptist preacher in
Manchester, Vermont, was converted in 1829. Having been one of the most
successful Baptist revivalists in his state, he immediately turned his
energies to the establishment of churches according to the New Testament
pattern. The Baptists promptly disfellowshipped him, but he succeeded in
organizing two small churches in Manchester and Pawlet. Reynolds’ wife
Emma was also excluded from Baptist fellowship, and her letter of
protest to her old church contains perhaps the first clear and full
written statement of restoration principles in New England. Dated
February 4, 1830, the letter sets forth her convictions:
"That all sectarian religion is
unscriptural, and at variance with the Christianity of the Bible. That
the churches of Christ, in calling themselves by any other name, or
assuming any other titles than those applied to them in the scriptures,
are carnal, and doing those things which Paul in his first letter to the
Corinthians (3d chapter,) reproves and condemns. That the churches of
Christ should be governed by the inspired writings, in the manner, form,
and connexion in which they were delivered to the saints, exclusive of
every other creed, rule, or confession whatever. That the bond of union
among Christians is faith in Jesus Christ, and the ground of fellowship
obedience to his commands. That the faith of Christians comes by
hearing, and hearing by the word of God, and his belief of the testimony
God has given of his Son. That there is no example, rule, or commandment
given in the Bible authorizing anyone to tell his mental agitations, of
the sorrows or joys he has experienced, in order for baptism; but that
with repentance, and an honest and hearty confession of his belief in
the Lord Jesus, he should be baptized for the remission of sins (through
the blood of Jesus) and the reception of the Holy Spirit, as declared by
Peter on the day of Pentecost. And that believers in Christ, so
baptized, should first give themselves to God and to one another for his
sake, and choose from among themselves men possessing such
qualifications as are pointed out in the scriptures for overseers and
servants of the church; and assemble on every first day of the week, if
possible, for the social worship of God, and for their own edification
by reading the scriptures, preaching, teaching, prayers, praises,
exhortations, breaking of bread in commemoration of the Saviour, and
contributing according to their ability and the necessities of the
congregation."
Campbell admired this letter enough to
print it in full in the Millennial Harbinger, along with the
deacons' reply. Significantly for the future, the crucial problem in the
deacons' eyes was not the purpose of baptism, but sister Reynolds'
insistence that conversion did not require the miraculous working of the
Holy Spirit.
The first missionary to arrive in New
England to champion the cause of the primitive gospel was Nathan Porter,
who was sent in 1833 by his church in Ashtabula, Ohio, to work in
northern Connecticut. The choice of the area may reflect contacts made
through the Christian Baptist and Millennial Harbinger,
for Campbell had several subscribers in that region. Settling at
Suffield, Porter began preaching there and in the neighboring towns. At
first, he took his message to the denominational churches, but they
quickly closed their doors to him. Frustrated, he must have wondered
along with Worden Reynolds, “So long as they will neither hear, nor
read, how can they be corrected?”[55]
Nevertheless, Porter made appointments to teach in private homes and
reached the people as best he could. For a while, he enjoyed some
success. By the end of April, 1834, he had baptized eight converts for
the remission of sins, and gathered a church of about twenty members in
Suffield. This church, however, did not endure; and Porter's mission
ended in failure after only a couple of years.
The increasing number of subscribers
from New England to the Millennial Harbinger and reports of
churches having actually been organized there according to the New
Testament pattern caused Alexander Campbell to consider how he might
more actively assist “the restoration of the ancient order of things” in
the region. Campbell knew well that, although the population and
commerce of the United States were moving steadily and inexorably
westward, America's intellectual center remained in New England, and
that the ultimate success of his effort to build again the church on the
old foundation of the apostles and prophets demanded an assault on the
fortresses of orthodoxy in Boston and New Haven. He knew that those
fortresses were troubled from within by the growing power of religious
liberalism, which eventually destroyed the religious character of New
England's great universities, such as Harvard. For a number of years, he
had sent free copies of his paper to area seminaries in hopes of gaining
a small foothold of interest, but without much success. Now seemed a
good time to renew his efforts in a more personal and forceful manner.
He decided to go himself.
Campbell set out in the summer of 1836 to visit New York and New England. As was
his custom when making such evangelistic tours, he took with him several
younger men, one of whom on this occasion was Tolbert Fanning, who later
became one of the most important leaders within the churches of Christ
in America. The first and less important part of the trip, a series of
speaking engagements in upstate New York, went smoothly enough. While
preaching at Auburn, Campbell sent Fanning on ahead into the unknown
territory of Massachusetts to prepare a welcome for his chief. The hope
was to gain an audience at Andover Theological Seminary. Meanwhile,
Campbell and his other companions would follow up contacts in towns
along their rout.
Campbell's first stop in New England
was his most productive one, even though he could scarcely have regarded
it as anything but a relatively unimportant side trip, which he did not
even mention in his account of the tour in the Millennial Harbinger.
Through the influence of Worden Reynolds, Campbell won permission to
speak to the Baptist church in the little village of Pawlet, Vermont.
His stay lasted only two days, but it gave a great boost to Reynolds’
efforts in the vicinity. Many of the Baptists were persuaded by
Campbell's learning and eloquence to take a new look at their faith. The
two small congregations which Reynolds had already established grew
somewhat larger and stronger. Most importantly, Charles White, a
physician from the nearby town of West Rupert, visited the services and
was deeply impressed. He later recorded that three things struck home to
him about Campbell's preaching: first, that Campbell knew the Bible more
intimately and thoroughly than any other person he had ever met; second,
Campbell's teaching on the Holy Spirit was a clear and satisfactory
explanation of what denominational preachers had insisted was a mystery;
and, last, that Campbell closed his sermons with a call for people to
obey the gospel then and there. A devout Presbyterian, White could not
bring himself to break immediately with his old religion, but he could
not dismiss Campbell's insights into the Bible from his mind. Months of
study convinced him that he must obey the clear commands of the New
Testament in regard to baptism and many other subjects. After his
conversion, he became the strongest pillar of a new congregation in his
home town.
From Vermont, Campbell went on to
Boston, where he arrived on August 3. He found that Fanning had been
busy making contacts with the Christians within the city, and had moved
on to Lynn, where there was a Christian Connection church that had come
under the influence of Ashley and Hunter. During a two-week stay in
eastern Massachusetts, Campbell made Boston his headquarters and visited
towns within a radius of about twenty miles. The plan to make contacts
within the academic community largely gave way to what seemed like the
brighter opportunities presented by the open pulpits of the Christian
Connection, then approaching the peak of its strength in numbers and
apparent vitality.
Campbell lodged with Joshua V. Himes, the minister of a large Christian church
and rapidly becoming a national leader within his denomination, Himes
had republished (without Campbell's knowledge) his guest's review of the
Book of Mormon in 1832 and subscribed to the Millennial
Harbinger. An indication of Himes' importance among the Christians
is his selection to author the article on his denomination in Brown's
Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, the same work which contains an
article by Campbell on the “Disciples of Christ.” Himes did not agree
with Campbell's views on several critical issues; but he also differed
with most Christian Connection leaders at other points, and Campbell may
have regarded him as more likely to have an open mind to what he had to
say. Campbell did not meet with any of the original leaders of the New
England Christians. At this time, Elias Smith had once again gone off
into Universalism; Daniel Hix had virtually retired from public affairs;
and Abner Jones had returned to Assonet, Massachusetts, where the fatal
illness of his wife distracted him, and his own ill health began
severely to limit his activities.
Campbell was not very favorably impressed with what he did see of the Christians
in New England. Several years before, he had come to know and love
Barton Stone and to accept the western Christians as cherished allies in
the cause of pure religion, but he did not know whether to regard the
eastern Christians as friends or foes. He complained,
It was boasted by many preachers in New
England and New York that the Bible was their only creed, and that by it
alone they would be governed; but unless the production of great
excitement, camp meetings, war against Trinitarians, and denunciations
against Calvinism be walking by the Bible alone, I cannot see that these
Eastern Christians are more under the banners of the Bible than any
other sect in the land. There are now as many of the fashionable
Christian vices to be met with in these communities as in
Congregationalists, Methodists, Episcopalians, or any other Protestant
societies.[56]
He admired their zeal, but loathed
their misguided emotionalism. He admitted their bright prospects for
numerical growth, but he warned that the “Christian vices” of
respectability, that had already introduced reverends and organs into
the work and worship of the church, were turning the Christians into
just another denomination, instead of the pure church of Christ which
they had sought to restore. Still, he by no means gave up hope on them.
