American Minute with Bill Federer
300,000 miles on horseback -Francis Asbury, Circuit Riding Preacher "one of the builders of our nation"
|
|
The
King of England
was the
head of the Anglican Church
from the time of
Henry VIII.
|
|
Beginning in 1535,
all English subjects,
including those
in English colonies,
were required to the
Oath of Supremacy:
"I (state your name) do utterly testify and declare in my Conscience, that the King's Highness
is the only Supreme Governor of this Realm ...
in all Spiritual or Eclesiastical things ... So help me God."
|
|
For most of England's history from 1535 to 1829,
not to take the Oath of Supremacy
was considered
treason,
resulting in
government prosecution, fines, arrest, imprisonment,
and in cases, being
hanged, drawn and quartered, beheaded,
or
burned at the stake.
|
|
In 1735, a young Oxford graduate and named
John Wesley
was sent as the
Anglican minister
to the new American Colony of
Georgia.
He had hopes of evangelizing the Indians.
His brother,
Charles Wesley,
was secretary to
Georgia's Governor, James Oglethorpe.
|
|
On the trip over, their ship, the
Simmonds,
was also carrying a group of 25
German Moravian missionaries,
as
Wesley
noted in his journal:
"Sunday, January 25, 1736
At seven I went to the Germans (Moravians). I had long before observed ... their humility ... by performing those servile offices for the other passengers, which none of the English would undertake ... saying ... 'their loving Savior had done more for them' ...
If they were pushed, struck, or thrown down, they rose again and went away; but no complaint was found in their mouth."
|
|
The
Moravian missionary
movement was begun just a decade earlier, in 1727, by
Count Ludwig von Zinzendorf
and the
Christian refugees
whom he had allowed to live on his estate in
Bohemia,
on the border of
Germany
and the
Czech Republic.
|
|
On the
Wesleys
trip to Georgia, their ship, the
Simmonds,
was caught in a terrible storm which shredded the main sail and flooded the deck.
|
|
John Wesley
saw how everyone panicked in fear except for the
Moravians,
who continued to sing praise songs. He noticed their relationship with the Lord was closer than his, as he wrote in his journal:
"There was now an opportunity of trying whether they were delivered from the Spirit of fear ...
In the midst of the psalm wherewith their service began, the sea broke over, split the main-sail in pieces, covered the ship, and poured in between the decks, as if the great deep had already swallowed us up. A terrible screaming began among the English.
|
|
... The Germans (Moravians) calmly sung on. I asked one of them afterwards, 'Was you not afraid?' He answered, 'I thank God, no.' I asked, 'But were not your women and children afraid?' He replied, mildly, 'No; our women and children are not afraid to die.'
From them I went to their crying, trembling neighbors, and pointed out to them the difference in the hour of trial, between him that feareth God, and him that feareth him not.
At twelve the wind fell. This was the most glorious day which I have hitherto seen."
|
|
John Wesley
was unsuccessful in his ministry in
Georgia
, and after a year, the
Wesleys
sailed back to England.
|
|
Depressed at their failure, they accepted an invitation to attend a Moravian prayer meeting
in Aldersgate in May of 1738.
John
was touched by the Holy Spirit and had a profound conversion experience, writing that his "heart strangely warmed."
|
|
He wrote in his journal after the prayer service:
"I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death."
|
|
Later in 1738,
John Wesley
traveled to
Moravia
in eastern Germany where he lived and worshiped for several months with
Count Ludwig von Zinzendorf
and the
Moravian believers,
experiencing first hand their sincere Christianity, being "the religion of the heart."
|
|
Wesley
wrote in his journal:
“God has given me, at length, the desire of my heart. I am with a church ... in whom is the mind of Christ, and who so walk as He walked ...
As they all have one Lord and one faith, so they are partakers with one spirit, the spirit of meekness and love, which uniformly and continually animates all their conversation. Oh! How high and holy a thing Christianity is! ..."
|
|
Wesley
continued, contrasting the Moravian church with his previous church experience under the King's government:
"How widely different from that, I know not what, which is so called, though it neither purifies the heart, nor renews the life, after the image of our Blessed Redeemer.
