E449 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS DDDD17H053E I •• ^^"^ 94.*^^" A? ^* --'-^ ■P* .»: » o r. "-^^0^ :mm;' -o/ r ^''■n^^ V ^ vh/JIak* *x^ '^ •©US* -«/ ^ «>vJOi r.' aO' ''^ ♦-••• ** A°^ .^ V*^ ^^ •-'^aB?/ J'''^^ ".^^^^z >" ^. V o > ^<&'* ^0 o/. • ♦ . ^^ <> ♦-TV.* -Wo ^v<»^ 1^^'' ^^\ %<& ^ c^'.^ ^3S^ N e K-^^ ^ ^ TWENTY-FIRST THOUSAND. THE BROTHERHOOD OF THIEVES; OR, A TRUE PICTURE OK THK AMERICAN CHURCH AND CLERGY: A LETTER TO NATHANIEL BARNEY, OF NANTUCKET. By STEPHEN S. FOSTER. CONCORD, N. H. : !• A R K E K r I L L S B U K Y . SiNCJLK Copies, 25 Cents; Five Copies, One Dollar. [ESH5H5H5H5E5HSH5H5H5HEfHSHHEHE5HSrH5H5HSH£J THE BROTHERHOOD OF THIEVES; A TRUE PICTURE AMERICAN CHURCH AND CLERGY: A LETTER NATHANIEL BARNEY OP NANTUCKET. By STEPHEN S. FOSTER. CONCORD, N. H. : PARKER PILLSBURY. Single Copies, 25 Cents; Five Copies, One Dollar. 1884. In B-:ck ^^ti Cornell Univ, 9 Fob 06 LETTER. Esteemed Friend : In the early part of last autumn, I received a letter from you, requesting me to prepare an article for the press, in vindication of the strong language of denuncia- tion of the American church and clergy, which I employed at the late Anti-Slavery Convention on your island, and which was the occasion of the disgraceful mob, which disturbed and broke up that meeting. In my answer, I gave you assurance of prompt compliance wdth your re- quest; but, for reasons satisfactory to myself, I have failed to fulfil my promise up to the present time. The novelty of the occasion has now passed away ; the deep and ma- lignant passions which were stirred in the bosoms of no inconsiderable portion of your people, have, doubtless, subsided ; but the important facts connected with it are yet fresh in the memories of all ; and, as the occasion was one of general, not local, interest, and the spirit which was there exhibited was a fair specimen of the general temper and feeling of our country towards the advocates of equal rights and impartial justice, I trust it will not be deemed amiss in me to make it a subject of public notice, even at this late period. But in the remarks which I propose to make, it will be no part of my object to vindicate myself in the opinion of the public, against the foul aspersions of those whose guilty quiet my preaching may have disturbed. Indeed, to tell the truth, I place a very low estimate on the good opinions of my countrymen — quite as low, I think, as they do on mine, if I may judge from their very great anxiety to have me speak well of them, which I positively never can, so long as their national capital is a human flesh-mart, and their chief magistrate is a slave-breeder. The most that I can do is to pledge myself never to mob them, nay, that I will not even be displeased with them, for speaking ill of me, while their character remains what it now is. My opponents, among whom rank most of the church and clergy of the country, have disturbed a major- ity of the meetings which I have attended, within the last nine months, by drunken, murderous mobs, and in several instances, they have inflicted severe injury upon my person ; but I value this violence and outrage as proof of their deep conviction of the truth and power of what I say. I deem the reproach of such men sufficient praise. And I here tender them my thanks for the high compli- ment they have so often paid to my opinions, in the ex- treme measures to which they have resorted to compel me to speak in their praise. But so long as their character remains such that I can bestow no commendations, I shall ask none in return. Nor is it my intention in this letter, to weaken, by ex- planations, the force of my testimony against the popular religion of our country, for the purpose of allaying the bloody spirit of persecution which has of late character- ized the opposition to my course. True, my life is in danger, especially whenever I attempt to utter my senti- ments in houses dedicated to what is called the worship of God ; but He who has opened to my view other worlds, in which to reap the rewards and honors of a life of toil and suffering in the cause of truth and human freedom in this has taught me to " be not afraid of them that kill the body, and after that have no more that they can do." Hence I have no pacificatory explanations to offer, no coward disclaimers to make. But I shall aim to present to the comprehension of the humblest individual, into whose hands this letter may chance to fall, a clear and comprehensive view of the intrinsic moral character of that class of our countrymen who claim our respect and veneration, as ministers and followers of the Prince of Peace. I am charged with having done them great injus- tice in my public lectures, on that and various other occasions. Many of those, who make this charge, doubt- less, honestly think so. To correct their error — to reflect on their minds the light which God has kindly shed on mine — to break the spell in which they are now held by the sorcery of a designing priesthood, and prove that priesthood to be a " Brotherhood of Thieves " and the " Bulwark of American Slavery " — is all that I shall aim to do. But I ought, perhaps, in justice to those who know nothing of my religious sentiments, except from the mis- representations of my enemies, to say, that I have no feelings of personal hostility towards any portion of the church or clergy of our country. As children of the same 5 Father, they are endeared to me by the holiest of all ties ; and I am as ready to suffer, if need be, in defence of their rights, as in defence of the rights of the Southern slave. My objections to them are purely conscientious. I am a firm believer in the Christian religion, and in Jesus, as a divine being, who is to be our final Judge. I was born and nurtured in the bosom of the church, and for twelve years was among its most active members. At the age of twenty-two, T left the allurements, of an active business life, on which I had just entered with fair prospects, and, for seven successive years, cloistered myself within the walls of our literary institutions, in •' a course of study preparatory to the ministry." The only object I had in view in changing my pursuits, at this advanced period of life, was to render myself more useful to the world, by ex- tending the principles of Christianity, as taught and lived out by their great Author. In renouncing the priesthood and an organized church, and laboring for their overthrow, my object is still the same. I entered them on the sup- position that they were, what from a child I had been taught to regard them, the enclosures of Christ's ministers and flock, and his chosen instrumentalities for extending his kingdom on the earth. I have left them from an unre- sistible conviction, in spite of my early prejudices, that they are a " hold of every foul spirit," and the devices of men to gain influence and power. And, in rebuking their ad- herents as I do, my only object is to awaken them, if possible, to a sense of their guilt and moral degradation, and bring them to repentance, and a knowledge of the true God, of whom most of them are now lamentably ignorant, as their lives clearly prove. The remarks which I made at your Convention were of a most grave and startling character. They strike at the very foundation of all our popular ecclesiastical institu- tions, and exhibit them to the world as the apologists and supporters of the most atrocious system of oppression and wrong, beneath which humanity has ever groaned. They reflect on the church the deepest possible odium, by disclosing to public view the chains and hand-cuffs, the whips and branding-irons, the rifles and bloodhounds, kith which her ministers and deacons bind the limbs and lacerate the flesh of innocent men and defenceless women, rhey cast upon the clergy the same dark shade which Fesus threw over the ministers of his day, when he tore iway the veil beneath which they had successfully con- !ealed their diabolical schemes of personal aggrandize- nent and power, and denounced them before all the 6 people, as a " den of thieves," as " fools and blind," "whited sepulchres," "blind giddes, which strain at a gnat, and swallow a camel," " hypocrites, who devour widows' houses, and for a pretence make long praj'ers," " liars," " adulterers," " serpents," " a generation of vipers," who could not " escape the damnation of hell." But, appalling and ominous as they were, I am not aware that I gave the parties accused, or their mobocratic friends, any just cause of complaint. They were all spoken in public, in a free meeting, where all who dis- sented from me were not only invited, but warmly urged, to reply. I was an entire stranger among you, with noth- ing but the naked truth and a few sympathizing friends to sustain me, while the whole weight of popular senti- ment was in their favor. Was the controversy unequal on their part? Wei-e they afi-aid to meet me with the same honorable weapons which I had chosen ? Conscious innocence seldom consents to tarnish its character by a dishonorable defence. Had my charges been unfounded, a refutation of them, under the circumstances, would have been most easy and triumphant. My opponents, had they been innocent, could have acquitted themselves honorably, and overwhelmed their accuser in deep dis- grace, without