Chapter
15
THE
CRISIS
True to prophetic fulfillment, the
time was at hand for the restoration of the church to her normal state of
unity and holiness. The scattered condition of God's people in the various
sectarian denominations was not always to continue, for such could not be the
ideal state of the church; it could not be her final state in which Christ
could expect to receive her as his bride. For her there was a better day at
hand. From Romish night to the light of justification by faith, possessed
among Protestant sects generally since the sixteenth century reformation, had
been a great step upward. Also the Wesleyan reformation, bringing in the
light of perfect holiness as a Christian attainment subsequent to regeneration,
marked an advance for the truth in its progress by stages unto the end of
time. There needed to be yet another step, another reformation, which should
bring the church to her fullness of glory, and visualize her unity and
solidarity.
It would seem that the holiness
movement that arose in the sixties and seventies should have accomplished
this, but it served only as an approach to it. True holiness indeed destroys
the elements of sectarianism, and forbids a continued state of division among
Christians. But the holiness movement, as such, came to have holiness only
nominally for its object. It undertook no antagonism to sectarian divisions,
though it deplored them. It stood for nothing more than holiness as a subject
to be taught and experienced, and satisfied itself as best it could to remain
within the denominations. It drew back when the real issue came, and in
consequence it has long been dissipated in the sects, having for forty years accomplished little or nothing toward bringing
God's people into unity.
Christian unity can never be
brought about within the sects nor in connection with any recognition of
allegiance to them. It absolutely can be effected only out of and away from
the sects, by obedience to God and a severance of sectarian ties. Since true
Christian unity is incompatible with sects, and since coming out of sects is
opposed by the sect spirit and invites persecution by the sects, the only
course for the people of God to take who have received the light on the true
church is to cut loose from human institutions and abide in Christ alone,
even though it places them in a relation hostile to the so-called churches.
For those first leaving the sects there was no body of saints already called
out to which they could be added. What could it mean to them but a crisis?
And what would it constitute in the progress of events but a reformation? But
the Spirit of the Lord was thus leading. Since sects are hostile to the
movement out of sects, the Spirit of the Lord becomes necessarily hostile to
them; for he indeed leads his people out of sects. But the time had come.
God's spiritual ones were looking and longing for some development or other
by which they would cease to be divided in sectarian bodies. No one had put
it into their minds; their anticipation of it was prompted by the Spirit of
God, which was in them. There needed some one to sound the trumpet of the
Lord, some one to take the lead and make a positive declaration against the
sin of division, some one through whom God could voice the call, "Come
out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye
receive not of her plagues" (Revelation 18:4).
God had in Brother Warner prepared
just such an instrument. His was the spirit of a reformer. He shunned not to
declare God's judgments. His ministry had a definite message, and represented
the burden of God for the purity and unity of his church. Looking back upon
Brother Warner's career it would seem, as the writer has already intimated,
that his connection with the Church of God (Winebrennerian), which assumed to
have no creed but the Bible and to be indeed the true church of God, had
doubtless served to emphasize to him the true church ideal and to shape his
course along right lines. And his rejection by the Ohio Eldership for the
preaching of holiness awakened him to see that that body was not what it
claimed to be, but was, after all, only a humanly ruled institution, only one
sect among the many. The light he already had on the church was sufficient to
forbid his reuniting with them. Thus the so-called Church of God had
contributed to him the right idea of the church, and the holiness movement
had brought to his understanding the line on which God would bring out a pure
church, namely, the line of holiness; and thus was the divine Hand leading
him and fitting him for the work to which he was called.
We can only imagine what it meant
to step out on God alone and preach the divine judgments against the apostate
religions of the day, to decry the evils of denominationalism, and to
undertake on that same line the publication of a paper. That his work was
despised and that Satan undertook to crush it in its very beginning cannot be
wondered at. Its humbleness and apparent insignificance looked uninviting to
the worldly-minded; but the deep spirituality and divine manifestations that
characterized it were a sufficient vindication to those who were capable of
spiritually discerning the truth. There was something that said, "This
work is of God." There was a sense of spiritual freedom and of love and
Christian fellowship that bore convincing testimony to those who would but
listen to the dictation of the Spirit that this is indeed the truth.
But Brother Warner was not alone.
God had reserved his thousands who no longer were bowing the knee to Baal.
From them he received encouragement and support, though for a few years it
seemed his work had to go through the crucible of trial. Accordingly we trace
his difficulties and sorrows, as well as his victories, until the cause becomes
fully established in the earth.
From what we learn of Brother
Warner's earlier views and attitude, he never had a party spirit; he never
was a sectarian. Even from his early ministry the love and fellowship that
exists among the people of God he recognized as the paramount bond of
Christian union. After his conversion, when dealing with the question of what
church he should join, he is found casting about to determine which one
represented the real church of God. As the followers of Winebrenner had the
right name, and seemed to him to be correct in doctrine, he was led into that
denomination. With the insufficient light he then
possessed he probably failed to see the man rule that prevailed, instead of
the Holy Spirit rule that characterizes the divine, theocratic government in
the true church of God. He discovered, of course, the clash of this man rule
with the free, independent inclination of the Holy Spirit, by which he
preferred to be led. But he bore with it patiently, believing that he was in
the true church; and it took years to discover to him that the body to which
he belonged was but a sect.
It was through the attainment of
the Bible standard of holiness that he was gradually led into the truth
respecting the church and sects. Early in 1878 he wrote: "The Lord
showed me that holiness could never prosper Upon sectarian soil encumbered by
human creeds and party names, and he gave me a new commission to join
holiness and all truth together and build up the apostolic church of the living
God." He soon began to receive light on the Scriptures, which revealed
to him that the church was to be restored to her primitive glory in the
evening of the dispensation. The chapter on a "Spiritual Shaking,"
taken from his book, clearly shows that when the chapter was written (1879)
he understood that God was going to bring out a pure church. He published
this in 1880, which became the date from which the present epoch of the
church may be reckoned.
It should be remembered that
during this time he was connected with the Northern Indiana Eldership; but as
this was a body already separated from the old Eldership because of their
purpose to keep on the Scriptural basis, he really believed that this body
was the true church, for that was its claim. Thus he was really out of
sectism in heart and was associated with a body claiming to be the church of
God. During the last year (1880) of The Herald of Gospel Freedom, when it was
fully under his editorial charge, its columns, while teaching holiness,
breathed the principles of the one true church. One of its stated objects was
"the union of all true believers in the Spirit of God and upon the
inspired Word." Because of insufficient light on the governmental aspect
of the true church, he was slow to discover that even the new Eldership was
only a body ruled by men. As light came on the Holy Spirit government, he
looked upon the man rule elements in the Eldership as inconsistencies that
needed removal. It was human machinery that he thought needed to be dispensed with. We must concede,
therefore, that in the meantime he was, to all intents and purposes, out of
sects.
We speak of this period as the
crisis because he took such a bold, uncompromising stand against sects and
taught holiness and the principles of the church with such thoroughness that
it seemed to awaken every satanic element that had been slumbering under the
guise of false profession. People had either to accept the truth or go into
darkness. To him it meant the break-up of old relations, the drawing of new
lines of fellowship, exposure to persecution, and everything that might
befall the career of a reformer. As the teaching of the resurrection and the
repudiation of circumcision constituted the offence of the cross in Paul's
day, so the preaching of the Bible standard of holiness and the renouncement
of all sects became the offence of the cross at this time. We shall give
several selections from the earlier issues of The Trumpet that are
representative of its teaching. In the issue of March 1, 1881, we have the
following:
BRANCHES
Where in the Bible do we find the
idea of sects being branches, as people talk about? "What branch of the
church do you belong to?" is a common expression in these times of
antiscriptural language and practice. Why do not people read their Bibles
better and learn that every individual believer is a branch in Christ--John
15?
If a whole sect is a branch, then
the individual must be a sub-branch; but this would make each one dependent
upon the sect for his union with, and life from, Christ. This would be second
hand salvation. We should not like to risk the coupling--I
prefer a direct union with Christ.
Taking Christ's parable of the
Vine and Branches, there is but one way to represent branch sects; that is,
imagine the branches adhering directly to the vine but pressed together and
tightly bound into several bunches. Thus drawn together each bundle would
have the appearance of a branch; but upon closer examination it would be
found to consist of many branches each adhering to the vine, except a good
many dead sticks, that had been killed by the unnatural confinement, and had
rotted loose from the trunk.
We think it is the great business
of the pure gospel sword of holiness to cut those soul-killing chords, that
the Father may purge the several branches, and that they may all straighten
out in natural position--live, grow, and bear fruit unto holiness.
His account of how he was led to
sever his connection with the holiness association, which he began to see was
but a milder form of sectism, is given in an editorial for June 1,
1881.
THAT
YE BREAK EVERY YOKE
Saturday, April 22, the hand of
the Lord was heavily upon our soul, had no relish to converse with any one
but God. Finally in company with two brethren we went into the house of God
at Hardinsburg, Indiana, and placed ourselves under the searching eye of God,
when the Spirit of the lord showed me the inconsistency of repudiating sects
and yet belonging to an association that is based upon sect recognition. We
promised God to withdraw from all such compacts. But being dearly attached to
the holiness work, we attended the Association at Terre Haute, and tried to
have the sect-endorsing clause removed from the constitution. Its substance
is as follows, speaking of local associations:
"It shall consist of members
of various Christian organizations and seek to work in harmony with all these
societies."
We offered the following
substitute: "It shall consist of, and seek to cooperate with, all true Christians
everywhere."
We had supposed that fellowship
and cooperation should not exclude any person or truth that is in Christ
Jesus, and that we should not be compelled to bow down to anything not in,
nor of, Christ Jesus.
We were positively denied
membership on the ground of not adhering to any sect. And now we wish to
announce to all that we wish to cooperate with all Christians, as such, in
saving souls but forever withdraw from all organisms that uphold and endorse
sects and denominations in the body of Christ.
In the same issue (June 1) he
reviews a position taken by T. K. Doty, the editor of The Christian
Harvester. We present this article, and also two others, in order to show his
argument on the question of the church and sects.
SQUARE
COME-OUTISM
"Probably this means the
doctrine of coming out of all the sects, and giving the church of Christ no
visible organization." -- Christian Harvester.
I wish to ask the editor of The
Harvester if human sects are essential to the visible organization of Christ?
The above language so implies.
Then, according to this statement,
the church of Christ was without a visible organization hundreds of years,
until the present-day sects arose. And if the visible organization thus
provided is a necessary adjunct to the church, then the apostle Peter made a
mistake when he said that God had already "given unto us all things that
pertain unto life and godliness."
Again, if the formation of sects
gives the church of Christ a visible organization, will The Harvester please
point out the time, in the history of the church, when that important event
occurred?
Was it when the first sect was
formed, namely, the Roman Catholic sect, in the beginning of the apostasy?
Did she give the church of Christ a visible organization? If so, what need of
subsequent efforts at organization?
We presume that The Harvester does
not admit that this corrupt hierarchy is the church of Christ. So there was
one sect formed, and Christ's church still not visibly organized.
Out of her came the Church of
England. She claims to be the identical church of Christ. Does The Harvester
admit the assumption? If not, then he must admit that a second sect failed to
organize and represent the Church of Christ.
Again, from the old mother of
sects came forth the Lutheran sect and her daughters--granddaughters of Rome.
Did any of them organize the visible church of Christ? If so, which
one?
Or was it left for John Wesley to
organize the church of Christ in the formation of the Methodist Episcopal
sect? If that sect is really the identical church of Christ, then the editor
of The Harvester is in a hopeless condition, since severed from that body;
but we presume that he still felt that he was in the church of Christ after
dismembered from that great sect, therefore it is not identical with the
church of Christ, and her organization was not the organization of Christ's
church at all.
Having now followed two branches
of Rome to the second generation without finding in any of these sister
denominations the identical church of Christ, we must pass on to the third
generation.
Is any of the sects that have
branched out from the Methodist Episcopal sect the church of Christ? If so,
will The Harvester point out the one? Will he assume that the one he
represents is the church of Christ? If so, then he has been without Christ's
church until recently. If not, then the founding of the Wesleyan Methodist
sect was not the organization of the body of Christ. It is a fact
which no man of intelligence will deny, that no one sect on earth is the
identical church of God.
But it may be claimed by some that
all the sects taken together constitute the true church in her visible
organization. This is also a great mistake. How can all these bodies sum up
the one organic visible church of God, when they have no organic relation
to each other? In what a disgraceful light sectism presents the church! Does
that look like a divine and heaven-born family, that is composed of numerous,
rival, jealous, independent, and conflicting organisms? Oh, I beseech you for
Christ's sake, do not dishonor God by confounding his church with Babylon
confusion!
Instead of sects giving the church
of Christ a visible organization they mar and destroy the visible
organization and unity of the church of Christ. A striking want of identity
in the membership of God's church and human sects also proves conclusively
that no sect, nor yet all sects together, constitutes the divine fold. Their
walls are not the walls of God's house at all, neither are "their
thresholds" his threshold. Many are in them who never entered God's
church, and, thank God, many have entered by Christ the door who have never
attached themselves to any of the factions that are not of God, but the result
of sin. If, then, the constituent elements of sects are not identical with
the elements of God's church, sects themselves are not identical with her,
and consequently their organization is not her organization.
QUESTIONS
ANSWERED
(August 15, 1881)
First: "Does the come-out
element constitute the true church of God?"
Answer: All true Christians in
heaven and earth constitute the true church of God. Ephesians 3:15.
Second: "In what particular
is the separationist, or come-out church, better than the Wesleyan Methodist
Church?"
Answer: This language places
antisect Christians in a false light. They never teach such a thing as a new
sect, whose distinguishing characteristic is simply the coming out of all
other sects; such is the impression made by the question, and it is a false
one. The Christians branded "come-outers" have founded no church or
sect, nor do they intend to; but, on the contrary, they have abandoned all
sects to live in the one church that Christ founded, and into which we were
inducted by regeneration. This fact is known by hundreds who nevertheless
misrepresent them continually: this goes with them. Cod's church is composed
altogether of "come-outers." The word "church" (ecclesia)
means the "called out," they are called out of the world, out of
heathen religions, and all corrupt and bogus Christianity. But while the
come-out element is embodied in the very word "church," she is not
to be called "Come-out" church. She embodies water baptism, but is
not a Baptist church. She teaches the Sabbath, and the second
advent, but is not a Sabbatarian nor Adventist church. Her members are all
brethren, and united, but she is not the United Brethren church. The sin of
all this is in making one of the subordinate elements of the system the
center, and not God in Christ Jesus. But to the question. The Wesleyan
Methodist sect is an organized party in Christendom, a schismatic, or cut-off
party, all of which is condemned in the Bible. "There should be no
schisms in the body." The origin of all such disintegrating factions,
whether for Paul, Peter, or Wesley, is carnality, as the Word of God teaches,
"the result of sin," says The Harvester. The Wesleyan Methodist
sect is human, fragmentary, and earthly, and will be utterly annihilated at
the coming of Christ, with every other schismatic party. The church of the
living God, in which "come-outers" inhere, to the exclusion of all
human organisms, was purchased, built, and sanctified by Christ Jesus, who is
its head, door, and foundation. It is the "pillar and ground of the
truth," and will stand through all eternity, that's the
difference.
Fourth: "Wherein does the
come-out church excel the Wesleyan, and manifest its divine origin?"
Answer: This is virtually a
repetition of the question above answered. We have often said, Why do not
opposers of holiness go to the standards of the doctrine and controvert what
they say? They never do. Again, we ask, Why do not sect apologists attack
what "come-outers teach? They teach the one true and catholic church of
the Bible-this can not be overthrown, therefore sect worshipers seek to hide
their sin in misrepresenting all who abandon sects. Come out of Babylon,
brother, then you can see much clearer.
THE
SHAFTING GIVING WAY
(November 1, 1881)
If it were not such a solemn
thing, it were really amusing to see how many are floundering about on the
question of organized divisions in Christendom. They admit them evil, predict
their downfall, and then, shrinking from the result of their own admissions,
they fly to their protection and raise the hue and cry against those who
bring the gospel of God to bear upon these ramparts of sin.
L. Hawkins, of The Banner of
Holiness, admits the design of Christ is the spiritual and organic unity of
all believers, and that an advanced degree of holiness would demolish these
walls of separation, and then, as if alarmed at their fall, he
pleads for their toleration at present.