Although recognizing that “much is wanting in many places to bring them
nigh to the platform of apostolic usage and authority,” he believed that
many Christians were honestly attempting to restore the New Testament
Church, and only needed “to be taught the way of the Lord more
perfectly.”[57]
He was encouraged by the response of the churches in Lynn and Salem,
which began having weekly communion and baptizing for the remission of
sins. He also felt that he had secured the support of Philemon Russell,
one of the Christians’ most influential young preachers and writers. All
in all, it seemed like a promising beginning in the new and vital field
of New England.
While in Boston, Campbell also preached
to congregations of other religious movements. He enjoyed alike the
hospitality of the Tremont Temple Baptist Church and William Ellery
Channing's flock of Unitarians, and attracted capacity crowds to hear
all his sermons. Campbell often preached to the Baptists wherever he
went, but his association with Channing is quite surprising, since he
had publicly attacked Unitarianism on many occasions. Perhaps the
unitarian Christians obtained this introduction for him, or maybe
Channing regarded Campbell as a fellow religious reformer, even if the
two men had radically different views on which direction reform should
take. Campbell spent one day of his visit inspecting a Christian
Connection school at Beverly. Here, Campbell found something which he
heartily and unreservedly approved. The students were given a basic
education in the liberal arts, but they were also trained in practical
labor and required to work in the operation of the school, with a heavy
emphasis on the development of moral virtues necessary for success in
everyday life. Campbell wrote,
“The objects of the institution are
such as every friend of Christian education must approve. It is not
intended to build up an aristocracy in religious society, or to form a
learned ministry; but to promote the intellectual and moral culture of
the youths of that community, and to fit them for useful stations as
members of the great family of man.”[58]
The school. in Beverly set Campbell
thinking about the possibility of establishing Christian schools in the
midwest; but we do not know how it may have influenced young Tolbert
Fanning, who many years later founded Franklin College, a very similar
institution in Nashville.
Campbell's trip marked an epoch in the history of the restoration movement in
New England. Its immediate results did not seem momentous, for no new
congregations had been founded, the handful of churches which shared
Campbell's views received only a few new converts, and no significant
leader among the Christians changed his position on any of the crucial
issues which Campbell raised. The churches in Salem and Lynn soon fired
their preachers who had introduced weekly communion and baptism for the
remission of sins, although strong minorities continued to believe in
both practices. If Philemon Russell agreed with Campbell on any of the
controversial questions, he kept it quiet. Nevertheless, Campbell had
succeeded in fundamentally altering the situation. Even though he had
not visited the fledgeling churches in Maine and Connecticut, his trip
rallied his allies throughout New England and gave them the beginning of
a sense of identity with each other. For the Christians, he brought
crisis. The Virginian's visit forced them to respond to exactly the type
of doctrinal issue which they had more and more tried to avoid during
the previous years of outward growth. Campbell insisted that going by
the Bible meant obeying biblical commands concerning baptism and the
Lord's Supper. To him, the Christians' acceptance or refusal of
scriptural teaching on these points was a test of whether or not their
claim to follow the Bible alone was a genuine commitment or mere talk.

Chapter 9
Crisis
The day of the Lord is near in the
valley of decision. Joel 3:14
The fundamental issue which Campbell
raised for the eastern Christians was the question of authority for
religious practices. Must Christians, to the limit of their knowledge
and ability, render entire and exact obedience to the express commands
of the New Testament in order for them truly to qualify as followers of
Christ? Campbell insisted that they must, for Jesus had made obedience
to his commands the test of our love for him. The Christians, whose
first principle as a religious movement had once been to make the
scriptures "the only sure, authentic, and infallible rule of the faith
and practice of every Christian," had backed away from their original
position, and now shunned any intellectual basis for their religion.
Where Jones and Smith had pled for no creed but the Bible, many among
the second generation of Christians wanted no creed at all, not even the
word of God. They denied their own past. Joseph Badger, Campbell's most
bitter opponent in the controversy, wrote in the Christian Palladium,
"We never knew our brethren to boast of walking by the Bible alone. This
we regard as an error, let who will proclaim it."[59]
The division between Campbell and his associates on the one hand, and
the main body of Christians in New England on the other, was not caused
by a misunderstanding of baptism or communion but by entirely different
views on the nature of faith and the essence of Christianity. Campbell
thought of faith as primarily an intellectual understanding and
acceptance of God's revelation in the Bible. Badger and Himes thought of
faith as an emotional relationship with God, impossible to define and
certainly not to be limited by the cold letter of the written word. To
Campbell, Christianity was essentially a loving obedience of God's
unchanging will. To many Christians, it was above all the immediate
experience of God's spirit, working mysteriously but powerfully in every
incident of life.
This broad and fundamental difference
resulted in conflict between the two groups on many specific issues. One
such question was whether the Lord's Supper should be taken every
Sunday. Based on several passages in the New Testament and supported by
the testimony of early Christian writers outside the Bible, Campbell
believed that the apostolic church had invariably practiced weekly
communion. Given this authoritative example, he felt that modern
Christians, living in a free country, had no excuse to neglect the
proper observance of a ceremony central to the church's life. All
Christian Connection churches served communion as a part of their
worship services; but many did so only a few times a year, or when a
minister happened to be present; and almost none of them placed the
emphasis which Campbell did on strict observance of the Lord's Supper
every week. As on so many other issues, many of them judged divine
commands by human standards, and decided that weekly communion would be
only a dry and legalistic formality. In their view, Christians could not
reach the proper pitch of emotion to take the Lord's supper so often. It
must remain a special occasion, or men would come to despise it. The two
sides probably did not understand each other very well on this point.
Each thought the other did not value communion highly enough. Campbell
criticized the Christians for neglecting regular observance, and the
Christians criticized Campbell for neglecting emotional preparation. The
question was a highly practical one, and churches could not sidestep or
compromise on it, because every week's service forced a decision.
Another controversy arose over the
nature of teaching in the church. The Christians had generally followed
the denominational practice of preaching on short passages of scripture,
usually no more than a verse or two, without any detailed study of the
Bible. Their sermons appealed to the heart, but they did not challenge
the intellect. They exhorted, but they did not explain. They attempted
the impossible task of making men good without first making them wise.
We have already noticed how, when Ashley and Emmons began reading the
Christian Baptist, they felt compelled to adopt an entirely
different style of preaching. Biblical scholarship replaced emotional
oratory, and they lectured their audiences instead of haranguing them.
Many Christians did not like the change, preferring to be excited rather
than to be instructed.
In their attitude toward church
meetings other than the regular worship service, the Christians and
Campbell and his associates differed even more widely. Most Christian
Connection churches met regularly for times of prayer, exhortation, and
witnessing. Campbell and those who came under his influence, although by
no means despising public prayer, felt that frequent Bible study was an
essential part of church life. Wherever Campbell's writings made an
impact, individual Christians began demanding that their congregations
begin Bible classes and grew impatient with the shallow emotionalism of
many of their preachers. Jehial Hendee bitterly complained,
Those that mere once humble followers
of Christ, and willing to suffer the word of exhortation and engage in
it themselves, now think that instead of conference and prayer meetings,
it should be a kind of Bible class, to read scripture and converse on
particular notions, (say, for instance, Mr. Campbell’s theory.)[60]
As their disagreement over the nature
of preaching suggests, Campbell and his opponents among the Christians
had radically different views of the ministry. Just as Campbell saw
nothing mysterious about preaching, but believed that the preacher
should simply present and explain Biblical teaching in a clear and
logical manner, neither did he see anything mysterious about being a
preacher, but thought that any Christian man, who had adequately
prepared himself by study and holy living, could discharge this
responsibility. He needed no "call" to preach other than the great
commission. He needed no “inspired" guidance other than the inspired
Bible. To many New England Christians, this seemed arrogant and almost
blasphemous. They thought that no one should preach except those
specially called and directed by the Holy Spirit. In his attacks on
Campbell, Joseph Badger insisted that the Christians believed that the
gospel was not contained in a book, but in human beings. The sword of
the Spirit was important, but it required inspired men to wield it.