the necessity of resorting to those argu- ments which appeal only to one's fears of personal harm, and which are certain to react upon their authors, when the threatening danger subsides. But if all that 1 have alleged against them be true, it was obviously my right, nay, my imperative duty, to make the disclosures which I did. even thougii it might be, as you well know it was, at the peril of my life, and the lives of my associates. In exposing the deep and fathomless abominations of those jjion.s thieves, who gain their livelihood by preacli- ing sermons and stealing babies, [ am not at liberty to yield to any intimidations, however imposing the source fi'om wlience they come. The right of speech — the liberty to utter our own convictiou^ freely, at all times and in all places, at discretion, unawed by fear, unembarrassed by force — is the gift of God to every member of the family of man, and should be preserveallot-box with their own hands. This, at least, is the doctrine of the ancient propiiet : ''When I say unto the wicked, O wicked 7nan, thou shait .snrel If (lie ; if thou dost not speak to warn (lie wicked from his wan/, that wicked man shall die i)i his inif/nitt/ : hut his blood will I ret/uire at thine hand." [Ezekiel xxxiii, 8.] Hence, politically, the sects are Whig and Democrat; and up to tiiis hour, they have gone all lengths with these parties, in their '' Tippecanoe and Ty- ler, too," and " Kinderhook " conventions for the election of slave-masters, and '• Xortliern men with Southern principles," to fill the iiighest offices in the gift of the people. Now, I ask, were their own children in slavery, would they be found in tlie ranks of these parties ? If you say, yea; then I reply, would they honor with the highest offices in the government the men w'ho had debauched their own daughters, and sold the flesh, and bones, and blood, of their sons in human shambles. If you say, nay; then, without further arguiuent, are they individu- ally convicted of knowingly and intentionally contribut- ing of their influence to support the slave system — a system that robs two and a half millions of our country- 28 men of every right and privilege which renders life a blessing ; and therefore they must answer to God, not for the enslavement of one or two individuals merely, but of every victim of our country's wrongs who now pines in his chains. And if Christianity be not a fable, Christ will say to them in the day of judgment, not only for what they have actually done to sustain slavery, but for what they have neglected to do for its overthrow, " 1 was a hungered, and ye gave me no meat ; I was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink ; 1 was a stranger, and ye took me not in ; naked, and ye clothed me not ; sick and in pris- on," — doicn on the planfntioris of the South — "and ye visit- ed me not." " Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlast- ing fire, prepared for the devil and his angels." For, •'Verily 1 say unto you, inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me." In the former part of my letter, 1 have shown that slavery is an American and not a Southern institution, and that the >J^orth and South are leagued together po- litically in its support. I have also shown, both by refer- ence to facts, and froin the testimony of distinguished men at the South, that the slave power could not sustain itself a single hour, without the aid and protection of the general govern nient, but must fall at once before the avenging arm of its outraged victims ; and, consequently, that all who sustain the government in its present pro- slavery character, do thereby sustain the slave system, and should be held responsible for all the guilt and mis- ery which it involves. But while the federal government, that is, the electors of the country, are the direct and vis- il)le agents on whose authority and fostering care slavery depands for support and perpetuity, there is, in this case, as in most others of a like nature, " a power behind the vthrone greater than the throne itself ;" for in a country like ours, civil government is of no force, any farther than it is sustained by popular sentiment. The will of the people for the time being is the supreme law of the land, the legislative and executive departments of the government being nothing more than a mere echo of the popular will. Hence the power which controls public opinion does, in fact, give laws to our country, and is, therefore, preeminently responsible for the vices which are sanctioned by those laws. That power in this case, is the priesthood, backed up and supported by the church. 'J hey are the manufacturers of our public sentiment ; and, consequently, they hold in their hand the key to the great prison-house of Southern despotism, and can " open and no man shut, and shut and no man open." 29 There are in our country more than twenty thousand of this class of men, scattered over every part of the land, and at the same time so united in national and local associations as to act in perfect harmony, whenever concert is required. They constitute what may properly be termed a religious aristocracy. Among the exclusive privileges which they claim and enjoy, is the right to ad- minister the ordinances of religion, and to lead in all our religious services. The ear of the nation is open to them every seventh day of the week, when they pour into it just such sentiments as they choose. And not only are they in direct and constant contact with the people in their public ministrations, l)ut in their parochial visits, at the sick bed, at weddings, and at funerals, all of which are occasions when the mind is peculiarly tender, and sus- ceptible of deep and lasting impressions. Amply sup- ported by the contributions of the church, their whole time is devoted to the work of moulding and giving char- acter to public sentiment ; and with the advantages which they enjoy over all other classes of society, of lei- sure, the sanctity of their office, and direct and constant contact with the people as their '* spiritual guides," their power has become all-controlling. It is in 2l finite sense omnipresent in every section of the country and is al)so- lutely irresistible, wherever their claims are allowed. Hence what they countenance it will be next to an im- possibility to overthrow, at least till their order itself be overthrown ; and whatever system of evil they oppose, must melt away like snow beneath the warm rays of an April sun. To illustrate the strength of their power more fully, 1 will suppose a case. The car of temperance rolls back its ponderous wheels, and we become a nation of drunk- ards. Midnight gloom covers the whole land. The voice of the reformer is no longer heard in stern rebuke against the general debauch which is now rife in every rank and grade of society. The traffic in intoxicating drinks is legalized in all parts of the country, and by a law of Congress for the District of Columbia^ every per- son who visits the seat of government on business, or for pleasure, may be compelled to drink to intoxication, on penalty of thirty-nine lashes on his bare back, in- flicted at discretion of the rum-sellers of the district. In this state of things, suddenly some daring spirit starts up, and with the watchword of reform gathers around him a little band of fearless coadjutors, who with himself pledge their lives, their fortunes, and their 30 sacred honor, to the glorious work of delivering the coun- try from the scourge and curse of intemperance. Struck with the sanctity of their professions, they naturally look to the priesthood and church for aid and cooperation. But to their surprise, they find that thousands of the clergy are not only the victims but the apologists, and advocates, of this degrading vice and crime ; many of them among the best customers of the rum-seller; they often go reeling and staggering from the grog-shop to the meeting-house, and are obliged to ascend the pulpit on borrowed feet ; and it not unfrequentiy occurs, during the divine services of the Sabbath, that the sentiments of melting tenderness which flow forth in supplication from the pious heart of the officiating priest, are interrupted in their passage by a sudden explosion of the contents of the decanter from his surcharged stomach. Deacons, too, in countless num- bers, are drunkards; the communion season is often a Bacchanalian revel; and much of the revenues of the church is the profits of the distillery. Doctors of divinity and presidents of our theological seminaries are often found engaged in amassing wealth by rumselling ; and not a few of the members and officers of the American Board of Com- missioners for Foreign Missions, and of the American Bible Society, are addicted to hal)itual intoxication; while the entire body of the priesthood and church, of all denomi- nations, are united in electing to the highest offices in the gift of the people men who are not only notorious drunk- ards, but who are also known to be in favor of perpetu- ating the infamous law, in the District of Columbia, which allows the rumsellers of the district to compel the citizens of the place, and strangers from abroad, to drink to intoxication, or submit to thirty-nine lashes on their bare backs. Schooled in the philosophy of the apostle