Voices; Birth-Marks; The Man and the Elephant - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Voices; Birth-Marks; The Man and the Elephant Part 33 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
The meetings were continued until the end of the week. At the closing services the audience asked that each year at the same place and season open air union services be held. So in the summer of 1800, a great camp meeting was held and the pavilion was used as the rostrum. This was the first camp meeting ever held in Christendom and the practice was continued for many years at the Gasper River Meeting House and other places in Kentucky.
The hallowing influence of "The Great Awakening" thus started, spread to other communities and eventually throughout the state and into northwestern Tennessee. Similar meetings were held by other preachers, at Masterson's Station in Fayette County, Clark's Station in Mercer, Ferguson and Chaplin chapels in Nelson, Level Woods (now Larue county), Brick Chapel in Shelby, Ebenezer in Clark, Gra.s.sy Lick in Montgomery, Muddy Creek and Foxtown in Madison, Mount Gerizim in Harrison, Thomas Meeting House in Was.h.i.+ngton (now Marion), Sandusky Station, now Pleasant Run in Marion, and Cane Ridge in Bourbon county.
The first Gasper River camp meeting held in the summer of 1800 was attended by a great mult.i.tude and proved a success. Baptist, Methodist and Presbyterian preachers were each given the opportunity to expound their particular doctrine. There were many conversions and among them several who in later years became distinguished preachers.
In the early summer of 1801, Father Rice, James McCready and Calvin Campbell conducted a great camp meeting in the c.u.mberland country.
Rumors of its success spread throughout Kentucky and many men rode weary miles through lonely forest trails to attend.
Among those who came a great way, was Barton W. Stone. In 1796 he had been licensed by the Orange Presbytery of North Carolina. Soon afterwards, emigrating to Kentucky he settled in Bourbon county and occasionally preached for the Cane Ridge and Concord churches. He was ordained in 1798 by the Transylvania Presbytery and received a unanimous call to become the pastor of these two churches.
Greatly impressed by the good work done at the camp meeting; filled with the spirit which took possession of all, the refined as well as the uneducated, he returned to his congregations and relating his experiences, fired them with the zeal of the meeting which yet inspired him; and by his preaching produced upon them the same effect, even to "the jerks," or bodily demonstrations.
They decided to hold a camp meeting of their own; and did so from August 6 to 13, 1801, near Cane Ridge church, in a grove seven miles east of Paris. It was attended by more than twenty-five thousand persons and it is yet historically known as "The Great Cane Ridge Camp Meeting."
Some even attended from Cincinnati and points north. They came on foot, on horseback and in all sorts of conveyances. Eleven hundred and forty-three vehicles were counted at the meeting; five hundred candles besides many lamps and fires were used for illumination; and more than three thousand persons, mostly men, were said to have made confessions and to have subsequently united with some church.
Among the Presbyterian preachers heard at the camp meeting were Father Rice, Barton W. Stone, Robert Marshall, Joseph P. Howe, who led the singing, and Calvin Campbell. Though the movement was inst.i.tuted by Stone, then a Presbyterian, it was for all purposes a union service and the great crowd was addressed by Methodist and Baptist preachers as frequently as by Presbyterian.
As evidencing the interest manifested, it is conservatively estimated that more than one-tenth of the total population of the state attended the meeting. The census of 1800 gave the population of Kentucky at 220,955, and many estimated the crowd in attendance at exceeding 25,000.
The fifth day of the meeting was known as Roger Williams or Baptist day and only Baptist preachers were heard. The crowd was so great that three different congregations were addressed at a time. The princ.i.p.al sermon was preached by John Gano.
The sixth day of the meeting was known as John Wesley or Methodist day and only Methodist ministers spoke. The chief service was conducted by William Burke.
Sunday, August 9, was known as John Calvin day; and John Calvin Campbell conducted the afternoon service. He was mentally and physically in his prime; a man of great spirituality, great mental force, great voice and untirable physically. To his preaching was attributed the beginning of The Great Awakening, now sweeping Kentucky and marvelous tales were told of him and his work. As the crowd was very great, arrangements were made for others to address overflow meetings, including Barton Stone and Robert Marshall, both of whom were very able preachers; but when it became evident that the crowd wished to hear Calvin Campbell and that the range of his voice was such that all might hear him if closely grouped, the other meetings were dismissed and all gathered to hear him.