Jehial Hendee worried that Campbell would take it out of the hand of the
Spirit and put it into the hands of fallible men, (not called of God,
but such as are conceited enough to consider themselves capable of
preaching.)"[61]
This last statement indicates how perilously close their desire to
experience the immediate influence of the Spirit had led them to an
acknowledgement that there could be infallible men, called by God to
give inspired teaching. They were approaching an utter repudiation of
their original plea for a return to simple Christianity, devoid of
ecclesiastical mystery and domination.
Baptism provided the most notorious
subject of controversy between Campbell and other religious leaders.
Campbell valued baptism so highly that he called it "the gospel in
water." Peter had told the crowd on Pentecost, "Repent and be baptized
every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins,
and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." Campbell could not see
why the same invitation should not be offered to sinners today. Since
the inspired apostle had made baptism one of the requirements for
forgiveness and the gift of the Spirit, modern preachers must present
the same requirements.
Campbell's emphasis on baptism upset
many Christians for a variety of reasons. First, they misunderstood him.
His opponents often charged him with teaching the "Romish" doctrine of
baptismal regeneration; the theory that the outward act of baptism,
separate and apart from faith or repentance, makes someone a Christian.
This was totally untrue. So far was Campbell from believing such a
doctrine that he rejected infant baptism partly on the grounds that
infants could not believe or repent, and were therefore not fit subjects
for baptism. Water baptism played a part in spiritual rebirth, but only
a part, worthless without the whole submission to God's direction.
Campbell charged that his opponents were intentionally misrepresenting
him on this point; and it seems hard to believe that anyone could read
his works with the slightest attention and come to such a mistaken
conclusion. Blind zeal wished to argue, not to understand.
Secondly, Campbell's insistence on
baptism by immersion of adult believers threatened the Christians'
efforts to unite with other religious groups. Abandoning their own
original attempt to bring Christians together on a foundation of
obedience to plain biblical teaching, they were moving rapidly toward a
more modern and liberal ecumenicalism. They did not want the issue of
baptism to stand in the way of such union. For them, Campbell was a
voice out of the past, not nearly progressive enough for their dynamic
faith.
Most fundamentally, many Christians
rejected Campbell's teachings on baptism because they regarded the whole
subject as insignificant in comparison with the "true religion" of
emotional experience. No matter what Campbell said, no matter what the
scriptures plainly seemed to teach, they knew they had been saved
without water baptism, because their hearts told them so; and they
believed their hearts spoke with the voice of the Holy Spirit. Against
such belief, no logical argument could prevail.
Direct contact between Campbell and the
New England Christians had begun all the way back in 1825. In that year,
Joseph Badger came west to visit the Christians in Kentucky, and
especially Barton Stone. Passing through Cincinnati on the return
journey, he accidentally happened to meet and hear Campbell, who was on
a short preaching visit to the city. Badger did not know quite what to
make of him. His obvious talents and commanding personality impressed
him, but he felt (or claimed years later to have felt) a vague
uneasiness at Campbell's preaching. Campbell had not yet taken his
famous position on baptism, and the Disciples (as Campbell and his
associates called themselves in that part of the country) were still
relatively few and not in close fellowship with the Christians; but
Badger apparently had clear enough sight to see that here was a man who
cold have a powerful impact on the restoration movement.
The following year, Barton Stone
breached the subject of cooperation and eventual union between the
Christians and Disciples in a letter to Campbell. Six years of
discussions, isolated joint meetings, and increasingly important
personal friendships between key figures in the two movements followed,
until they eventually bore fruit in a wholehearted joining of forces in
the Midwest in 1832. In towns where separate Christian and Disciple
congregations existed, many merged; and Stone made John Rodgers, a
leading preacher among the Disciples, co-editor of his religious
magazine, the Christian Messenger.
Stone's prestige gave the merger its
best chance of spreading to include the Christians in the East, who
reverently regarded "Father Stone" as perhaps the greatest man alive.
His open avowal of united fellowship with the Disciples caused general
confusion among the eastern Christians and utter consternation among
those who had already aligned themselves against Campbell and his
doctrine. Arguments began over whether Campbell had converted Stone to
his views, or Stone had converted Campbell. The same J. V. Himes who
later entertained Campbell in Boston wrote a letter to Stone, requesting
an explanation of how matters stood. Himes asked, Have the Christians
given up the old ground, or, that on which they first came out in
doctrine, and practice, thirty years ago?[62]
Stone gave a ringing reply in the Christian Messenger: "No, they
have not. The ground, on which we then stood, was the Bible alone as the
only rule of our faith and practice. This ground we yet occupy." To the
question of who converted whom, Stone answered, “They did not join us,
nor did we join them; but we mutually agreed to meet on the Bible alone.
. .Neither side gave up any sentiment, or opinion, nor were they
requested to do it.”[63]
Both Stone and all other Christian preachers had been insisting for a
generation that all followers of Christ should forsake their
denominations and unite in simple Christian faith and love, with no rule
to guide them except the New Testament. The union between Disciples and
Christians proved the validity of this plea, and opposition to the union
appeared to Stone as a perverse repudiation of the Christians' ideals at
the very point when they were finally accomplishing this goal.
Stone's efforts to persuade his
brethren to work together with the Disciples in peaceful harmony can be
followed in the pages of the Christian Messenger, while the
failure of those efforts appears in bitter articles in the Christian
Palladium, edited through much of the period by Joseph Badger. At
the very beginning of the controversy after Stone had given the right
hand of fellowship to the Disciples and appointed John Rogers as
co-editor of the Messenger, Rogers replied to a critical article
on water baptism in the first issue of the Palladium by offering
to trade space in the two periodicals for each side to present its
views. This would have amounted to a written debate. Rogers believed
that they could carry on such a discussion in a friendly manner that
would show the church "how calmly, candidly, and kindly, Christians can
conduct their controversies."[64]
Badger refused; and his subsequent attacks on Campbell and the Disciples
were seldom calm, candid, or kind.
Despite his total rejection of
Campbell, however, Badger kept contact with Stone. Although he refused
to print a letter written by Rogers to the Palladium, he
regularly published letters from Stone, which gave Stone an opportunity
to continue trying to heal the breach. Stone, on his part, maintained a
friendly and positive attitude, while gently warning against Badger's
excesses. He wrote in May, 1835, “I find you have unsheathed the sword
in war against Campbellism. May God speed your efforts in cutting down
and destroying every ism, not recognized in the scriptures. But would it
not be well to be guarded, lest while you root up the tares, you root up
the wheat also."[65]
He pleaded with Badger and the readers of the Palladium not to
allow the disagreements between the Disciples and themselves to
frustrate the cause of Christian unity, but to join in a united search
for the truth on all disputed matters. This is what he had done.
We ourselves agree not on every point
with brother Campbell, and he in the same points, differs from us What
then? Shall we not fraternize? Shall we not unite as Christians? Shall
we quarrel about our difference of opinion like the world before us?
Shall we love each other less? No. We are determined that diversity of
opinion shall not be a bar to Christian fellowship. I stand on the old
ground, the Bible, to acknowledge everyone to be my brother, sister, and
mother, who does the will of my Father, who is in Heaven. To do
otherwise is antiscriptural and sectarian; from which may the Lord
preserve us all.[66]
Stone either did not recognize, or
glossed over in hopes of an eventual solution, the fact that what
divided Campbell and Badger was more than mere "diversity of opinion,"
but rather the vital practice of Christianity. The two sides held such
divergent views on baptism, especially, that it inevitably resulted in
widely different practices that could not be reconciled. Isolated from
them in the Midwest, Stone probably did not understand the radical
spiritual evolution which many of the Christians in the East had
undergone.