who taught that "judgment must begin at the house of God," the reformers call first upon the church and priesthood to re- pent, and sign the pledge of total abstinence. A few comply with the call, and not only sign the pledge, but advocate its merits ; but much the larger portion continue to drink ; and to save their own reputation, they pour con- tempt and ridicule on the friends of total abstinence, and wink at the mobs which are got up to put them down. Presbyteries resolve that drunkenness " is not opposed to the will of God." The General Conference of the Metho- dist Episcopal church declare, by an overwhelming vote, that they have no " right, wish, or intention," to abolish intemperance. Professor Stuart comes out in a published 31 letter, and denounces the lectures on total abstinence as mere " spoutings and vehemence," and boldly declares that men may get drunk " without violating the Christian faith, or the church." President Fisk endorses this doc- trine, and asserts that it *' will stand, because it is Bible doctrine." Some of the smaller sects, and local bodies in the more influential ones, pass resolutions in favor of temperance, but at the same time slander and traduce its firmest and most unflinching friends, because they refuse to recognize a rum-drinking and rum-selling church and clergy as the representatives and followers of Christ ; and as if to give undoubted proof of their hypocrisy, they still continue to vote for drunkards, and the advocates of the compulsion law, for the presidency and all other import- ant offices in the gift of the people, and sternly resist every importunity of the friends of temperance to aid in the election of men who are in favor of repealing that infernal enactment. Now with the church and clergy in this position, what progress, 1 ask, could the friends of temperance hope to make in their work of reform? It requires all the moral power which they can command to make headway against the depraved appetite of the drunkard, with the church and clergy nominally in their favor. What, then, could they do with this mighty influence openly pitted against them, and on the side of the drunkard? Would they ever dream of putting down intemperance by pollficnl action, so long as the land was cursed with a drunken and besotted churcii and priesthood, and they were themselves in full fellowship with that church and priesthood? Surely, no man in his sober senses would ever seriously entertain such an idea. Men of sense would see, at a glance, that the church and clergy were a strong and im- pervious rampart around the citadel of intemperance, and that the oidy hope of our country was in their speedy conversion or utter overthrow. But is there any analogy between the case I have here supposed and tlie one under consideration? Is it true that thousands of the ministers of our country are slave- holders? Are our deacons, in countless numbers, slave- breeders, and slave-traders? Do doctors of divinity, and presidents of our theological seminaries enhance their wealth by plundering cradles and trundle-beds? Do members and officers of the A. B. C. F. M. and of the A. B. S. claim their neighbor's wives and daughters, and ap- propriate them to their own use as chattels personal ? Have presbyteries passed resolves thai "the holding of slaves, so far from being a sin in the sight of God, is nowhere condeamed in his holy word?" Has the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church publicly declared that it had " no right, wish, or intention," to abolish the infernal slav^e system. Has Professor Stuart denounced the lectures of aboli- tionists as mere "' spouting and vehemence," and boldly declared that the strong may enslave the weak, without violating the " Christian faith or the church ?" And has President Fisk endorsed this doctrine, and asserted that " it will stand, because it is Bible dovfrine ? " Do those sects and local ecclesiastical bodies which adopt resolu- tions in favor of anti-slavery, at the same time slander and vilify the character of its firmest and most unflinch- ing friends, because they refuse to recognize a pro-slavery church and clergy as the followers of Christ? And do they, as a body, still persist in voting for slave-claimants and pro-slavery men to fill the highest offices in the gift of the people, and that, too, against the earnest remon- strances and entreaties of the abolitionists? Truth, I re- gret to say, requires an affirmative answer to all these questions ! The entire body of the church and clergy of the country are in Christian fellowship with slavery, that is, with those who legalize the system ; while a large pro- portion of them are its open and unljlushing advocates and apologists I Not a solitary sect in the land, of any magnitude, has espoused the anti-slavery cause. They all, without exception, stand on the side of the oppressor, and legalize his atrocities. They pass from the commun- ion table to the ballot-box, and there deposit their votes for the man who has robbed his neighbor's cradle, to fill the highest office in the gift of the people. Xot a chain has been forged — not a fetter has been riveted on any hu- man being in the* District of Columbia, without their sanction ! The question has often been put to them, " Do you, the professed ministers and followers of Christ, wish the capital of your country to remain a human flesh- mart, where your Saviour may be sold, in the person of his followers, under the auction hammer ?" and they h^ve as often returned an affirmative answer! And whenever the abolitionists have sent up their petitions to Congress for the abolition of slavery, the church and clergy have sent men there, as their representatives, who have basely trampled those petitions under their feet ! But it is not in their political capacity that the influ- ence of the church and clergy has been most prejudicial to the cause of emancipation. True, they have rivalled 33 the infidel and nothinoarian in their support of pro- slavery parties ; and their recreancy at the ballot-box has been such as to merit the severest epithets which 1 have ever bestowed upon them. But in their ecclesiastical char- acter, tliey have publicly defended the slave si/stem as an in- nocent and Heaven-ordained institution, and have thrown the sacred sanctions of religion around it, by introducing it into the pulpit, and to the communion table ! At the South, nearly the entire body of the clergy publicly advocate the perpetuity of slavery, and denounce the abolitionists as fanatics, incendiaries, and cut-throats ; and the churches and clergy of the North still fellowship them, and palm them off upon tiie world as the ministers of Christ. I know it will be said that there are exceptions to this charge ; but if there be any, I have yet to learn of them. I know not of a single ecclesiastical body in the country which has excommunicated any of its members for the crime of slaveholding, since the commencement of the anti-slavery enterprise, though most of them have cast out the true and faithful abolitionists from their com- munion. T might with great propriety pursue these general re- marks, and indulge in a somewhat severer strain ; but to understand the true character of the American church and clergy, and the full extent of their atrocities, you must hear them speak in their own language. Should I tell you the whole truth respecting them, and tell it in my own words, I fear you wouhl entertain the same opinion of me that the Hramin did of his English friend, who, on a certain occasion, as they were walking together along the banks of a beautiful river, admiring the richness of its scenery, imprudently remarked, that in his country, during the winter season, the water became so solid that an elephant could walk upon it. The Bramin replied, " Sir, you have told me many strange and incredible things respecting your country before, yet I have always believed you to be a man of truth, but now I knew you lie." So, if I tell the truth respecting the Ameiican church and clergy, T am afraid you will think me guilty of falsehood. 