INTRODUCTORY ESSAY
THE comparatively little interest taken by the world, and even by professed Christians, in Church History, is truly astonishing. In how small a proportion of the, not to say libraries, but houses of such can a book, purporting to be a Church History, be found! And in what profound ignorance of the history of Christianity is the world to-day! That non-professing men should take so little interest in Church History is indeed strange, that Christians should be indifferent to it is unaccountably so. An ancient historian justly remarks:
"Nothing can be more becoming a Christian than a general
knowledge of Church History. It is a
shame, that most of those who profess Christianity should be acquainted not
only with the History of their own country, but even with that of the remotest
nations, which only serves to satisfy their curiosity; and should at the same
time know nothing of Church History, whence they may draw such light as may be
conducive to their salvation. What
advantage may not be reaped from it? It
teaches us religion, it shows us what we are to believe and practice, what
errors are to be rejected, what things we are to imitate; it furnishes us with
abundance of examples of heroic virtue, and instructs in duty. It is a great
abuse that the study of it is so much neglected. Men are very careful to
instruct their children in profane history, which very often only serves to
spoil their minds and corrupt their manners, and they leave them altogether
ignorant of the history of Jesus Christ and his Church. Worldly people read the ancient and modem
histories of nations and countries, without casting their eyes upon the Gospel,
the Acts of the Apostles, and those historians who have writ what have happened
concerning religion."*
Excepting the study of the Bible, the life and teaching of Christ,
the teachings and Acts of his Apostles, what study can or should be more
delightful or more intensely interesting to the Christian than the study of the
history of the churches which succeeded those planted in the days of the
Apostles, and…
* Du Pin, vol.
pp. 238-9.
…which have existed, preserving a pure faith and a pure practice
through centuries of the fiercest persecutions and martyrdoms, unto this
time? Are not Christians concerned to
know whether that prophecy, concerning the Kingdom of Christ, spoken by Daniel
2:44, has thus far been fulfilled? If we understand the prophet he foretells
the setting-up of a kingdom in the days of the kings of the fourth universal
Empire the Roman—which was never to be broken in pieces—utterly disorganized—or
given to another people, but to stand forever and ultimately fill the whole
earth. Was there a kingdom set up in the days of the Caesars by the God of
Heaven? Has that kingdom, or organizations
in all respects similar to it, existed from the days of Christ until now? And
has it been composed of the same class and character of people during all
subsequent ages until this time?
Ought not Christians to interest themselves to learn the fulfillment
of those promises of Christ himself concerning his Church and people? "The
gates of hell shall not prevail against it," "lo, I am with you alway
even unto the end." These promises
certainly secure the integrity and perpetuity of churches of Christ in and
through all subsequent ages, even unto the end of this dispensation. Says Dr.
S. Miller, "This promise seems to secure to his people that there shall
be, in all ages, in the worst of times, a substantially pure Church; that is,
there shall always be a body of people more or less numerous, who shall hold
just the doctrines and order of Christ's house, in some good degree, in
conformity with the model of the primitive Church. Accordingly, it is not
difficult to show that, ever since the rise of the 'Man of Sin' there has been
a succession of those whom the Scriptures style 'Witnesses for God’-‘Witnesses
for the truth,' who have kept alive 'the faith once declared to the Saints,'
and have in some good degree of faithfulness, maintained the ordinance and
discipline which the inspired apostles, in the Master's name committed to the
keeping of the Church."*
The Christian who reads and so understands this promise, must feel
a painful solicitude touching the history of his brethren—that company of
faithful and true witnesses who have preceded him—and especially knowing as he
does, that the powers of darkness and the gates of hell have ceased not in
their attempts to prevail against them; that Apostate Rome, for nearly 1260
years, has employed armies and crusades, inquisitions and tortures, prisons,
famine and the stake, to break in pieces this…
* Recommendatory
Letter to Dr. Baird, p. 1.
…kingdom, and utterly exterminate these witness throughout the
world:-to consummate that work which Pagan Rome attempted ages before him. Will not the Christian ask, who have been
these suffering witnesses during the past eighteen centuries? In what lands of
earth have they been fed for these twelve hundred and sixty prophetic days,—and
by what countries has the bride or Christ been "nourished from the face of
the serpent—in the mountains and caves, and forests of what wilderness,"
has she been securely hid by the Saviour from their hand?
Will not the Christian desire to know the gracious manner in which
the Saviour has thus far fulfilled his promise to his followers in the fearful
ages of persecutions past? Will not the questions rise within him, "How
grievous were the trials, how merciless the persecutions, how intense the
sufferings, how many and great the sacrifices which those who have kept the
testimony of Jesus, have been called upon to undergo, since the days of the
last Apostles,—and what have been the faith id patience of the Saints during
them all?"
And having ascertained the sources from whence the history of such
a people can be gathered, will he not be moved, owing to the present distracted
state of Christendom and the conflicting claims of modern sects, to belong to
the family of Christian churches, to inquire with great carefulness, "what
were the peculiar doctrines which in every age distinguished this unbroken body
of witnesses,—under what form of Church government did they exist, how did they
observe the ordinances God's house,—did they admit of human traditions,—did
they recognize human legislation in the churches,—and in what light did they
regard, and with what measure of charity treat lose persons and powers that
opposed them with human and worldly organizations, into which they sought to
coerce men? The right answers to these inquiries would at once determine which
one, of all the different opposing denominations in this our day, can claim
kindredship with those two witnesses, and are therefore the legitimate and only
surviving heirs to the promises of the "Lord Messiah," to his Church.
Are not these en questions of paramount concern to all denominations—since, if
not from the New Testament, certainly, from the history of these, the form,
subjects, ordinances and doctrines of the true Churches of Christ can be
learned?