Not all of even Badger's closest
associates shared his extreme antipathy for the Disciples. David
Millard, a regular writer for the Palladium, visited Stone in
Georgetown, Kentucky, in 1834. He came away very impressed by the rapid
growth and general condition of the churches in Kentucky. Stone and
Rogers gratefully acknowledged Millard's friendly visit in the
Christian Messenger:
We are highly pleased with his visit,
his person, his piety, and his public exhibitions. He had happily
removed the unfavorable impressions, made on many minds, that the
Christians in the East were fast approximating to Sectarianism, and had
settled down on former opinions, without farther examination, and
investigation of revealed truth. We should rejoice at the frequent
visits of such brethren from the East, and that such
brethren from the West could interchange the visits. This would be a
happy means of cementing a union, important to the interests of
religion.[67]
This passage shows how weary Stone had
become of the constant bickering back and forth between tactless
Disciples and Christians of the Badger camp. Millard's visit was a
refreshing encouragement, since it seemed to demonstrate that unity was
possible between the two groups. However, Millard's willingness to
fellowship the Disciples probably reflects his own conviction, not
shared by men like Badger, that baptism was an essential part of
Christianity. To the suggestion that “baptism is a non-essential, and
not worth contending about,” he replied passionately,
Do you honor your Savior no more than
to say he came from heaven to earth to institute non-essentials—things
of no use? What better evidence ought you to desire that baptism is
essential than to know it is a command of the divine Redeemer? If that
command is from heaven, is it not essential to your soul that you obey
it, just as God's word teaches?[68]
Such an attitude provided at least
enough common ground with the Disciples to make rational discussion
possible.
How many more moderates there were like
David Millard among the New England Christians in the 1830's we can only
guess; but they must have been numerous and prominent enough to have
inspired the repeated attempts by the Eastern Christians to heal the
breach with their brethren in the West, for efforts toward unity did not
all originate from Stone's side.
Campbell's trip to New England in 1836 marked a turning point. Just as it
greatly increased Campbell's influence in the area and helped establish
several churches modeled after “the ancient order of things,” so it also
provoked Badger and his allies to new extremes of abuse and opposition.
Campbell unwisely included a personal attack on Badger in his report of
the trip in the Millennial Harbinger, and Badger fired back with every
verbal weapon he could command, suggesting Campbell might be insane. His
anger reaches almost to hysteria in one of these attacks.
What an unkind, uncharitable, and
unchristian spirit those dear Disciples of Mr. Campbell possess.
We know of no Christian sect who have arisen in modern times, who have
such an unreasonable degree of vanity, egotism, pride, malice, war, and
persecution as is found among them. From Maine to Missouri, wherever
they can be found, there may be witnessed contention and a careless
infidel spirit; “by their fruits ye shall know them.” Every man who
dares dissent from their theory may expect every means will be tried to
tarnish his honest fame.[69]
Campbell had the good sense not to reply to such provocation, and apparently
dismissed Badger and his wing of the Christians in the Northeast as a
lost cause; but he must have been deeply mortified to have Bishop
Purcell quote Badger's criticism against him in a debate in Cincinnati
in 1837 on Roman Catholicism. Badger actually took pride in having
provided ammunition for Purcell in the debate, and thus assumed the
astonishing position, for a Christian preacher, of preferring Raman
Catholicism to Campbell's plea for restoring New Testament Christianity.
The increasing bitterness of the
controversy shocked and dismayed Stone. Viewing the situation with his
characteristic gentleness and toleration, he could not understand why
Campbell, Badger, and the rest of the combatants could not work out
their differences according to the scriptures, or how they could use
such violence of language against each other. He was growing old,
beginning to be in ill health, and mortally weary of being caught in the
middle between angry men. In 1840, he wrote to Joseph Marsh, who had
succeeded Badger as editor of the Palladium,
I am grieved, Brother Marsh, at the
course you and the Reformers (better known by you as Campbellites) have
taken, one against the other. Blame equally attaches to both parties.
Had you both cultivated more of forbearance, and charity, the wide gulph
between you might have disappeared. Christian union is my polar star.
Here I stand as unmoved as the Allegany mountains, nor can anything
drive hence.[70]
Stone had the rare quality of caring
deeply about the course other men took, because he loved them and longed
for their salvation, yet never allowing their actions to deflect him
from what he knew was right. He remained true to his purpose, but he
mourned the loss of so much good that might have been.
More and more of the Christians in the
East turned their back on fellowship with Stone and Campbell as the
decade of the 1840's began. This occurred partly because they chose to
reject much of the doctrine which Stone and Campbell preached, but it
also reflects a growing pre-occupation with other matters that will be
discussed in the next chapter. As the breach widened, even Stone came
under personal attack for his fellowship with the Disciples. At long
last, he gave up his efforts to make peace. In reply to the attacks
against him, he made one final defense of his actions and plea for
unity, which closes with these words:
I bid you, bro. Long, and bro. Carr,
and all my Eastern brethren, farewell. I die, and shall see you no more,
till we meet at the judgement seat. I leave you with love, and hope to
meet you all in the same spirit in a better world, where partyism will
forever cease. It is better for us to err on the side of charity. Take
from your old brother a last word of advice. Little children, love one
another and see that you fall not out by the way.[71]
Stone lived only two years more after
this letter, but that was long enough to witness the bitter catastrophe
of the Christian Connection in the Northeast.

Chapter 10
The Trumpet That Did Not Sound
I saw a dream
which made me afraid. Daniel 4:5
During the 1830's, a new force began to
make itself felt in American religion. It originated from a most
unlikely source, an obscure farmer in upstate New York named William
Miller.
The first part of Miller's life follows
much the same trail as we have traced in the history of Abner Jones and
Elias Smith. Born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, in 1782, Miller moved to
the promised land of Vermont to seek his fortune in 1803, the same year
in which Jones and Smith joined forces to ask men to become “Christians
only.” Like them, he had only a bare minimum of formal education, but
his mind thirsted for knowledge, and he read insatiably. His
intelligence won for him a measure of respect and trust from his
neighbors, who elected him as a justice of the peace and deputy sheriff.
After serving as a captain in the War of 1812, he moved west to Hampton,
New York, and settled down to live an outwardly quiet and respectable
life.
Inwardly, however, Miller was
undergoing the kind of spiritual anguish which Jones and Smith had
suffered before him. From a Baptist background, he felt the need for
religious faith, but he found the Bible so confusing and apparently
contradictory when he tried to read it, that he concluded it must be “a
work of designing men, whose object was to enslave the mind of man."[72]
He did not rest on this unsatisfying conclusion, but resolved to study
more intensively. In the midst of his study, he felt suddenly that God
had opened his eyes, and the scriptures, “which were before dark and
contradictory," became dazzlingly bright and clear.[73]
He went from the extreme of condemning the Bible as hopelessly obscure,
to the extreme of celebrating it as absolutely plain, containing no
difficulties and no mysteries.
Among the matters which he decided were
clearly revealed in scripture were the exact time and circumstances of
the second coming of Christ and the end of the world. He computed that
Christ was surely coming some time between March, 1843 and March, 1844.
Afraid of the ridicule of his neighbors, he prudently kept his
calculations to himself for fifteen years; but his conscience tormented
him for keeping secret such vital information. Finally, he later wrote,
“I was compelled by the Spirit of God, the power of truth, and the love
of souls, to take up my cross and proclaim these things to a dying and
perishing world.[74]
When Miller broke his silence in 1831,
his views received quite a different reception than the one he had
feared. People flocked to hear him and enthusiastically hailed his
teaching. His neighbors did not scruple to believe that their friend had
unlocked the mystery of the ages. In the following year, the Baptist
church of which he was a member licensed him to preach, and a wider
audience opened up for his teaching. He accepted invitations to preach
in churches of different denominations farther and farther away from
Hampton, as the circle of his influence widened. In 1836, he published
his views in a book confidently entitled Evidence from Scripture and
History of the Second Coming of Christ, about the Year 1843. Miller
became a well-known revivalist in the churches of the rural Northeast.