1 will therefore introduce several of the leading sects, and let them speak for themselves, througli the resolves of th 'ir respective ecclesiastical bodies, and the published sentiments of their accredited ministers ; and altiiough you may not believe me, should I tell you that they have "no wish or intention" to abol- ish slavery, yet you will believe them, I trust, when you 34 hear the declaration from their own lips. I will begin with THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. This church extends, in territory, over the whole Union, and embraces in its communion, at the present time, over 1,000,000 members, of whom probably not less than 100,000 are slaves. It comprises thirty-two Annual Con- ferences, from which delegates are chosen to meet in Gen- eral Conference, once in four years. The church is gov- erned by six bishops, who are elected by the General Conference, q.nd whose duty it is to preside at the An- nual Conferences ; fix the appointment of preachers ; or- dain bishops, elders, and deacons ; and oversee the spir- itual and temporal business of the church. The first meeting of the General Conference, subse- quent to the formation of the American Anti-Slavery So- ciety, was in Cincinnati, in May, 1836. On the evening of the 10th of May, the Cincinnati A. S. S. held a public meeting, which was addressed by two of the members of the Conference. On the 12th of May, Rev. S. G. Roszell presented to the Conference the following preamble and resolutions : — " Whereas great excitement has pervaded this country on the subject of modern abolitionism, which is reported to have been increased in this city recently, by the unjustifiable conduct of two members of the General Conference in lecturing upon, and in favor of that agitating topic; — and whereas such a course on the part of any of its members is calculated to bring upon this body the suspicion and distrust of the community, and misrep- resent its sentiments in regard to the point at issue; and where- as, in this aspect of the case, a due regard for its own charac- ter, as well as a just concern for the interests of the church confided to its care, demand a full, decided, and unequivocal expression of the views of the General Conference in the prem- ises ; " — Therefore, Resolved, — 1. "By the delegates of the Annual Conference in General Conference assembled, that they disapprove, in the most un- qualified sense, the conduct of the two members of the General Conference, who are reported to have lectured in this city re- cently upon, and in favor of modern abolitionism." Resolved, — 2. " By the delegates of the Annual Conference in General Conference assembled, — that they are decidedly opposed to modern abolitionism, and wholly disclaim any ri?ht, wish, or in- tention to interfere in the civil and political relation between 35 master and slave, as it exists in the slaveholding states of the Union." These resolutions, after a full discussion, were adopted b}' the Conference — the first by a vote of 122 to 11, the last 120 to 14. Accompanying these resolutions, as they went forth to the world to " define the position" of the Methodist Epis- copal church on the great question which is now agitat- ing the land, was a pastoral address to the churches, which contains the following passages : " These facts, which are only mentioned here as a reason for the friendly admonition which we wish to give you, constrain us, as your pastors, who are called to watch over your souls, as they must give account, to exhort you to abstain from all abo- lition movements and associations, and to refrain from patron- izing any of their publications, olition, but whose desires are not su^hciently strong to induce them to separate from a slaveholding church. They love their church organiza- tion, corrupt as it is, better than they love the cause of the bleeding slave. Hence they cling to it. and oppose the genuine abolitionists, who go for entire separation from slave-breeders and their Northern abettors.* Soon after the last Tiiennial Convention, a Provisional Foreign Mission Committee was appointed by the disaf- fected Baptist ministers of the New Organization, for the ostensible purjiose of carrying on a system of missionary operations among the heatlien, disconnected with slavery ; 52 but it proved to be a mere trick of the clergy, to quiet the anti-slavery agitation. All the movers of it are, to this day, in full fellowship with the Baptist church or denom- ination, as a Christian body; and that church is made up, mainly, of slave-claimants and those who legalize shivery. And besides, a large sum of money that was raised from abolitionists, on condition that it should not be mingled with the blood-stained contributions of the South, was ap- propriated to the use of the old man-stealing board, as will appear from the following resolution, unanimously adopted at the first, or an early meeting of the Provisional Foreign Mission Committee : — " Whereas the Foreign Mission Board have recently sustained a heavy loss by the failure of their banker at Calcutta, and thus appropriated supplies are cut off from the missionaries in Asia; Therefore, " Resolved, — " That the treasurer of this committee be instructed to for- ward, as soon as po?si )le, five hundred dollars, from funds now in the treasury, to the relief of the missionaries, to be expended under the direction of Dr. Judson and Mr. Vinton. " Simon G. Shipley, Chairman. " Charles W. Dennison, Recording Secretary." A second missionary association has recently been formed by a portion of the same disaffected members, called the American and Foreign Baptist Missionary So- ciety ; but it is only another limb of the old man-stealing Baptist body. The leaders in it are still in Christian fel- lowship with Drs. Sharp, BoUes, and Wayland, and Hon. Kichard Fletcher, all of Avhom are oificers of the old board ; and also with the Baptists generally of the North, who legalize slavery. The organization of these new missionary associations is only a family quarrel, and not a division in the family. But the case is one which de- mands separation, like that which took place in the Con- gregational church when a portion of it embraced the Unitarian faith. The last General Convention of the Baptist church was characterized by base servility to the slave power, and utter recreancy to every principld of Christianity. The North and South there met together in loving fellowship, to advance the kingdom of the Redeemer. Every section of the church was fully represented. The slave-claimant, the Northern apologist of slavery, and the New-Organiz- ationist, were all there, and sat clown together. 'J'hey took the object of their meeting into ''prai/erful consider- ation," and invoked the divine blessing upon it. But — 53 O, tell it not in Algiers ! — their first act was to choose a TiiiKF to preside over their deliberations. Subsequently, another thief was selected to preach the sermon ; and yet another to make the prayer preparatory to the elec- tion of the Missionary Board ; and he, doubtless, prayed to the God of thieves ; for their next act was to drop the venerable Elon (ialusha from the board, and elect a fourth thief to till his place ! And to close the farce, they united over the communion table in singing the hymn beginning with the following lines : — ' " Lo, what an entertaining sight Are brethren who agree !" Such was the character of the last Triennial Conven- tion. And yet the Xew-Organized Baptist ministers, who had separated from the American Anti-Slavery Society because woiuen were allowed to stand upon its platform, saw no occasion to withdraw from it. They could par- ticipate in a Baptist Convention whose president was a man-stealing doctor of divinity; but they could not re- main in an anti-aUiverji meeting, where women were per- mitted to speak. Alas, how true it is thut a sectarian cannot be an honest man ! — But I am consuming too much time with my own remarks. I will let the Baptists speak for themselves. They can tell their own story better than I can tell it. . Rev. \Vm. H. Brisbane, corresponding secretary of the American and Foreign Baptist Missionary Society (for- merly a slave-owner) : — "As a body, the Baptists of this country are still united in supporting, directly or indirectly, slavery and slave-trading, and, by consequence, ail of its terrible evils. Baptists who have no slaves themselves are in intimate communion with those who have them. A very considerable proportion of Baptist ministers are slaveholders, and yet they have free access to the pulpits in almost every part of our common country; yea, they adminis- ter, oftentimes by invitation of those who possess no slaves, the sacred elements of the Lord's supper. In the Baptist (General Convention, for the thirty years of its organization, slaveholders and non-slaveholders have met in common fellowship. Its presidents have, r>r the most part, been slaveholders." Rev. Lucius Bolles, d. d., corresponding secretary of the American Baptist Board of Foreign Missions : — "There is a pleasing degree of union among the multiplying thousands of Baptists throughout the land. Brethren fn)m all parts of the country meet in one general convention, and co- operate in sending the gospel to the heathen. Our Soul/tern 54 brethren are liberal and zealous in the promotion of every holy enterprise for the extension of the gospel. 1 hey are generally^ both ministers and people, slaveholders.'''' The Baptist man-thieves of the South are liberal and zealous in the promotion of every holy enterprise, for- sooth ! ! So says a leading d. d. of the Baptist church of the North. And he tells us, further, that there is a pleas- ing degree of union between these inan-stealers and the multiplying thousands of Baptists throughout the land ! This is doubtless true ; but to whom is this union pleas- ing? Not, surely, to the despairing slave; nor to God, who can himself, of course, have no possible union with thieves, although they may be very good Baptists and Baptist ministers. But it is pleasing to the slave-master, and to the Baptist clergy generally ; and it is doubtless pleasing to (heir father. Slavery is greatly strengthened by it ; and whatever strengthens that institution, cannot be otherwise than pleasing to him. Rev. W. B. Johnson, d. D.,of South Carolina, president of the last General Convention : — " When, in any country, slavery has become a part of its settled policy, the inhabitants, even Christians, may hold slaves withotit crime.