The Harvester adds, "Then let
us hail every sign of real unity as from the Lord, and, as holiness laborers,
not be afraid when the temporary shafting of denominationalism begins to give
way.
So it is admitted that
denominationalism is bolstered up with temporary shafting. This reminds us of
a pamphlet we read some years ago, in defense of sect organizations. The
writer confessed that the denominations were not the real "house of God
which is the church of the living God," but that they were necessary
scaffolds for the erection of the house, and that when the house shall have
been completed, the scaffolds will all be taken down. Well, in view of the
prospects of Christ's speedy coming we prefer to keep off of these old
rickety, rotten-timbered scaffolds that are destined so soon to tumble down
and be consumed with all the rubbish of Satan's invention. For our part we
are ready for the sect shafting to give way any day; for we are builded into
the house of God itself, and have nothing to lose or to fear. But many are
not ready for the catastrophe. While fearing and even predicting the fall of
those Dark-Age structures, they are unwilling to abandon them. They sit
trembling upon their lofty but narrow Methodist, Baptist, United Brethren, or
Presbyterian plank, while with one hand they try to hold onto the walls of
God's church. We can always tell whether a man is resting upon one of these
scaffolds or whether he is building only on Christ, the sure foundation. If
on the latter, he has nothing to fear; if on the former, he is sure to
command a halt when he sees the true priests of God blowing the trumpets
about these walls. Such always think the time has not yet come to abolish
sects and denominations. "Oh! no! do not push against our scaffold poles
yet; be careful down there! Please don't lean against that shafting, there is
danger of its falling!"
One dear minister took us aside at
the Alvan (Illinois) camp meeting last summer and inquired of our views. We
told him, of course, that we believed in no church but the body of Christ,
etc. He conceded about all we contended for, but, unwilling to abandon his
elevated plank, he humbly besought us not to be so hard on them. Poor fellow!
We think all had better climb down from these shaky concerns; for God has
announced her fall. "Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen, and is become
the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of
every unclean and hateful bird. And I heard another voice from heaven,
saying, Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and
that ye receive not of her plagues" (Revelation 18:2, 4). "Then let
us hail every sign of real unity as from the Lord, and not be afraid when the
temporary shafting of denominationalism begins to give way." This is
good advice, but does Brother Doty walk in it? Does he hail as from the Lord
those whom the Spirit of God has led out of those cut-off parties, which
divide the people of God, and who stand in the "one fold" and body
of Christ? or has he not done his best to represent them as teaching "no
church," "no organization," and as building another sect,
etc.? Is it consistent to admit that sects are without a warrant in God's
Word, and that they are the "result of sin in the body of
believers," and express a hope for the unity of God's people, and then
join with all the popular holiness journals in opposing those who have
abandoned all those unscriptural schisms? Is it consistent to say, "We
don't want an ism gospel," and yet adhere to and stuff The Harvester
full of the gospel of Wesleyan Methodist ism?
An event that had to occur sooner
or later was Brother Warner's separation from the Northern Indiana Eldership.
At the Eldership meeting which convened at Beaver Dam, Kosciusko County,
Indiana, in October 1881, he proposed some measures by which that body might
be made to conform more perfectly to the Bible standard with reference to
government. In this he would not be heard, and on their rejection of his
reform measures he realized, probably for the first time, that the new
Eldership, bent on continuing their human organization, was a sect with which
he must sever his connection, and he then and there did so. This event does
not properly mark his coming out of spiritual Babylon, as some have supposed.
In heart he had already been out, and had preached against sects. But he
ignorantly supposed that the Northern Indiana Eldership of the Church of God
was not a sect and therefore that he was keeping clear of sects. Thus his act
at Beaver Dam was a keeping out of Babylon as much as a coming out. It was
the latter only in the outward sense, but of course it emphasized and gave
more definite character to the anti-sectarian stand he had previously
taken.
There were others in attendance at
the Eldership meeting who had heard his preaching against spiritual
Babylon and who also took the same step with him. They were David Leininger,
William Ballenger and wife, and F. Krause and wife. We give their names and
also their pictures as being of those originals who declared themselves free
from all outward forms of Babylon.
A similar thing occurred in
Michigan. About the same time the Northern Indiana Eldership was formed,
there originated near Pompeii, Gratiot County, Michigan, the Northern
Michigan Eldership of the Church of God. This body was formed because its
members had been isolated from and generally dissatisfied with the old
Eldership, which sanctioned secrecy and was steeped in tobacco. About the
fall of 1878 there joined this new Eldership J. C. Fisher and his wife, Allie
R. They had never heard of Brother Warner at that time. In the spring of
1880, J. C. Fisher had occasion to visit Indiana on business, and it happened
that while there he heard Brother Warner preach, and he accepted the doctrine
of holiness and received the experience. The following autumn the Fishers
sent for Brother Warner to come up to that part of Michigan and preach
holiness. It was then that Allie R. consecrated for and also received the
experience of sanctification.[2]
A year later, just before the
annual meeting of the Eldership (October 1881), the Fishers and others, thinking
to get the Eldership to accept holiness and thus make good the claim of being
the true church, started a holiness meeting at Carson City, where the Fishers
lived, and again had Brother Warner present. This was right after the meeting
in Indiana where Brother Warner had declared his separation from the Northern
Indiana Eldership. The situation was similar to what it had been in Indiana.
Brother Warner had been preaching on the true church and setting forth its
divine government, and the hope of these Michigan saints was that if they
could get the Eldership to accept holiness they might get them to do away
with the human machinery and fill the true church requirement. In this they
were disappointed. Before the holiness meeting was over the Eldership showed
its opposition. Upon this the Fishers and a good number of others, nearly
twenty in all, withdrew from the Eldership.
Thus there were two centers where
a stand of independence with regard to the Eldership and human ecclesiasticism
had been taken. These two congregations of saints--at Beaver Dam, (Indiana),
and Carson City, (Michigan), --were the earliest in the United States (so far
as the author knows) who had stepped completely out of Babylon and had taken
for' their basis that of the New Testament church alone. An annual camp
meeting was established at each place.
The Michigan saints in order to
express in definite form their position and intentions drew up the following
resolutions:
Whereas we recognize ourselves in
the perilous times of the last days, the time in which Michael is standing up
for the deliverance of God's true saints (Daniel 12:1), the troublesome times
in which the true house of God is being built again, therefore.
Resolved, That we will endeavor by
all the grace of God to live holy, righteous, and godly in Christ Jesus,
"looking for, and hastening unto the coming of the Lord Jesus
Christ," who we believe is nigh, even at the door.
Resolved, That we adhere to no
body or organization but the church of God, bought by the blood of Christ,
organized by the Holy Spirit, and governed by the Bible. And if the Lord
will, we will hold an annual assembly of all saints who in the providence of
God shall be permitted to come together for the worship of God, the instruction
and edification of one another, and the transaction of such business as the
Holy Spirit may lead us to see and direct in its performance.
Resolved, That we ignore and
abandon the practice of preacher's license as without precept or example in
the Word of God, and that we wish to be "known by our fruits"
instead of by papers.
Resolved, That we do not recognize
or fellowship any who come unto us assuming the character of a minister whose
life is not godly in Christ Jesus and whose doctrine is not the Word of
God.
Resolved also, That we recognize
and fellowship, as members with us in the one body of Christ, all truly
regenerated and sincere saints who worship God in all the light they possess,
and that we urge all the dear children of God to forsake the snares and yokes
of human parties and stand alone in the "one fold" of Christ upon
the Bible, and in the unity of the Spirit.
It should he noted that even at
this time, while they could see the evils of human machinery in the church,
they had not as yet a perfect knowledge of how the divine government would
be. They wondered whether they should form a new Eldership or whether they
had anything at all to do in the new procedure, cut loose as they were from
all human organizations. At this time Sister Fisher was given a vision. It
was of a tower which she and others were constructing with stones that were
piled about them in heaps. The foundation was already laid and they were
engaged on the superstructure, their work being to polish the stones and fit
them for the tower. When polished, the stones were clear as crystal. They were asked where they got such beautiful stones. She
replied that they were simply such stones as could be found anywhere. Their
beauty was brought out through the work that was put upon them. The capstone,
or headstone, was also perfectly clear, but it had a blood-red spot in the
center which shone and which shed rays of light like streaks of blood down
through all the tower.
The vision seemed to her so
wonderful. She awoke to a full consciousness and said, "Lord, what is
it?" He answered, "This is my church." Immediately the
Scriptures in 1 Corinthians 3:11-18; Ephesians 2:20-22; and 1 Corinthians 3:9
came to her mind. She then understood that the church was organized by God,
and that it was man's part to work with him and let him be Leader and
Foreman, and that Jesus was the head of the body.
They soon learned to be led of the
Spirit and that they were complete in Christ in matters of government as
well as everything else. Conscious of their freedom from the bondage in which
they had been held and that they had taken their stand on God alone, they
were blessed with the Spirit of God upon them and their assemblies in a
remarkable manner. The joy of the Lord was their portion and they were
satisfied. Thus the reformation had taken complete form. The light began to
spread and the work became established in various places. A sister Harris,
living near Bangor, in the southwestern part of Michigan, was called up to
Gratiot County in July 1882 to attend the funeral of a niece. While there she
heard J. C. Fisher preach and she invited him down to her part of the State.
He went the following October and held meetings there, which were very
successful, resulting in a number getting saved. An annual camp-meeting was
started there the next year. This camp-meeting has been continued ever since,
though it was taken to Grand Junction seven miles north in 1892. Thus this
part of the State was one of the first sections where the work of the
reformation was established, and Grand Junction became, at a later date, the
home of the publishing plant for a number of years.
That God was working on a similar
line in other parts of the world may be seen from a letter written from England
and quoted in The Gospel Trumpet from The Christian Harvester.
SOUL
PROSPERITY WITHOUT THE PENS
We extract the following from a
letter in The Christian Harvester from E. Morgan, Maidstone, England:
"We have a number of people
who enjoy holiness, men and women, old and young, who do not belong to any
sect. They have the presence of the Holy Spirit with them in a much richer
and more powerful way than the friends in the churches. This seems to
indicate that the lord will raise up an army to do his work, and perfect love
will be the uniting power that will keep them one."
It is not at all to be wondered at
that those who have obeyed God and come out of all human sects should have a
superior degree of God's grace and Spirit with them, who are free from the
oppression and interdiction that we hear so much of in all our holiness
papers. Yes, God is now raising up that holy army who stand free in Christ,
bound only by the truth and the love of God. From the above, we see, as well
as from the testimony of hundreds in this country, that the assertion that
coming out of sectism results in spiritual death is a groundless falsehood.
The result is always the opposite, unless it be in some instances where souls
have been overwhelmed with the hellish rage and deceitful, persecuting spirit
of the sects, which has induced a super indignation.
Brother Warner's separation from
the Northern Indiana Eldership was the subject of comment by his contemporary
editors and others. His reply to a letter on the subject of his leaving the
church is here given.
A dear brother writes to us as
follows: "I think you have erred in leaving the Church of God, and yet
God is blessing you and The Trumpet."
To talk about "leaving the
church of God and yet receiving the blessing of God," is Babylon confusion.
There is absolutely no way given under heaven and among men whereby we can
leave the church of God but by ceasing to live by faith in and obedience to
Jesus Christ, or falling into and continuing in sin; in which case God does
not and can not continue his blessings upon that soul as before. Therefore,
when certain preachers in Ohio published that I had left the church (which
was false, for they themselves cast me out of their synagogue for the crime
of preaching real experimental holiness), they declared the fact that what
they worship in the name of the "Church of God" is only a
"creature" of men, to which they invite members and report
"accessions" through a different process than that of regeneration,
which is the only means of accession to God's church. And when people talk of
our having left the church, because we withdrew last fall from a human
corporation called the "Northern Indiana Eldership of the Church of
God," they simply show that the devil's counterfeits still pass current
with them; they call that the church which does not answer the Bible
description of the church. Oh, how hard it is to get rid of the marks of the
beast, and the number of his name!
The Bible speaks of churches of
God in Galatia, in Achaia, in Asia, etc., but we do not read of any northern,
southern, eastern or western Galatian, Achaian, or Asiatic Elderships of the
church of God. You see this thing--Northern Indiana Eldership of the Church
of God--is too long for any use, so we just take the broad ax of God's Word
and chop it in two between "of" and "the" and throw the
first part to the moles and bats, according to the sayings of the prophet.
Then we have the church of God left, which is the body of Christ, "the
fullness of him that filleth all in all." Glory to God and the Lamb,
"we are complete in him"!
If some more would suffer the
excision of this useless appendage, there would be quite a vacuum made for
the reception of this "fullness." The term "Eldership" as
used in this case, is both contradictory in itself and a perversion of God's
Word. Where the apostle Paul speaks of "laying on of the hands of the
presbytery," the Bible Union and some other versions render "hands
of the eldership," and I think correctly, too. So I accept the word
"eldership" as a Biblical term. But what is its obvious meaning?
Simply the elders of the church in one locality, or in a district, or
country. as the case may be. To apply it therefore to an organized
corporation is a misapplication, a perversion of one of the words of God's
Holy Book. It is contradictory, and asserts a falsehood, because the
corporate "body" to which it is applied is not composed of elders,
but of brothers and sisters, a few elders, and without doubt some sinners and
backsliders; so this use of the word changes the truth of God into a
lie." Like every other body that is not identical with the body of
Christ, this "new Eldership," as it is often called, is a rival of
the body of Christ, and is used by the devil to generate party spirit and
sectish bigotry. Nothing is more natural than the disposition of carnality to
want to get up something besides the glorious church of the Firstborn.
The reason is obvious. Christ
built his own church, adds the members, and spews out the unworthy; 'He is
head over all to his body, the church,' the only real ruling power, except as
he chooses to execute his will through some of the members. Hence this gives
no place to aspirants who wish to work up something that men can build, so as
to receive the glory, and become lords over the work of their hands. As
Sister M'Creery says in her history of the origin of the Free
Methodists--during the six years that they were contented to work with a
single eye, and let God build up his own church, and receive all the glory,
the Spirit was with them in mighty power to save souls, because they had no
craft to look after; but after they set up the Free Methodist idol, it was
all, "He 'o he, go up Free Methodism!" And ceasing to work
exclusively for God's kingdom of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy
Spirit, and founding another sect, that they call "Our Church,"
they necessarily became double-eyed, and lost the real power of God. So after
our meeting last fall we heard the call to rally up the party spirit; and to
apologize for the addition of this sect corporation to the several hundred
already in the mazes of Babylon, it was called the "Northern Indiana
Eldership of the Church of God, opposed to Secret Societies." Just as
though the church that Christ himself founded did not oppose secret
societies, therefore it is necessary to form another "body" for
that purpose. Thus every sect on earth is an insult to God; even their
formation implies that we are not complete in Christ, hence the
"necessity," as B. T. Roberts said, of our organizing another
sect.
The Trumpet's New Year's greeting,
at the dawn of its second year, has an interesting tone.
NEW
YEAR'S GREETING
To all who may read this Trumpet,
and especially to all who love the truth, we send you our brotherly greeting,
a "Happy New Year," and a heartfelt "God bless you." Our
heart overflows with love and gratitude to God, and all his loving saints,
for all the benefits and mercies that filled the expiring year. Dearly beloved
friends and patrons of The Trumpet, and lovers of its hated truth, we are
happy to report from this watch-tower of Zion that we see nothing but
success, victory, and glory. A beloved father in Israel in New York on first
seeing The Trumpet recently wrote us of his inexpressible gratitude, and he
remarked that he had tried to have one established in Chicago, but says he,
"There was no one interested in the truth, that seemed to have
sufficient means to undertake the project." Well, glory to God. He has
chosen the weak things, and the money less, to carry on a work which to all
human appearances, in this sect-loving and idolatrous age, could not be
accomplished without considerable capital, and on a free basis--the wonderful
work of God. How has he "surprised the hypocrites," and confounded
the prophets of Babylon! G. D. Watson but uttered the predictions and carnal
prayers of thousands when he said through an antichrist sheet in this place,
"Brother Warner cannot succeed in that line." What is this but a
thrust at Jesus Christ! It virtually says to the Son of God: "In the
prosperity of our churches, there can be nothing but failure in the attempt
to build up 'God's Church.'" Oh, these devotees of Babylon would blot
out of existence, if they could, the church that Christ founded over eighteen
hundred years ago, to augment the glory of our "great Methodist
Church" founded less than a hundred and fifty years ago!