If the solutions of the above questions could be ascertained from
the pages of Church history—and they undoubtedly can from one faithfully
written—would they not immensely strengthen the faith of the Christian? Would
they not tend to add immeasurably to their boldness "and the faithfulness of
their testimony for Christ, to their zeal and sacrificing in the kingdom and
patience of the Saints? Would not the unshrinking faith, the heroic virtue, and
patient sufferings of his brethren, the martyrs, through such ages of
inconceivable afflictions and wrongs, loudly reprove his own sinful
luck-warmness, repinings and murmurings, when called upon to "endure but a
little hardness as a good soldier of Christ?" When he has learned by the
light of God's Word and the History of his people, that he is indeed a member
of the same household, resting upon the same immutable rock upon which apostles
and martyrs, so securely based, were grounded through ages of such fearful
whirlwinds of Pagan enmity and Papal wrath, will he not feel indeed a thousand
fold more confidence in the immutability of his foundation, and more
confidently challenge the malice of devils, and the "gates of hell"
to "shake his sure repose?" And will he not, from the mouths and
lives of those whom Christ himself pronounces "faithful and true
witnesses," learn how to testify against all informal and corrupt
churches" in this our day—against human traditions, and mutilated and
profaned church ordinances, and those who impiously presume to enact laws in
place of Christ, and to change the order of his Church?
The study of the history and lives and testimony of those
preceding us, who have been accounted "faithful and true," is
certainly praiseworthy and of great advantage.
Did not Paul recount the faith, and sufferings, and patience of the holy
men and prophets who had lived before his day to animate the zeal of his
brethren? Did he not intimate that they were, through their whole Christian
race, being inspected by that "so great a cloud of witnesses" who,
from their blissful seats, were gazing intently down upon them, and ready to
receive the victors with triumphant shouts and acclaims of joy? Surely with advantage may we then study the
history of the holy men and martyrs through whom the church of Christ, and its
doctrines and ordinances, have been transmitted to us in their primitive
integrity and purity; and with profit may contemplate their lives and their
sufferings, their patience in trials and their triumphs in death—all having
been made more than conquerors through him who was with them to the last.
Their history introduces us to the countries—not that they
inhabited, not in which were their homes, but in which they were pilgrims and
strangers, as it were—in which were their refuges and hiding places from the
face of their pursuers. Who can imagine the feelings of the Christian traveler
visiting those Alpine vallies in which the witnesses of Jesus were hid and
nourished in those fearful times, descrying here and there the foundations upon
which, traditions tell him, once stood their houses of worship, and from which
they were driven by their enemies—and then gazing upward to the "munitions
of rocks," the cloud-capped citadels of the everlasting hills to which
they fled for refuge, as into the very bosom of their God! Or wandering through
those mountains and deep forests, he enters, perhaps, the very caverns in which
they hid, and which they made to echo—not with murmurs and complainings, but
with the voice of worship, songs of praise, and "their hymns of lofty
cheer." Cold and insensible must be that heart whose piety would not be
rebuked, and whose zeal would not be energized by the contemplation of scenes
hallowed by such memories! If a visit to the homes of the ancient patriots and
philosophers of Athens, the rostrums from which they spoke, the groves in which
they taught, and the tombs in which they slept, could so inflame the ardor of
Cicero in the imitation of their virtues,* how must a visit to the vales of
Piedmont, and the mountains of Wales affect the heart and influence the life of
a Christian! And yet in all the
pilgrimages of modern times, to scenes of sacred history, never do we hear of
one to the valleys of Pragela, or St. Martins, of Perouse, Angrogne, or
Luserne.
The little interest felt in, and the almost universal ignorance of
Church history, are attributable to the unfaithfulness of those who have
professed to write it. There ever has
been more or less anxiety on the part of Christians to inquire into the history
of the churches that have preceded them, but while they have asked for bread,
they have received a stone, and a scorpion for an egg.
Seventeen centuries of the Christian era have passed, and the
history of the Christian church is still unwritten; while a thousand works have
been palmed upon the world for Church Histories. The only true history of Christian churches that has been extant
during these centuries, are the Acts of the Apostles by Luke, and the prophetic
history of the Church by John, the beloved disciple, and was this last but
thoroughly understood, no other history would be necessary; unless to…
* "Movemur
nescio quo pacto, locis ipsis, in quibus eorum quos diligimus, aut admiramur,
adsunt vestigia. Me quidem apsae illae nostrae Athenae non tam operibus
magnificis, exquisitisque antiquorum artibus delectas, quam recordatione
summorum viorum, ubi quisque habitare, ubi sedare, ubi disputare solitus sit;
studiosque eorum etiam sepulchra contemplor, &c. Cic. de Legibus.
…show the world with what particularity and faithfulness Christ
has fulfilled its predictions. As we have said, tomes and epitomes of books,
purporting to be Church Histories, have been written, and each year adds to
their number, but still, not until within a few years past has a solitary
effort been made upon the proper basis, or in the right direction. The Church
Histories with which our book stores are crowded, were written by
Paedobaptists, and they wear a falsehood upon their very title pages, as
samples of their contents.
Do Paedobaptists regard the Romish Church as the Church of Christ,
or the trunk or even branch of the true church? They certainly do not, if their
standards are the exponents of their views.
Since this has lately become a question of vital importance with
all Paedobaptist sects, we quote the language of Dr. Beman, in the Genl.
Assembly of the N. S. Pres., Church, 1854, to establish our position.
"Our standards declare the Pope to be Anti-Christ, and that
his ministers must be excluded from the Christian ministry. Let us not shrink
from the conclusion which flows from this principle; the Scriptures have
declared this thing: Rome is the scarlet harlot, riding on the beast with seven
heads and ten horns. This Church is drunk with the blood of saints." This
is most unquestionably so; all Protestant sects so affirm. Now, if that Church
has been manifestly Anti-Christ, since it has been under the jurisdiction of
the Pope, then has it been Anti-Christ since the year 606, when the first
bishop of Rome assumed the name of universal bishop, and for the first time
begirt himself with both swords. But
for full three hundred years before 606—from the time of the Pure
Secession—this Church was a corrupt secularized hierarchy, without the least
claims to be considered a Church of Christ.