It was said that more than eight thousand persons listened in marked attention to his sermon.
The scripture lesson was taken from the seventeenth chapter of Acts. His text was "Paul in Athens" or "Wors.h.i.+pping Our Own Handiwork" and a portion of the sermon is preserved.
"Paul, driven from Thessalonica, departed for Corinth. On the way he stopped at Athens waiting for Timothy and Silas.
"Visit the grave of the great, the tomb of one of the Pharaohs, and though you know the body is long since dust, you feel the spirit of a reflective greatness. Thus Paul visiting Athens must have been impressed by the mother of art, eloquence and philosophy. Decadent Athens, her liberty gone, paying tribute to Caesar. Even a Caesar could not take away the heritage of the children of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle; this her citizens alone could rob themselves of; and this they were doing by wors.h.i.+pping false G.o.ds, by following the precepts of an Epicurean philosophy, and by vain, wordy babbling. They still thought Athens the abode of wisdom, and like children of the great, still thought themselves the world's great thinkers and philosophers because their fathers had been; when as Paul puts it, 'They spent their time in nothing else but either to tell or to hear some new thing;' piling words on words, metaphysical and unfathomable; and knowing nothing of the beginning of wisdom, which is to fear the Lord and depart from evil.
"Paul's biographer tells us that, 'His spirit was stirred when he saw the city full of idols;' G.o.ds of gold and silver and stone, with even a shrine to THE UNKNOWN G.o.d.
"Though such sights would have stimulated our curiosity, Paul had seen enough. There was work to do; he could not remain silent; and spoke first in the synagogues and the Agora, the market place. Then he was taken to the Areopagus. North of the market place was the Areopagus or Mars Hill, a spur of the Acropolis which towered three hundred feet higher and on which stood the citadel, the Parthenon and the Temple of Winged Victory. Whether Paul spoke from the top of Mars Hill or the Athenian Council, which having in earlier days met on the Areopagus and for that reason was so called, is immaterial. We know he spoke to an Athenian audience, who were curious to hear from a Jewish Socrates, a new man on a new subject, THE UNKNOWN G.o.d.
"From the summary of his discourse we know it was framed upon that pedagogical dictum that one should proceed from the known to the unknown. That he talked first of their G.o.ds, of their poets, of their belief that there was an unknown G.o.d; then of a universal G.o.d, unknown to them, but known to him, of Christ, of the resurrection. He quoted from their poet Epimenides; and considering the subject, we have a right to a.s.sume that he quoted from his own prophet, Isaiah. How a man taketh an ash log, and with part thereof he roasteth flesh 'and is satisfied; yea he warmeth himself and saith, Aha I am warm, I have seen the fire; and the residue thereof he maketh a G.o.d, even a graven image; he falleth down unto it, and wors.h.i.+ppeth it, and prayeth unto it, and saith, Deliver me, for thou art my G.o.d.'
"But man is wrong. G.o.d dwelleth not in temples made with hands. G.o.d is not an image of gold or silver or stone; but himself made the earth and all things therein; and in him we live and move and have our being.
"When Paul talked to them, not of G.o.ds of appet.i.te and ambition, which sometimes rule in our hearts, or of hand made G.o.ds, such as decorated the streets of Athens and were enshrined in their temples, which even while we wors.h.i.+p have a habit of disintegrating to dust and ashes, but of the Divine Creator, the Universal G.o.d, the Bountiful Giver, the Almighty Ruler, the Unseen Spirit, the Tender Father, the Righteous Judge, they called him a babbler; and when he spoke of the Eternal Son of G.o.d and the resurrection, many of them mocked, some said we will hear you again-and a few believed.
"Until he came to Athens, the opposition he had met was Jewish prejudice and mob violence; it was a tangible thing; but at Athens he encountered something harder to overcome, philosophy, conceit, contempt. Having delivered his message, discouraged, he departed in sorrow.