I grieve to think how that holy name by which we are called must be blasphemed among the heathen, while they see discontented Christians, passionate Christians, resentful Christians, earthly-minded Christians.
Yea, to come to what we are apt to count small things, while they see Christians judging one another, ridiculing one another, speaking evil of one another, increasing instead of bearing one another’s burdens.”
|
|
John Wesley
left Germany and returned to England, where he and his brother, Charles, began
a revival movement within the Anglican Church
called
Methodism.
|
|
John
preached thousands of sermons and organized a system of itinerate preachers who traveled through shires and towns in England in a circuit, or circle.
|
|
Charles Wesley
wrote over 6,500 hymns.
|
|
Their friend,
George Whitefield,
became one of the era's most notable preachers, coming to America seven times, preaching to thousands and befriending leaders such as
Ben Franklin.
Whitefield
spoke at least 18,000 times to an estimate 10 million hearers in England and America.
|
|
John Wesley
spoke of the inner witness of the presence of the Holy Spirit in one's heart, as:
"... an inward impression on the soul of believers, whereby the Spirit of God directly testifies to their spirit that they are the children of God."
|
|
Someone who was inspired by
John Wesley
to be an Anglican Methodist lay minister was 18-year-old
Francis Asbury,
born August 20, 1745.
|
|
At the age 22,
Francis Asbury
was appointed by
John Wesley
to be a traveling preacher across England.
|
|
When
George Whitefield
died in 1771, the question arose as to who would follow in his footsteps and preach in America.
Francis Asbury,
at the age of 26, volunteered.
|
|
In 1771,
Francis Asbury
arrived in America, and for the next 45 years, he road
300,000 miles on horseback,
from the Atlantic to the Appalachians, from Maine to the Gulf of Mexico,
spreading the Gospel.
|
|
Prior to the Revolution, the
Anglican Church
was the
official established state church
in:
Virginia
in 1609;
New York
in 1693;
Maryland
in 1702;
South Carolina
in 1706;
North Carolina
in 1730; and
Georgia
in 1758.
|
|
In English colonies,
everyone paid taxes to the King's government, and the government paid the salaries of the
Anglican pastors.
Pastors lived on church-government owned farms called "glebes."
|
|
On July 9, 1776, patriots in New York pulled down the statue of King George.
|
|
Several American colonies made it an act of treason for pastors to continued saying public prayers for the King.
|
|
In 1777,
British General Howe
invaded Philadelphia and imprisoned
Rev. Jacob Duche',
the
Anglican chaplain of the Continental Congress,
and undoubtedly
pressured him to abandon the American cause.
|
|
As the Revolution progressed,
Anglican ministers
faced a
crisis of conscience.
They had to choose between
allegiance to the King and state,
or
allegiance to the patriotic American cause.
The problem was, if they joined with those fighting for independence, they would lose their means of livelihood.
|
|
As a result, most Anglican ministers returned to England, but
Francis Asbury
was one of the few who chose to stay in America.
Asbury
stated:
"I can by no means agree to leave such a field for gathering souls to Christ as we have in America."
|
|
Francis Asbury
preached over 16,000 sermons in churches, town squares and court houses, addressing everyone he met, from travelers to workers in the fields to laborers in tobacco houses.
He rode an average of 6,000 miles a year.
|
|
In 1784, 81-year-old
John Wesley
appointed
Francis Asbury
and
Thomas Coke
to oversee the Methodist revival movement in the America.
|
|
The crisis of conscience for Anglican ministers came to a head in 1784, when
Rev. Samuel Seabury of Connecticut
sought consecration as an Anglican bishop but
could not take the Oath of Supremacy to the King.
|
|
A Bishop in Scotland
agreed to consecrate
Rev. Seabury,
and in 1785, Bishop Seabury began ordaining ministers in Connecticut.