He found a particularly receptive
audience in the Christian Connection churches of New England. They were
numerous in precisely those rural areas where Miller's adventist ideas
had their earliest and greatest impact. Their practice of allowing
virtually anyone to speak from their pulpits gave him easy access to the
congregations; their fondness for emotional appeals readily embraced the
ultimate emotionalism of end-of-the-world preaching; and their tradition
of not making the teaching of any opinion a test of fellowship made
certain that those who opposed Miller would not be able to stop the
progress of adventism in their congregations. Above all, his ability to
excite the public and bring converts into the church through great
revivals seemed to the Christians to prove that he was truly an
instrument of the Holy Spirit.
Despite his success in rural areas,
Miller might have remained a relatively obscure and unimportant figure
on the fringes of American religious history, had he not in 1839 met and
joined forces with J. V. Himes, a man ideally suited to take advantage
of Miller's popularity. Himes had been very successful as the minister
of the First Christian Church in Boston, and had recently started a
second congregation in the city. He was widely known within the
Christian Connection, and thus could open doors for Miller among his
brethren. More importantly, he possessed an unlimited supply of audacity
and an extraordinary genius for public relations. Whether or not he knew
the Bible, he knew people and how to persuade them very well.
Given the opportunity presented by
Miller, Himes proved himself one of the greatest publicity agents in
American history. Miller converted him into an adventist, but he
converted Miller into a celebrity. His chief tool was the printed page.
He flooded the country with a deluge of papers, pamphlets, and books
that warned that the end was near. Early in 1840, he began publication
in Boston of the first paper to advocate adventist views, the Signs
of the Times. Beginning without a single subscriber, Himes rapidly
managed to make it into a widely circulated and influential paper. It
soon spawned similar journals in New York, Philadelphia, Rochester,
Cincinnati, and other cities. To go with this barrage of printed
material, Himes brought Miller personally from the backwoods into the
largest cities of the country. Buying a huge tent, they went from place
to place holding meetings that drew thousands of people. It has been
estimated that half a million people heard Miller preach in the years
1842 to 1844 alone.
All this had a disastrous effect on the
Christian Connection in New England. Although Miller's views gained some
acceptance among members of almost all denominations, they had a
uniquely powerful impact among the Christians. Passionately convinced
that the world was coming to an end in 1843, those who accepted Miller's
teachings naturally focused their whole lives on the expected event.
They regarded that portion of the church who did not share their
fanaticism as composed, to use Miller's words, of “the worldly
professor, the Pharisee, the bigot, the proud, haughty, and selfish.”[75]
Perhaps as many as half of all the New England Christians came to
believe in the truth of Miller's prophecy of doom, and the other half
felt a growing resentment and fear, as they wondered what would happen
to their churches when 1843 came and Christ did not.
One of the most important converts to
Millerism among the Christians was Joseph Marsh, editor of the
Christian Palladium, which he turned into an adventist publication.
Joseph Badger, Campbell's old antagonist and the former editor of the
Palladium, took the opposite side against Miller. The dilemma
which Badger now faced exemplifies the problem confronting the Christian
Connection preachers who rejected adventism and sought a way effectively
to oppose it. He could not appeal authoritatively to the Bible to refute
Millerism, because, in his dispute with Campbell, he had denounced
walking “by-the Bible alone.” He could not warn of the dangers of
revivalism, because he had too often praised revivals as “the very heart
of our churches.” He could not caution his brethren that the outward
success of Miller's preaching was no guarantee of its truth, because he
had used the argument of outward success to guarantee the truth of his
own preaching. Yet, he knew Millerism was unbiblical, full of an
unhealthy emotionalism, and that its outward success proved nothing more
than how easily men will believe a lie. He kept silent. Finally, in
1842, as the furor reared toward its climax, he broke his silence in an
impassioned letter to Marsh, which, while correctly diagnosing the
problems inherent in Millerism, unconsciously indicts himself and the
Christian Connection.
A class of orators are got up who
assume uncommon sanctity, have a set of arguments founded on
mathematical calculations upon the prophecies, which common sinners are
not capable of contradicting. Another class of arguments drawn from
history, which common men have not the means at hand to contradict, are
presented; then bringing all to bear on the one great point that God
will burn up the world next year, is it strange that converts are
multiplied? They serve God for fear he will burn them up if they do not.
Take away this fear and they will hate him still. . .I do not see how we
can say it matters not what motives we present, or what means we adopt,
if we only get men to repent.[76]
As the crisis over adventism
developed, death deprived the Christian Connection of their two most
beloved leaders. Daniel Hix's long life of service came to an honored
end in May, 1838. Elijah Shaw preached his funeral in the Dartmouth
church where Hix had preached for more than half a century. His death
left a void that cannot be measured. Never traveling, more than a few
miles from his home, he spent his entire life patiently building up the
Christian churches in southeastern Massachusetts. He helped make those
churches one of the bulwarks of the Christian Connection. Far beyond the
quiet villages where he personally ministered, however, his example
reached out to enrich the churches wherever there were people who had
come in contact with his remarkable personality. At his passing, the
Christians felt a loss of stability and a separation from the great
beginnings of their movement. Shaw selected as his funeral text the
somber words of Psalms 12, “Help Lord, for the godly man ceaseth, for
the faithful fail from among the children of men.”
If the passing of Hix seemed to mark
for many Christians the end of an era, the death of Abner Jones three
years later broadened and deepened their sense of loss. Hindered by the
lingering illness of his wife and then by his own ill health, Jones had
taken a less and less active part in the life of the Christian
Connection; but he still enjoyed unique prestige as the founder of the
movement in New England. As he neared the scriptural standard of
threescore years and ten, he felt the approach of death, and
self-consciously prepared for it, as though he were an actor in a
religious play. A few weeks before the end, he preached his last sermon,
drawn from the text, “Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel, and
afterwards receive me to glory.”[77]
When he could no longer preach, or even attend worship, and feeling the
final exhaustion of his strength, he called the church to his bedside
for a last observance of the Lord's supper. There he calmly commended
his brethren to the care of God and expressed his own perfect
willingness to leave this world for a better. A few days later, on May
29, 1841, he died. He was buried in Exeter, New Hampshire, where he had
spent the last year of his life. Elijah Shaw preached his funeral sermon
just as he had that of Daniel Hix, and surely it is given to few men to
say farewell to two such friends.
Jones's character was flawed by his
restless need for emotional reassurance; and his leadership failed
either to guide those who followed him to a clear understanding of
Christianity, or to establish firmly among the Christians the crucial
goal of judging nothing in religion except by the standard of the Bible
alone, or even to preserve the Christian Connection from the
annihilation which awaited it. Yet, despite his faults and his failures,
he was a man easily loved and rightfully honored. Out of spiritual
darkness, he struggled for light. Without help or encouragement from
friends or family, without any religious instruction worthy of the name,
without even an elementary education, constantly beset by his own doubts
and fears, enduring the ridicule and contempt of those whom the world
called Christian ministers, he found the courage to embark on the great
adventure of discovering and bringing to life the teachings of Jesus.
For forty years, he continued in that endeavor. He may have strayed, but
he did not give up, even when Elias Smith deserted the cause and all but
destroyed it. That he failed is a tragedy. That he tried is a praise not
ever to be taken away from the first and the greatest of the Christians
of New England.
After Jones's death, the Christian
Connection hurried toward disaster. Through the summers of 1841 and
1842, adventist revivals spread all across the northern United States.
The contagion infected even the strongest of the Christian
congregations. No matter what happened in the heavens or on earth,
whether a meteor shower or a revolution in Turkey, the Millerites
interpreted all events as additional proofs that their prophet was right
and the end was near. They found many people gullible enough to believe
them.
By the beginning of 1843, excitement
grew into hysteria among some of the Millerites. Miller had refrained
from giving an exact date for the second coming, but he assured his
followers that it would be sometime between March 21, 1843, and the same
date the following year. As the beginning of this period drew near,
thousands of people confidently expected Jesus to come in that spring.
March 21 arrived, and nothing happened.