"We have heard many times the expression, 'When Greek meets Greek, then comes the tug of war.' That day in the Areopagus Paul started a tug of war that shall continue long after we and what we know of the tangible handiwork of man is in dust and ashes; started it because his spirit was troubled at beholding that the world's greatest city intellectually, was given over to idol wors.h.i.+p. His discourse on Mars Hill, or if you prefer in the Athenian Council, started the conflict between pagan philosophies and Christianity; and while Christianity prevailed, the converts from paganism brought into it too much of the metaphysical, the doctrinal, and that simple faith become contaminated by what was borrowed from these philosophies.
"The Epicureans taught that pleasure is the only possible end of rational action. They believed that everything started from an atom.
That the G.o.ds were not interested in men and that there was no future life.
"The Stoics believed in the school of philosophy founded by Zeno. That man should submit to the inevitable; they were fatalists; did not believe in exhibiting joy or sorrow; lived lives of sternness and austerity and many believed in the immortality of the soul.
"Athens, a city posing as the most enlightened, where polemics and philosophers gathered to discuss metaphysical questions, did not relish being told by a barbarian, a mere Jew, that all they believed in and argued about was false; and that he knew things unknown to them; of a G.o.d concerning whom they had never heard. He discoursed of G.o.d, Christ, the resurrection, the unity of mankind, the sovereignty of G.o.d. He told of G.o.d the Father, whose habitation was not made with hands; who had made of one blood all nations and had fixed the bounds of their habitation. A G.o.d easily found because always near; and through whom we live and move and have our being. This being true, how foolish to wors.h.i.+p G.o.ds of our own make. Rather let us wors.h.i.+p the G.o.d I wors.h.i.+p and whom I preach unto you; the G.o.d that made YOU. Then he spoke of the love of G.o.d for man; how he gave his Son as a vicarious atonement; how that Son living as a man among men, taught that a life of selfish pleasure, Epicureanism, was a sin; and that fatalism, Stoicism, was remorse without faith or hope. Then how that Son, crucified for men that they might live, rose and returned from the land of silence, a messenger to those who loved and trusted him, that they might have a pledge of glory and honor and immortality.
"But the 'superior persons' who in that day peopled Athens, were harder to win than the barbarians of Lycaonia, the land of the wolves, because they were men of intellectual sensitiveness and dead hearts; men who, though they do not know it, live in the dark and after death reaching out find nothing to lay hold on. Though as Paul says, G.o.d is not far from any one, He is farthest from them. G.o.d tempers the wind to the shorn lamb and those that hear best and are nearest are those who have fresh and simple hearts like children and heathen; for them the way is made straight and plain.
"That day on Mars Hill, Paul preached but three things: 'Idolatry is foolish-Given the new light you must repent-On an appointed day you will be judged by Jesus, the righteous judge.'
"The application of the lesson I can put in a simple question: How many of us today are as the Athenians, wors.h.i.+pping false G.o.ds and spending our time in nothing else but either to tell or to hear some new thing?
How many of us seeking new things are willing to trade the old lamp, the faith of our fathers, for a new one; even though the old is infinitely greater than Aladdin's, when the new will prove a will o' the wisp, a delusion and a snare.
"Suppose Paul should come to Lexington and spend a day or two looking about; would he say of the people of Lexington as of Athens: 'Still spending your time in nothing else but either to tell or to hear some new thing;' still seeking false G.o.ds. He might strengthen the charge: Still lovers of pleasure more than lovers of G.o.d; though the price of the Gospels is a farthing and all know of the mission of Christ and its fulfillment.
"What he told to the Athenians was a new story; many mocked, some said we will hear you again-a few believed. But Athens was Athens after Paul left. What Paul told to them is to us an old story. Do we love it? Do we love to tell it? We can hear it and mock and delay. We cannot tell it unless we believe.