^^ Rev. Daniel Sharp, Massachusetts, to Rev. Otis Smith : " In regard to church action in the case I consider it both inexpedient and iinscriptiiral. There were, undotd>tedly, both slaveholders and slaves in the primitive churches. I, therefore, for one, do not feel myself at liberty to make conditions of com- tminion lohich neither Christ Jtor his apostles made. I do tiot consider myself wiser or better than they were. Nor have I yet made such progress in knowledge as to believe that a good end sanctifies ujijustifiable means. I believe that a majority of the wisest and best men at the North hold to these sentiments. But if I stood alone, here I shall remain immovable, unless I gain some new light, which, at my period of life, I do not expect. " I am yours truly, " Daniel Sharp."' Rev. R. Funnan, d. d.. South Carolina, to the governor of the state, 1833 :— " The right of holding slaves is clearly established in the Holy Scriptures, both by precept and example." On the death of Dr. F., which occurred soon after, among the property advertised by his executor to be sold at public auction, was " a library of miscellaneous char- acter, chiefly theological, twenty-seven negroes, some of 55 them very prime, two mules, one horse,, and an old wag- on." Query — Were any of the Negroes whom Dr. Fur- man lett, at his denth, to be sold at auction with his mules and horse, his own children ? I am nmch inclined to think they were. For the doctor derives his sanction for holding slaves from the " example" of the patriarchs ; and if my memory serves me, they made concubines of their handmaids. I know of no good reason why their example should not serve in the one case, as well as in the other. Nor will the revelations which have been made within the past few years warrant ine in thinking that our modern doctors of divinity would be less likely to imitate the example of Abraham, in the use which he made of his property, Ilagar, than in his claim to her, as such. I know nothing of the private habits of Dr. Fur- man, but he was a slaveholder and an adrocate of slavery ; and 1 have already shown that every slaveholder is an adulterer ; nay, that he is guilty of a crime of a much deeper dye. I should be afraid to trust a friend of mine in the company of any jnan who would sell, or hold, her, or any other woman, as a slave ! Such a man is a liber- tine at heart, and has not the least possible regard for female chastity ; otherwise he could never consent to see, much less to iiold, any of the sex in the helpless and un- protected condition of a slave. It is proper to add that Dr. Furman was president of the Baptist General Con- vention a short time previous to his death. The Charleston Baptist Association (extract of an Ad- dress to the Legislature of South Carolina) : — "The question, it is believed, is purely one of political econ- omy. It amounts, in effect, to this — IVhctker the operatives of a country shall be bought and sold, iTnd themselves become prop- erty, as iti this state ; or whether they shall be hirelings, and their labor only become property, as in some other states ; in other words, whether an emph^yer may buy the whole lime of laborers at once, of those who have a right to dispose of it, with a permanent relation of protection and care over them, or whether he shall be restricted to buy it in certain portions only, subject to their control, and with no such permanent relation of care and protection. The right of masters to dispose of the time of their slaves has been distinctly recognized by the Creator of all things, who is surely at liberty to vest the right of property over any object in whomsoever he pleases. That the lawful possessor should retain this right at will, is no more against the laws of society and good morals, than that he should retain the personal endowments with which his Creator has blessed him, or the money and lands inherited from his ancestors, or acquired by his industry." 56 WTiat will the working men and women of the North say to this doctrine' of the Baptist clergy that " the oper- atives of a country shall be bought and sold, and them- selves become property V At the South, many of the Baptist brethren are the property of their priests : are the Northern brethren ready to become the property of theirs ? Dr. Bolles and Dr. Sharp, who are now enjoying " a pleasing degree of union " with this same Charleston Baptist Association, would doubtless be glad to own some of them. They are now nothing but ''hikelings," in the estimation of the Charleston Association : would it not suit as well, if a slight change were made in their re- lations, so that, instead of being "hirelings," as at present, they should become the property of their employers ? I am amazed that any working man or woman in the coun- try can look upon the Baptist church with any other feel- ings than those of abhorrence and alarm ! These minis- ters would sell every soul of them into slavery, if they had the power to do it ; for they have no more regard for their rights and liberty, than they have for those they now hold in bondage. The Goslien Association, Virginia : — Resolved, — " I. That we consider our right and title to this property [slaves] altogether legal and bonaf.de, and that it is a breach of the faith pledged in the Federal Constitution, for our North- ern brethren to try, either directly or indirectly, to lessen the value of this property, or impair our title thereto." Resolved, — " 2. That we view [in the movements of the abolitionists] the torch of the incendiary, and the dagger af the midnight assas- sin, loosely concealed under the specious garb of humanity and religion, falsely so called." The Savannah River Baptist Association, in reply to the question, " Whether, in the case of involuntary separation, of such a character as to preclude all prospect of future intercourse, the parties ought to be allowed to marry again." A nswer, — " That such separation among persons situated as our slaves are, is civilly a separation by death, and they believe that, in the sight of God, it would be so viewed. To forbid second marriages in such cases, would be to expose the parties, not only to stronger hardships and strong temptation, but to church censure, for acting in obedience to their masters, who cannot be expected to acquiesce in a regulation at variance with justice to 57 the slaves, and to the spirit of that command which regulates marriage among Christians. The slaves are not free agenls, and a dissolution by death is not more entirely without their consent, and beyond their control, by such separation.'' Hung be the heavens in sackcloth I — I.et the sun liide his iace in darkness, as ^vhen the inlatuated Je^Ys nailed tlie Son of God to the cross!— and let there be a jubilee in Hell! — What have v\e liere? An ecclesiastical decis- ion wliich sets the authoi ity of Jehovah at nought, and blots out the lieaven-ordained institution of marriage among 2,7()O,0<)0 of our own countrymen ! — the decree of a council of Baptist clergymen in favor of second mar- riages, whilst both tlie parties to the original aie still liv- ing ! ! Tliese vile hypocrites aie not satistied with tearing asunder the loving pair whom (iod has joined in lioly wedlock, and forcing them to take to their bosoms other companions whom they cannot love, and should not, if they could; but they must make God accessory to the in- fernal deed. They gravely tell us tliat, lie regards it as " a separation by death,"' and, of course, tliat he will hold them guiltless. Tliis is the religion of the Baptist churcli ! These are the men with whom Dr. Holies assures us the multiplying thousands of I^aptists throughout the country are enjoying a pleasing degree of union. If there be a (iod in heaven who takes cognizance of the actions of men, and if there be in reserve a place of punishment for the guilty, where every one sliall receive his due reward, I think the day of final retribution must be a trt/inf/ one to the Baptist church. Xo crime w as ever perpetrated by depraved mortals which, as a body, they have not sanctioned. They have wrested the sce])tre of dominion from the hand of .lehovali, abrogated his law, and made themselves the suiu'eme sovereigns of thousands of his children, whose bodies and souls they have con- verted into merchandise, and now offer for sale in market with the neighing horse and lowing ox. They have anniliilated the sacred institution of marriage, and legalized adultery and rape in their most odious and hateful forms, making thousands of the female members of their own church "the Bkkkdeks on their plantations, whose offspring are torn from them with as little reluct- ance as the calf is torn from the • cow !