Well, Brother Warner may have
failed in many respects but no man that reads The Trumpet can deny the fact
that God and truth have most gloriously triumphed. And The Trumpet, too,
through the God-approved truth it holds forth, has proved a glorious success,
notwithstanding the different measures Satan has devised to hedge up its way.
One poor whited sepulcher had the impudence to say with a satanic chuckle,
"We will crush The Trumpet" and "take all Brother Warner's
subscribers." A gentleman in this city when asked to take the chaff, and
baby soap, sheet, remarked, "If you succeed with this paper will it not
break down The Trumpet?" and received the following reply: "That's
just what we want to do." He told a brother this, and said he did not
think there was much holiness in that, and did not want the paper. Yet one,
M. L. Haney, who was canonized at the Jacksonville convention as "the
Patriarch of Holiness in the West" and everywhere else, is so blind that
he has twice presumed to intimate that that enterprise might be of God,
saying "If your paper is of God." Nearly all the professed holiness
periodicals have been hauling barrels of water and pouring on the altar of
God's truth and filling up the trench round about: but God is all the more
glorified in this test between The Trumpet and the prophets of sects. Praise
his name!
The Gospel Trumpet has proved
Satan false in more than one way. In all love, we suggest to all those papers
and preachers that have been in the habit of telling the people that
"separation from the sects invariably results in spiritual death"
to read The Trumpet, then shut their mouths, and cease their lying against
the truth. There is not a sect-endorsing paper in the land that presents as
strong array of testimony to clear definite holiness, Holy Ghost power,
wonder-working faith, and fruitful lives. And we have abundance of live,
glowing reports and experiences that we have not had space to use, and nearly
all have spared us the necessity of telling you that the writers are without
the camp of creed factions. We have published numerous expressions of
appreciation, because, by their strong relish for the truths of The Trumpet
coupled with their vigorous spiritual health and usefulness in Christ, they
condemn all who reject the food we issue, as perverted and spiritually
diseased. To the former class The Trumpet is heavenly music; but to the latter,
it is an annoying sound, because their hearts and ears are not sufficiently
circumcised to endure sound doctrine. The Trumpet has demonstrated the fact
that God is able to carry a war against the devil in his strongest, last, and
most desperate fortress.
God has in a remarkable manner
heard and answered our prayers; not always however in the way we expected,
but far better than we imagined. Last spring we prayed the Lord for a more
speedy press, but the furnace of trial through which he brought us was better
for our soul than a hundred presses and ten thousand subscribers. Glory to
the God of Daniel, and the Hebrews! Oh, what lessons we have learned in the
salt and fire school of Christ! We would gladly pull the lever of the Lord's
good old hand press for forty years to come, rather than have missed those
furnace wrought visions of God, of his church, and of the great sect
abomination. To all the patrons of The Trumpet, we would return many thanks
for the means you have furnished the Lord's cause, and the many appreciated
contributions you have sent us by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. You
have largely made the paper what it is, and by your continued labor of love
and sacrifice for Christ's sake you will continue to improve and enlarge the
paper and extend its sphere of usefulness. We regard the real testing point
in The Trumpet as past; God has established the work of our hands. Our
circulation is steadily increasing; we have been printing sixteen hundred
papers each issue, sixteen fifty this time, and we do not have fifty papers
left when we get through mailing. The demand for canvassing and sample copies
continually increases.
To Babylon and all her
concomitants, we promise nothing but fire, sword and hammer, and confounding blasts
from the armory of God's Word. We have scarcely begun the bombardment of the
wicked harlot city. By the grace of God, we expect to deal with sin and
sinners as we never yet have done. Some have intimated to us that we have
been too personal in rebuking Church sinners: but, before God, we are ashamed
of and repent for our mildness and want of personality in the past. And now
we give fair warning to hypocrites, and all whose walk has not been upright
before God, that if you don't repent and publish your confession of sin, the
Lord has made it our duty, so far as we know, to expose and rebuke you before
all. We know no man after the flesh, and we seek to please no man. If God can
not carry on the paper by us seeking only to please Him, The Trumpet will
surely be discontinued. But God is our sufficiency. "I shall not
want." "For the Lord God will help me; therefore shall I not be
confounded: therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I know that I
shall not be ashamed" (Isaiah 50:7).
While it is our duty to reprove
all outward sin, we must keep the fact prominent that all reform must begin at
the heart, which God only can change; inward transformation is only upon the
condition of faith, and, therefore, must be definitely presented in the
Scriptural order of pardon and adoption to the sinner, and entire
sanctification to the believer. We regret that some attempt to beat down the
ice mountain of sect by the hammer of the Word, without the melting fire of
the Holy Spirit. Getting people out of the sects any other way than by
leading them to Christ for heart purity and the reception of the Comforter,
which leads the soul from all sects and into all truth, is but enlisting men
into carnal crusade against Babylon, and can result in little good, and has,
in some instances, hedged up the way and turned back the tide of God's truth
more than it will be are to advance it. Because the Bible experience of
entire sanctification is the true objective of Christ's atonement and shed
blood, and because thorough holiness destroys sects and denominations, as
frost would disappear under the beams of the June sun, and as the promotion
of true holiness is the only remedy for schisms and every other form of sin
in the body of professed Christians, therefore The Gospel Trumpet shall continue
to "praise the beauty of holiness" and proclaim the power of the
blood of Christ on the gospel line of definite holiness and perfect
heart-purity. We ask the cooperation and prayers of all true saints of God,
who love the freedom of Christ Jesus our Savior.
The truths of the reformation were
disseminated largely by The Gospel Trumpet, and in many parts of the country
there were those with whom its teachings found a hearty welcome. A few bits
of correspondence addressed to Brother Warner and taken from The Trumpet of
early in 1882 are here presented.
I like The Trumpet very well; hope
it may sound out long, loud. and clear to call the people back to the old
paths, the good way. Yes, truly it is the good way, the strait and narrow
way, the new and living way. and the high and holy way. You may count me a
subscriber as long as The Trumpet sticks to the Bible. Your brother purified
and being tried, E. B. B.
He keeps them that put their trust
in him. I pray God the time may soon come when Christians shall be united as
one in Christ Jesus, the living Head, and throw away all divisions, taking
Christ for their head and having their names enrolled on God's book in
heaven. May the Lord bless all the saints. May God bless you, Sister Warner,
in giving up part of your house in order that The Gospel Trumpet may still be
printed. Oh, we can't give up The Trumpet! Oh, that I could do something! I
will do what I can to help you. The Trumpet must go on. Enclosed find the
widow's mite. L. B.
We are strangers, never have seen
each other, yet we know each other by the Spirit that is given us. I am glad
you have grace enough to run The Gospel Trumpet without any visible means.
They that overcome inherit all things. The Lord will not forsake you in the
work. He will help you to carry it through. I gladly send you one dollar and
would gladly send you more if I could at present. I have no love for sects in
my soul. L. M.
Success crown your labor of love
in the kingdom and patience of Jesus.
May sectarianism totter and fall
to its very base, and glory and unity fill God's kingdom of peace and
righteousness.
God grant that the trumpet of
salvation may continue to sound its certain blasts, until Babylon be
overthrown by the power of God and truth. Mrs. L. L. and Elder J. M.
God bless you abundantly. Amen. My
heart is with you to do the whole will of God, regardless of great or small
men, bigots, or devils. T. F. D.
I have received two numbers of The
Trumpet; the sentiments therein taught are mine and have been for
fifteen years. My wife stands with me. Let The Trumpet continue to sound
louder and louder, until the walls of sectarian Jericho fall. J. C. A.
The more I deepen in Christ, the
better I understand the doctrine Brother Warner advocates; and the more I
understand the doctrine advocated and acquaint myself with the early history
of the Friends, the greater similarity I find between the two. He does not
insist upon entire separation from the world in every form stronger than they
did. F. W.
God bless you and yours and the
great and glorious work in which you are engaged. Would like to help you
scatter pure gospel truth without isms or man-made walls. The Lord hasten on
the day when they shall all fall to rise no more. Glory to God! Yours saved,
J. L. K.
In the issue of January 16, 1882,
Brother Warner answers a number of criticisms by contemporary
editors.
TO
OUR CONTEMPORARIES
"Modern come-outism, or,
better said, no-churchism." We hold that uniting with the people of God
in church fellowship, even of our own choice, does not necessarily constitute
us sectarians." Gospel Banner.
In all love we would ask our kind
Brother Brenneman to inform us of those modern "no-church" men of
whom he speaks; give us the address of any man professing godliness who
believes in and claims membership in no church.
Second. Is the body of Christ no
church?
Third. If there is any way to get
into the church besides Christ and through the Holy Spirit--if the church is
something that men open the door of and admit members into--please give us
"thus saith the Lord" for it.
Fourth. If uniting with one party
or sect of the professed people of God does not constitute one a sectarian,
then why should union with a Masonic Lodge constitute a man a Freemason?
Fifth. If a person is in Christ
Jesus, is he not in the church, and is he not already joined to all others
that are joined to the Lord?
Pure Religion very smartly, as she
supposes, ranks "come-outers" with "all other sects," by
which she virtually admits that they are as good as the others, and then says
that it takes the following elements to make a good "come-outer":
1. It is necessary that the person be "turned out of some church,"
meaning of course one of those "other sects," for a little sober,
candid reflection upon the Bible will show any person that such remarks
cannot apply to the true church at all; for "the Lord added to the
church daily such as should be [or, were being] saved," and no man [or
ecclesiastical court] can pluck them out of his hand.'
If the Editress of Pure Religion
were half as zealous to know what the Bible teaches as she is to exhibit her
wit, she would doubtless have learned that the church is not something that
men organize and admit members into, but that it is "a holy temple in
the Lord," "God's building, God's husbandry."
2. The Editress thinks that to be
a good "come-outer" the person should have a small stock of
religion and "quite a good stock of ignorance." We presume that she
did not consider that in those words she condemned as nearly graceless and
very ignorant such men as Luther, Melancthon, Fox, and Wesley, who at the
very time when they stood out of and condemned all sects and did not
contemplate joining or forming any, wielded their greatest power for
God.
The Good Way recently informed us
that Wesley never contemplated the forming of a sect. What was he then but a
"come-outer"? It is an undeniable fact upon record that he deplored
the unhappy divisions and parties of Christendom.
It is the uniform testimony of the
history of the Reformation that every reform effort was attended by a much
greater power and demonstration of the Spirit of God before it culminated in
a new sect than ever was manifest in that sect afterward. I think I can safely
challenge a single exception to this fact. During ten years labor in the
denomination that grew out of the labors of J. Winebrenner and his coworkers,
it was the constant admission of the old fathers and mothers that no such
power of God had been witnessed in that body as was before they assumed and
received the name of another religious denomination. The same is true of
early Methodism, and in a remarkable manner is it true of the Free Methodist.
Let me give you a few extracts from the "History of the Origin of Free
Methodism," by Sister Sidney M'Creery, who with her husband, Joseph
M'Creery, was associated with B. T. Roberts and William Kendall from the
beginning of the great holiness revival that resulted in their separation
from the Methodist Episcopal sect. Hence she testifies what she knows and
declares what she has seen.
The record is that for six years
they worked and prospered wonderfully under the power of God and freedom from
all sect yokes, and that from the formation of a new sect by B. T. Roberts
the glory departed from the Nazarites, as they had been called. She
says:
B. T. Roberts in his discipline
says the Free Methodist organization was a necessity. Was it? Let the
hundreds testify who were wonderfully and lovingly united together in the
Holy Ghost. The truth is this: God's heritage and work were spoiled by the
laying on of man's hands.
While enjoying this spiritual
fellowship all was peace and harmony and the work of conversion went on, the
saints rejoiced, and the sectarian devil was mad, sinners in Zion were afraid
and trembled as they saw the weakest saint upon his knees.
B. T. Roberts started out with a
trap in hand, making a new test of fellowship. He visited far and wide among
the live pilgrims, preaching sect fellowship as the one thing needful, and
that they could go no further without it.
In most cases it took them by
surprise. They examined themselves and reasoned thus: We are already in
fellowship with the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and in holy spiritual
fellowship with the saints, and God has given us the victory again and again
while fighting against the unholy sects. What can the sect yoke do for us? We
are now free to go everywhere preaching and teaching in the name of Jesus.
Thus many stood out for a while. Oh, what robbery, what treachery, to pervert
and use this work of God, which began so gloriously, to the building up of a
carnal and selfish organism! At every gathering. large or small, the sect
yoke was presented and held forth as 'the cross
My husband was satisfied with
God's way of ordering the battle; yea, more than satisfied he rejoiced and
was exceeding glad to see the prosperity of Zion in our midst. While B. T. R.
said in action by the formation of his sect, 'I have suffered enough reproach
and shame; I will number Israel and become as other nations,' then the work
of building up 'our church' commenced. How the enemy triumphed! At all the
gatherings the spirit of sectarian zeal was worked up to the highest pitch,
and so fulfilling the scripture which saith, 'Who changed the truth of God
into a lie, and worshiped and served the creature more than the Creator, who
is blessed for ever.' . . . "And today he (B. T. R.) has no more
influence than any other sect bishop, whereas he was once a terror to evil-doers
and a praise to them who did well. From this time the battle of the Lord
ceased and the enemies rejoiced. Some who remember the former days of liberty
and power ask B. T. R. why the same power is not manifested now as formerly.
He answers on this wise: God then gave the people a special blessing for a
special work. Very good; but why not continue under these special blessings
and in this special work? What an absurdity, what inconsistency to build
another sect in order to go through the same variations and evolutions of its
predecessors! Was it pleasing in the sight of God to manufacture another
class of backsliders? Was it a necessity? Wherever I go I find the burden of
Free Methodist preaching is to backslidden membership, whereas before its formation-while
they remained in God's order, where he placed them--every man, woman, and
child was able to do a full day's work. In visiting many places I find them
(the F. M.'s) nearly, if not quite, extinct. In missionary fields the work
takes well for a season, but when they begin proselyting and making it a
'necessity' to gather them into their peck measure, then the Lord leaves them
to themselves. As I am passing through the land I often meet with those with
whom I was acquainted during the war of the Lord, and immediately they refer
to the former days of power and salvation and say, 'We don't have such
meetings nowadays; I would go a long distance to enjoy such privilege.'
We might multiply quotations, but
these will suffice to show the fact that the formation of sects is the
destruction of Christianity. Thus it is an undeniable fact, that when men
enjoyed the stigmatized "come-out" "stock of ignorance,"
they have been used of God far more than after they suddenly
became wise (?) in building up a wall about themselves or entering a sect pen
built by some one else.
The Vanguard calls coming out of
Babylon "a kind of spiritual rash"; and Pure Religion and Gath
Rimmon both think that very smart, and serve it up to their readers. May the
Lord forgive this lightness. Had we not better look into the Word of God and
see what the Lord saith, than to indulge In mere witticisms? Does the Word of
God teach that it is a "spiritual rash" to belong to Christ alone
and hold only to him, "the head over all things to the church, which is
his body, the fullness of him that filleth all in all"? Was Christ
afflicted with a spiritual rash when he said, "There shall be one fold
and one shepherd"? Was that the infirmity that Paul had when he said
'there should be no schisms in the body'--no Methodist schism, no Wesleyan
schism, no Free Methodist bond schism, nor United Brethren; yea, no
schism?
Now, brethren, if you dare drop
the scales from your eyes and look squarely at the Holy Bible, you must admit
that every one of those sect organizations which you call churches are
schisms, just what God condemns and forbids. Unless you are shamefully blind,
you know it to be the truth and nothing but the truth, and your slurs and
sarcasms can not revoke that truth nor enable you to stand when you are
judged by it.
There are other exchanges that
have uttered hard things against the Rock on which I stand. Now, I simply
want you to know what you are doing, then if you wish to continue kicking
against the goads, you may do so. Do you believe that Christ purchased and
founded one church of the living God? Do you believe that the "body of
Christ" is the church? Do you believe that Christ is the only door to
the church, and that "by him if any man enter he shall be saved"?
Do you believe that the Holy Spirit sets the members in the body, the church?