How then do these facts bear upon the subject before us? Evidently the
history of this "Man of Sin"—this "Son of
Perdition"—"THIS ANTI-CHRIST"—has been written and palmed off
upon the world for the History of the Churches of Christ! Was ever any thing
one-half so preposterous?
Historians acknowledge the New Testament to be an authentic
history of the Church until its Canon closes, A.D. 100. Commencing with this
date, they trace its history down for two centuries, when the first secession
took place, when the Puritans—who maintained the primitive simplicity and
integrity of church government and of the ordinances—repudiated the claims of
the corrupt party to be considered a church, although assuming to be, par
excellence, the Church Catholic.
This corrupt party, which called itself, so early as the fourth
century, the Catholic Church, in 606 became the Roman Catholic Church,
anathematizing all who dissented from it as heretics, and consigning them to
destruction. All Pedobaptist historians have recognized the impious claims of
the Catholics to be the Church, and have written their history for the history
of the Church of Christ, down to the sixteenth century, and then reformed the
churches of Christ out of the bosom of the Mother of Harlots! Examine the standard Church histories of
our day, and mark, they all include the history of sixteen centuries; thirteen
of which belong to the Catholic and Romish Church, and only two of the sixteen
to the Church of Christ. It is no longer strange that the world is so
profoundly ignorant of Church History. It is not strange that the people are
disgusted with the books that purport to be Church Histories, and have
"wondered after the Beast," with whose history they have been
surfeited. Do not such histories wear a falsehood on their title pages? Dr.
Beman, pursuing this same track, writes a history, and calls it a "History
of the Church of Christ." His history includes sixteen centuries; you ask
him as a historian, if his book is a correct history of the Church of Christ
during these sixteen centuries, and he avers that it is. You ask him as a theologian, if this party,
the history of which he has written from A.D. 300, to A.D. 1600, is the Church
of Christ, and he answers you with great warmth and indignation;—"No, sir,
it is Anti-Christ; it is the scarlet harlot riding on the beast with seven
heads and ten horns; she is drunk with the blood of saints." Why then,
sir, have you written the history of Anti-Christ, instead of the history of the
Churches of Christ, for Church History? And what can Dr. Beman, or all the
doctors of Presbyterianism in the world, answer? The question is involved in
inextricable difficulties. It is a fearful question for them; it devolves awful
consequences upon them.
A little history connected with the last N. S. Presbyterian
General Assembly, which held its session in Buffalo, May, 1854, will illustrate
this, and it ought not to be allowed to pass without improvement.
A query was introduced into that body to this effect:—Are Romish
baptisms and ordinations valid? A
Committee of junior and senior patriarchs, was sent out to report an answer.
They failed to agree. The majority reported negatively. But there were sundry
gray-haired doctors, who saw the logical consequences that lay behind such a
decision, and indeed, any decision they as Pedobaptists could make; and those
consequences would certainly be precipitated upon them by their Baptist friends
and Catholic foes.
The reports were read in the Assembly, and a warm discussion ensued. Unfortunately, very little of that
discussion has been given to the public; but the positions taken by the two
parties were substantially these:
The majority reported that all ordinances at the hands of Romish
priests were invalid, because the Romish Catholic Church was no Church of
Christ, and no part or branch of Christ's Church; but manifest Anti-Christ—the
scarlet harlot riding on the beast with seven heads and ten horns, drunk with
the blood of saints; the baptism and ordinations of such an apostate body are
null and void; and to pronounce them valid, is to pronounce the Romish Church
the Church of Christ; and more, to involve Presbyterians and all Protestant
sects in the guilt of schism, since they rent the body of Christ when they came
out of Rome!
But the party who sustained the minority report, or were
unfavorable to a decision, urged on the other hand:—If you deny the Church of
Rome to be a true Church, and decide that her baptisms and ordinations are
invalid, then do we to all intents and purposes unchurch ourselves, unless we
can baptize the- ashes of Luther and Calvin, from whom we have received our
baptisms and ordinations! If the
baptisms and ordinations of Antichrist, of the Man of Sin, and Son of Perdition
are invalid, then Luther and Calvin were unbaptized, as were all the members
that composed the first churches of the Reformation! then were they unordained,
and consequently had no authority to baptize their followers, or ordain other
ministers to follow them; in a word, all Protestant societies are unbaptized
bodies, and consequently no Churches of Christ, since a body of unbaptized
persons, however pious, cannot be considered a Church; all Protestant ministers
are both unbaptized and unordained , and consequently unauthorized to preach
officially and administer the ordinances.
Thus we see the trilemma into which the query precipitated them.
To decide that "Antichrist," "the Man of Sin,"
"the Mother of Harlots" is a true Church of Christ, would be a
monstrous solecism. But this would
convict all Protestant sects of sin, and destroy at once every claim they could
set up to be churches of Christ; for they confess themselves schismatics.
2. To decide that the Romish apostacy is not the true Church of Christ, is to decide that all her ordinances are invalid, and consequently that all Protestant societies are bodies of unbaptized persons, and therefore not churches of Christ, and all Protestant ministers are both unbaptized and unordained, and consequently unauthorized either to preach or administer the ordinances.
3. To say that we cannot decide a question so manifest, will arouse the attention of the people, and awaken their suspicion, at once, that there is a great wrong and a great failure about Protestant churches somewhere.
