15 August 1861 A.D. “Old School Presbyterians” Divide
North & South
August 15: Old School Divides North
& South
Ideas & Actions Have Consequences
On this day, August 15th, in 1861, a group of pastors and ruling elders met in
Atlanta to plan the division of a new denomination, splitting off from the Old
School wing of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. Strictly
speaking, the Southern Old School men did not divide over the matter of
slavery. Rather, their point of division was the Gardiner Spring
Resolutions. What follows is an account of how that division came about,
written by the Rev. Moses D. Hoge, and found as chapter 22 in the volume,
Presbyterians: A Popular Narrative… (1892):—
In
May, 1861, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States
of America (Old School), which met in Philadelphia, adopted a paper in
reference to the Civil War, which begun the month before. This paper became
known as the Spring Resolutions, after the Rev. Gardiner Spring, pastor of the
Brick Church in New York and the minister who brought these resolutions to the
floor of that General Assembly. Three times these resolutions were put before
the Assembly, and twice they failed of vote, but with some changes, passed on
the third presentation. With the adoption of the Spring Resolutions, the
Assembly undertook to decide for its whole constituency, North and South, a
question upon which the most eminent statesmen had been divided in opinion from
the time of the formation of the Constitution, namely, whether the ultimate
sovereignty, thejus summi
imperii, resided in the people as a mass, or in the people as
they were originally formed into colonies and afterward into States.
Presbyterians
in the South believed that this deliverance, whether true or otherwise, was one
which the Church was not authorized to make, and that, in so doing, she had
transcended her sphere and usurped the duties of the state. Their views upon
this subject found expression in a quarter which relieves them of all suspicion
of coming from an interested party. A protest against this action was presented
by the venerable Charles Hodge, D.D., of Princeton Theological Seminary, and
fifty-seven others who were members of that Assembly.
In
this protest it was asserted, “that the paper adopted by the Assembly does
decide the political question just stated, in our judgment, is undeniable. It
not only asserts the loyalty of this body to the Constitution and the Union,
but it promises in the name of all the churches and ministers whom it
represents, to do all that in them lies to strengthen, uphold and encourage the
Federal Government. It is, however, a notorious fact that many of our ministers
and members conscientiously believe that the allegiance of the citizens of this
country is primarily due to the States to which they respectively belong, and
that, therefore, whenever any State renounces its connection with the United
States, and its allegiance to the Constitution, the citizens of that State are
bound by the laws of God to continue loyal to their State, and obedient to its
laws. The paper adopted virtually declares, on the other hand, that the allegiance
of the citizen is due to the United States, anything in the Constitution or
laws of the several States to the contrary notwithstanding. The General
Assembly in thus deciding a political question, and in making that decision
practically a condition of Church membership, has, in our judgment, violated
the Constitution of the Church, and usurped the prerogative of its Divine
Master.”
Presbyterians
in the South, coinciding in this view of the case, concluded that a separation
from the General Assembly aforesaid was imperatively demanded, not in the
spirit of schism, but for the sake of peace, and for the protection of the
liberty with which Christ had made them free.
After
the adoption of the Gardiner Spring Resolutions in May of 1861, Presbytery
after Presbytery in the Southern States, feeling that by that act they had been
exscinded, withdrew from the jurisdiction of the Assembly that had transcended
its sphere and decided political questions. A conference of ministers and
elders was held in Atlanta on August
15-17, 1861, and in response to a call thus issued the Assembly
met.
Accordingly,
ninety-three ministers and ruling elders, representing forty-seven
Presbyteries, duly commissioned for that purpose, met in the city of Augusta,
Georgia, on the 4th of December, 1861, and integrated in one body. The first
act after the organization of that memorable Assembly was to designate a name
for the now separated Church, and to declare its form and belief.
Something to Ponder:
The North/South division of the Old School Presbyterians did not happen in an
historical vacuum. That brief comment above, “…feeling that by that act they
had been exscinded,…” is an intriguing key. Could it be that the division of
1861 happened in part because of the division of 1837? In the division of 1837,
the Old School Presbyterians unwittingly established a precedent when they
exscinded four Synods which were predominantly New School. In making this
observation, I am not arguing that they were right or wrong, but simply that
ideas and actions have consequences. The overt exclusion of four Synods in 1837
was still a recent memory in 1861, and in that light it seems a more reasonable
suspicion that now it was the Southern churches which were being excluded,
whether overtly or not.
Our
actions have consequences. Once you do something, it becomes easier to repeat
that action. This is how habits are formed. This is how we learn. And this can
be either good or bad. On the positive side of things, skills and abilities can
be tuned to a fine pitch; all manner of tasks can be mastered. But, by allowing
a first transgression, we can also become quite adept at sin. Instead, let us
fear God and hate evil. Like Joseph, turn from sin at its first appearance, and
run! Or, to return to our story, imagine how things might have turned out, had
that first slave ship been refused access to our shores? What sort of nation
would we be if a different precedent had been set from the start? We can’t undo
history, but we can find forgiveness and mercy in Christ as our Lord and
Savior.
[excerpted
from Presbyterians: A
Popular Narrative of their Origin, Progress, Doctrines, and Achievements,
by Rev. Geo. P. Hays, D.D., LL.D. New York: J. A. Hill & Co., Publishers,
1892, pp. 483-486.]
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