Do you believe there should be "no schisms in the body"? Do you
believe that believers are "made perfect in one" and that
"thorough holiness destroys sects and denominations"? Do you believe
that 'divisions and offences are contrary to the doctrine we have received'
of Christ? Do you believe that Christians should not be "un-equally
yoked together with unbelievers"?
In the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ I ask any paper to speak out and tell me which of these points you
dispute. And if you say you believe them all, as some of you have, then I
ask, Why do you object to my believing the same? for that is just what I
believe. The only difference is, I act consistently with my faith, while you say
and do not.
You admit there is but one church
of God, still you think hard of me for not allowing that all your
"churches" are of God. This is God's truth and you can not deny it.
You say that sects are wrong, but advise God's children to continue in the
wrong. I claim that sects are wrong. and therefore say, Come out from among
them, as saith the Lord. Men professing godliness should act consistently
with their belief.
If you believe that Christ is
divided and there are many folds, many bodies, many Lords, many faiths, instead
of "one fold," "one body," "one Lord," and
"one faith," then you may consistently with your faith antagonize
The Gospel Trumpet; but you must abide the consequences of fighting against
God's Word. And remember this, that in the day of judgment it will do you no
good to have put false colors on the truth you are opposing. You will not
plead before the bar of God that I taught "no-churchism," no
organization," etc.
If you are ignorant of The
Trumpet's teaching, you will be condemned before God for opposing and
speaking evil of the things you do not understand. You should hold your peace
until you know what you are talking about.
If you do know what we--myself and
contributors--teach, you know that every paper insists on organization, the
very organization set forth in the New Testament, and you do know that we all
advocate the church, and never have encouraged anybody to leave her; but we
chose to learn from the simple Word of God what the church is, and not from
your Dark Age creeds and confused tongues. Now, all you who have lifted up
your heel against Christ and his body, the only true church in heaven and
earth, have done so because you have some sect idol in your heart and cannot
receive the truth or endure sound doctrine, or else you have not the moral
courage to assault the devil in his stronghold of divisions. What does Satan
care for your clamor against the "sin in the sects" so long as you
give him the best means of bringing God's house or kingdom to naught-the sin
of sects? I pity your sad confusion. May God give you all repentance to the
acknowledging of the truth.
An editorial in the July 25 number
answers an objection by the editor of The Sword.
THAT'S
RIGHT
Brother Dolan makes a sweeping cut
with his Sword like this: "Sectism is of the devil, and no-sectism is of
the devil."
Amen. That's true. An ism spirit
may attach itself to any principle, false or true.
As many sects have been developed
by making a center of some subordinate point of the Christian system as by
rallying upon some mere human tradition.
Whether men worship the moon or an
idol of their own make, it is an equal insult to God; and whether men worship
a gospel principle, or a doctrine of devils, is of little if any difference in
the sight of God. Either case is idolatry; because Christ is supplanted as
the center by something else either subordinate or foreign. When men get a chronic lopsidedness, so that they will scan greedily
over a paper and drop it as soon as they see nothing on their hobby, whether
it be sect or anti-sect, Sabbath or anti-sabbath, or anything else,
notwithstanding it may contain much good, pure food, many blessed thoughts
about Jesus, they have put something else in the place of Christ, and their
religion runs about like a grindstone with its axis near the outer
circumference and passing diagonally through the stone.
We once heard a Disciple preacher
say that every sect that holds some truth that no other sect holds, has a
right to its existence. This provides for as many sects as there are truths
in the religion of Christ but God allows no "schism in the body."
Nothing but the exclusive 'holding the Head,' 'seeing Jesus only,' and the
full enjoyment and constant "praising of the beauty of holiness,"
can keep us from all isms.
A selection from the Vanguard,
copied in The Trumpet shows the spiritual state into which a number of
leading holiness editors had by this time drifted because of a failure to
follow as God was leading.
BACKSLIDDEN
Brother Brooks in the last number
of the Banner (and his authority as the oldest holiness editor in the country
can not be doubted) says that the aggressiveness has gone out of the holiness
movement, and ceasing to be aggressive it is a dying thing. In most places
its numbers are decreasing, only a few accessions.
Well, he tells the truth. The
holiness people as a general thing through the country are backslidden from
God. A large per cent of them never had anything but a reclaimed backslidden
experience to leave. They got back to God and called it by the new name of
holiness. taught to do so by superficial teachers that wanted to swell the
Banner reports.
The chief cause of this awful
declension that has rolled back the tide of the salvation of the world a
decade is that the editors and evangelists. failing to become more and more
aggressive at every point against sin in the church and out, especially among
holiness people. have backslidden as a class. . .
Brother Brooks told me he could
not put radical truth into The Banner without Brother Haney and Brother Kent
and other such temporizers writing and denouncing him; so Brother Brooks
would yield and backslide from Holy Ghost power.
Brother Isaiah Reid told Brother
Sherman he did not want anything in his paper that would indicate that the
holiness people were not all right; he was planning to have The Highway as a
support for his old age. A year ago he called for a thousand
"firemen" in the holiness work as the only thing needed. He has
spent his energies this year in regulating the fiery come-outers from
wrecking the train, and evidently wants the oaks of Bashan slashed down with
a little hatchet, and not with a broadax. Rams' horns, goad sticks, and the
un-sectarian "jaw-hone of an ass" Philistine-killer, he evidently
does not take much stock in. Brothers Inskip and Macdonald are not square on
the Freemason question and are churchy. While the shell remains in part of
radical holiness, that only is the real thing, much of the spirit is gone.
You may call it fault-finding, sour godliness, or whatever you please, these
are God's facts about your case. You know the whole batch of you are afraid
to throw red-hot truth uncompromisingly everywhere. We except from this
catalog Baker and Arnold of The Free Methodist, Warner of The Trumpet,
Johnson of The Stumbling Stone (if he had the Holy Ghost), and The Sword, and
some others.
Now Brother editors and
evangelists, suffer the word of exhortation from a "jaw-hone,"
break up your fallow ground, do your first works, burn up Haney's chapter on
dress, not resolve against it; pay your debts, or go and acknowledge them at
least; cease to print such dawdle as Brother Bryant's church holiness
writings; seek for and get the Holy Ghost again; and lead the people up into
the land. - Vanguard.
Satanic forces were arrayed
against the reformation work in every conceivable way, not only by mobs and
undisguised, professional evil (though this form of attack was usually
instigated by the sectarian element), but also by deception--by teachers and
editors who were apparently right on some main question in order to deceive,
but wrong on some other vital points. A writer in The Trumpet points out one
of these destructive agencies.
A
DESTRUCTIVE HERESY
By
D. W. M'Laughlin
There is an eternal antagonism
between true holiness and fanaticism in all its phases, and the individual
possessed of the fullness of the Holy Ghost will be able to detect fanaticism
in others whether it be in outward act or deportment or in the more subtle
form of heretical teaching. The Spirit and the Word agree, and the Holy
Spirit moves and works in harmony with the written Word and never contrary
thereto.
The writer has been receiving from
time to time during the last four years copies of The Stumbling Stone, and
while much truth is found in its columns as to the evils of sect divisions,
the destructive heresy of Count Zinzendorf (that sanctification is not
subsequent to regeneration) is held with inveterate opposition to the gospel
order. Consequently, from this standpoint, the holiness movement is of the
devil, and the second-grace Christians are in need of the first grace. The
Stumbling Stone seems to attack every movement extant, even to the Salvation
Army, as well as all holiness associations and bands for the promotion of
entire sanctification. Even the position of The Gospel Trumpet he calls a
holiness schism, because the editor makes a distinction between justified and
sanctified believers. And he proposes to "kick Brother Warner's
justification cobhouse into pi," by which he exhibits his ignorance of
the real plan of salvation He might as well talk of kicking God's Word into
pi as to overthrow the two distinct works of grace, justification and
sanctification. . . .
By the above and similar remarks
The Stumbling Stone editor reveals the antagonism in his heart to the
"second grace in the Bible economy of salvation. Now, my honest
conviction is that a come-outism that sets itself squarely against holiness
as a definite experience subsequent to pardon, is surely of the devil. It is
a fact that wholly saved souls who are spiritual and discerning men detect at
once the carnality in such persons, and, quite naturally, are led to conclude
that "if such spirits are the fruits of come-outism I will have nothing
to do with it." Thus, this spurious anti-holiness come-outism is a snare
of Satan to deter honest souls from separating from sectism, leaving them
under the pressure of unholy corporations, which often results in compromise
and the loss of the Spirit of God. A come-outism that sets itself to fighting
the sects in a vindictive spirit, condemning and unchristianizing all who do
not at once come out, can not be of God. Let us lead the children of God to the
true apostolic unity, but never attempt to drive them out of Babylon; and,
above all things, let us keep sweet and deal kindly with persons who, under
the blinding influence of sectarian education, can not yet see the sin of
sects, and the true church of God.
Sound teaching, in connection with
the come-out movement, is of the utmost importance. False doctrinal
theories and extravagant notions cause untold disaster to the cause we
represent.
In the issue of May 1, 1883, when
The Trumpet was yet printed at Cardington, Ohio, Brother Warner speaks of how
the cause was sifted at that place.
SALT
IN CARDINGTON
God's cause has passed through a
terrible sifting in this place. All the powers of darkness and of Satan's
hellish rage have been let loose upon the few loyal, holy little ones here.
Wicked sect members have boasted that this cause was crushed out. One
Methodist son of Belial, steeped in tobacco and the poison smoke of his
torment, has even boasted through the secular press that he had succeeded in
putting down holiness. A Quaker preacher and family have let their tongues
run with the base, vulgar, and profane of the place in speaking against this
way. But bless God, the devil is sadly mistaken. Several souls have recently
become established, unblameable in holiness. The Lord is with us in power,
the hidden ones have four meetings every week, and God is wonderfully
blessing us.
In the chapter on The Gospel
Trumpet we have already referred to the trying ordeal through which Brother
Warner had to pass while the Publishing Office was in Bucyrus, Ohio, in 1883.
A general assembly of the saints in Ohio was announced to be held on Friday,
November 9. The place was Annapolis (now called Sulphur Springs), seven miles
northeast of Bucyrus. In Brother Warner's call to this first general assembly
in Ohio he wrote as follows:
We expect to see a large turnout
of the saints of the living God from Van Wert, Paulding, and Wood Counties,
and some from eastern Ohio; and come ye, dear ones, from Pennsylvania. Come,
O ye sanctified hosts of the Lord! Let us eat together in the name of our
Chief Shepherd and only Head and Leader. Come in the power of the Spirit;
come to have the spiritual gifts stirred up and strengthened; come to sharpen
each other as iron sharpeneth iron and to have the faith once delivered to
the saints developed in us up to the Bible standard; come to make a more
perfect consecration. Come, O ye lame and halt and blind and deaf, for the
power of the Lord will be present to heal all who believe on him. Come, O ye
sufferers, and give yourselves up to the mighty God and be made whole. Come,
poor sinners, and be saved in the day of his power. Come, O ye poor and
wayward Christians, and have your hearts established unblameable in holiness.
Come, ye who are in bondage of sect captivity, and learn your way out of the
wilderness unto the city that is set upon a hill, which hath foundations, and
whose builder and maker is God. Come from far and near, whoever seeks the old
paths and the peace of Jerusalem. Come, for the little ones will make you
welcome; yea, the Spirit and the bride say, Come, and whosoever will, let him
take of the water of life freely.
Little did he realize, when giving
this invitation and bold promise of such benefit to all who should have any
need of the divine favor, that Satan would come also with various forms of
deception and attempt to divert the reformation movement into false channels
and to so confuse the truth with clouds of error and fanaticism that men may
not see it.
The meeting began on Friday
evening at Conlay Bethel, some distance in the country from Bucyrus.
Saturday, the second day, was appointed a fast day. The first conflict came
with some elements of fanaticism manifested by three men from Van Wert and
Paulding Counties, who believed it wrong to wear collars, collar buttons,
lace, eye-glasses, etc., and confessed that they came to the meeting
purposely to make Brother Warner and the other saints take off these things.
They were a great interruption of the meeting until Brother Warner finally
rebuked them. After this they feigned great humility. They prostrated
themselves on three sides of the table behind which Brother Warner was
preaching, and would moan and groan during his discourse.
On Saturday evening the meeting
was moved to the hall at Annapolis. Here another element was met. L. H.
Johnson, who published in Toledo a paper called The Stumbling Stone, had
arrived and even before the evening service began had mounted a wagon and
begun to teach his false doctrine. He rejected the New Testament ordinances
and also opposed sanctification as a second work of grace, though he was also
on the anti-sectarian line. He was very bold to break in on the
meeting with his harangue against the true way, which he did particularly on
Sunday. On Sunday evening the saints, wishing to get away from the confusing
and delusive elements, withdrew to a private house where they felt they had
escaped from the atmosphere impregnated with devils, and where the meeting
continued victoriously all night--until 5 A.M. On the next day, Monday, at 1 P.M. the meeting was held at another private
house. This time the deceiving elements appeared and undertook to get the
upper hand. The saints, being forbidden in the Scriptures to have any
fellowship with devils withdrew to another room, where the meeting progressed
peacefully. One sister ventured to stay in the room occupied by the false
teachers. She was suddenly seized by the awful powers of darkness and she
felt she was lost. To a sister who came to her she said, "Oh, I feel so
bad; take me to the altar!" She was led to the saints' apartment, where
she bowed at the altar and soon began to manifest a frightful appearance. She
jerked and cried, "I have a devil; stay away from me!" Her face
blackened and twitched with frightful contortions, her eyes glared, her
tongue darted out like a serpent's, and when any one approached her, she
would spit and claw furiously. Hands were laid on her and she was instantly
delivered and clothed in her right mind.
This was but one of the many
remarkable manifestations. The meeting ended on Tuesday evening, and on the
whole with victory on God's side, but it had been a trying time indeed.
Brother Warner devoted a whole page of The Trumpet to the report
of this Assembly. We quote the beginning of the report:
We have never been called upon to
portray any meeting that so transcends our powers of description. We can now
better understand the language of John when he said that "if all the
works of Christ had been written, I suppose the world could not contain the
books." A full account of the meeting would make quite a volume. For
some time we felt that the meeting would be one of unusual interest. As we
received intelligence of the saints' coming from time to time, the Spirit of
God was poured upon our soul, insomuch that we could not restrain the praises
of God as we walked the streets. And their coming was as the heavens bowed to
earth. Our little habitation was thronged most of the day on Friday, and in
the evening we all went to the Conlay Bethel, where the meeting began. Since
the first assembly in Michigan, where Satan was also loosed and a terrible
conflict ensued, resulting in his being cast out, all the meetings of the
sanctified and free saints of God that we have attended have been blessed
with great unity and peace; and as there were such a host coming to this
assembly, all of which we knew were of one mind and one heart in the truth
and Spirit of Christ, and most of whom had never met before, we looked for a
meeting that would be a sample of the reign of heaven. How apt we are to
forget that we are still in the field of battle, and that Satan is now loosed
for a little season, having great wrath because he knows his time is short!
In the very first meeting we felt that Satan had also gathered his angels
together where the sons of God came to worship the God of the Bible (Job
1:6).
Certain of the brethren and
sisters had been previously shown by visions some of the things that occurred
at this meeting. The Lord was on the side of his saints and vindicated the
righteousness of his cause by manifesting himself in their meetings as well
as to their spiritual consciousness. Outwardly, of course, the meeting bore
an aspect of confusion; but Brother Warner learned to see the good in
everything. Referring, at a later date, to this assembly, he said:
This providential bringing
together of the children of light and the powers of darkness has proved a
great blessing to the saints in that it has clearly brought to light which
side men occupy.
The Bucyrus assembly was but one
engagement with the forces that at this time had gathered to oppose and
overthrow the reformation work which Brother Warner and The Trumpet had
begun. Other instruments were to figure in the struggle, and another terrific
battle was soon to follow. There were two prominent holiness teachers who
were not in sympathy with Brother Warner's position regarding sects. They
opposed the coming out from denominationalism. R. S. Stockwell was a young minister
who had helped in the meetings and who had been loved and respected by both
Brother Warner and Sister Warner, but had become exalted in himself and
deceived, and had sprung a very pernicious doctrine, the doctrine of marital
celibacy. He held that the sex relation was carnal; that when a person was
fully cleansed, the love for a husband or wife was no more than the love for
any one else; especially, that if a husband and wife were not in harmony it
would be wrong for them to maintain the conjugal relation or be to each other
anything more than to any one else; and that they would have more love for
others with whom they were in harmony than for their own companion, etc. The
attainment along this line was an advanced experience, a sort of third work of
grace.