Undaunted, Miller confirmed to the
public in May that they were indeed living at the “end time,” and he
suggested that a likely date for Jesus to choose to appear would be
sometime during the seventh Jewish month, which worked out to be
October. Through the summer and early fall, Christian Connection
congregations in which Miller's prophecy was taught enjoyed an
intoxicating burst of popularity. Thundering revivals herded hundreds of
terrified converts into the churches to avoid the wrath of the Lamb.
When October came, the Christians turned their eyes toward the heavens,
some in hope, some in fear, some in doubt, some in ironic satire of
their brethren's credulity. Again, nothing happened.
The Millerites reminded themselves that
the prophetic year had still five months remaining to it, and they
believed that Jesus would surely come by March 21, 1844. Once more, they
waited for the great day with single-minded devotion. When the winter
passed by and Christ did not appear, they rested their hopes on March 21
itself. Many gathered in their churches on the fateful day, in hope to
be found ready to meet their Lord. Their meetings lasted all day and
into the night, until, at the stroke of midnight, they had to face the
realization that their hopes had proved false.
Miller would not accept defeat. He
re-examined the prophecies and discovered that he had miscalculated: the
prophetic year extended throughout 1844, and all signs pointed
infallibly to October 22 as the exact date of Christ's coming. Not only
did the mass of his followers believe him, but trust in Miller's
prophecy hit a new high through a summer of tremendous excitement. Many
believers who had saved a little money quit their jobs and lived on
their savings, for why should they work or save money if the world was
coming to an end in October? Some farmers in New Hampshire did not
cultivate their land; and others, who had weakly consented to plant,
found their faith grow strong enough by the end of the summer that they
refused to harvest and allowed the crops to rot in the field. One family
in Kensington, New Hampshire, bought special “ascension robes” to be
properly dressed for the occasion. Another gave away their oven, on the
grounds that raptured souls would not have to prepare food. Merchants
sold out their goods and made no effort to restock their shelves, since
store, stock, and customers were all destined soon to be burnt up in the
conflagration of the world.
Tension between those Christians who
followed Miller and those who opposed him increased to the breaking
point. The non-Millerite Christians had patiently borne with the
fanaticism of their brethren in the expectation that, when the
inevitable day of disillusionment came, they could then try to rebuild
the church. That day had come, but the adventists had incredibly refused
to be disillusioned. The Christians lost respect for one another. One
side viewed the other as hopelessly worldly, and they in turn regarded
their brethren as inexcusably foolish. Churches began to split, as some
Millerites decided that they could not worship with people who did not
share their faith. A group that left the Christian church in
Wolfeborough, New Hampshire, gave the following reasons for their
action:
First, we consider all the nominal
churches Babylon, and are commanded to come out; secondly, we view
ourselves as unequally yoked together with unbelievers, and that the
time has arrived for these bonds to be broken; thirdly, we believe that
on the tenth day of the seventh month, which is either the twenty-second
or twenty-third of October, that this world will be on fire, and Babylon
will be destroyed.[78]
Most congregations remained united, at
least on the surface, but it was becoming clear that Millerism was going
to cause permanent damage to their fellowship.
The Millerites turned away from the
world and looked to October 22 as the certain time of their hope's
fulfillment. The day came. Once again, the true believers gathered in
church buildings and meeting halls where they hoped their Lord would
find them ready. Day passed into night. In mounting tension, they prayed
their hearts out for Jesus to come. In some places, pranksters cruelly
hoaxed the nervous people by blowing horns or raising a shout outside
the churches, thus provoking a brief rapture of mistaken hallelujahs. As
it neared midnight, the tension became unbearable. Finally, the clocks
struck twelve, and to many Christians it was the most terrible sound
that they had ever heard. Their faith had proved false.
The stunned Millerites, one by one,
left the meeting places and stumbled homeward in silent despair or
inconsolable sorrow. One leader in the movement wrote, "Our fondest
hopes and expectations were blasted, and such a spirit of weeping came
over us as I never experienced before. It seemed that the loss of all
earthly friends could have been no comparison. We wept and wept till the
day
dawned.[79]
It was agony to have to face life again, to search for a new job or look
on their uncultivated fields bearing silent testimony to their
foolishness, to bear the ridicule of the world and the unwanted pity of
their saner brethren in the church. An adventist in Vermont wrote:
And now, to turn again to the cares,
perplexities, and dangers of life, in full view of jeering and reviling
unbelievers who scoffed as never before, was a terrible trial of faith
and patience. When Elder Himes visited Waterbury, Vermont, a short time
after the passing of the time, and stated that the brethren should
prepare for another cold winter, my feelings were almost uncontrollable.
I left the place of meeting and wept like a child.[80]
The Christians who had been caught up
in the Millerite excitement reacted in different ways to the
disappointment of their hopes. Some, led by J. V. Himes, refused even
then to admit that they had been fundamentally wrong. Some slight error
in calculation or misinterpretation of a prophetic symbol must have
misled them as to the precise time, but Christ was surely coming soon,
of that they were certain. They separated from the Christians and
founded their own denomination to await the end. The name they chose,
Advent Christians, sufficiently reveals the background of their members.
The denomination still exists, though with only a few thousand members;
but its historical significance lies in its role as one of the sources
from which Seventh Day Adventism arose. Himes tried predicting the end
of the world on his own in 1854, but he no longer had the magic to move
the multitudes, and the world scarcely noticed his prophecy of doom.
More damaging to the Christian
Connection than the stubbornness of men like Himes was the despair that
overwhelmed many Christians. They had put their faith totally in the
adventist hope, and now felt betrayed. Instead of blaming Miller or
their own gullibility, they blamed Christ for not coming when they
called. Many who walked away in bitterness from that last midnight vigil
never entered a church building again for the rest of their lives.
Having been deceived by a false religion, they gave up the search for a
true one.
With the departure of the Advent
Christians and the drifting away of the discouraged, the Christian
Connection in New England lost approximately half its total membership
in a single year. Many small congregations were wiped out, and larger
ones were severely crippled. The church in Dartmouth, Massachusetts,
which Daniel Hix had spent a lifetime building up, retained only seventy
of its four hundred members by the summer of 1845. More important even
than the staggering numerical losses, the Millerite disaster deprived
the Christian Connection of whatever optimism and vitality it still
possessed. It became the goal of Christian churches to survive instead
of to evangelize. They entered on a long, slow, but continual decline.
Forgetting their original principles, they came to resemble the
denominational churches around them. Habit and old loyalties kept the
churches barely alive, until one by one they closed their doors or
merged with whatever strong denominational church was close by. Finally,
in 1929, the remnant that was left joined with the Congregational
Church, now known as the United Church of Christ, thus officially ending
the history of the Christian Connection. Yet, though the funeral of
their faith lasted for almost a century, the heart of the Christian
Connection in New England died at midnight on October 22, 1844.

Epilogue
The loss of the Christian Connection
from the Restoration Movement by no means ended efforts to restore New
Testament Christianity in New England. Churches of Christ in other parts
of the country helped Restoration ideas keep at least a foothold on New
England soil.
The year after the Millerite debacle,
churches in Virginia and the Midwest sent a mission team of five
preachers to Boston to help the tiny church already meeting there become
firmly established. Like most subsequent efforts, this trip met with
only modest success. Over the next seventy-five years, more than fifty
attempts were made to establish congregations in New England. Only about
half of these churches endured for more than a few years, and the total
number existing at one time never exceeded sixteen. Progress was very
slow; and Disciple Literature contains many references to New England as
a “hard field.” Nevertheless, the churches did grow, however slowly, and
they had gained more than a thousand members by 1868, reaching a high of
nearly three thousand around 1910.
Most congregations remained very small,
but a handful achieved remarkable growth. The Church of Christ in
Danbury, Connecticut, led the way throughout the nineteenth century, and
attained a record membership of 800 in 1915, the largest congregation in
the history of the region. It was served by nationally prominent
ministers, including Isaac Errett, and had the distinction of being
visited by Alexander Campbell in 1856. In northern New England, the
strongest congregation was the one resulting from Campbell's 1836 visit
in West Rupert, Vermont. This church reached a peak membership of over
300, and enjoyed one of its most successful revivals under the preaching
of young James Garfield, later president of the United States. Despite
repeated efforts and occasional short periods of prosperity, the church
in Boston never became a stable support to the cause in New England.