— Their crimes would put Atheism itself to the blush. Did ever Thomas Paine or Abner Kneeland advocate forced concubinage? Did they ever contend for man's right to' unlimited power over woman ? lUit this is advocated by the Baptist church. Slavery is nothing but a system of forced concubhiageaud 58 adulteiy ! It gives woman up into the power of her owner, to do with her as he pleases I Thousands of the Baptists of this country claim, and exerci^e^ this power over the fe- male sex ; and more than nine tenths of the remainder authorize their claim an(i assist them to maintain it. Can any woman in the Baptist church be pure in heart? I think not, if she possess sufficient intejligence to under- stand the nature of her church relations. ^>he is an adul- tress at heart ; otherwise she could not fellowship a church which had annihilated tiie marriage in>titution, and thrown a million of her sisters into the market for pur- poses of prostitution. By her fellowship of slaveholders, she shows that she has, at heart, no abhorrence of an adulterous connection ; and if she is herself kept from it, it is only by the force of external circumstances. Jf Jeremiah could say of the Jewish church m his day, that they \vere " ail adulterers,'' with how much more force and propriety may this charge be brought against the Baptist church, whose most distinguished ministers " have given a boy for a harlot, and sc^ld a gii'l for wine, that they might driidc !" nay to have even i-y/ J girls /or wine for their communion table!! — But I must leave this painful picture, and turn to THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Of this church 1 have little to say; for, from the very nature of its organization, and the character of the ele- ments of which it is composed, it is the very last of all the sects to which any cause of reform should look for aid. From the commencement of our enterprise, it has been an inveterate enemy of abolition, and has thrown its entire inliuence, as a body, into the scale of slavery. Among its members have been found a few sterling abo- litionists, but fewer probal)ly, in proportion to its whole numbers, than in any oilier denomination. I believe the first instance of the opening its meeting-houses for anti- slavery lectures is yet tt) be recorded ; and if, in its eccle- siastical capacity, it has done less to sustam slaver}', by positive action in its favor, than some of the other sects, it has not been for want of love for the system, but from its haughty and dignified indifference to all matters of general interest. Many of its ministers and members are slave-claimants, and nearly all of them legalize slavery, and strenuously oppose its abolition in the District of Columbia ; and in abusive treatment of people of color, they have, if possible, rivalled even the Methodifit chui'ch. 59 Some idea of the spirit which pervades this body towards that portion of our countrymen to whom God lias given a complexion differing from ours, may be gathered from the following extracts from a recent woik Irom the pen of Judge .Jay, himself a Churchman, entitled "Caste and Slavery in the American Church." Mr. Jay says : — " In the month of June, 1839, the Board of Trustees of the General Theological Seminary, composed of the bishops and clerical and lay delegates from the different states and .territo- ries, met at New York; and their proceedings were subse- quently published in a pamphlet. From the minutes, it ap- pears that a candidate for holy orders in the diocese of New York, now the Rev. Alkxand'i-.k (kimmki.i., applied to them, l)y petition, to be allowed to enter the seminary as a student; that the petition was referred to a committee consisting of the Right Rev. Bp. II. U. Ondkkdo.nk, Rev. Drs. Ja.mks Mil- NoK and Hn;ii Smith, and \V.\f. Johnson, D.wid B. Oguen, and Edward A. Xkwton, Ksquires, who, after deliberate con- sideration, recommended a resolution of rejection, which, on the motion of the Rev. Francis L. Hawkks, d. d., was adopt- ed; that the Right Rev. liishop Doank asked leave to enter his protest against the decision, and that leave was not granted. Neither the reasons for their decision, nor the disciualitication of the candidate, are even intimated by the minutes; but it does appear, that the right of every candidate fv)r orders to en- ter the seminary was expressly guaranteed by the constitution, which the trustees were bound to obey; and that this fact was well known to them, also appears from an amendment pro- posed by the bishop of New York, while the matter was pend- ing, to the very clause uj)on which they were tram])ling. '• The true cause which led the trustees to nullify the consti- tution and deny the right of the candidate, and which they were ashamed to acknowledge, was, that he was a c 0/0 re c/ m2.n; and this was the ou/y cause — his diocesan. Bishop Onderdonk, of New York, having declared in ' The churchman' (Nov. 4, iS39),that he explicitly stated to them, ' that it they should think it right and proper to admit a ctn.oRKD man into the Seminary, he considered the applicant before them one in whose case it niii^ht loilh ^reat safety and prop riity be done.' "The Rev. Peter Williams, tor many years a respectable clergyman of New York, was never allowed to sit as a member of the Diocesan Convention, nor has the Church of St. Philip, of whi.h he was the pastor, been yet represented in that body. Me died soon after the act of the trustees, upon which we have been remarking, was exposed to the worUl; and to coun- teract, as far as possible, the indignation it had excited, the clergy in a body, attended bis funeral, and the bishop of New York pronounced from the pulpit a high elogium upon his GO character. Several of the clergy admitted that it was done merely for effect, and one of them bitterly remarked at the funeral, that the empty honors to the lifeless dust were a poor atonement for the insults so often offered to the living man. The Rev. Mr. DeGrasse, another colored clergyman of the Episcopal church, of Hne talents, excellent acquirements, and amiable disposition, — who, three years previously to the appli- cation of Mr. Crummell, had been excluded from the Seminary, and who, after a residence of some years in this city, sought in the West Indies the respectful treatment and sympathy he could not find at home, and there ended his early years by a Christian's death, — once said to the writer, with tears in his eyes, ' 1 feel that the bishop and many of the clergy are against us — that they do not want any colored clergymen in the church. I have struggled against the conviction, but it is impossible to resist it; the proofs are too strong; I experience it daily; I know it is so.' " In the diocese of Pennsylvania, an express canon debars the African church from being represented in the Convention, and excludes the rector from a seat. Truly ! a singular picture to be exhibited by Christians meeting as a council of the church; but the limits of caste stop not here. Beautifully says the poet — 'Aie we not brothers? So man and man should be; But clay anri clay ditftrs iu dignity, Whose dust is both alike.' " Since Shakspeare wrote, even the dust has learned to claim precedence over dust; and No/i me tangere is daintily in- scribed upon the mouldering coffin-lid. "Ay ! this ' aristocracy of color ' is maintained not only in God's temples, but even in that last abode where all distinctions have been supposed to disappear. In the very graveyard where Death reigns as conqueror, and worms revel on the mouldering remains of manliness and beauty; where pride, and pomp, and power, have doffed their trappings, and have said to corruption, Thou art my father, and to the worms, Thou art my mother and my sister; where the voice of passion is forever stilled, and the heart that has ceased to beat is as cold as the marble beneath which it reposes; — even here, among the tombs. Prejudice has liis dwelling, liin up by the neck ! but he planted his hand firmly against the boat, and dashed the rope away with his arms. One of them took a long bar of wood, and, leaning over the prow, endeavored to strike him on the head. The blow must have shattered the skull, but it did not reach low enough. The mon- ster raised up the heavy club again, and said ' Come out now, you old rascal, or die.' ' Strike,' said the negro; 'strike — shiver my brains noiv ; I want to die;' and down went the club again, without striking. This was repeated several times. The mob, seeing their efforts fruitless, became more enraged, and threat- ened to stone him, if he didnot surrender himself into their hands. He again defied them, and declared he would drown himself in the river, before they should have him. They then resorted to persuasion, and promised they would not hurt him. * I'll die first;' was his only reply. Even the furious mob was awed, and for a while stood dumb. "After standing in the cold water for an hour, the miserable being began to fail. We observed him gradually sinking — his voice grew weak and tremulous — yet he continued to curse ! In the midst of his oaths he uttered broken sentences — * I didn't steal the meat — I didn't steal — my master lives — master — master lives up the river — [his voice began to gurgle in his throat, and he was so chilled that his teeth chattered audi- bly] — I didn't — steal — I didn't steal — my — my master — my — I want to see my master — I didn't — no — my mas — you want — you want to kill me — I didn't steal the — ' His last words could just be heard as he sank under the water." The Natchez Free Trader, of June, 1842, gives the fol- lowing account of the burninii- of a negro at L'nion Point, Miss. : — " The body was taken and chained to a tree immediately on the bank of the Mississippi, on what is called Union Point. Fagots were then collected, and piled around him, to which he appeared quite indifferent. When the work was