Sister Warner was a splendid woman
and had been a faithful companion to her husband. She had borne her part well
in the arduous duties of their evangelical career. But there had come in some
disorder that had begun to affect their fellowship. Brother Warner mentions
it thus in his "Meditations."
First
there appeared mysteriously withal,
Some
leprous spots on our domestic wall.
Though
plague soon marred our holy fellowship,
Then
ate like moth the threads of love that knit
Our
hearts and souls in sweet connubial bliss,
And
made us one in sympathetic flesh.
It is probable that this would
have been but temporary had not deceiving forces combined to turn her mind
and estrange her from her husband. She came from a well-to-do family, and it
is possible that the contrast of a life more or less destitute of physical
comfort had some weight with her at this time and made her susceptible to the
suggestion that perhaps The Trumpet could be more successfully managed in the hands of some one else. There were those who were
desirous of taking it over and had the means to invest in it. Under
Stockwell's instruction she endeavored to consecrate for the "third
work," and under his enamoring influence the enemy took advantage of her
state of mind, and she came into affinity with spirits that antagonized the
work that the lord had been accomplishing through her and her husband. Once
in the hands of these enemies, the "flying roll," which had begun
to carry messages of salvation to thousands, would of course have to cease
its mission. A league of babel spirits, though dissimilar in character,
comprising free-love, anti-ordinance, anti-second-work, and anti-come-out
elements, had united against Brother Warner.
In a meeting at a private house in
Bucyrus, Stockwell, who had begun to assume a papal-like authority, gave
those assembled about an hour's harangue, which was like a gathering storm
about to break on Brother Warner. There were peculiar manifestations at this
meeting. On a lounge lay a woman of frightful appearance, her face drawn, her
eyes sunken, and she was uttering moans. Another, a man with distorted limbs
and scowling countenance, also gave evidence of an attack upon his body by
some supernatural power. It was claimed by Stockwell that these were divine
evidences that some one needed to be set right; just who, the Lord would make
known. Each began to say, "Lord, is it I?" Brother Warner had been
asking the Lord for wisdom and had been shown that after some trial of
suffering he would be able to take God himself for his wisdom. Now, since his
wife had taken sides with others who held that he was not right, and since he
was ready to suspect himself as being in error rather than his wife, he felt
that possibly they were right in their contention that the error lay with
him. In his intense eagerness to be right with God and have the blessing of fellowship
restored in his family, he became a victim. He bowed before them.
A
suppliant in that infernal maze,
To
evil spirits' much elated gaze.
His critics gathered around him
and waited with agonizing groans while Stockwell pried into his consecration
and asked whether he was willing to sell The Gospel Trumpet. They said they
felt that such was God's will and that if he was not able to see it he should
be wise and act upon their judgment, and that his soul would be blessed in so
doing. Brother Warner consented, but reserved one condition--that should God,
ere the transfer be made, interdict the order and show him differently, he of
course would obey God. They said, "No, but that 'if' you must leave
out." Finally he was persuaded to drop the if. Then the agonies of those
who, it was claimed, were groaning for him, ceased and gave place to fiendish
laughter, as they supposed God's "flying roll" was taken. This was
the crisis that had come upon his soul; this the price he had to pay for a
decision to preach uncompromisingly the truth that should create a shudder in
the ranks of hell and work a reformation in the world. Opposing forces had
succeeded in getting him to consent to give up The Trumpet and yield to the
suggestion that he was not right.
But the promised blessings did not
come to his soul; on the contrary he was plunged into spiritual darkness. He
had weakened and given over his sacred trust. What a night of suffering
followed! Only with the morning that swept away the horrors of night came a
spiritual illumination and consequent victory. His very disappointment had
brought reason to its throne and changed the aspect of the situation. And the
Lord broke the satanic spell, filled his soul with peace, and enlightened his
understanding as to the devilish powers that had been seeking to crush his
soul. He went to the little publishing office, bowed in thankfulness, renewed
his covenant, and was swallowed up completely in God once more. He then felt
that he could henceforth take the Lord for his wisdom against all the
suggestions of men or devils transformed as angels of light.
But now he began to realize that
his trueness to God would mean the sacrifice of his own bosom companion.
This, then, should be the lingering phase of his sorrow. For about one week
the battle alternated between victory and the attacks of hell. Morning would
bring apparent release, and Satan's hosts would flee, only to renew the
conflict when the shadows of evening gathered around him. His strength wore
away. He prayed that he might be comforted by some friend, if one were left.
There was a brother, a John N.
Slagle, whom God had reserved and who had expressed to Brother Warner a
forewarning of some trouble. This brother came to him and took him to his
home, seven miles in the country, where was enjoyed a sweet sleep and a
respite from the storm's rage. The poem Meditations on the Prairie, is very
touching in its description of these experiences. What this humble servant of
God had to pass through in this trying ordeal only One can know. In one long
sleepless night of parching fever and inward pain a portion of his hair
suddenly turned grey. What that the Trumpet during this period was sometimes
late in reaching its readers or that for four months it failed to appear at
all!
With repeated endeavor Brother
Warner tried to win back his alien wife. They had one child, a boy of three
years. He had fears that he should have to be separated from the child also;
but it seemed the mother's affection for both husband and child had forever
flown. She wrote her husband that he could come and get the child for aught
she cared.
The
train that bore us onward to that son
Seemed
slow that day, so very slow to run.
We
met, and lo, upon his little face
A
famine of parental love we trace.
Three
days we tarried there in strong appeal
That
God would make that woman's heart to feel
One
touch of love, yea, but one precious beam
Of
fond affection where a living stream
Once
issued forth to bless our happy home,
But
now, alas, congealed in icy zone.
In
vain was wished one moment's private talk;
At
last 'twas begged that we together walk
Outside
the city, where repose the dead,
In
silence slumb'ring in their narrow bed,
And
where, between two virgal evergreens,
A
little mound more dear than any seems:
The
grave of our Levilla Modest child,
On
whose sweet brow but three bright summers smiled.
She
was her mother's idol and firstborn,
Her
childish virtues memory still adorn.
But
this request she coolly yet declined,
As
if no love to living or dead remained.
Then,
taking that one warm and little hand,
We
slowly walked to where cold marbles stand.
Dear
Sidney chatted merrily on the way
Not
knowing what within our bosom lay:
'Twas
hard to answer to his prattling words
With
but the tearful tribute grief 'affords.
Poor
child! God bless him! We devoutly pray
He
ne'er may feel what father felt that day.
We
came to where there had been laid to rest
The
form, now cold, that we had known was blessed
To
hold a pure and lovely spirit-bud
That
went to blossom in the home of God.
And
there beside the foot of that small mound
We
knelt in prayer upon the turfy ground.
Dear
Sidney--bless the child--rememb'ring how
In
family worship he was wont to bow
Close
to our side in sweet becoming grace,
He
gently came and now resumed his place.
His
tender heart beat with devotion there
As
soft his name was breathed in fervent prayer.
But
oh, that hour! what deep emotions rose!
No
earthly language could our heart disclose.
For
our child's dear sake some feeble words were used,
But
they failed to carry what was inward used.
Oh!
how our heart longed for the poet's flight
Oh!
sing relief to deep affection's blight.
When
touched emotions rise like a swelling flood
And
merge the soul, oh! it is then we would
That
some kind angel could but lend his harp
To
start the flowing of a surcharged heart.
But
mundane language gave no wings to thought;
Our
feelings could in tears alone flow out.
Brother Warner endeavored to
regard this alienation of his wife as Providential. He took it all for good
and felt that by it he would experience all the more of Heaven's riches in
his soul.
Through the kindness of a brother
who happened to have a copy of The Christian Harvester of May 1, 1884, we are
able to give to the readers the article by Mrs. Warner in which she renounced
the movement which she brands Come-outism.
COME-OUTISM
RENOUNCED
The following communication pretty
fully explains itself. It was written by Sister Warner, the wife of D. S.
Warner, the Come-out leader, and editor of The Gospel Trumpet. Those who know
Sister W. generally, among the straight holiness people. have confidence in
her integrity. God bless her, and may she save her husband from his strong
delusions. She desires the holiness papers to copy her article:
Dear Brother Doty: My soul praises
God today for a perfect salvation in Jesus. He sweetly abides in my heart,
and I do know that his Word is true. His promises to save from all sin and
keep in perfect peace are most wonderfully verified in my case; praise his
name! Salvation is sweeter to my soul every day I live.
And
how sweetly Jesus whispers,
Take
the cross, thou needst not fear;
For
I've trod this way before thee,
And
the glory lingers near
Yea, praise God for the cross, and
the glory that always follows.
I feel it my duty to say to all
God's children, that he has opened my eyes to see the evils of come-outism. I
am free from it, and forever renounce it and praise God that he has so
completely delivered me from the spirit of it. I am thoroughly convinced that
this effort to unite God's people by calling them out of the churches is not
God's plan of unity. It simply cuts off a few members by themselves,
who get an idea that none are clearly sanctified unless they see as
"we" do; and, then, they have a harsh grating that is the very
opposite of love. I have found that the predominant spirit of the come-out
movement is the same self righteous, pharisaical spirit that Christ rebuked
when he was here on earth. They hold and teach that no one can be entirely
sanctified and belong to a "sect."
It is not necessary for me to
speak of the fanaticism and absurdities connected with this movement; but I
am not at all surprised to hear of men losing their minds after passing
through such a meeting as the assembly at Sulphur Springs last November. I
have seen more Babylon confusion outside the churches than in. I know whereof
I speak, for I have been connected with the movement from its beginning, and,
as you all know, at the very head of it. And while I believe it my duty
before God to renounce it, and stand aloof from it, I have all charity for
those connected with it. I am confident that I have nothing in my heart but
love toward them all, and love to my husband; nor do I reject him, but I can
not endorse either the movement or its organ, The Gospel Trumpet. I must obey
God, and walk in the light he has given me, or forfeit salvation, which I can
not afford to do. I have suffered the loss of all things, but rejoice to know
that I am counted worthy to suffer for Jesus' sake.
In taking this step for Cod I have
not been hasty. I have been convicted of this duty for some time.
Circumstances and the manifestations of the spirit of this movement have been
such for several months past that I fear further delay on my part would be
disastrous to the cause of Christ and my own soul. I humbly ask the prayers
of all God's children that he will keep me firm and sweet while passing
through the furnace.
Mrs.
S. A. Warner.
Upper
Sandusky, Ohio, April 22, 1864.
Brother Warner deplored his wife's
going into print with their trouble. A number of the so-called holiness
papers made remarks that were reflective on Brother Warner and the cause of
truth. On account of this, he felt it necessary to make some reply in The
Trumpet and set forth the facts concerning his wife. In the issue of July 15,
1884, he made a very clear delineation of the whole affair. He showed the sad
deception into which his wife had fallen, how it had affected her conduct,
and hardened her conscience to do things she was never known to do before,
even to being untruthful, and yet publish her testimony abroad that she was
more sweetly saved than ever. Near the close he says:
And this is the kind of holiness
the sectarian sheets have such a jubilee over. This work of the devil which
has at present broken up a family, brought a reproach upon the cause of
holiness, robbed us of our sweet child for over three months past, and which
has filled all hell with a jubilee, The Highway of Holiness says "should
be received with thankfulness." Yes, it is received in
hell with thankfulness, and just to the extent that Babylon glories in the
same she proves that she is in league with hell.
While our heart is sad for the
sake of our dear companion, we have great reason to give everlasting thanks
to Cod for the glorious fruits of these furnace flames. Oh, how our
weaknesses have been searched out and our patience perfected!
We
would not cast away the gold
We've
gathered in the furnace flame,
Nor
would we wish again the dross
Here
purged in our Redeemer's name.
In The Trumpet of July 1, 1884, a
quotation is made from the writings of John Bunyan in which are recalled the
persecutions that culminated in his imprisonment. He tells of how Satan,
failing in one plan to overthrow his work and make it ineffectual,
tries another, which was to stir up the minds of the ignorant and malicious
to load him with slanders and reproaches, and finally to have him arraigned
and put in jail. With this quotation Brother Warner makes the following
comparison:
In all these sufferings Bunyan
had, besides the grace of God, the consolations of a true wife to sustain and
comfort him. With his great heart glowing with love for the truth, and deep
affection for her that had been such a true friend in the past, just suppose
for a moment the devil had in the time of his greatest persecution from
sectarian idolaters, overthrown his faithful Elizabeth, and so blinded and
deceived her as to make it appear her duty to renounce him and the truth he was devoted to, in all the papers of that day.,
Suppose he had found her all at once fellowshipping his persecutors and
slanderers, and receiving the friendship and applause of the popular sects of
that time, rather than suffering persecution with her husband for Christ's
sake; do you not believe that such a trial would have more cruelly
"pulled the flesh from his bones" than twelve years' imprisonment
with a good and faithful wife at home sharing his reproach and offering her
daily prayers. to God on his behalf?
Of course the woman could not have
published any sin of the man of God, nor would it have been necessary. All
that she would have needed to do would have been to renounce him and the
"come-out movement" that he was engaged in under God, and remind
them that she "had been connected with the movement from its beginning,
as you all know, and at the very head of it," and then throw out a few
hints that she had "suffered" a great many things, and that
"circumstances and the manifestation of the spirit of this movement have
been such for several months past that I fear further delay on my part would
be disastrous to the cause of Christ and my own soul." This were
sufficient to confirm all the vile slanders that Satan had sent out against
her husband, with all who hated the truth he taught. Oh, yes, that would
settle the matter. Yes, yes, you know all the terrible things that are
reported of this awfully deluded man, and now his wife comes out against him,
which proves that these things are true. And if the devil were as smart then
as he is now, he would have led the poor apostate guilty woman to put on a
very lovely aspect in her public comforters, to the idolaters of those times,
in order to have the more influence. Yea, doubtless, while selling her
husband to the devil for the friendship of his enemies, and selling Christ,
whose truth he dared to speak, she would have hypocritically said, "I love my husband,"
and "Jesus sweetly abides in my heart." Oh, what a record the day
of judgment will unfold! But God be praised that Bunyan was blessed with a
true companion but let him whose lot is otherwise "bind this to him as
an ornament," as Bunyan did the vile slanders heaped upon him.
After a few years there appeared
in The Trumpet, in the issue of January 7, 1892, the following statement, from
a person who knew Mrs. Warner from her youth and who here speaks of her
divorce and remarriage:
Nothing has ever been more
surprising to me than the steps she has taken. It may not be generally known
that she got a bill through the court at Upper Sandusky, Ohio. The grounds
upon which she filed her complaint betray a dreadful absence of conscience
and the fear of God, stating that she had "been a faithful wife to him
ever since married," and that "he had been willfully absent from
her for over three years"; when the facts are, she had willfully
abandoned him over six years before, during which time he twice visited her
and wrote many letters kindly urging her to return and that without any
conditions. And she was so far from being a faithful wife that she did not
even answer his letters.
Brother Warner did not feel led to
appear against her, but faithfully admonished her for her soul's sake not to
put on record in the county court and the high court of heaven statements she
knew to be so directly opposite to the truth. And, worse yet, the woman has
recently shown her disregard for the counsel of the Bible by marrying another
man. We insisted that these few words of explanation be published to cut off
all occasion for unreasonable men to speak against the cause of Christ and
against his servant. -- E. J. Hill.
In The Trumpet of June 1, 1893, an
editorial speaks of her death, as follows:
While holding meetings in
Portland, Indiana on Wednesday, May 24, we were informed that there was a
telegram at the office for us. On going there we were startled with this
brief dispatch: "Sarah died this morning in Cincinnati. Signed, L. F.
Keller."
He is a brother of the one we
ought to be able to call our wife, and this fact rendered the familiar name
"Sarah" all sufficient in the dispatch. O my Lord, is it possible
that she is cut off in the midst of her days! She who seemed so fresh and
well is suddenly called to be the first to break the circle of six children,
all of whom were early instructed in the fear of the Lord. Ah, we cannot help
the conviction that had the dear woman never been alienated by the adversary
to break her solemn vows, and held by a blind and erring influence from
returning to the obligations of a mother and wife, yea, and' had she not been
by that influence led to obtain a bill, and that on absolutely false grounds,
she would be alive, well, and happy today. But alas, all is past now.