"Listen to the word of G.o.d:
"'Where is the wise? where is the scribe? where is the disputer of this world? Hath not G.o.d made foolish the wisdom of this world? For after that in the wisdom of G.o.d the world by wisdom knew not G.o.d, it pleased G.o.d by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe. For the Jews require a sign and the Greeks seek after wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling block and unto the Greeks foolishness but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of G.o.d and the wisdom of G.o.d * * * but G.o.d hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise and G.o.d hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things that are mighty; * * *
that no flesh should glory in his presence. * * * That according as it is written, he that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.'"
The Rev. Calvin Campbell continued his preaching for more than an hour and it resulted in the conversion of some souls. Though many said his views were not wholly orthodox; all agreed that he preached the essentials of Christianity and was a faithful amba.s.sador of his Lord.
The effect of the "Great Awakening" was evidenced by the remarkable growth of the churches during and just succeeding it. The Baptists, then as now the strongest religious denomination in the State, exhibited a phenomenal growth. The Elkhorn a.s.sociation at its annual meeting in 1801 reported 3,011 new members during the current year. The South Kentucky a.s.sociation reported a practically similar growth; the Tate Creek a.s.sociation 1,148 new members, the Salem a.s.sociation more than 2,000 new members, and the Green River a.s.sociation, organized in 1800 with 350 members, increased to over one thousand in less than a year.
Although much criticism attaches to the physical demonstrations as contrary to a sober Christian faith; there is no doubt but that these meetings were most potent in the development of a serious Kentucky spirit. It is estimated that at least half the population of the state was brought directly under their influence and their minds lifted from material to spiritual things. Thousands were converted who otherwise would never have attended a religious service. It would be a very narrow person who would condemn the great good done because of the attendant physical demonstrations.
Another result of these meetings was to revive the anti-slavery movement, which had been put to sleep by the action of the First Const.i.tutional Convention.
This movement a.s.sumed a tangible form, when in 1804 an organization of Baptist ministers calling themselves "Friends of Humanity," but known to others as "Emanc.i.p.ators," declared with the members of their churches for the abolition of slavery: "* * * that no fellows.h.i.+p should be extended to slaveholders, as slavery in every branch of it, both in principle and in practice, was a sinful and abominable system, fraught with peculiar evils and miseries, which every man ought to abandon and bear testimony against."
The Baptist Church, acting upon the matter, in a.s.sembly decided it was: "* * * improper for ministers, churches or a.s.sociations to meddle with the emanc.i.p.ation of slavery or any other political subject," and by resolution advised their ministers to have nothing to do with it in their religious capacity.
This resolution was offensive to the Friends of Humanity and they withdrew from the organization of the church. In 1807 they formed an a.s.sociation of their own, calling it "The Baptist Licking-Locust a.s.sociation, Friends of Humanity." Strong at the time of organization they soon dwindled in numbers, and in a few years the name became a mere memory.
Though Presbyterian preachers inst.i.tuted the series of meetings which resulted in the "Great Awakening" and were active at all the camp meetings, their denomination profited less, numerically, than either the Baptist or the Methodist.
The reason was that several of their most influential preachers, Barton W. Stone, Robert Marshall, John Dunlavy, Richard McNemar and John Thompson, began preaching certain schisms, contrary to Calvinism.
The orthodox of the church were not only worried but frightened by the growth of the schism of doctrine. For a long time they dared not oppose it, thinking that it would split the church. It was first officially considered by the Presbytery of Springfield, who placed Richard McNemar under dealings.
When the Kentucky synod met in Lexington on September 6, 1803, with Samuel Shannon as moderator, he called the attention of the body to a pet.i.tion signed by eighty Presbyterians and letters from Mr. William Lamme, charging that Revs. Richard McNemar and John Thompson, of Was.h.i.+ngton Presbytery, were promulgating erroneous doctrines and that their Presbytery had refused to consider the pet.i.tion implicating their orthodoxy. The synod decided to enter upon an examination and trial of the two members.
When this vote was announced they with Barton W. Stone, Robert Marshall and John Dunlavy protested and withdrew.
Two days later those withdrawing announced they had formed an organization of their own, which they called the Springfield Synod.