Leadership in Massachusetts fell to the Main Street congregation in
Worcester, which was instrumental in establishing other churches
throughout the state. A direct link can be traced between the Christian
Connection and a number of the Disciple churches, including the one in
Worcester, which was founded by a group out of the Advent Christians.
The Disciple efforts in New England
were doomed, however, by events outside the region in the general
development of the Restoration Movement. The majority of the church,
especially in the North, grew more and more liberal in theology as the
nineteenth century drew to a close. The widespread introduction of
instrumental music into worship and the development of denominational
organizations were signs that the Disciples were abandoning their
distinctive plea for a return to New Testament Christianity. As they
came increasingly to regard themselves as just one among many
denominations of the Lord's people, the call to send missionaries to New
England seemed first unnecessary and then ridiculous. They became
anxious not to offend the denominations. As early as 1878, B. B. Tyler
held a two-week meeting in New Hampshire and never offered an
invitation, for fear he might scandalize the local clergy. With the
prevalence of such attitudes, the Disciples inevitably declined. By
1978, they claimed fellowship with ten churches in New England with a
total membership of less than a thousand. Even this probably overstates
their actual strength.
The bleakest chapter in the history of
the Disciples in New England is the role played by students who came to
the divinity schools at Harvard and especially Yale. These bright young
leaders in the church could have spread the gospel throughout New
England. Instead, they either poisoned the churches with liberalism, or
allowed them to die by neglect. Between 1872 and 1948, four hundred
Disciple students attended Yale Divinity School. They never even
established a congregation in New Haven where Yale is located. In 1907,
Harry Minnick, the preacher in Worcester, wrote to the Christian
Standard:
We need men, not to rewrite Moses, nor
correct Christ, because we have a surplus of experts engaged in that
business, but we need men who believe the gospel is the power of God
unto salvation, and who are not ashamed to proclaim it in truth and
love.[81]
He dejectedly reported that he had
solicited “a report from the brethren in New England who love the Lord,
but do not love the way some of their brethren carry on the mission
work. Only one responded . . .”
When the religious census of 1906 made
the first statistical distinction between Churches of Christ and the
more liberal Disciples, less than two hundred members were identified as
belonging to seven tiny churches of Christ in New England. Six of the
seven churches were in Maine, where the conservative influence of the
churches in the Maritime provinces of Canada extended across the border.
These congregations were plagued by the opposite extreme from
liberalism, the belligerent radicalism of Daniel Sommers, who opposed
Christian colleges, located preachers, and a great many other things.
Nevertheless, during the 1920's and 1930's, despite its difficulties,
the cause began to regain vitality and slowly to expand. By the early
1940's, small groups of Christians were known to be once again
worshipping “according to the ancient order of things” in every state in
the region.
The Second World War, the greatest
armed conflict in history, ironically did more to spread the gospel of
Christ than all the missionary schemes ever imagined. The exigencies of
war moved millions of Americans far from their homes, and made friends
and neighbors of those who would otherwise never have met. For the
largely rural members of the churches of Christ in the South, this
experience brought a new vision of the need and opportunity for world
evangelism. As a result, missionary activity multiplied in every
direction. The churches in New England have benefited from a steadily
increasing commitment of men and money from the South. At the same time,
the mobile nature of post-war American society has brought many
Christians to move to the Northeast to accept employment or to go to
school, without any conscious effort to be missionaries. These factors
have helped cause the present relative prosperity of the New England
churches, which numbered approximately seventy-five in 1980, and
included several thousand members. In addition to these, thirteen small
churches of Christ survived that used instrumental music in worship, but
still professed the goal of restoring New Testament Christianity.
Serious problems remain for the churches of Christ in New England. Their
numerical growth, when compared with the past, has been wonderful.
Compared to the eleven million people who live in New England, it seems
almost insignificant. They must find ways to reach out to the masses in
the area's cities. Despite the multiplication of congregations, they all
are small and vulnerable to the loss of a few key members. Only a
handful have elders, and the great majority receive at least some
financial aid from outside the region. Only time will tell whether or
not the new mission points will develop the maturity needed to face the
future. As with the church in all places and at all times, far more
important than other problems is the question whether or not they will
remain true to the principles of the New Testament. Every doctrinal
dispute that has upset the church elsewhere in the country has had
echoes among the New England churches. Such disputes will continue to
test their faith. Above all, the great colleges of New England, which
thinkers stretching back to Alexander Campbell have recognized as one of
the most crucial targets for evangelism in America, also continue to be
a likely source of doctrinal controversy and division.
In the issue of November 29, 1930, an
editorial appeared in the Christian Standard on the merger of the
Christian Connection with the Congregational Church. The editorial was
entitled, "The People Who Lost Their Way"; and it read in part, “There
is no more pathetic spectacle in American history than the history of
the group of Christian people and churches known as the ‘Christian
Connection.’” It is all too easy for us to see their foolish mistakes;
but do we see our own? The church can lose its way again. We are not
immune to the temptations which deceived them. We too may surrender to
emotionalism, or become so obsessed with numerical growth that we employ
error to achieve it, or go astray on some point that never even posed a
problem for the Christians. The church must be on watch.
More than a century ago, the ladies of
the Calais, Vermont Church of Christ fashioned letters to hang on the
wall behind the pulpit of their church building. They spelled out an
ancient warning taken from Proverbs 22:28, “Remove not the ancient
landmark, which thy-fathers have built.” Today, the landmark remains,
but those things for which it stood, the faith and hope of the Christian
Connection, have utterly perished. If our spiritual inheritance is to
prove any more lasting, we must teach our children to do more than
preserve our church buildings. Each generation must be confronted with
the full challenge of following Christ, for each will certainly face the
full power of sin. We must teach them to respect and follow the one
landmark which can endure forever, the word of God.

End Notes
[1] Letter dated September 10, 1784.
[2] Abner Jones, Memoirs of the Life and
Experience, Travels and Preaching of Abner Jones, (Exeter,
N.H.: Norris & Sawyer, 1807), p.12.
[6] Abner Jones, “Sketch of the
Denomination Who Claim to be Styled Christians,” Christian
Palladium, Vol. 3 (1834).
[7] Elias Smith, The Life, Conversion,
Preaching, Travels, and Sufferings of Elias Smith
(Portsmouth, N.H: Beck & Foster, 1816), p.298.
[13] A.D. Jones, Memoirs Of Elder Abner
Jones, (Boston: Crosby, 1842), p. 182.
[14] Abner Jones, Memoirs of the Life and
Experience, Travels and Preaching of Abner Jones, (Exeter,
N.H.: Norris & Sawyer, 1807), p.179.
[15] A.D. Jones, Memoirs Of Elder Abner
Jones, (Boston: Crosby, 1842), p.179.
[17] Letter to Daniel Humphreys.
[18] Elias Smith, The Life, Conversion,
Preaching, Travels, and Sufferings of Elias Smith
(Portsmouth, N.H: Beck & Foster, 1816), p.323.
[20] Warren Brown, History of Hampton
Falls, (Manchester, N.H.: Clarke, 1900), p.92.
[21] Charles Coffin, History of Boscawen
and Webster, New Hampshire, (Concord, N.H.: Republican, 1878),
p.242.
[22] I.C. Goff, aricle of unknown date in
Herald of Gospel Liberty, quoted in Stephen Andrews, A
Sketch of Elder Daniel Hix with the History of the First
Christian Church in Dartmouth, Mass. For One Hundred Years,
(New Bedford: Anthony, 1880), pp. 26-27.
[23] Edward Williams, “A History Of The
Christian Church, Woodstock, Vermont”, 1950 unpublished
monograph, p.3.
[24] Elias Smith, The Life, Conversion,
Preaching, Travels, and Sufferings of Elias Smith
(Portsmouth, N.H: Beck & Foster, 1816), p.402,403.
[26] Quoted by William Tucker, The History
of Hartford, Vermont, p. 259.