We wrote immediately to our friend
who had kindly informed us of the departure of the one who once so filled the
vision of our heart, for the particulars of her death, and received a prompt
reply that she died with acute typhoid fever, to which was added peritonitis,
and that she did not express herself about the future.
Out of a full heart we would love
to say much, but we have space only for these thoughts. May God comfort the
sorrowing mother, brothers, and sisters.
The unhappy woman, having forsaken
her God, her husband, and child, became married over a year ago to another
man. But alas, how often the path that leads from God is cut short!
As to what became of Stockwell,
the author has found no trace. When Brother Warner recovered his spiritual
poise, after the terrible conflict at Bucyrus, he renounced Stockwell, and
the latter at once dropped all profession.
An incident that occurred at
Medina, Ohio, before Stockwell's defection, gave Brother Warner some trouble. A
Mrs. Booth had had a vision in which she saw herself caught up with a
thousand-dollar note. Stockwell, who was at that time apparently in
sympathy with The Trumpet, interpreted her vision to her as meaning that she
should give the one thousand dollars to The Trumpet. She then decided to do
so and threw the money into the lap of Sister Warner, who refused to accept
it. Stockwell then said he would take it, which he did, and with it paid off
the debt against The Trumpet office. After this was done, Mrs. Booth came to
Brother Warner one day in company with an attorney for the purpose of
recovering the money, whereupon Brother Warner adjusted the matter by
mortgaging The Trumpet equipment for one half the amount and giving a note
for the balance. The report got out in some manner that he had fraudulently
taken the money from Mrs. Booth. In explanation he speaks of the matter as
follows:
We feel rather like treating with
silent contempt the wicked aspersions that have gone through many papers,
secular and religious, against our character; but as friends demand it of us
we will just say that the report that we fraudulently took from a Mrs. Booth
a thousand dollars by mesmeric influences is wholly and basely false. If we
have been correctly informed, it was fabricated by a lying infidel in Bucyrus
and furnished to a Cincinnati Enquirer reporter by him. That paper, after
consulting more reliable parties in Bucyrus, on the 15th of last February
published an article refuting all the reflections that had been cast upon us.
The Church Advocate, having published the Enquirer's slanders, also took back
the charges against us. The fact is, we never had any hand in obtaining that
money. We were at our home and knew not that the woman had a thousand dollars
or any money at all, until a letter was sent me stating she had given the
same. We also have letters from her stating that she had cheerfully and
deliberately given the money; that God had called her to do so and that she
did not regret the step she had taken. But subsequently she fell through the
opposition of her husband and Satan, and we gave security for the money
because it was demanded, though we were under no legal or moral obligation to
do so.
One can imagine that during his
severe trial at Bucyrus Brother Warner felt very much forsaken. But God had
many others who were ready to stand with him. There were those who were
solicitous with reference to his welfare. In one of the issues of The Trumpet
we find this little note:
A brother writes thus, inquiring
of us, "O Daniel! is thy God continually able to deliver thee?"
Through the amazing grace of God we are able to answer from the lion's den
and from the seven-times-heated furnace, Yes. Glory to the God of our
salvation, he keeps our soul above the world, the flesh, and the devil, and
from all sin. He keeps us from these two opposite regions of death, namely,
the cold, hard-hearted, grating, fruitless spirit of carnal sect-hatred on
one side; and from the soft, spurious, self-soothing, carnality-pleasing, and
sect-compromising all-bogus love delusion on the other. God helping us we shall never move out of Micah 3:8 and Psalm
149:69.
He received many letters from
those who were sympathetic and who were thankful for The Trumpet. The
following are a few:
I am so glad to get The Gospel
Trumpet. I think it is the best paper I ever read. It speaks the Bible truth.
May the Lord bless you in the good work, and give you grace and strength to
withstand all the fiery darts that Satan and his hosts can hurl at you. God
and Christ shall be for walls of salvation about you. Whom shall we fear when
God is our friend? I am trusting in Jesus for a full and free salvation.
'Without holiness no man shall see God.' It does my soul good to read the
testimonies of how God is healing both soul and body, I believe he is willing
to manifest as much power on earth today as he did when Christ was here in
the flesh. Your sister, saved through the blood. L. B.
We are continually praising God
for the way he is keeping you through every severe trial. When we understood
the reality of your trials we all wept as if we had been at a funeral. How our
hearts go out in sympathy for you! O dear brother, hold on to God;
he will not forsake those that trust in him. You must come to our
camp-meeting without fail, for we know God wants you here; but the sect
people are hoping you will not come. Your sister, M. J. F.
May God reward you in your great
work. Some good friend is sending me The Trumpet, and I do love to read it,
because it has the right ring. It sounds as if it had been baptized in the
Holy Ghost and with fire. I never saw until I was baptized with the Holy
Ghost the corruption of sectism. I am so glad that there are a few that do stand for Christ and him alone. Your brother, H. B.
C.
My prayer is that you may continue
blowing The Trumpet, and that it may always give a clear and certain sound. I
had a pretty sharp discussion with a minister today on the subject of
sanctification. By the grace of God I was under the necessity of telling him
that he was not a competent witness on the subject, having never received the
experience. Oh, why will men attempt to explain and preach that of which they
know nothing! May the God of all grace be continually your refuge and your
exceeding great reward. M. M.
That The Trumpet had the right
ring was a fact recognized wherever there were spiritual Christians who had
felt the oppression and seen the evils of human control in the so-called
churches, and of course that meant in all parts of the country. There were
many ready to fall in line with its teachings. Besides Beaver Dam, in
Kosciusko County, Indiana, and Carson City, in Michigan, as original centers,
there had come to be congregations in other parts of the States flamed, and
in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Iowa, Kansas, and others. The reformation
was in all places marked with spiritual vigor, enthusiasm, joy, love,
fellowship, confidence, and activity. People who came in contact with it and
who were not already prejudiced by sectarianism, were made to feel, by a
spiritual discernment, that "this is the way" and "these people
have the truth." A spirit of victory pervaded the work everywhere. God
manifested himself by the outpouring of his Spirit and by miraculous healings
and answers to prayer.
A remarkable instance of healing
occurred at the first camp-meeting held near Bangor, in southwestern Michigan
in June, 1883. Emma Miller, who lived in Battle Creek, had been an invalid
for nearly three years. Her eyes had become affected and she had to be led
about. For nearly the whole period of three years (or, lacking one month) she
had not read a line of print. After her conversion, which occurred nine
months previously to her healing, she was plainly shown by the Lord that she
would be healed. On being invited to the camp-meeting she was again shown, in answer to her prayer, that she would be healed.
She requested her friends to provide her with paper and envelopes, promising
to write to them. In this confidence she went to the meeting.
On the fourth morning of the
meeting, after continued prayer had been offered, she was impressed she would
be healed that day. Brother Warner had been called away from the meeting, but
J. C. Fisher and others were present. Here was a case of blindness. Her eyes
were covered with a film and the lids were closed through paralysis and she
could not open them. But nothing daunted the little body of spiritual workers
here assembled. Fasting and importunity characterized the earnest prayer.
About 5 P.M. of the day mentioned, while Sister Miller was seated on the rostrum, where she had been requested to sit that
all might see, suddenly her eyes were opened and she gazed upon the audience
and praised the Lord. The people were amazed. Some fell to shouting, which
was heard two miles away. Others trembled and cried. After praising God for
an hour or more Sister Miller went out into the bright sunlight without any
unpleasant sensation, the first time for nearly three years, and wrote two
postal cards. Her eyes became bright and strong. Sister Miller (now Mrs. A.
B. Palmer) is still living and has had her sight ever since.
Marvelous healings were common,
but as this one was a healing of complete blindness and was one of the
earliest cases, it is here mentioned. Another divine manifestation was the
power given to the ministry over devils. Since the early centuries it has not
been characteristic of any spiritual movement prior to this one, so far as
the author has learned, that devils were in such subjection and had to come
out of those possessed.
By this time quite a force of
ministers had been raised up in various portions of the country. Over in
Missouri was a man named Jeremiah Cole, who had been led into the light
independent of any human instrumentality. He had suffered from dyspepsia for
twelve years; he had been so bad he could eat only specially prepared
articles of food. He was instantaneously and wonderfully healed in answer to
his own importuning prayer, so that he could eat all ordinary foods without
discomfort. His own healing led to the healing of his sister, Mary, who had
been an invalid all her life. She began to have spasms at two years of age,
and later dyspepsia and other ailments, until her life was one of continual
suffering. Through her own prayer and that of her brother, she also was led
to claim her healing, and the work was done. Both of these persons became
effective ministers in the reformation.
In northwestern Ohio God had
raised up several persons (among whom were A. J. Kilpatrick, William N.
Smith, J. N. Howard, and Sarah Smith) who also became prominent workers. In
western Pennsylvania was G. T. Clayton, and in yet other parts of the
country, far and near, were those who had received light on the church, in
some cases without any teaching from any one, and who were by the Spirit of
God added to the ministry.
APOSTASY
OF FISHER
A sad defection from the ranks of
those who had been active in the reformation work was that of J. C. Fisher,
which has been already referred to. He was a very effectual preacher. It was
through his efforts that the original company was raised up at Carson
City, Michigan, where he lived at the time. Also it was through his
instrumentality that the work was started in southwestern Michigan and in
some other parts of the country. Through a lack of his consecration, sad to
say, he became unfaithful in his marriage relation and found affinity
with another. After being patiently and faithfully counseled by Brother
Warner and others, and after it became evident that he was rejecting all
admonitions, and in fact had married another woman, he had to be renounced
and cut off from the fellowship of the saints.
This was a distinct loss to the
cause, for Fisher had been a very successful evangelist, and had a great
influence. His error, however, was plain, and there were scarcely any who
were sufficiently in sympathy with his actions to be to any extent drawn away
with him.
As a part of this chapter, we wish
to include an article from one of the earlier Trumpets, written by a
contributor, which touches the central principle of the reformation, the principle
which distinguishes it from all other movements. It is on this line, the
ruling authority of the Holy Ghost, that the reformation proceeds.
RULING
AUTHORITY OF THE HOLY GHOST
By
D. W. M'Laughlin
Notwithstanding the apostasy of
the Romish Church, her utter departure from the faith because of the
substitution of a manmade system of ecclesiasticism for the personal presence
and authority of the Holy Ghost, Protestants have not profited (but in part)
by her fall; they have very generally fallen into a like snare.
The apostolic church fully
recognized the personal presence and authority of the Holy Ghost. He was
fully accepted as their teacher and guide. They fully embraced the words of
Jesus: "When he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into
all truth"--yea, "teach you all things," even the "deep
things" of God. Hence, we hear Peter saying unto Ananias, "Why hath
Satan filled thine heart to lie to the Holy Ghost?" The presence of the
divine Spirit was to them a certainty.
In Acts 13:2 we read, "As
they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Ghost said, Separate me
Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them." Here the
authority of the Holy Ghost is recognized. Thus we see that the early church needed
no man-made system; being filled with the Holy Ghost they fully accepted him
as their teacher and guide. But in process of time the church lost her
primitive power; the presence of the Holy Ghost seemed less real. The
necessity of a teacher and guide was felt; hence the absence of the Holy
Ghost necessitated the substitution of another teacher and guide, a
"dead ecclesiasticism," called the Holy Catholic Church (?), with
the prerogative of the divine Spirit--thus priesthood was exalted and
invested with power to forgive sins; and the pope made the "visible head
of the church." or the vicar of Jesus Christ upon earth. But the church
felt the need of an "infallible teacher"; the loss of the divine
Paraclete necessitated a substitution, if the resemblance of the apostolic
church be maintained; hence the system must supply the lack. Thus the dogma
of infallibility was conceived, ending in the exaltation of the pope of Rome
above all that is called God, or that is worshiped--the "man of
sin" "sitting in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is
God."
Any man-made system of
ecclesiasticism must necessarily be lifeless and powerless, just in
proportion as it fails to recognize the personal presence and authority of
the Holy Ghost, and sets up its own order and authority.
Indeed the modern church has so
far lost sight of the veritable presence and authority of the personal Holy
Ghost, that everything seems reduced to man-ordered system--yea, an endless
treadmill of works. The form of religion takes the place of vital godliness,
and the people seem to have forgotten that there is any Holy Ghost.
It is said history repeats itself;
let us consider what meaneth the cry of "fanatic" now so prevalent
in the sects as used against the holiness movement. Perhaps we may learn a
lesson from Rome--why did the Romish hierarchy persecute the Reformers?
Simply because there had been substituted a wire-bound ecclesiasticism (a
man-made system) for the presence and authority of the personal Holy Ghost; a
lifeless system-yea, a dead ecclesiasticism was thought to be the one holy
catholic church. It was not allowed that any could be loyal to God unless
loyal to the system, hence the cry of "heretic," which today finds
its counterpart in the term "holiness fanatic" as used by the dominant
sects against holiness men. In their devotion to churchism they lose sight of
the personal Holy Ghost, and exalt the system. We must go back to apostolic
ground; the presence and power of the Holy Ghost must mark (or make manifest)
the church. The blinding power of churchism will deceive nominal professors
in the Protestant sects just as effectually as it did in the Roman Church. It
is eternally true that the natural man perceiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God. The great Sanhedrin judged it right that Jesus Christ, the
Lord of glory. judged to be a vile deceiver, should be crucified between two
thieves; the Romish Church considered it right to burn "heretics";
and in all ages the mystic Babylon of Revelation has persecuted the' true saints
of God.
Thus it will be till the time of
the end.
THE
ONE CHURCH
Through
the night of doubt and sorrow
Onward
goes the pilgrim band,
Singing
songs of expectation,
Marching
to the Promised Land.
One
the object of our journey,
One
the faith that never tires,
One
the earnest looking forward,
One
the hope our God inspires.
One
the strain that lips of thousands
Lift
as from the heart of one;
One
the conflict, one the peril,
One
the march in God begun.
One
the gladness of rejoicing
On
the far eternal shore,
Where
the one Almighty Father
Reigns
in love forevermore.
Onward
therefore, pilgrim brothers,
Onward
with the Cross our aid
Bear
its shame, and fight its battle,
Till
we rest beneath its shade.
--Sabine
Baring-Gould.
[1] Desiring to trace the earlier
history of The Gospel Trumpet, I have permitted the preceding chapter to
overlap this one a few years.
[2] She relates that her
consecration occurred in the house of an Elder Walker, and that so great was
the power and manifestation of God in Brother Warner while he was praying for
her that Walker and his wife through fright fled into another room,
where he was found squatted in a corner. In Brother Warner's report of this
trip he speaks of a meeting near Lacey's Lake (in Eaton or Barry County) as
follows. "Was happy at this place to meet a people who have come out of
various denominations, ignoring human creeds and sects and endeavoring to
walk in the oneness of the Spirit."
[3] This vision is very similar to
the one recorded in The Shepherd of Hermas, in the second century. It was a
remarkable coincidence that while Sister Fisher had never heard of the vision
of The Shepherd of Hermas, she and her husband had ordered the set of books
known as The Apostolic Fathers (in which The Shepherd of Hermas is included),
and on the same day of her vision the books were received and unpacked, and
on looking into them her husband opened right at the vision in The Shepherd
of Hermas. They were astonished to find that her vision was there recorded and explained as the church.
[4] Once after her second
marriage, while living in Cincinnati, she wrote a letter to her boy, Sidney,
who was in the care of his father. Brother Warner had been to visit her twice
since their separation, and he was constrained to go again. So he took the
boy and went to the city address as given in her letter. She happened not to
be at the house just then. So the two walked about leisurely until she should
return. While on the opposite side of the street from her house they saw her
returning. She reached the house first and entered the hall and stood waiting
for them. When they reached the door she railed out in terrible abuse on her
former husband. That was his only reception. He had on his former visits to
her felt the Spirit dictating that there was no hope of a reconciliation; and
likewise on this occasion, as his child clung the closer to him, the Spirit
said, "It is enough; leave off thy fond pursuit."
|
Chapter
16
EVANGELISTIC
TOURS
The responsibility of publishing
The Trumpet required, of course, that the editor spend a good portion of his
time at the Publishing Office. But Brother Warner's zeal for the evangelistic
work, as well as the demand for his services here and there in the field,
took him forth a good deal on various tours. An account of the principal
tours he made, and the events in connection therewith, is sufficient for a
chapter by itself.