This was the beginning of the official split of the
Episcopal Church in America
away from the
Anglican Church of England.
|
|
Episcopal
ministers,
Rev. William Smith of Maryland
and
Rev. William White of Philadelphia,
in 1786, proposed a
revised Book of Common Prayer
where
references to the King were replaced
with
references to Congress.
|
|
Near that same time, at the Baltimore Christmas Conference in 1784,
Francis Asbury
moved the
Methodist revival movement
into
its own denomination
- the
Methodist Episcopal Church.
|
|
This had tremendous political impact in
Virginia
as the
Anglican Church
had been the
officially established state church
since the colony's founding charter in
1606.
|
|
In 1786, with Americans having just fought a war of independence from the King, the
Virginia Assembly
was faced with a question.
Should Virginia
replace
the
established Anglican Church
with the
new Episcopal Church,
or should they disestablish the concept of an established church altogether?
|
|
It looked as if the
Episcopal Church
would be
established,
being supported by leaders such as George Washington and Patrick Henry.
But
Francis Asbury's
separation of the
Methodist movement
into
its own denomination
meant there would not be enough
Episcopal members
in the
Virginia legislature
to vote for that church to be established.
|
|
Therefore, in 1786, Virginia officially
disestablished the Anglican,
now Episcopal, Church,
thereby allowing all other denominations to be treated equally.
|
|
Responding quickly, Britain passed the
Consecration of Bishops Abroad Act of 1786
which allowed Anglican Archbishops to consecrate Episcopal Bishops.
|
|
In 1787, they ordained
Episcopal Bishop Samuel Provoost of New York,
who was chaplain of the Continental Congress and the first chaplain of the U.S. Senate; and
Episcopal Bishop William White of Philadelphia,
who served as the second chaplain of the U.S. Senate.
|
|
In 1789, Episcopal clergy met in Philadelphia to ratify the
initial constitution
of the
Episcopal Church in America.
|
|
Nearly one-fourth of all U.S. Presidents were Episcopalian, more than any other denomination, followed by Presbyterian, Methodist and Baptist.
The majority of U.S. Senate Chaplains have been Episcopal (19), followed by Methodist (17), Presbyterian (14), Baptist (6), Unitarian (2), Congregational (1), Lutheran (1), Catholic (1), Seventh-Day Adventist (1).
|
|
The fourth Episcopal bishop in America, and the first in Virginia, was
Bishop James Madison,
cousin of fellow Virginian James Madison, the fourth U.S. President.
|
|
In recapping, just as the
Anglican Church
separated from the
Catholic Church
beginning in 1534, the American Revolution resulted in the
Episcopal Church
and the
Methodist Episcopal Church
separating from the
Anglican Church.
|
|
Other denominations had their own histories of separating from the
Anglican Church
during the previous two centuries:
-Presbyterians,
-Congregationalists,
-Puritans,
-Separatists,
-Pilgrims,
-Quakers, and
-Baptists.
|
|
Rev. Francis Asbury, one of the first two Methodist Bishops,
stated:
"My desire is to live more to God today than yesterday, and to be more holy this day than the last."
"My soul is more at rest from the tempter when I am busily employed."
|
|
"We should so work as if we were to be saved by our works; and so rely on Jesus Christ, as if we did no works."
"God is gracious beyond the power of language to describe."
|
|
"O what pride, conforming to the world and following its fashions! Warn them, warn them for me, while you have strength and time and be faithful to your duty."
"Preach as if you had seen heaven and its celestial inhabitants, and had hovered over the bottomless pit, and beheld the tortures, and heard the groans of the damned."
|
|
Francis Asbury's
leadership resulted in the
Methodist Church
in America growing from just 1,200 people to 214,000, with 700 ordained minsters, by the time of his death in 1816.
|
|
Methodist Bishop Francis Asbury
befriended
Richard Bassett,
a signer of the U.S. Constitution.
Richard Bassett
converted to being a Methodist, freed his slaves, paid them as hired labor and rode joyfully with them to revival meetings.
|
|
Shortly after being sworn in as the
first President, George Washington
was visited in New York on May 19, 1789, by the
first two Methodist Bishops in America, Francis Asbury
and
Thomas Coke.
The
Bishops
greeted
Washington
with the words:
"We ... express to you ... our sincere congratulations, on your appointment to the presidentship of these States.