Finding that they could not extricate themselves from this labyrinth of fatal consequences, they moved an indefinite postponement of the question! Their membership which they have led into their societies, and the world which they are now using every possible effort to entice into their societies, should loudly and constantly demand of them to decide whether the Romish apostacy is a true Church of Christ or not, for let Protestant societies decide it affirmatively or negatively, according to their own admissions, they equally cut off all their own claims to be considered Christian Churches!*
It is "high time" for the history of the Church of Christ to be written. The world has quite long enough wondered after the Beast, and the Church of Christ left in the obscurity of the wilderness. One thing settled by the late discussion in the Presbyterian Assembly, is that no Protestant can write
the history of the Christian Church! Unless he writes the history of the Romish church, he has no church to write about for sixteen centuries,—until the Reformation of Luther. He may well be asked, Had Christ no church, no witnesses in the world during the roll of one thousand five hundred years? and if he had, why did not Luther and Calvin unite themselves and their followers to the then existing Christian churches, instead of setting up rival churches,—originating new and never before heard of, schemes of church governments, and thus distracting Christendom.
If the world is ever favored with a faithful history of Christian Churches, it will receive it from Baptists, and that history will rest upon a new basis, and will look after communities of Christians from the third to the sixteenth, and down to the nineteenth centuries, far different from Catholics of the former period or the Protestants of the latter.
During the last thirty years, several efforts have been made in the right direction. Robert Robinson, in his History of Baptism and Ecclesiastical Researches, aided in indicating the…
* Let all Baptists and Baptist ministers everywhere
constantly call the attention of the people to this trilemma.
…direction such a work should take. Wm. Jones, with the light
thrown upon his path by Paul Perrin, and Robinson, did still more, and left us,
not a complete but a valuable church history.
But the most valuable chronological history of the Churches of
Christ, now extant, and excepting Jones's, the only one passing over eighteen
centuries, that deserves the name of Church History, now before the Christian
world, is the one we now present to the American public for the first time, in
a reprint. A full, philosophic history, it claims not to be, but it does claim
to prove, by the most unquestionable authorities, the existence of large
communities of Baptists, in the various countries of Europe, and a succession
of them from the earliest ages down to the present time; and we think the
author has been successful. It has been before the public in England for
several years, and if its authority has been questioned we have the fact to
learn.
It is a history especially needed by Baptists, to assist them in
replying to the taunting interrogations of Paedobaptists, "Where were you
before the days of Roger Williams, or before the days of Muncer?"
In the standard denominational publications issuing from their
"Book Concerns" and Publication Societies, they teach the world that
Baptists originated about the time of the Munster rebellion, and were the
ringleaders and chief actors in it! It is time for the public to be so well informed,
as to be able to give the retailers of such scandal the rebuke they deserve.
The reasons that induced the author to prepare this work—the
sources from which he drew his facts—the directions in which he looked for the
communities of Christians whose history he has compiled—the principles by which
he has determined their religious character, and the unshaken confidence he has
in his authorities, and the conclusions to which he has arrived, he has briefly
set forth in an "advertisement," from which we make the following
extracts:
"WHILE on a visit to a friend in Somersetshire, in 1823, a
minister of the Independent persuasion panegyrized Dr. Carey to me and others,
as the individual who raised the Baptists out of obscurity; and further remarked,
that 'they had no existence before the days of the Commonwealth.' The
respectability and age of the minister did not allow me, a young man, and
unacquainted as I was with our history, to negative his assertion, only by a
relieving hint, 'that from the days of John the Baptist, until now,' I believed
our denomination had had an existence. I was resolved to be satisfied on this
subject, particularly since this assertion has appeared in print; but there was
no volume to which I could be directed, that would meet the inquiries and
solicitude of my mind. Mr. Ivimey's
work was of the English Baptists; Mr. Crosby's was of the same character; Mr.
Danvers enters into
the question, but gives no historic connexion. I wrote to Mr.
Jones, author of the History of the Christian Church, and his work (on his
recommendation) I procured; and this valuable history gave me the clue to the
church of God. I had now to ascertain the views the different parties
advocated, which cost me very considerable application, and the result fully
satisfied my inquiries. After some years' reading, and making extracts from
authors, on the subject of my investigation, I resolved on throwing my
materials into chronological order, to exhibit the feature of a connected
history. This done, I became fully satisfied; and established the proof of what
Robinson conjectured, that 'the English Baptists, contending for the
sufficiency of Scripture, and for Christian liberty to judge of its meaning,
can be traced back, in authentic documents, to the first Nonconformists and to
the Apostles.'
"In the course of my reading, materials so accumulated on my
hands as to enable me to furnish facts sufficient to make a compendious history
of the Baptists in various provinces; from their rise to their being scattered
or extinguished; and which facts are submitted in the following pages. Nor do I
fear contradiction, since I have taken the most accredited historians, and have
preferred, in most instances, the testimonies of men hostile to our communion*
"The ensuing facts, with many more, were selected to satisfy
my own inquiries; but when I had placed them in a connective form, I thought
they might be useful to others similarly circumstanced, conducing, perhaps, to
the removal of a portion of that visible ignorance, as to the early features of
our denomination; particularly, since it has been said, that 'the Baptists may
be considered as the only Christian community which has stood since the times
of the Apostles; and as a Christian society which has preserved pure the
doctrines of the gospel through all ages.'
This statement we consider to be proved in the following pages, where
authors are quoted, supporting these facts.
* Free admission
to the extensive libraries of Earl Spenser and the Duke of Bedford is gratefully
acknowledged;—from which sources the writer has drawn some portion of the
denominational materials now submitted.
"It is stated in the most satisfactory manner, that all
Christian communities during the first three centuries were of the Baptist denomination,
in constitution and practice. In the middle of the third century, the Novatian
Baptists established separate and independent societies, which continued till
the end of the sixth age; when these communities were succeeded by the
Paterines, which continued till the Reformation. The oriental Baptist Churches, with their successors, the
Paulicians, continued in their purity until the tenth century, when these
people visited France, resuscitating and extending the Christian profession in
Languedoc, where they flourished till the crusading army scattered, or drowned
in blood, one million of unoffending professors.