For the first few years after The
Trumpet started, he made frequent trips. Of these we shall give no account,
but shall begin the chapter with a trip into western Pennsylvania in the
summer of 1884. A camp-meeting was to be held two miles south of Sandy Lake,
in Mercer County, beginning August 23. This was the second meeting for that
place, as one had been held there the previous year. He planned to attend
this meeting after holding a grove meeting in Medina County, Ohio, and he
accordingly announced there would be no Trumpet issued for August 15, since
he expected to make this tour. Portions of his report of the Sandy Lake
meeting are here given. Quotations direct from Brother Warner will enable the
reader the better to comprehend the man and to feel the touch of his
saintliness; for there breathes out from his words such a spirituality and
devotion as is possessed only by those who are thoroughly abandoned to
God.
Glory be to the God of
salvation-power! These words seem best fitted to begin our report of this
heavenly convocation. We were met by conveyance at Stonesboro, and the very
instant we entered the precious grove of the saints' encampment we felt the
presence of God. Indeed it was wonderful. We were engaged in conversation as
we drove in and were not thinking of or expecting such a glorious
manifestation of God, when we were suddenly filled with the consciousness of
his holy presence, impressing heart and lips in praises to his holy
name.
We had been unwell some days in
the city, and felt half sick on the train but as soon as we breathed the
God-pervaded atmosphere of that beautiful pine-grove, all our infirmities
fled away and we could shout the praises of God in a sound body. How hallowed
and sweet the recollections of God's blessings upon that ground one year ago!
How dear to our heart the precious chambers in Brother and Sister
Carmichael's tent, where we often spent much of the brief interval between
the three daily services, in nearly all of which the Lord used us to read and
teach his Holy Word to the dear saints. In that precious retreat he daily
filled our soul and recuperated the wasted energies of our body and mind so
that we could stand and feed the Lord's sheep. Praise God, we found the same
little sanctum prepared for us again. Thank God, there were plenty to share
the work of the gospel ministry this year.
The blessed Holy Spirit wrought in
the hearts of the people from the first service to the close of the meeting.
On Tuesday we went to the stream a mile from the camp and immersed fourteen
of the dear, happy saints of God. It was a glorious and wonderful time. The
Spirit of the living God was poured out in mighty power. Some went down into
the water shouting the high praises of God, and nearly all leaped and shouted
as they came forth from the symbolic grave. What glory shone in the faces of
those blood-washed ones! The place was one of beautiful scenery. On either
side the stream stood the dense and lofty pines. As this blood-washed company
faced the stream, with their eyes lifted toward God and their faces all lit
up with heaven's glow, and sang the sweet songs of redemption, we were
reminded of Bunyan's company of pilgrims that stood in white robes awaiting
their invitation to cross to the celestial paradise. . . .
Do we astonish you when we say
that while sinners were melted to tears by the power of God during the
baptism, and said, "This is the right way. This is the right way,"
an apostate and hypocrite preacher by the name of --- stood back and spake
against "this way" of the Lord? Woe unto such empty clouds,
wandering stars, wells without water! . . .
Brother Fisher was quite sick when
we reached the grove, and after having been strengthened several times to
preach the word he was finally and instantaneously healed by faith and the
laying on of hands. The next evening the healing power was mightily upon him,
and four of the dear saints were healed of various diseases and old
complaints. In the early part of the meeting Brother and Sister Frost's
little girl was healed of a very bad case of catarrh. The morning Brother and
Sister Fisher left, the Lord woke us between three and four o'clock in the
morning and led us forth into the woods to commune with him. Our mind was led
to ask for a more perfect faith. Praise God, he gave it. Early we walked to Brother
Farrah's house, where we found Sister Clayton very sick with sick-headache.
In the name of the Lord we laid hands on her head, and she was immediately
healed by faith in Jesus. Several others of the saints were healed that day.
. .
One evening in company with
Brother and Sister Fisher we went home with Brother and Sister Frost. Sister
Owen lives a close neighbor to them. Her daughter had two days before been
taken sick. That night she was taken very bad, and she suffered extremely.
Mr. Owen wished to go for the doctor, but Lula begged her pa to send for us.
Though he had been extremely prejudiced against us by some ungodly sectarian
neighbors, he could not refuse the wish of his suffering child. He gave his
consent, and at two o'clock we were called up, and went to the house in the
name of the Lord. Lula had been praying the Lord to forgive her sins, and
seemed to have found pardon, but she was in great suffering. Brother Fisher
and I laid hands upon her, and in less than a minute her intense suffering
ceased, and she rested until morning. Her body gradually recovered strength,
and two days later she was out to the meeting. Praise the Lord, O my soul!
The power of God since then so softened the heart of Brother Owen that he has
turned to serve the Lord. His heart is so changed that he not only loves God
but us also. May God bless the dear brother.
Praise the Lord for the wonderful
bond of love that binds our hearts together in the Son of God! Blind
sectarians ask us, "What have you got to bind you together?" We
reply by asking them, "What have you got to part us asunder?" Oh,
bless God for the balm in this union! We never know the strength of the
divine bonds of love until all the sect bonds of the devil are cast away and
we are led to suffer together for the gospel of God and the name of Jesus.
Oh, happy bond of perfect love, which binds all the pure in heart to God and
to each other!
After the close of the Sandy Lake
meeting he went by invitation to Greenville, in the same county. He first
held an evening service on the streets, in which he spoke to a large
audience. This was on Friday evening, September 5. The rest of the services
at Greenville were in a grove in the country. In his report he tells of his
being mercilessly beaten by a drunken man and of his wonderful escape from
injury because of divine protection.
We praise God for having sent us
here. We are confident that much good was done. One brother, who had been
wonderfully converted and blessed, had actually made an appointment at a schoolhouse
and talked to the people by the Holy Spirit. People were moved, and asked the
man to speak again. But he consulted his Methodist priest, who told him it
would never do in the world for him to attempt to speak and exhort without
license, and that if he did so he would be brought up and tried. The poor man
was scared down and was on back ground; but he promised us to rededicate
himself to God and go straight forward in God's will. May God bless' and help
him. Such is the pernicious work of the devil under the mask of what he calls
our church." We hope in the providence of God to return to Greenville
again. A sister told us that we would receive persecution for pay. Well,
praise God, we were well remunerated in that kind of currency for Christ's
sake. It has brought the "leap and rejoice with "the spirit of
glory and of God" in our soul. After the grove-meeting we spoke again on
the streets of Greenville to a very large crowd of attentive hearers. . .
.
After preaching in the grove
Saturday night, we walked a mile and a half to find rest for the night. The
mother and two of the family are fully saved. But the husband is intemperate
and desperately wicked. He does not often stop with the family, as the little
home belongs to one of the sons, who, with his brothers, affords protection
to their mother against the father's abuse. The wretched man had been
drinking liquor through the day, and was also well filled with the wine of
Babylon's wrath received from his sectarian neighbors, who hate any child of
God that lives godly in Christ Jesus outside of her pales. He seems to have
come liquored up on purpose for a row. After entering the house, the frenzied
man assaulted us with shocking oaths and threats. He was desperate, just in that state of intoxication in which
he had more than his usual strength, and maddened beyond all reason. He soon
struck me with all force in the forehead, but through God his blow was not
more than a ball of cotton. We praised the Lord. Feeling a deep concern for
the wicked man's soul, we dropped upon our knees in the middle of the room,
raised our hands, and began to pray for him. But this enraged Satan more than
ever. He seized a large rocking chair and slammed it down on us with all
vengeance, but through the Lord Jesus Christ our uplifted hands turned it off
with ease. The storms of oaths and slamming of furniture was terrific. It
looked as though there would not be a whole piece left in the room. The
infuriated man grabbed a common wood-bottom chair by the back and struck down
twice or three times at our head, which was safely shielded by the hand of
the Lord. Glory to God in the highest! Our soul was filled with great peace
in the midst of the storm; we had not the slightest fear of suffering
harm.
The kind wife and a daughter, who
were gloriously sanctified at the Sandy Lake meeting, tried to protect us,
when the latter received a heavy blow on the shoulder from the chair, the
legs having been threshed off by previous blows, making it all the better to
maul with. Seeing that they were in danger of being hurt in our protection,
we arose and began to retreat. The savage monster followed us out of the yard
and some rods on the road with awful curses and open threats that he would
kill us. Glory to the God of our salvation! There was not a hair of our head
hurt, not a scratch or mark upon our body. The next morning we felt our right
wrist was slightly sprained by stopping the terrible blows, but it soon
disappeared. The man soon left, shortly after which his large son came, whose
delay furnished the intoxicated man his opportunity for an onslaught.
Praise God, the Lord led me to do
just as I had preached what a holy man should do when thus assaulted--commit
our life to God, fear no evil, and let him be glorified in our death or
deliverance, as he shall choose. Fearing the man might return that night and
our presence excite to deeds of violence upon the family, one of the boys and
I went to the barn to sleep, but I spent the night in thanksgiving to God for
his sweet deliverance. Surely it is safe to trust God always.
It was while he was in western
Pennsylvania that he received word from his wife that he could come and get
their boy, Sidney, then a little more than three years of age. Accordingly he
returned home by way of Upper Sandusky, Ohio, and got the boy. He then made a
visit to the saints at Jerry City, Wood County, of which he thus
speaks:
Then, following the apostolic
example, we "declared what miracles and wonders God had wrought"
where we have gone about preaching the kingdom of God's grace, and assured
the dear saints as he did "that we must through much tribulation enter
the kingdom of heaven." And the hearing of all the gracious dealing of
God with our soul and in many hearts "caused great joy unto all the brethren."
Many tears of sympathy and holy love flowed from the eyes of the
beloved.
He arrived home at Williamston in
time for the annual assembly; for which the large hall, 28 x 84, on the
second floor of the Office building afforded a splendid place. It was a
wonderful gathering of the saints. A number were ordained to the ministry,
and among these he included himself, as where so many were assembled he
probably decided that his call to the work should be solemnly recognized and
confirmed by the laying on of hands of the elders present. As was evidenced
by the success of this assembly, the work of the reformation seemed by this
time to be taking a forward move. Since the Ohio assembly at Bucyrus, one
year before, Brother Warner had learned to take a more fearless, unyielding
attitude against deceiving elements such as had encompassed him there.
We shall ever have reasons to
thank God for the benefit derived from the Ohio assembly last fall. Though
much of the good anticipated was not realized because of the evil powers that
were permitted to "encompass the beloved saints," yet the lessons
learned as a result have furnished a protection against the devil in all
subsequent meetings. The fact is, we were delivered from priestcraft and had a
solemn abhorrence of everything that savored of lordism. Hence we declared
the meetings free; yes, free for heretics, false prophets, and virtually for
the devil himself. In our zeal to avoid all dragon authority we had also lost
sight of the divine authority, and God had to permit that victorious conflict
with the powers of hell to teach us the necessity of using, not lordism, but,
the double-edged sword of the Almighty upon everything that is not clean and
straight before God.
Since "we know that we are of
the truth, and shall assure our hearts before God," "we know that
we are of God, and he that heareth us not is not of God." And the only
sense in which we give place to such as are deformed and darkened by
antichrist traditions and "doctrines of devils," is in this wise:
We give place for them at the altar, where, by entire consecration, and faith
in the blood of Christ they may be cleansed from sin and all foolish
conversation received by tradition from the fathers." Glory be to God,
there is now a flaming sword in the assembly of his saints, that can be
endured only by those who know and do the truth, and such as honestly wish to
know and obey the truth as it is in Christ Jesus. We believe that all future
time and eternity will not erase the glory of this [Williamston] assembly
from the memory of the redeemed.
After the assembly he held a
meeting in Battle Creek, Michigan. The following is a portion of his account
of a woman's deliverance from devil-possession, which occurred while he was
there. Such instances were found from time to time. For an example we give
but this one:
For some months past Mrs. Samuel
Worden, of Battle Creek, Michigan, has created quite an excitement in the
papers throughout the country by the exercise of a supernatural power of healing.
People have come from a considerable distance to be treated, and letters have
poured in from every direction. Some cases of healing were actually
performed.
The woman and her husband, hearing
of our meetings, came to hear the gospel and seemed willing to receive the
truth. She confessed that they were not fully saved and filled with the Sprit
as they should be, although she claimed to heal in the name of Christ and by
the power of God. She soon came to the altar. God enabled us to see her
condition pretty correctly. We told her she was in the "gall of
bitterness and the bonds of iniquity." She acknowledged the fact and
desired deliverance. In the course of a few days she professed to have found
salvation. There seemed to be a change; but still there was something in her
from which the Spirit of God in our heart recoiled. She tried to consecrate
for sanctification, but could not claim that grace.
On Sabbath afternoon, October 26,
the power of God was upon our little meeting. There were four cases of
healing by the laying on of hands. Sister Worden said that she had suffered
for many years in an awful manner with what she called a confused headache.
She had hands laid on her for the healing. The Spirit came on us and her in
mighty power. She claimed what had been prayed for, a complete healing of her
body. Presently there were strange manifestations, which the most of us at
once recognized as the writhing of evil spirits in her. We asked God to show
her just what it was. Presently she said, "Brother Warner, pray for
me." We asked her what she wanted. She replied, "That the devil
might be cast out." This was the confession we desired to draw out of
her. Hands were laid on her head, and the demons were commanded to come out
of her in the name of Jesus Christ. The poor victim was soon convulsed and
choked by the hellish spirits, which had to come out by the power of God. She
obtained relief, sat up, but did not look clear. We all kept looking to God
to complete the work. Hands were laid on again in the name of Jesus. Another
struggle ensued. Then we perceived that to get complete deliverance there had
to be a more perfect consecration, confession, and mortification. We
proceeded to use the sword of the Spirit in every possible manner. But a
miserable don't-care devil answered to every point of consecration.
Oh, what an awful condition the
poor woman was in! How discouraging! The devils had so long held possession
of her that they had almost taken possession of her own will and thoughts.
And this awful enemy had so tortured her head that she had had a hard
struggle to keep out of the asylum; so when he was pressed by the power of
God he caused such distress and confusion in her head that he could use her
mind and organs of speech. But by the grace and mercy of God conviction
reached her conscience. The poor woman made some humiliating confessions, was
humbled down, and wept. She confessed her association with Spiritualists,
which Satan had tried to conceal before. Glory to God, his chief nest was now
revealed. The Spiritualism devil was commanded to come out of her in the name
of Christ. Oh, how he tortured the poor woman! Her throat became greatly
swollen. How the legions of hell struggled against the power of God! She was
pretty thoroughly decided for God; declared she would have every last evil
spirit cast out if it killed her. Glory to God for the mighty Deliverer!
Relief came by the hand of Jesus. A great measure of peace filled her soul.
She sat up in the rocking-chair and her hands were raised while we sang songs
of victory for the space of an hour.
Two days later she discovered that
there was still in her heart something that was not right, and a close
examination discovered that she had some lingering love for Spiritualists.
She confessed it, when she soon found that more evil spirits were revealed.
By the laying on of hands and the power of God she was fully delivered, after
which she consecrated wholly and entered the sacred rest of entire
sanctification. On Saturday hands were laid upon her for healing. The mighty
power of God came upon her and filled her soul and body, and she was
perfectly healed from the awful tortures Satan had inflicted upon her for
many years. Praise God for his wonderful mercy to the oppressed children of
men! For years this poor woman had struggled hard to keep out of the insane
asylum; now she says, "I am 'clothed and in my right mind.'" Her
neighbors see the great change in her countenance. One woman looked upon her
with astonishment, and said, "Why, how your face and voice are changed!
surely these meetings are the true work of God."
The months of February and March
1885, he spent in a tour to southeastern Iowa, and northeastern Missouri. He
refers to his leaving home as follows:
In the kind providence of God we
were permitted to start forth on this long-expected tour January 28. Cod
bless the beloved ones we left behind in The Trumpet Office. Oh, how our
hearts are knit together in the pure love of Jesus! Bless God for those he
has given to he with us in the glorious work of the Lord! But the hardest of
all was to leave my precious little Sidney, not expecting to see the dear
child again for some three months. But praise God for the very kind provision
he has made for the poor boy in the devout family of Brother and Sister
William Crandall, residing at the edge of our town. Here he is taught to pray
daily, and his little heart is developed only in the pure spirit of love and
obedience. He is my only living child, three years old the 24th of last June.