completed, he was asked what he had to say. He then warned all to take example by him, and asked the prayers of all around; he then called for a drink of water, which was handed to him; he drank it, and said, ' Now set fire — I am ready to go in peace ! ' The torches were lighted and placed in the pile, which soon ignited. He watched unmoved the curling flame, that grew until it began to entwine itself around and feed upon his body: then he sent forth cries of agony painful to the ear, begging' some one to blow his brains out; at the same time surging with almost superhuman strength, until the staple with which the chain was fastened to the tree (not being well secured) drew out, and 70 he leaped from the burning pile. At that moment the sharp ringing of several rifles was heard : the body of the negro fell a corpse to the ground. He was picked up by some two or three, and again thrown into the fire and consumed — not a ves- tige remaining to show that such a being ever existed. " State of North Carolina, \ Lenoir County. / " Whereas complaint hath been this day made to us, two of the justices of peace for the said county, by William D. Cobb, of Jones county, that two negro slaves belonging to him, named BEN (commonly known by the name of Ben Fox) and RIG- DON, have absented themselves from their said master's service, and are lurking about in the counties of Lenoir and Jones, com- mitting acts of felony; — these are, in the name of the state, to command the said slaves forthwith to surrender themselves, and return home to their said master. And we do also hereby re- quire the sheriff of said county of Lenoir to make diligent search and pursuit after the above-mentioned slaves; and them having found, to apprehend and secure so that they may be conveyed to their said master, or otherwise discharged as the law directs. And the said sheriff" is hereby empowered to raise and take with him such power of his county as he shall think fit for the apprehension of said slaves. And we do hereby, by virtue of an act of the Assembly of this state, concerning servants and slaves, intimate and declare, if the said slaves do not sur- render themselves, and return home to their master immediately after the publication of these presents, t/ia^ any person may kill and destroy said slaves by such j?ieans as he or they think Jit, without accusation or impeachment of any crime or offence for so doing, or without incurring any penalty or forfeiture there- by. "Given under our hands and seals, this 1 2th of November, 1836. B. Coleman, J. P. [Seal.] Jas. Jones, J, P." [Seal.] 200 DOLLARS REWARD.— Ran away from the subscriber, about three years ago, a certain negro man named Ben (com- monly known by the name of Ben Fox). Also one other negro, by the name of Rigdon, who ran away on the 8th of this month. I will give the reward of one hundred dollars for each of the above negroes, to be delivered to me or confined in the jail of Lenoir or Jones county, ox for the killing of them, so that I can see them. ' W. D. COBB. November 12, 1836. I will only add, in this connection, that these atrocious outrages were mostly perpetrated under the sanctions of American law ; and in no solitary instance have the per- petrators been brotight to condign punishment. Indeed, they are but the legitimate offspring of the slave system, 71 and are inseparable from it. And yet Prof. Stuart tells us that that system " may exist, and that, too, without violating the Christian faith ;" and the Hoii. Edward Ev- erett (a church member), once, on the floor of Congress, volunteered military aid in its defence. " Sir," said he, addressing the speaker, " I am no soldier. My habits and education are very unmilitary. Hut there is no cause in which I would sooner buckle a knapsack on my back, and put a musket on my shoulder, than tnat of putting down a servile insurrection at the South. * * * Domestic slavery is not, in my judgment, to be set down as an im- moral or irreligious relation." I have now done with the proof which I intend to pre- sent in support of my first charge, and come to the second, which is. " That the Methodist Episcopal church is more corrupt than any house of ill-fame in the city of New York." To convince you of the truth of this charge will require no labored argument. The case needs but to be stated, to be fully proved. Those dejis of infam> in New York, where the libertine resorts to satiate his de- praved desires, are tenanted by women who devote them- selves to purposes of prostitution. But are these aban- doned characters compelled to lives of infamy and crime? Ts there for them no escape from the paths of vice ? Can they not, on the other hand, change their course, and lead a virtuous life, whenever they choose to do so? But in the Methodist Church there are 50,000 women who are inevitably doomed to lives of prostitution. With them there is no alternative. They are sold in the market for the domestic Sekagho, — they are the "Bkkedkus ' on the plantation, and are compelled, on pain of cruel scourging, and even death, to submit to their owners' wishes, whatever they may be ! And yet this churcli has assured us, through its highest ecclesiastical trii)unal, by a vote of 120 to 14, that it has " no wish or intention to interfere in their civil and political relations /" It would not place them in a situation where their virtue would be secure against the brutal marauder, if it could ! The church, as a body, sanctions, and great numbers of its members perpetrate on their slaves, the very crime which the laws of your state punish with death ! My third charge is, " That the Southern ministers of the Methodist Episcopal church are desirous of perpetu- ating slavery, for the purpose of supplying themselves with concubines from among its hapless victims." From the nature of the case, the proof of this allegation must necessarily be circumstantial. But it is not, on that ac- 72 count, the less satisfactory ; for men never act but from motives ; and the actions are a sure index to the state of the heart. The tree is known by its fruit. In charging the Southern ministry with a desire to perpetuate slavery for the purpose of supplying themselves with concubines, 1 do not assert that this is their only motive in supporting it, but that it is a motive ! Now, that these men are desirous of perpetuating slav- ery, there can be no manner of doubt; for they tell us plainly that they have )io wish to see it abolished. They must, therefore, have some motive in wishing to perpetu- ate it. That motive, surely, cannot be a sincere desire to spread the knowledge of Jesus Christ, and the tri- umphs of his kingdom ; nor can it be love of wealth, — that master passion of the human breast, — for slavery is fast bankrupting the whole South. Nor is it found in their love of reputation, nor yet in their regard for the quietude of domestic life ; for these would both be greatly enhanced by the abolition of slavery. It is, doubtless, found in part, however, in their love of power ; but is this their only inducement ? Is it from a desire of dom- ination alone that they sustain a system which their founder denounced as the "sum of all villanies," and which is fast filling the land with pauperism, ignorance, and crime? That surely cannot be. There is a stronger motive in this matter than the love of power; and that motive is revealed to us in the history of the private morals of our Northern clergy. If Northern ministers possess such strong predilections for adultery and concu- binage, as the painful disclosures of the few past years force us to believe, hedged about as they are, on every side with the safeguards of virtue ; if they are often will- ing to hazard the loss of reputation, and even the dis- grace and sufferings of incarceration in the state peniten- tiary, to gratify those predilections. — is it not natural to suppose, nay, is it not morally certain, that the Southern clergy, nursed as they have been in the very hotbeds of pollution, would be anxious to perpetuate a system which affords them ample scope for indulgence, without danger, or even the fear of disgrace ? That such is the fact, is abundantly proved by the adoption, by the General Con- ference of 1840, of the resolution denying to persons of color " the right to testify against white persons, in cases of church discipline." Pending a motion to reconsider that infamous resolution, the strongest remonstrances were urged against it by Southern ministers, who even went so far as to threaten a dissolution of the church, if 74 the conduct of many of the American clergy, and the Al- gerine pirates. Look on the darkest page of :\Ioorish history, and tell me, has the Algerine ever sold his sister of the same faith for a " Ijkkedeii " to "stock "the plantation f)f her haughty proprietor with human cattle, perchance the offspring of his own V)ody? Has he ship- ped his brother Algerine to a foreign' realm, and sold hini for a galley-slave, to one of a religion dittVriiig fioui his own ? Has he denied to a portion "of his own countrv- men the right to read the Koran (his Bible), and sold those countrymen into slavery to raise funds to send that same Koran to those who were ignorant of its contents in other lands ? Has he ever claimed the wife and daughters of his Mahometan brother as his properly? Has he robbed the frantic mother of her babe, and with the price of that babe's body and soul replenished his communion cup? Kay, has he even compelled the heart-broken mother, if she observe the ordinances of her religion at all, to drhik fiom that cuf> the wine which was purchased with her own child's blood? Such enormities even the tongue of calumiiy dares not impute to the Algerine pirate, iifa sol- itary instance. And yet they are the settled policy of no inconsiderable portion of the American clergy \ They stain and darken almost every page of the modern history of the American church ; and if generally known, they would render that church a stench'in the nostrils of the heathen of every realm on the globe! My task is done. iMy pledge is redeemed. I have liere drawn a true but painful pictiire of the American church and clergy. I have proved them to be a rhotherhood OF thieves! I have shown that multitudes of them subsist by uoHREUY and make theft their tiade !