We ... place as full a confidence in your wisdom and integrity, for the preservation of those civil and religious liberties which have been transmitted to us by the Providence of GOD ...
Dependence on the Great Governor of the Universe which you have repeatedly expressed, acknowledging Him the source of every blessing, and particularly of the most excellent Constitution of these States, which is at present the admiration of the world ..."
|
|
Bishop Asbury
and
Coke
continued:
"We enjoy a holy expectation that you will always prove a faithful and impartial patron of genuine, vital religion - the grand end of our creation and present probationary existence ...
We promise you our fervent prayers to the Throne of Grace, that GOD Almighty may endue you with all the graces and gifts of his Holy Spirit, that may enable you to fill up your important station to His glory."
|
|
On May 29, 1789, President Washington wrote a reply:
"To the
Bishops
of the
Methodist-Episcopal Church ...
I return to you ... my thanks for the demonstrations of affection and the expressions of joy ... on my late appointment.
|
|
... It shall still be my endeavor ... to contribute ... towards the preservation of the civil and religious liberties of the American people ...
I hope, by the assistance of Divine Providence, not altogether to disappoint the confidence which you have been pleased to repose in me ... in acknowledgments of homage to the Great Governor of the Universe ..."
|
|
Washington
continued:
"I trust the people of every denomination ... will have every occasion to be convinced that I shall always strive to prove a faithful and impartial patron of genuine, vital religion ...
I take in the kindest part the promise you make of presenting your prayers at the Throne of Grace for me, and that I likewise implore the Divine benediction on yourselves and your religious community."
|
|
In 1799,
Francis Asbury
ordained the
first African-American Methodist minister,
Richard Allen,
and dedicated the
first African Methodist Episcopal Church.
|
|
Francis Asbury's
carriage driver and traveling assistant was
"Black Harry" Hosier.
Though illiterate, Hosier listened to
Francis Asbury's
sermons and memorized long passages of Scripture.
|
|
"Black Harry" Hosier
became one of the country's most popular preachers, drawing crowds in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Boston, Connecticut, Philadelphia, Delaware, Baltimore and New York.
Hosier
rejected slavery, lifted up the common working man, and charged audiences "that they must be holy."
|
|
Hosier's
popularity gave birth to the name
"Hoosier"
being used to refer to persons of humble, low-born background who firmly held to fundamental Bible values, as the settlers who crossed the Ohio River to the Indiana shore.
|
|
President Calvin Coolidge
unveiled an
Equestrian Statue of Francis Asbury
in Washington, D.C., 1924, stating:
"Francis Asbury,
the
first American Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church
... made a tremendous contribution ..."
|
|
Coolidge
continued:
"Our government rests upon religion. It is from that source that we derive our reverence for truth and justice, for equality and liberty, and for the rights of mankind.
Unless the people believe in these principles they cannot believe in our government ...
Calling the people to righteousness (was) a direct preparation for self-government. It was for a continuation of this work that
Francis Asbury
was raised up ..."
|
|
Coolidge
added:
"The government of a country never gets ahead of the religion of a country.
There is no way by which we can substitute the authority of law for the virtue of man ...
Real reforms which society in these days is seeking will come as a result of our religious convictions, or they will not come at all.
Peace, justice, humanity, charity - these cannot be legislated into being. They are the result of a Divine Grace ..."
|
|
Coolidge
continued about
Francis Asbury:
"Frontier mothers must have brought their children to him to receive his blessings!
It is more than probable that
Nancy Hanks, the mother of Lincoln, had heard him in her youth.
Adams
and
Jefferson
must have known him, and
Jackson
must have seen in him a flaming spirit as unconquerable as his own ...
He is entitled to rank as
one of the builders of our nation
.
On the foundation of a religious civilization which he sought to build, our country has enjoyed greater blessing of liberty and prosperity than was ever before the lot of man.
These cannot continue if we neglect the work which he did."
|
|
Coolidge
concluded:
"We cannot depend on the government to do the work of religion.
I do not see how anyone could recount the story of this early
Bishop
(Asbury)
without feeling a renewed faith in our own country."
|
|
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
|
|
Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|