"The Baptists in Piedmont and Germany are exhibited as
existing under different names, down to the Reformation; these churches, with
their genuine successors, the Mennonites in Holland, are connectedly and
chronologically detailed to the present period, for proof of which, see the
body of the work.
"The ground of unity and denominational claim to the people
whose Christian characters are detailed, is not the harmony of their creeds or
views; this was not visible or essential in the first age: but THE BOND OF
UNION, among our denomination in all ages, has been FAITH IN CHRIST; and that
faith PUBLICLY EXPRESSED, by a voluntary submission to his authority and
doctrine in baptism. Wherever this
conduct is evident, we claim the disciple as belonging to our communion and of
primitive character, at the same time leaving his mind in the full enjoyment of
his native and purchased freedom; and in establishing this association, we feel
no difficulty or dishonor, since almost every denomination has, from their
honorable and holy characters, claimed affinity to them in faith and practice,
though such claims are not supported by family likeness.
"Most modern historians have been of the Paedobaptist
persuasion. These writers have, in a general way, suppressed in their details
those evidences of believers' baptism, which abound in early writers. This
omission in their histories was intended, that the modern practice may not be
disturbed, and themselves condemned as innovators, by the records and practice
of early churches. These writers, from the pope to the peasant, have united in
suppressing and extinguishing part of the truth; consequently, it was necessary
to collate writings, histories, and documents, before the dawn of the German
Reformation, in order to get at the whole truth; and strange to say, while
ministers of religion, for party purposes, have suppressed certain
denominational features, Voltaire, Hume, Gibbon, and other infidel with
deistical writers, have in these respects faithfully and openly recorded
events, and have been more impartial in their details than many modem divines.
"The author has found it necessary to use the specific names
of the denomination more frequently in this history than might be agreeable to
some readers. The reluctancy of some moderns to allow of the early and
reputable existence of this class of Christians, made it necessary that the
terms Baptist, Anabaptist, &c., should be often mentioned, to prevent
misconstruction, and the more fully to establish the object the writer had in
view.
"He has also kept unadorned facts prominently forward. These
are the stubborn materials of history.
In many instances, he has copied the language of able historians, and
here he acknowledges his obligations to Mr. Jones's invaluable writings on the
Church of Christ. On controverted points he feared to alter statements or
clothe ideas in his own language, lest cavilling readers should doubt his
veracity. If more verbosity had been
given, the work would have been more agreeable to some, but the writer feared
weakening the evidence of his work, and of making a large book; he has,
therefore, preferred crowding the materials together, to make his compilation,
a reference book in triumph, rather than its contents should be questioned from
any accommodating aspects. In its character, it may be considered a rough
rampart, planted round the visible camp of the saints, within which fortification
they may feel safe, while at the same time, they are furnished with those means
of repelling attacks, made with antiquated weapons.
"A refutation we do not rear; this would be a difficult task,
since controverted facts are generally given in the words of the historian, and
so far as the writer could, a Paedobaptist's testimony has had the preference.
References could have been increased to a considerable extent, but the support
of the statement by one respectable name was deemed sufficient.
"Whatever inadvertence or errors there might be, the writer's
best efforts are here offered to the society of which he stands an unworthy
member, and if he realizes their approbation, he shall consider it next to the
smiles of his Master, and feel remunerated for fifteen years' labor; at the
same time, his desire, prayer, and efforts, are for the promotion of the truth,
the whole truth, and nothing but the truth; and his hope is, that this heavenly
principle will soon universally prevail: then the precepts of men, traditionary
services, and compulsory religion shall be swept away; truth then, in all its
legitimate and unrestrained influence, shall have free course, unadorned by
human fancy, unchecked by human laws, unaided by human device; then, reinstated
in its native dignity, truth shall be found like the beams of the sun alighting
and regulating the inhabitants of the world, dispelling darkness and ignorance,
conferring on the benighted the blessings of a gospel day, exhibiting their
moral condition, awakening new sensations, requiring the north to give up, the
south to keep not back; bring my sons from far, and my daughters from the ends
of the earth; then shall we see eye to eye, Jerusalem shall be the joy of the
whole earth, and our God shall bless us."
For more than one century our enemies, conjointly, have made one
continuous effort to depreciate the claims of Baptists to an ancient
origin. Like the animal in the manger,
that, not being able to eat the hay himself, was determined the oxen should
not; so they, satisfied that they cannot claim an origin prior to the days of
.Luther, they seem determined that no one shall believe that Baptists have a
valid claim to a more ancient origin.
They allege that the madmen of Munster were Baptists; and that Baptists
as such, were the authors of the rebellion and all the excesses of that period;
and they point us to Munster, when we speak of our origin and history, and
sneeringly say:—"That was your origin and that your early history."
In vindication, we point them to the pages of Mule. D'Aubigne:—
"One point it seems necessary to guard against
misapprehension. Some persons imagine that the Anabaptists of the times of the
Reformation, and the Baptists of our day are the same. But they are as
different as possible." Fessenden's Encyclopedia (quoted with approbation
by D'Aubigne) says:—
"ANABAPTIST. The English and Dutch Baptists do not consider
the word as at all applicable to their sect." "It is but justice to observe that the Baptists of Holland,
England and United States, are to be essentially distinct from those seditious
and fanatical individuals above mentioned; as they profess an equal aversion to
all principles of rebellion, or the one for the enthusiasm of the
other."—Pref. to His. Ref. p. 10.
We point them to Mosheim, himself a Lutheran, who lived upon the
soil, though a bitter enemy to Baptists: he was conversant with all the facts.