— that they plunder the cradle of its precious contents, and rob the youthful lover of his bride !— that they steal " from princii)lc," and teach their people that slavery "is not 9Pposed to the will of God," but "is a merciful visit- ation !"— that they excite the mob to deeds of violence, and advocate Ly.N'cii law for the sui)pression of the sacied right of speech !— 1 Jiave shown that they sell their own sisters in the cliurch for the Seraglio", and invest the proceeds of their sales in Bibles for the heathen !— that they rob tlie forlorn and despairing mother of her l)ai)e. aiul barter away that babe to the vintner for wine for the Lord's supper! I have shown that nearly all of them ler/n/lze slavery, with all its bar- barous, bitter, burning wrongs, and make Piracy lawful and honorable con)merce; and that they dignify slave- 73 the resolution should be rescmded. I must give you a specimen of their expostulations. They betray a sensitive- ness and warmth of feeling, as you will perceive, which no other question has ever called forth. The Rev. William Winans, of Mississippi, said,— " He was never more deeply impressed with the solemnity of his situation — the act of this afternoon will determine the fate of our beloved Zion ! * * * * If you wrest from us that resolution, you stab us to the vitals t * ♦ ♦ * Repeal that resolution, and you pass the Rubicon ! Dear as union is, sir, there are interests at stake in this question which are dearer than union ! Do not regard us as threatening i * * * * But what will become of our beloved Methodism? The interests of Methodism throughout the whole South are at stake ! " The Rev. Mr. Collins, of , "Admonished the Conference, that the moment they rescinded that resolution, they passed the Rubicon. The fate of the con- nection was sealed." The Rev. William Smith, of Virginia, "Agreed with the brother from Mississippi, that there were interests involved in this question dearer than UNION itself, however dear that might be. Southerners are not prepared to commit their interests, much less their consciences, to the holy keeping of Northern men. Conscience was involved in this matter, and they could not be coerced." WTience, I ask, is this mortal fear of colored testimony? Whv do the clergy see in it a dagger, that will " stab thein to the vitals T What evil have they done, that they would sooner see the " UniOxN itself " dissolved than per- mit their sister, whom Christ has washed and cleansed in his own blood, to give utterance to her thoughts, in an assembly of his saints? AVhat mighty truth lies hidden in the bosom of the slave, that needs but to be revealed to explode the church — " determine the fate of our be- loved Zion "—and blast the rising "interests of Method- ism, throughout the whole South?" But one answer can be given to this question, and that answer abundantly confirms the truth of my charge. I come now to the last charge in the long catalogue of allegations which I have made against the American church and clergy. It is this—" That many of our clergy are guilty of enormities that would disgrace an Algei'ine pirate."^ And needs this allegation any further proof, after the appalling developments which 1 have already made ? If so, I challenge a comparison between 75 holding, and render it popular, by placing Man-stealkrs in the Presidential chair ! I have shown that those who tlieniselves abstain from these enormities, are in church fellowship with those who perpetrate them; and that, by this connection, they countenance the wrong, and strengthen the hands of the oppressor ! I "have shown that while with their lips they profess to believe that Lib- KKTY is God's free and impartial gift to all, and that it is " inalienable," they hold 2,r)()0,00 i of their own country- men in the most abject bondage; thus proving to the world, that they are not Injideh merely, but blank Athk- isTs — disbelievers in the existence of a Ood who will hold then) accountable for their actions! Those allega- tions are all supported i)y evidence which none can con- trovert, and whicii no impartial mind can doubt. The truth of them is seen on every page of our country's his- tory ; and it is deeply fell by more than two millions of our enchained countrymen, who now demand their plun- dert'd rights at their "hands. In making thi^ heart-rend- ing and ai)pairmg disclosure of their hypocrisy and crimes, I have spoken with great plainness, and at times with great severity ; but it is the severity of truth and love. 1 have said tJiat only which I couM not in kindness with- hold ! and in discharging the painful duty which devolved upon me in this regard, I have had but a single object in view — the redemption of the oppressor from his (luiU, and the oppressed from his chains. To this darling ob- ject of my heart, this letter is now dedicated. As it goes out through you, to the public, a voice of terrible warn- ing atid admonition to the guilty oppressor, but of con- solation, as I trust, to the despairing slave, I only ask for it, that it may be received with the same kindness, and read with the same candor, in which it has been written. With great respect and affection, Your sincere friend, S. S. FOSTER. Canterbury, X. II., July. 1843. NOTE BY THE PUBLISHER. This edition of one of the most remarkable produc- tions ill Anti-Slavery literature, is a perfect fac simile of those of forty years ago. The very few more pages are the result of a slight difference in the type used, and not of one added or altered word. The work was stereotyped and passed through twenty editions ; so that more than twenty thousand copies were scattered through the coun- try. With what effect will hardly be questioned by any who give it attentive and thoughtful perusal. The gen- erous contributions of a very few persons at the West and in Massachusetts, have made the present edition pos- eible. Its necessity is but too apparent from the fact that so many of the clergy to-day claim that they, or their predecessors, abolished slavery, and could have sooner done it had Garrison and his fanatical and injidel folloicing been out of their way ! This Tract, an invulner- able array of argument and fact, will show, as with noon- day sunlight, just what sort of church and clergy we had in the early and later Anti-Slavery days. Whoever would pursue the subject farther, should purchase and peruse Thk Acts of the Anti-Slavery Apostles, by Parker Pillsbury ; to be had of the author, at Concord, N. H. Price, one dollar and fifty cents. A limited num- ber of this Pamphlet may also be had by same applica- tion — five copies for one dollar ; single copies, twenty -five cents. 54 IT 1 Reader, are you a member of either of the great religious sects of the country? or, in other words, do you belong to the " Brotherhood of Thieves ?" If so, quit, I entreat you, this unfortunate and inglorious con- nection ! " Come out from among them, and touich not the unclean thing;" and henceforth "enter not into their counsels." Turn your back upon the church, and repu- diate your allegiance to their government ; for they have conspired together for the enslavement of a sixth portion of your countrymen I You cannot retain connection with either without giving character and countenance to slavery, and thereby involving yourself in its enormous guilt. God and the good of every nation abhor such connection, and it is most disgraceful to yourself. Would you join a church whose mem))ers legalized horse-stealing ? Would you enter into political relations with freebooters, pledging them aid and protection, and uniting your destinies with theirs, botU in peace and in war? If not, then separate yourself from the political and ecclesiastical institutions of the country, and become an abolitionist indeed ! Too long already have you upheld the hand which holds the lash ! Too long have you quieted the guilty conscience of the enslaver ! Too long have you dishonored yourself by standing before the world in political and ecclesiastical fellowship and alliance with the worst enemies of the human race ! Quit, then, your unnatural and unmanly position, and enlist heart, and hand, in the glorious moral revolution which is now sweeping over the land like a mighty tornado, and whose motto is, " No Union with Slave- holders I" s. s. F. Sasssas g.^_.o-^. i« « * • M "^ ..♦ \'