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CHAPTER XIX.
Last
Words To My Brethren.
"A
false system has for accomplice whoever spares it by silence" (Vinet.)
I have now, clearly as possible,
in the limited space allotted to this work, placed before you the principles,
polity, and practices which characterized our historical ancestors, and
something of the terrible sufferings it cost them to maintain them at the hands
of Pagans, Papists, and Protestants, from the days of the apostles until now. I
wish, in conclusion, to urge a few questions upon your prayerful consideration:
1. Will you now decide, by the
evidence submitted, if the scores of thousands of Baptists in America,
especially in the South, in England and Germany, who now hold and witness for
the principles and polity developed in the preceding chapters, have left the
"old paths" and are walking in "a new way, and a way
not cast up" by the Master?
Or, whether those Baptists who
recognize those very organizations, which persecuted our fathers, as evangelical
churches. and accredit their preachers as evangelical ministers, by associating
with them upon perfect ministerial equality, and receive their immersions as
valid baptisms, and affiliate with them in all things, and extend to them every
token of ministerial and ecclesiastical fellowship?the Lord?s Supper
excepted?are traveling
"In
The Ways Our Fathers Trod?"
This is the practical question of
this age. It is vital to the best interests of American Baptists that it should
be correctly answered. The world demands its settlement. To assist in
determining this question this little book has been written. My conclusions are
before you.
In the thirty odd years past,
during which I have discussed and urged upon Baptists the adoption and practice
of these views. I have not heard of one man, however, bitterly opposed, who did
not acknowledge that these conclusions are logically irresistible, if my
premises are granted. May I beg of you, who read these lines, to
decide, before you lay down this book, whether the plain unvarnished teachings
of the apostles, and the practice of our denominational ancestors, from the
fourth to the eighteenth centuries, do not sustain my premises beyond a
reasonable doubt? Turn back, if necessary, and re-read Chapter XIV, and not only
note what our fathers claim, but what Catholics and Protestants, with united
voice, testify they held and practiced in the face of the dungeon and the stake.
Are you not compelled by facts to admit that?
1. They did not acknowledge
Catholic or Protestant societies to be evangelical churches, but proclaimed them
alike to be anti-Christian bodies, and their ordinances null and void?
2. That they did not accredit the
ministers of the Protestant sects any more than those of Catholics, by any act
as gospel ministers, nor did they associate with them in preaching the gospel or
in any Christian work.
If this is not your conclusion,
you may as well close the book, for further words of mine will be useless. But
these historical facts admitted, let me press upon your fraternal consideration
other important questions:
2. Were not our martyr fathers
approved of God for bearing the steadfast and unmistakable witness they did for
the divine constitution, the doctrine and ordinances of the church of Christ,
and against the human societies that opposed, and the corruptions that subverted
them in their day? You can not doubt it. John saw their souls under the altar
and white robes given unto them, and heard the promise of their future
vindication and coming glory.
3. Can you doubt that it is as
much your duty and mine to steadfastly hold, faithfully teach, and as cheerfully
suffer, if needs be, for these same principles, and to as boldly oppose these
self-same sects and their false teachings and practices in this day, as it was
their duty in that age? My brother, do not lightly pass this, but decide?upon
your knees, with your Bible, your conscience, and your God.
"Must
I be carried to the skies,
On flowery beds of ease;
While others fought to win the prize,
And sailed thro? bloody seas?
Are there no foes for me to fight?
Must I not stem the flood?"
4. Have you ever stopped to think
why it is that not one in a thousand to-day, who bears the name, suffer the
least opposition or discomfort of any sort for being a Baptist? It was never so
before. Why is it that thousands of our ministers finish a life ministry, and
sill their advocacy of Baptist principles?or preaching the gospel, if you
prefer it?never costs them one word of reproach from the teachers of error,
the hatred or ill will of a living man? So that living friends even solace their
grief, by inscribing on the tombstone of such?
"None
knew him but to love him,
Or heard him, but to praise."
Was the boast of that eminent
doctor of divinity to his praise, who said in a recent speech: "If I have
offended man, woman, or child with my denominationalism in a pastorate of
twenty years, I have never heard of it?"
That minister exchanged pulpits
with Unitarians, and invited Universalists even unto his own. If the position of
Bros. Jeter and Burrows is correct, that we do not thereby recognize their
ordinations or themselves as evangelical ministers, but only as gentlemen, thus
lowering the pulpit?which should be the throne of God?s truth on earth?to
the level of the parlor, that minister?s course can not be condemned.
Thousands of Baptist ministers
can truthfully repeat his boast, after professing to preach the gospel five,
ten, and fifteen years; and other thousands are preaching today with no higher
ambition than to build up large churches, and to gain an enviable reputation for
being "undenominational preachers;" men of "broad"
"liberal," "Catholic" views.