Does he say that the Baptists had their origin at Munster? Hear him:—
"The true origin of that sect which acquired the name of
Anabaptists, by their administering anew the rite of baptism to those who came
over to their communion, and derived that of Mennotists from that famous man,
to whom they owe the greatest part of their present felicity, is HID IN THE
REMOTE DEPTHS OF ANTIQUITY, and is consequently extremely difficult to be
ascertained."—Vol. iv. p. 427.*
We ask Zuingulius, the celebrated Swiss Reformer, who was
cotemporary with Luther, Muncer, and Stork, "Is anabaptism a novelty; did
it spring up in your day?"
"The institution of anabaptism is no novelty, but for 300
years has caused great disturbance in the Church, and has acquired such a
strength that the attempt in this age to contend with it appeared futile for a
time." This carries our history back to A.D. 2251
But have we not been persecuted and worn down for lo! these twelve
hundred years,—has not the Apocalyptic "WOMAN" during all this time,
been drunk with our blood and heaven filling with our martyred brethren? We
appeal to Cardinal Hosius, President of the Council of Trent, (A.D. 1560) the
most learned and powerful Catholic of his day. Hear him testify;
"If the truth of religion were to be judged of by the
readiness and cheerfulness of which a man of any sect shows in suffering, then
the opinion and persuasion of no sect can be truer and surer than that of
Anabaptists [Baptists] since there have none for these twelve hundred years
past, that have been more generally punished, or that have more cheerfully and
steadfastly undergone and even offered themselves to the most cruel sorts of
punishment than these people." This carries our history back to the fourth
century.
We appeal to the most eminent scholars and historians of Europe,
to the matured verdict rendered by Dr. J. J. Durmont. Chaplain to the King of
Holland, and to Dr. Ypeig, professor of Theology in the university of
Groningen—who were especially appointed by the king to ascertain if the claims
of the Dutch Baptists had any foundation in the facts of history. These distinguished
men did go into the investigation; and what did they report to the king?—That
Baptists originated at Munster—as we are charged by authors, whose works are
now published and sent broad cast over this land by the "Methodist Book
Concern?" This is what they reported; which has never been disproved, or
attempted to be disproved.
"The Mennonites are descended from the tolerably pure
evangelical Waldenses, who were driven by persecution into…
* This is from
the Edition of 1811.
…various countries; and who during the latter part of the twelfth
century, fled into Flanders and into the provinces of Holland and Zealand,
where they lived simple and exemplary lives—in the villages as farmers, in the
towns by trades, free from the charge of any gross immoralities, and professing
the
most pure and simple principles, which they exemplified in a holy
conversation. They were, therefore, in
existence long before the Reformed Church of the Netherlands."
Again, "We have now seen that the Baptists, who were formerly
called Anabaptists, and in later times Mennonites, were the original Waldenses;
and who have long in the history of the Church, received the honor of that
origin. ON THIS ACCOUNT THE BAPTISTS MAY BE CONSIDERED THE ONLY CHRISTIAN
COMMUNITY WHICH HAS STOOD SINCE THE APOSTLES; AND AS A CHRISTIAN SOCIETY WHICH
HAS PRESERVED PURE THE DOCTRINE OF THE GOSPEL THROUGH ALL AGES. The perfectly
correct external economy of the Baptist denomination tends to confirm the truth
disputed by the Romish Church, that the Reformation brought about in the
sixteenth century was in the highest degree necessary; and at the same time
goes to refute the erroneous notion of the Catholics, that their communion is
the most ancient."—Encyclopedia Rel. Knowl.
It is an interesting fact that as a consequence of this, the
government of Holland offered to the Mennonite churches the support of the
State. It was politely but firmly declined, as inconsistent with their
fundamental principles.
Finally, and with still greater triumph, we now appeal to the
pages of this history, upon which, not our enemies only, but the credulous and
fearful of our own brethren may see the clearest and most satisfactory proof,
that not in one country alone, but in many kingdoms, successions of Baptist
communities have come down to us from the apostles, all striped and scarred and
blood covered—a line of martyrs slain by prisons, by fire, and by sword—we hail
these as the faithful and true witnesses of Jesus during those fearful ages, when
the Man of Sin-
Sat upon the Seven Hills,
And from his throne of darkness
ruled the world;
And we may well be proud to be able to claim these as our
brethren; would that we were worthier to bear their name.
Our history is now redeemed from reproach; but are Baptist
principles obnoxious to the censure of Americans or of republican Christians
anywhere? Through the influence of our religious principles, and the example of
our form of Church government. Republicanism and republican institutions have already
been bequeathed to half the world, and are now rocking the other half to its
centre, crumbling the thrones of its tyrants, and arousing and energizing
oppressed humanity, to assert its rights, and overthrow its oppressors.
We appeal to the opinion of Jefferson, the most eminent of
American statesmen, touching Baptist church government. The following facts
were communicated to the Christian Watchman, several years ago, by the Rev. Dr.
Fishback, of Lexington, Kentucky.
"Mr. Editor—The following circumstance, which occurred in the
State of Virginia, relative to Mr. Jefferson, was detailed to me by Eld. Andrew
Tribble, about six years ago, who since died when ninety-two or three years
old. The facts may interest some of your readers.
Andrew Tribble was the pastor of a small Baptist Church which held
monthly meetings at a short distance from Mr. Jefferson's house, eight or ten
years before the American Revolution. Mr. Jefferson attended the meetings of
the church several months in succession, and after one of them he asked Elder
Tribble to go home and dine with him, with which he complied.
Mr. Tribble asked Mr. Jefferson how he was pleased with their
church government? Mr. Jefferson replied that it had Struck him with great
force, and had interested him much, that he considered it the only form of pure
democracy that then existed in the world, and had concluded that it would be
the best plan of government for the American colonies. This was several years
before the Declaration of Independence."