[27] Circular letter to the Christian churches
of New England, published in Herald Of Gospel Liberty,
November 10, 1808.
[28] A Sermon On New Testament Baptism,
(Exeter, N.H.: Norris & Sawyer, 1807).
[29] “Sketch of the Denomination Who Claim To
Be Styled Christians” in Christian Palladium, vol.3,
1834.
[30] Elias Smith, The Life, Conversion,
Preaching, Travels, and Sufferings of Elias Smith
(Portsmouth, N.H: Beck & Foster, 1816), p.358.
[31] Simon Clough, “An Account Of The
Christian Denomination In The United States” in Christian
Herald, vol. 10, p.66.
[32] Jones, “Sketch of the Denomination Who
Claim To Be Styled Christians” in Christian Palladium.
[33] (Exeter: Norris, 1813).
[34] Quoted in The Whole World Governed By
A Jew, etc., p.35
[35] The Whole World Governed By A Jew, etc.,
p.77
[36] Herald Of Gospel Liberty, November
10, 1808.
[37] Herald, June 23, 1809.
[38] The Life Of Pilgrim Joseph Thomas,
Containing An Accurate Account Of His Trials, Travels, and
Gospel Labours (Winchester, Va.: Foote, 1817), p.44
[39] Herald, January 17, 1812.
[40] Herald, June 23, 1809.
[41] A.D. Jones, Memoirs of Elder Abner Jones,
p.81.
[42] Stephen Andrews, A Sketch of Elder
Daniel Hix, (New Bedford: Anthony, 1880), p.25
[43] Quoted from unidentified sources in “A
History of the Christian Church, Woodstock, Vt.”, p.4
[45] Life Of Elder Mark Fernald,
(Newburyport: Payne and Pike, 1852).
[46] History of Tuftonboro, (Concord:
Rumford, 1923), p. 65.
[47] Sentiments of the Christians,
(Exeter: Brown, 1842).
[48] “A History of the Christian Church,
Woodstock, Vt.”, p.12.
[49] Christian Luminary, March, 1831.
[50] Sentiments of the Christians.
(Exeter: Brown, 1842).
[51] History Of Danbury (New York:
1896), p.300.
[52] Williston Walker, “The Sandemanians of
New England”, Annual Report of the American Historical
Association, 1901 (1902), vol. I, p.154.
[53] Christian Baptist, III (1826), p.
180
[54] Millennial Harbinger, I (1830),
pp. 63-64.
[55] Millennial Harbinger, IV (1833),
p. 471.
[56] Millennial Harbinger, VII (1836),
p.545
[57] Millennial Harbinger, VII (1836),
p.546
[58] Millennial Harbinger, VII (1836),
p.546
[59] Christian Palladium, V (1837),
p.258
[60] Christian Luminary, IV, No. 2
(December, 1834).
[61] Christian Luminary, IV, No. 2
(December, 1834).
[62] Christian Messenger, IX (1835),
p.42.
[63] Christian Messenger IX
(1835), p.42-43.
[64] Christian Messenger, VI (1832), p.
198
[65] Christian Messenger, IX (1835),
p.106
[66] Christian Messenger, IX (1835),
p.109.
[67] Christian Messenger, VIII (1834),
p.158,159.
[68] Memoir of Rev. David Millard; with
Selections from his Writings, ed. David E. Millard (Dayton:
Christian Publishing Assoc., 1874), pp. 448-449.
[69] Christian Palladium, VI (1837), p.
25
[70] Christian Palladium, VIII (1840),
p. 286.
[71] Christian Palladium, XII (1842),
p. 211.
[72] J.N. Loughborough, History Of
Wolfeborough (Wolfeborough: 1901), p. 318.
[76] E.G. Holland, Memoir of Rev. Joseph
Badger (New York: Francis, 1854), p.387.
[78] Benjamin Parker, History of
Wolfeborough (Woldeborought: 1901), p. 318.
[79] Booton Herndon, The Seventh Day: The
Story Of The Seventh-Day-Advientists (New York: McGraw-Hill,
1960), p. 49.
[81] Christian Standard, (1907), p.706.

Selected Bibliography
Andrews, Stephen; A
Sketch of Elder Daniel Hix with the History of the First
Christian Church in Dartmouth, Mass. for One Hundred Years
(New Bedford: Anthony, 1880).
Barrett, J. Pressley; The
Centennial of Religious Journalism (Dayton: Christian
Publishing Assoc., 1908).
Brown, John; Churches of
Christ (Louisville: Morton, 1904).
Christian Baptist
(Bethany, 1823-1830).
Christian Luminary
(Middlesex, Vt., 1831-1834).
Christian Messenger
(Georgetown, Ky., 1826-1844).
Christian Palladium
(Union Mills, N.Y., 1832-1857).
Christian Register and Almanac
1825, 1842 (Portsmouth).
Christian Standard
(Cincinnati, 1866 -).
Evans, Madison; Biographical
Sketches of the Pioneer Preachers of Indiana (Philadelphia:
Challen, 1862).
Fernald, Mark; Life of Elder
Mark Fernald (Newburyport: Payne, 1852).
Greene, Robert; "Progress of
Disciples of Christ in New England°"; unpublished dissertation
at Butler University (1957).
Hammond, G. R.; Album of
Christian Ministers (Le Grand, Iowa, 1915).
Herald of Gospel Liberty
(Portsmouth, 1808-1817).
Holland, E. G.; Memoir of
Rev. Joseph Badger (New York: Francis, 1854).
Humphreys,
E. W.; Memoirs of Deceased Christian Ministers (Dayton:
CPA, 1880).
Jones, Abner; Memoirs of the
Life and Experience, Travels and Preaching of Abner Jones
(Exeter, N.H.: Norris & Sawyer, 1807).
Jones, Abner; The Vision
Made Plain: A Sermon on Election and Reprobation (Danville:
Eaton, 1809).
Jones, A.D.; Memoir of Elder
Abner Jones (Boston: Crosby, 1842).
Loughborough, J. N.; Rise
and Progress of the Seventh-Day Adventists (Battle Creek:
General Conference Assoc., 1892).
Millard, David E.; Memoir of
Rev. David Millard; with Selections from his Writings
(Dayton: CPA, 1874).
Millennial Harbinger
(Bethany, 1830-1870).
Minutes of the New Hampshire
Christian Conference
(Durham, 1832).
Morrill, Milo T.; A History
of the Christian Denomination in America (Dayton: CPA,
1912).
Plummer, Frederick; The
Mystery Revealed (Exeter: Norris, 1813).
Presbytery of Springfield;
An Apology for Renouncing the Jurisdiction of the Synod of
Kentucky (Lexington; Charless, 1804).
Richardson, Robert; Memoirs
of Alexander Campbell (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1871).
Scott, William T. and Durward
T. Stokes; A History of the Christian Church in the South
(Burlington: UCC Southern Conference, 1976).
Shaw, L. J.; Memoir of Elder
Elijah Shaw (Philadelphia: Christian General Book Concern,
1852).
Smith, Elias; The Life,
Conversion, Preaching, Travels, and Sufferings of Elias Smith
(Portsmouth: Beck & Foster, 1816).
Smith, Elias; A Sermon on
New Testament Baptism (Exeter: Norris & Sawyer, 1807).
Smith, Elias; The Whole
World Governed by a Jew, or the Government of the Second Adam,
as King and Priest (Exeter, 1805).
Stinchfield, Ephraim; Some
Memoirs of the Life, Experience, and Travels of Elder Ephraim
Stinchfield (Portland: Douglas, 1819).
Taylor, Richard; "A History of
the Christian Connection in Vermont", unpublished monograph
(1977).
West, Earl I.; The Search
for the Ancient Order, vol. I (Nashville: Gospel Advocate,
1949).
West, William Garrett;
Barton Warren Stone: Early Advocate of Christian Unity
(Nashville: Disciples of Christ Historical Society, 1954).
Williams, Edward; "A History of
the Christian Church, Woodstock, Vermont", unpublished monograph
(1950).
Other useful sources included
approximately sixty town histories that contain essays on local
churches.
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