Have you ever seriously asked
yourself if these men can be pleasing the Master? I turn to His Word and it
reads: "Woe unto you when all men speak well of you; for so did their
fathers to the false prophets."
Has this passage no application
in our day? Is it true, as some preachers tell us, that the days of
persecution are ended? Has the offense of the cross indeed ceased? How am I to
understand these declarations of my Savior: "Ye shall be hated of all men
for my sake: but he that endureth" (Matthew 10:22). "The disciple is
not above his master; if they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how
much more shall they call them of his household?" "Think not that I am
come to send peace on the earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword."
"For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the
daughter against her mother, and the daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law:
and a man?s foes shall be of his own household." "If the world hate
you, ye know that it hated me before it hated you. If ye were of the world, the
world would love his own: but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen
you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you. Remember the word I said
unto you, The servant is not greater than the lord. If they have persecuted me, they
will persecute you." (John 15:20). Paul understood the import of
this language: "Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall
suffer persecution." Do you say all this was spoken of the
apostolic age, and is obsolete and utterly meaningless in this; and that the
Testament would be as complete to us if these and all similar passages
were eliminated? Is it indeed so? has Beelzebub become a faithful ally of
Christ?
"And
this vile world a friend to grace,
To help us on to God?"
If this be so, has it ever
occurred to you that we shall lose many and exceedingly precious promises as
well? A few occur to me: "Blessed are they who are persecuted for
righteousness sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." Can it be that
the blessedness of that kingdom will be the same to those who have never lived
for Christ so as to be persecuted? "Blessed are ye when men shall revile
you and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you
falsely, for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceedingly glad; for great is your reward
in heaven, for so persecuted they the prophets who were be fore you." Is it
impossible for us to gain this great reward? Is it, alas! true, that we,
alone, of all the Christians who have lived on the earth, are denied the
distinguished privilege of gaining this "GREAT REWARD? That we can not
suffer peril from false brethren?can not so witness for Christ as to suffer
reproach or even to be spoken about falsely for Jesus? sake?
If this be so, then indeed are
we, of all Christians, the most unblessed; for the crowning
glories of salvation are alike predicated upon suffering with and for
Christ here. Among a host are these: "If so be that we suffer with him,
that we be glorified together" (Rom. 8:17). Is it not here implied
that those only are glorified together who have suffered for Christ?
"If we suffer for him, we shall also reign with him" (2
Tim. 2:12).
But suppose we live on such terms
of amity and concord with the enemies of Christ, and those who oppose His
teachings, that they become our friends, and speak well of us, can we
hope to reign with Christ? Grant that we may possibly be saved "yet
so as by fire," have we a promise of reigning with Christ? The
Scriptures impress me that only sufferers, martyrs, cross-bearers, witnesses of
Jesus, and for the Word of God, "have part in the first resurrection,
and live and reign with Christ a thousand years" (Rev. 20): that only those
Christians who "have not defiled themselves with women"?i.e.,
affiliated on terms of equality and friendship with false churches?are
accounted as "virgins" unto Christ, and are numbered
with the one hundred and forty and Jour thousand, and are permitted
companionship with Christ (Rev. 14). If one passage more than another has
influence, and now influences my life as a Christian and a minister, it
is those words of Jesus to His faithful servant at the close of his service:
"Well done, good and faithful servant: thou has been faithful over a few
things, I will make thee ruler over many things: enter thou into the joy of thy
Lord" (Matthew 25:21). What is this world to me if I have no good hope,
through grace, of hearing these words at last from the lips of my master? How
unspeakably fearful, though I have gained the praise of earth?s millions, and
fail to hear the "well done" of Jesus? Oh, what can the future be to
me, though I should have the praise of the angels, and fail to hear these few
words?"well done, good and faithful servant"?from the lips of my
Savior? I know, that He. whose name is Truth, will never utter
them unless I have done well, and been faithful in the things committed to me.
If I have failed to openly hold and boldly preach His whole truth, for
fear of men. I may not hope to hear them, for He hath said: "For whosoever
shall be ashamed of me and of my words, of him shall the Son of man be ashamed,
when he shall come in his own glory and in his Father?s, and of the holy
angels."
Let us not deceive ourselves or
be deceived. Satan bears the same hellish hate towards the Savior and His
church, he did the day he nailed Him to the cross of ignominy, by the wicked
hands of his servants.