We appeal to Judge Story, the most eminent of American jurists:
"To Roger Williams belongs the renown of establishing in this
country, in 1636, a code of laws, in which, 'we read for the first time, since
Christianity ascended the throne of the Caesars, the declaration that
'conscience should be free, and man should not be punished for worshipping God
in any way they were persuaded He required.' "
We appeal to Bancroft, the most eminent of American historians:
"Roger Williams was then but little more than thirty years of
age; but his mind had already matured a doctrine, which secures him immortality
of fame, as its application has given religious peace to the American
world."
We turn to the old world—to Germany, the land of scholars and historians—and
ask if the character of Baptist principles and their influence upon the world,
have not been seen and felt?
Gervinus, the most astute and philosophic historian of this age,
in his work entitled, An Introduction to the History of the Nineteenth Century,
says:
"In accordance with these principles, Roger Williams insisted
in Massachusetts upon allowing entire freedom of conscience, and upon entire
separation of the Church and the State. But he was obliged to flee, and in 1636
he formed in Rhode Island a small and new society, in which perfect freedom in
matters of faith was allowed, and in which the majority ruled in all civil
affairs. Here in a little State, the fundamental principles of political and
ecclesiastical liberty practically prevailed, before they were even taught in
any of the schools of philosophy in Europe. At that time people predicted only
a short existence for these democratical experiments— universal suffrage,
universal eligibilty to office, the annual change of rulers, perfect religious
freedom—the Miltonian doctrines of schisms.
But not only have these ideas and these forms of government maintained
themselves here, but precisely from this little State have they extended
themselves throughout the United States. They have conquered the aristocratic
tendencies in Carolina and New York, the High Church in Virginia, the Theocracy
in Massachusetts, and the monarchy in all America. They have given laws to a continent and formidable through their
moral influence, they lie at the bottom of all the democratic movements which
are now shaking the nations of Europe."
Here we might be satisfied to rest, was it not to do justice to
the memory of the pastor of the first Baptist Church in America,—Dr. John
Clarke. The fame that justly belongs to, or at least should be divided with
him, has been bestowed upon Roger Williams, whose name has been sounded round
the whole world as the first great champion of civil and religious
freedom. He was indeed a brilliant
light in thick darkness; but his was only borrowed light, and he himself but a
reflector. The Baptists of England and of the Continent advocated the glorious
principles of soul liberty, centuries before R. Williams was born; as they did
during the reigns of James I. And Charles I. when he was in his boyhood.—
"That Roger Williams cannot be said—in the language of
Bancroft—to have been 'first in modern Christendom to assert in its plenitude
the doctrine of freedom of conscience,' would seem to be evident from the very
fact that the arguments against persecution, prefixed to Roger Williams'
'Bloody Tenet' which called forth an answer to them from Mr. Cotton, are
entitled by Mr. Williams, 'Scriptures and Reasons written long since by a
witness of Jesus Christ, close prisoner in Newgate, against persecution in
cause of conscience.' It was added that
this prisoner in Newgate was a Baptist;
and that the 'humble supplication' which he drew up in 1620, and addressed to
King James, from which the arguments prefixed to Roger Williams' book are taken,
was subscribed 'your Majesty's loyal subject, not for fear only; but for
conscience's sake, -falsely called Anabaptist.' "*
The History of the Life and times of Dr. J. Clarke, and of the
organization and rise of the first Baptist Church in America, is now in course
of preparation, when the proper distinction will be made between the labors and
merits of R. Williams and Dr. J. Clarke. †
But we are not limited in looking for our brethren to those
countries, alone, which Mr. Orchard has explored with such rich results. Could
not a Baptist be heard of in Africa, in Spain, in Italy, in Piedmont, Bohemia,
or Holland; yet it can be shown upon the most unquestionable authorities, that
there has been a succession of Baptist churches in England and Wales, from the
days of Paul until now, and it is an established fact that a majority of the
churches planted in America, from the year 1645— 1730, were organized by Welsh
Baptists, and constituted upon articles of faith, brought over with them from
the mother churches. Mr. Orchard informs us in an advertisement at the end of
his book, that he is preparing for the press a history of the Baptists of
England, Wales, Ireland, Scotland, and America, which will be immediately
reprinted so soon as it can be obtained. In the meantime we submit the
following facts:— A.D. About fifty years before the birth of our Saviour,
63 the Romans invaded the British
Isle, in the reign of 180 the Welsh king, Cassibellan; but having failed, in
consequence of other and more important wars, to conquer the Welsh nation, made
peace with them and dwelt among them many years. During that period many of the Welsh soldiers joined the Roman
army, and many families from Wales visited Rome; among whom there was a certain
woman of the name of Claudia, who was married to a man named Pudens. At the
same time Paul was sent a prisoner to Rome, and preached there in his own hired
house, for the space of two years, about the year of our Lord 63.‡ Pudens and Claudia…
* J. Dowling,
Author of His. Romanism.
† This History
is now being prepared by Eld. S. Adlam, Pastor to the Newport Baptist Church,
R. I., which is the first Baptist Church in America.
‡ See Acts of
the Apostles, 28: 30.
…his wife, who belonged to Caesar's household, under the blessing
of God on Paul's preaching, were brought to the knowledge of the truth as it is
in Jesus, and made a profession of the Christian religion.* These, together
with other Welshmen, among the Roman soldiers, who had tasted that the Lord was
gracious, exerted themselves on the behalf of their countrymen in Wales, who
were at that time vile idolaters.
That the gospel was extensively spread in Britain during this
period, we learn from Tertullian and Origin. In the year 130 there were two
ministers by the names of Faganus and Damianus, who were born in Wales, but
were born again in Rome, and there becoming eminent ministers of the gospel,
were sent from Rome to assist their brethren in Wales, †
During this year, Lucius the Welsh king was baptized, and the
first king in the world who embraced the Christian religion. During the next
century Christianity made rapid progress in the island, as is evident from the
testimony of Tertullian, and from the multitudes of martyrs who suffered in the
tenth pagan persecution under Dioclesian, which took place about the year 300 three hundred. The Saxons in 469
invaded England, 469 overthrew Christianity, and burnt
the meeting houses, and drove all who would not submit to them into Cambria,
which is now called Wales. During this
century the British Christians suffered greatly at the hands of their Saxon
foes. Yet we find there were several eminent and faithful ministers among the
Welsh Baptists at this period; among whom were, Gildas, who was a man of
learning, Dyfrig, Dynawt, Teilo, Padaru, Pawlin, and Daniel.
Infant Baptism was not known to the Welsh Christians 600 until A. D. 596 or 600, when
Austin was sent by Gregory, Bishop of Rome, to convert the Saxons. In this he
was successful, and according to Fox, he baptized ten thousand in the River
Swale. He sought and obtained a conference with the Welsh Baptists, near the
border of Wales. The main point was
that these primitive Christians should acknowledge the usurped authority of the
Church of Rome. Fabian, an ancient
historian, relates the final demand of Austin in these words, "Sins ye wol
not assent to my hests generally, assent to me specially in III. things: the
first is, that ye keep Ester day in due forme and tyme as it is ordayned. The
Second, that ye give christendome to children; and the thirde is that ye…
* 2 Tim. 4: 21
Fox's Acts and Monuments, p. 137. See also Dr. Gill and Matthew Henry, on 2
Tim. 4:21. Godwin's Catalogue. Crosby's History of the English Baptists,
preface to vol. 2. Drych y prif oesoedd, p. 179.
† Dr. Haylin's Cosmography,
lib. pp. 257, Crosby vol. ii, p. 13, Welch Bap. by Davis.
…preache unto the anglis the word of God as aforetimes I have
exhorted you, and all the other deale, I shall suffer you to amende and reforme
within yourselves." But these Baptists utterly refused to practice the
traditions of Rome for the commands of Christ, when this emissary of Rome
threatened them in this wise, "sins ye wol not recave peace of your
brethren, ye shall of other receave warre and wretche." The Saxons shortly after invaded Wales, it
is thought through the influence of Austin, and slaughtered incredible
numbers. While infant baptism and the
traditions of the son of perdition were enforced by the sword upon the low
country, and the rich and more fertile portion of the island, Welsh Baptists
contend that the principles of the gospel were maintained pure and unalloyed in
the recesses of their mountainous principality, all through the dark reign of
popery.
"God had a regular chain of true and faithful witnesses in
this country, in every age, from the first introduction of Christianity to the
present time, who never received nor acknowledged the pope's supremacy: like
the thousands and millions of the inhabitants of the vale of Piedmont, residing
on green and fruitful meadows, surrounded by high and lofty mountains,
separated from other nations, as if the all-wise Creator had made them on
purpose, as places of safety for his jewels that would not bow the knee to
Baal."*
"Dr. Richard Davis, Bishop of Monmouth, said 'there was a
vast difference between the Christianity of the Ancient Britons, and that mock
Christianity introduced by Austin into England, in 596; for the Ancient Britons
kept their Christianity pure, without any mixture of human traditions, as they
received it from the disciples of Christ, and from the church of Rome when she
was pure, adhering strictly to the rules of the word of God.' "
"President Edwards of America, said: 'In every age of this
dark time, (of popery,) there appeared particular persons in all parts of
Christendom, who bore a testimony against the corruptions and tyranny of the
church of Rome. There is no one age of Antichrist, even in the darkest times,
but ecclesiastical historians mention by name, those who manifested an abhorrence
of the pope and his idolatrous worship, and pleaded for the ancient purity of
doctrine and worship. God was pleased to maintain an uninterrupted succession
of many witnesses through the whole time, in Britain, as well as in Germany and
France; private persons and ministers; some magistrates and...
* See doctrine
of Baptism, by Benjamin Jones; P. A. Mon. p. 149; and Sir Samuel Moreland.
...persons of great distinction. And there were numbers, in every
age, who were persecuted and put to death for this testimony.' "*
"The faith and discipline of the Scottish churches in
Ireland, were the same with the British churches, and their friendship and
communion reciprocal. The ordinances of
the gospel in both islands, at this time, were administered in their primitive
mode. The venerable Bede says, that the supremacy of Rome was unknown to the
ancient Irish. The worship of saints and images was held in abhorrence, and no
ceremonies used which were not strictly warranted by Scripture. All descriptions of people were not only
allowed but desired to consult the sacred writings as their only rule of
conduct."
"In short, from what we have stated, and the evidence
produced by the learned archbishop Usher, quoted by the Rev. William Hamilton,
'we have the strongest reason to conclude that these islands enjoyed the
blessings of a pure enlightened piety, such as our Saviour himself taught,
unembarrassed by any of the idle tenets of the Romish Church.'"
"When we cast our eyes on King Henry the second, advancing
towards this devoted nation, bearing the bloody sword of war in one hand, and
the iniquitous bull of Pope Adrian in the other, we have one of the strongest
arguments to prove that this was not originally an island of popish saints, and
that the jurisdiction of Rome unquestionably was not established here.'"†
With the above authorities I submit with confidence the subject of
Primitive Church Constitution to all candid men.
* Edwards's
History of Redemption, p. 205.
† Bede, Vita S.
Columbi. Bede, Hist. Gent. Angl. lib. 3, c. 27. Brit. de Hibemi, p. 703. Vide a
curious treatise of Archbishop Usher on the religion of the Ancient Irish. Vide
Harding's Chron. c. 241. Also Hamilton's Letter, p. 38 and 43. Also Bishop
Lloyd's Historical Account.
J. R. G.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. 1855.