The carnal heart is still only
enmity to God. The whole world still lieth in the wicked one, and is as
thoroughly opposed to the authority of Christ as of old. False systems of
religion, and false teachers are a thousand times multiplied; only they assume
the character, and demand of us the name of "evangelical churches" and
ministers of Christ. The words of Christ and His apostles are equally for this
as for any former age; and it is tremendously true now as then?that they
"who will live godly shall suffer persecution." There never was, there
is not now, there never will be, till Christ comes, an exception to this
declaration. If you and I are not persecuted, if we are not reviled and spoken
falsely of, for Christ s sake, it is as certainly true as God?s Word that we
are not living godly. We are not persecuted nor reproached because we have
struck an unholy truce with sin, and the spirit of this world, and with
spiritual wickedness, because throned in high places. In every age when the
witnesses of Christ have been faithful to their mission, they have suffered from
His avowed enemies and professed friends.
It was not only true when the old
Pagan dragon held his authority over the nations, but equally so when its
ghost?a counterfeit Christianity?ascended the throne and wore the purple of
the Caesars; and more bitterly true when Protestantism shed the blood of
the saints in the days of the Reformation, and whenever and wherever it has been
able to wield the sword, whether in England old or England new, on the soil of
the Old Dominion or of Georgia. In every age and in every land, genuine
Christianity has been persecuted by its counterfeit, and shall we by all our
influence as Baptists, accredit that counterfeit as "evangelical" and
genuine?
Be assured, my brother, were we
only as faithful in teaching and defending Christ?s precious truth as our
fathers were; if we would no longer sacrifice it by sinful compromises to secure
the peace and obtain the friendship of false teachers and their followers, we
would not long be strangers to their bitter experiences, and we would realize
that the words of Christ, and the teachings of the apostles, are of real
significance in our day; though our blood might not be shed, yet our
names would be defamed, our characters blackened, the spirit of the evil one
attributed to us when preaching most faithfully, as it was to the first
Baptist?for they said, "he hath a devil"?our wives, and daughters,
and sons ostracized from "polite society," and we and ours would be
"accounted the filth of the world and the offscouring of all things, even
in this day."
A young lady was converted at
meetings held at the Baptist Church in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and had given her
name to be baptized, when she was visited by the Episcopalian rector, and
informed if she should so degrade herself as to join the Baptists, who were of
the lower class, she would be no longer invited into polite society, but would
sink to their level.
We see and feel enough to be
convinced that we have entered the Laodicean age of this dispensation, in which
the Master?s knock will soon be heard at the door. The love, and zeal, and
works of the first age have been "left;" the faithfulness to the order
of the house of God, and in trying and condemning false teachers, and
the hatred of the laxity, and the profane double-dealing of
the Nicolaitanes?who, professing to be followers of Christ, fellowshipped
false religions as well?which characterized the churches of other ages has
well-nigh died out, and instead, a strange indifferentism to gospel doctrine
and denominational principles?to church constitution, to church order, to
church discipline, and to pastoral support, has seized the great mass of the
membership?a state denomination "lukewarm" by the Savior, which is,
of all states, the most abhorrent to him.
But, added to this, an
overweening desire to be considered "respectable," and to command the
admiration of the world, has taken possession of the churches. We boast of our
numerical strength, our power and our influence, and the culture of our
ministry. Could an uninspired pen so graphically have described our condition as
a denomination as Christ foretold it?
"And unto the angel of the
church of the Laodiceans write; These things saith the Amen, the faithful and
true Witness, the beginning of the creation of God; "I know thy works, that
thou art neither cold nor hot: I would thou wert cold or hot. So then, because
thou are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spue thee out of my mouth:
Because thou sayest, I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of
nothing; and knowest not that thou art wretched, and miserable, and poor, and
blind, and naked: I counsel thee to buy of me gold tried in the fire, that thou
mayest be rich; and white raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the
shame of thy nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eye-salve, that
thou mayest see. As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten; be zealous therefore,
and repent. Behold, I stand at the door, and knock: If any man hear my voice,
and open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with me.
To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even as I also
overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne. He that hath an ear, let
him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches" (Rev. 3:14-22).
Whatever other brethren may do,
will you not, my brother, resolve, here and now, to join
the noble few whom God is raising up to resist this flood-tide of looseness,
lukewarmness, and indifferentism, which is rendering powerless the protest of
the churches of Christ against sin and error?
The angel, in Revelation 18, is
the symbol of a class of ministers who are to come to the front, at the close of
this age, to tell Christians and the world what Babylon is, and call upon
God?s people to come out of her. Hear the voice of God, cast the fear of men
behind you, and become a martyr?a witness for Jesus.
"Perish
?policy? and cunning,
Perish all that fear the light;
Whether losing, whether winning,
Trust in God, and do the right.
Some will hate thee, some will love thee,
Some will flatter, some will slight;
Cease from man, and look above thee?
Trust in God, and do the right."
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