Though he has a happy home and two little playmates, still, as may he
imagined under the circumstances, his dear little heart clings to his father
with the most fervent love that a child is capable of possessing, as ours
also does to him. But since God so lovingly cares for him, we must leave the
blessed little angel in his charge and go forth to win to Christ souls that
are lost in sin.
He was gone nearly three months.
The meetings in Iowa and Missouri resulted in good, yet nothing of unusual
interest attended them. Early in June he made a trip to Daviess County,
Indiana. He had found in his evangelistic work that preaching on the street
was a very effectual way of reaching the people. When he lived in
Indianapolis, a few years previously, he and the saints in that place engaged
frequently in preaching on the streets and in the parks. One Sunday
afternoon, while preaching in Central Park, a man came to him and gave the
names of persons in southern Indiana to whom he requested The
Trumpet sent. Thus The Trumpet became the forerunner of his visit to Daviess
County.
As we passed through the village
of Odon, we notified the people that we would preach the gospel on their
streets the next afternoon. Not being accustomed to such services, there was
quite an interest. The people began to collect some time before the hour
arrived. Store-boxes, sidewalks, etc., were converted into pews, and we had
one of the best hearings we ever had on the streets. God mightily helped us
by his Spirit to testify the gospel of his perfect salvation for an hour and
thirty-eight minutes. Bless God, the truth swept all the sinnership religion
into the pit, from whence it came. Though real Bible holiness had scarcely ever been preached in that place, and no
holiness meetings ever held there, so far as we learned, yet every hearer,
even lawyers, doctors, and preachers, acknowledged the practicability of
perfect salvation and preservation from all sin through Christ Jesus. A
Baptist preacher by the name of W--, who had been preaching to the people
that no one can or does live without sinning in this world, and that all men
sin day and night, sat close by us, and was convinced of the truth of the
gospel and convicted of his sins. He sanctioned the word and acknowledged to
others that it was all truth. We saw the tears in his eyes, and hoped he
would become saved and qualified to preach for Jesus, instead of for sin and
the sect.
Sabbath, the seventh, we held
services in a grove near old Shiloh Bethel, south of Odon. As the appointment
was circulated only after our arrival, there was not a large turnout. The
Baptist preacher sat near us while preaching in the forenoon, and looking
into his face during the discourse, our soul was pained to see that he had
shut his heart against the truth and salvation of God. Instead of coming down
to an equality with Christ, he chose to have a reputation among men, to
indulge the lusts of the flesh and enjoy the friendship of the world. From
that moment his "face gathered blackness." During the afternoon
preaching he showed every disposition to avoid listening to the gospel of
God. He came to some of the meetings afterward, just as the ungodly Pharisees
followed Christ, to "catch something out 'of his mouth." On
Wednesday evening Bro. O. Allen met and spoke to this priest of Baal,
standing in a public place of the village, burning incense to the devil in
gratification of the filthy lust for tobacco.
He later made another trip into
Pennsylvania and attended the third annual campmeeting at Sandy Lake. At
the close of this meeting he, in company with others, drove about twelve
miles to attend a Church of God (Winebrennerian) campmeeting, held near
Barkeyville. His description under the title "A Night in Babylon,"
is here given in part.
On the way we met a good many
people returning from the camp, and we were no little astonished to see so
many of them smoking cigars. Finally the thought forced itself on our mind,
"Can it be possible that they are selling such things on the
campground?" But considering that it was the Sabbath-day and the people
holding the camp-meeting professed to be the "Church of God," such
a thing surely could not be. The very thought was shocking and preposterous.
When a half mile away we saw a smoke ascending at the camp. As we entered the
ground we observed a crowd of sinners standing about a
building with a sign, Boarding-Tent, and the smoke from their many cigars
blended into a cloud, that we had seen from a distance. Soon after landing,
we said to a brother, "Let us walk up and see what they have to sell
there." We did so, and adventuring into the poison-fog we walked the
whole length of the long building, all opened in front, displaying a large
stock of every variety of ware that would be necessary to satisfy the pride,
vanity, and lust of the horse-race or any vanity-fair throng of this
world.
We were shocked and amazed at this
horrible traffic. The chief sale was tobacco. There the nasty, filthy stuff
was piled up from one end of the building to the other. The vile curse of the
earth, in every form and shape the devil ever invented, freely sold on a--oh,
the blasphemy!--"Church of God" campground!. . . .
It was all licensed by the
preachers in control of the meetings. And such men have the wicked
presumption to call themselves ministers of Christ! One of the
"merchants of these things which were made rich" by the
"abundance of the delicacies," though we understand he makes no
profession of Christ, was ashamed of the unhallowed traffic, and though his
contract included another year, he said he would never come back again. He
confessed that if he were to open up such traffic on Sabbath at his place of
business in town he would be prosecuted; but the superabundance of
righteousness (?) of these tobacco-soaked preachers, it would appear, was to
atone for the same sins on their camp-ground. Surely it has come to pass what
is written in the prophets, "They overpass the deeds of the wicked"
(Jeremiah 5:28).
After taking some refreshment and
having obtained permission to praise God, we engaged in our evening devotion,
with singing and prayer, to the God of our salvation. Our doors were soon crowded with young folks to hear the singing.
The tobacco-smoke was so dense
that we could scarcely endure it without getting sick. But after a; few songs
and prayers were offered, every one cast his cigar away and listened with
seriousness. This they did without a word said by any of us.
The meeting had been in progress
four days, and no soul had been saved. Not a seeker. Not even a place for a
penitent to kneel, no straw on the ground. The pulpit was the only place to
kneel in the congregation; as though they did not expect a poor
penitent to seek God, and that the preacher should do all the praying.
On Monday morning, the services
were made later than the usual hour. The preachers were doubtless perplexed
how to perform in the deadness of their souls. "The sinners in Zion are
afraid; fearfulness hath surprised the hypocrites" (Isaiah 33: 14). Not
one of them would venture to preach. The services were confined to one hour. After reading a psalm, the preacher announced that all
should be free to serve God by prayer, and testimony, and song, requesting
brevity of each. So, as our heart was "springing up" full of the love
of God, we opened our mouth to praise the Lord in singing a verse
occasionally. After several had spoken we arose and testified to the great
"salvation we have in Christ Jesus with eternal glory." We aimed to
be very brief, but occupied seven minutes by the watch, when they began to
sing. But they being but a few and "feeble folk," their song would
not have interfered materially with our remarks. However, we struck in to
sing until they stopped, and then sat down.
After the services were dismissed
we were ordered to leave the ground as soon as we could pack up and depart;
and forbidden to sing, pray, or preach, within one mile of their
tobacco-soaked camp.
When asked why they would not
allow us to worship God there, the president said it was because we held a
second work of grace, which they did not believe. Why should they fear to
hear the testimony? If they really believed that there is no "second
grace," they need not fear that any of their flock would obtain it.
According to their' position, they were afraid of the thing that does not
exist. What brave soldiers!
One of the preachers arose in the
speaking-meeting and said, "According to the little bit of information I
have received concerning Christ's salvation, it is all received at
once." Certainly a man that has only " a little bit of information
respecting Christ's salvation" has only a little bit of salvation, and
that little bit of salvation was doubtless all obtained at once, for it was
so little it could not have been divided. And when that very "little
bit" is analyzed it is seen to consist in a mere name to live," a
"form of godliness," anointed by love of self and love of sect. . .
.
The preacher who led the meeting
is saturated with tobacco and addicted to horse trading and worldly foolish
jesting. In his remarks he said we should "exemplify Christ," that
is, our lives should be like his. The Lord led us to ask him if he regarded
himself an example of Christ's character; whether he could consistently say
to boys and men generally, "Follow the example I set before you."
Not having 'sanctified the Lord Jesus in his heart,' he was not ready to give
an answer. He paced the pulpit, being speechless. We repeated the question,
including both him and the president. Neither answered. We then told the
latter something about their being of the same spirit the old Jews and pagans
were of, who forbade the apostles preaching any more in their towns. We also
called their attention to the abominable and wicked traffic we saw on their
ground on the Lord's day, which was licensed by them and sanctioned by their
filthy habit. They could allow that corrupting bane of society; but of a few
little children of God who have obtained pure hearts and desired to
"worship God in the beauty of holiness," they said, "Away with
them"!...
Well, we are compelled to give the
manifestations at that camp the credit of being the filthiest and vilest form
of Babylon we have ever met. An unconverted man who was there and witnessed
the scene said to them, "God deliver me from such a sect." They are
destitute of God's grace. 'For the grace of God that bringeth salvation . . .
teacheth us. that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live
soberly, righteously, and godly in this present world' (Titus 2:11-12). But
these live in the filth of the world, "walking after their ungodly
lusts."
In a report written from this part
of Pennsylvania three years later, he refers to his visit to the
Winebrennerian camp, as just described, and says, "Well, that was the
last campmeeting held on that ground. Their doleful tents are rotting to the
ground, and are the habitation of owls and bats."
Brother Warner felt that he
needed, and that the Lord was going to provide, a company of singers to go
with him in the evangelistic field. It was about this time that the company
who should travel with him for more than five years began to be formed. It
was at the Williamston assembly that summer that Brother Warner said to
Nannie Kigar, of Payne, Ohio, and to Frances Miller, of Battle Creek, who
attended the meeting, that he felt impressed they would form a part of his
company to help in singing and other gospel work. Their voices were soprano
and alto respectively. They, with a number of other saints, accompanied Brother Warner to the Beaver Dam assembly. On
their way, as they changed cars at Fort Wayne, they met and were joined by
Sarah Smith, of Jerry City, Ohio. While they were at Beaver Dam the Lord
added Sister Smith to the company. Her voice furnished a high tenor. She was
an elderly lady and she was called the "mother" of the company.
Brother John U. Bryant and Brother D. Leininger, from the Beaver Dam
neighborhood, also traveled in the company for a time.
After the Beaver Dam meeting,
Brother Warner made a short visit to Illinois and Iowa, while the rest of the
company remained at Beaver Dam and were soon engaged in a protracted meeting
at the Hans Schoolhouse, where about fifty souls were saved and a great
interest was created. While on this trip he was healed of an affliction of
the eyes. He thus speaks of it:
During the Williamston assembly in
September, Satan began to afflict our eyes. At the beginning we were
impressed that it was an attack of the enemy. They grew worse until we were
scarcely able to read or write. The next morning after our arriving in Iowa,
the Spirit impressed a sister that it was Satan who had afflicted our eyes to
prevent our labors in writing, etc. Instantly recollecting the same
impression in our mind at the beginning of the attack, we knew it was of
God.
Our vehement faith in God and
indignation against the devil were instantly aroused. We fell upon our knees
and asked God to deliver us, rebuking Satan in the name of Jesus Christ.
Praise God, the pain all ceased, and we were able to do a pretty good day's
work. And our eyes have been well ever since. God suffered the attack
doubtless to teach us a lesson concerning the origin of much of the suffering
of the afflicted.
In the latter part of January he
with his company of singers and coworkers went to Deerfield, Randolph County,
Indiana, arriving on a Saturday evening. The next morning they attended a
meeting where a nominal Christian preacher had the service. They sang some of
the sweet songs of victory; but this so confounded the preacher that he could
not find anything in his Bible to preach, and after he had taken the pulpit
he invited Brother Warner to preach. The latter preached a burning message.
He had hoped for the use of the house, but it could be seen that the preacher
intended to control the house that week, for he proposed that he and these
people use it alternately. He was soon told that they were out on the blood
and fire line, that they could not yoke up with the dead priests of Babel and
would go elsewhere.
They went over into the edge of
Jay County and began meetings in a United Brethren house called Prospect.
Here the preaching created a furor among those who were joined to their
sectarian institution and felt that it was in danger. It was like a
thunderbolt in the community. The singing drew the crowds. The trustees
became fearful. One of them went into the woods to pray to know what to do to
get rid of these people who seemed to be taking things. The heavenly songs
seemed to follow him. He felt he should attend all the meetings to see what
occurred. He soon found that these people had something more than the United
Brethren had. He was one of two trustees who embraced the truth, and of
course desired that the meetings continue. Threats were made. A woman was
heard to say, "They ought to be driven out of the country with
shotguns." A Baptist preacher who came into the neighborhood said that
they ought to be put in jail, and offered his service as one to help in the
matter.
The United Brethren minister had
been holding meetings, with but little success. A Mrs. R--, one of their
number, had been praying the Lord to send somebody who would preach the truth
in such a way that God would get unto himself a people who would serve him.
She and a Mrs. W-- went to the altar together, with others. Brother Warner
asked them whether they would be willing to separate themselves from
denominationalism if the Lord should show them that duty. Sister W-- said in
her heart, yes. Sister R-- turned over to her and said, "Now, they are
trying to tear down the church, so let us just stick." There she turned
bitter, and the very thing she had prayed for she was rejecting. She walked
up and down the aisle wringing her hands and crying, "My church! my
church!" Another woman said, "These people are either awfully good
people or else they are desperately wicked." Once during the meeting
flying missiles crashed through the windows. Glass flew across the room,
striking a woman on the head and drawing blood. Said Brother Warner:
People have dealt in cheap, shoddy
religions so long that they feel like stoning us when we state the cost of
that we are commissioned of Christ to offer the people; nevertheless, when
men consent to pay the price they are always highly pleased with the
results.
Such a display of sectarian
idolatry was a good exhibition for some who had come out of Babylon, for they
saw what they had been yoked up with. About eight persons made their escape
in this meeting.
There were in attendance, as was
usual in the meetings everywhere, people who gloried in hearing the sects
spoken against. Such people, of course, while adding force in the start, were
no substantial credit to the movement, as they were not genuine
representatives.
During the winter the evangelists
went to Marshall County, into a neighborhood that seemed very dark
spiritually. After one of the evening meetings there, in which he had
preached with marvelous power, Brother Warner was passing out the door when a
young rough gave him a kick. He turned and thanked the fellow and said he
always praised God when he received such treatment. As he started on he
received another kick, for which he also praised God aloud. At the house
where he was stopping the sister had two very wicked sons. On the night the
kicking occurred one of these young men, instead of retiring to bed, sat in
his chair at the fireplace, his face in his hands, groaning. When asked what
was the matter, he referred to what had happened that evening and said he
felt sorry for Brother Warner, for surely he was a godly man, etc. When he
saw how Brother Warner received such abuse, his heart was touched, and he was much pained. He and his brother had both mistreated
Brother Warner and those with him and had in their presence cursed his mother
for feeding them. When they saw the love manifested their hearts melted, and
they became warm friends to the saints of God.
From Marshall County the company
went up into Michigan, into Van Buren County. Here, at Geneva Center
lived a young man whom the Lord had saved and was calling into the gospel
work, Brother Barney E. Warren. The fact that he was under twenty-one years
of age and that his father was unsaved and was opposed to his going into the
ministry, was an obstacle. But his father, who was a very wicked man, became
very much convicted during the meetings held in a schoolhouse in the
vicinity. He was seized with such trembling that in his attempt to steady
himself by holding to the seats he shook the very floor of the building.
Finally, in a consecration-meeting in Brother Joseph Smith's house, near
Lacota, he rebelled against the Lord and started to leave the room. Before he
reached the door the strength of his legs gave way and he sank instantly to
the floor, and was unable to go farther. He then yielded. Brother Warner
asked him if he was willing to let Barney go into the gospel work. His reply
was, "Barney is the Lord's." The way was then opened for the young
Brother Warren, and in the following April he became a part of the little
singing company that should travel with Brother Warner for the next five
years, and should consist of, besides Brother Warren, who was a base singer,
Sisters Nannie Kigar, Frances Miller, and Mother Smith. This constituted a
complete quartet, with Brother Warner often reinforcing the tenor.
There had come to be many saints
gathered in the one fold in this part of Michigan. Brothers. A. B. Palmer, S.
Michels, W. B. Grover, and S. L. Speck were ministerial workers whom God was
using in this vicinity. At this time Brother Warner was called to Williamston
to help get out the second edition of the Songs of Victory, the first
song-book published at The Gospel Trumpet Office. Of the first edition there
were over fifteen hundred copies sold in less than three weeks. Holy song
exerted a wonderful influence in the reformation. With reference to his
return to Williamston we include a paragraph from his report.
The day we arrived at home a good
steam engine was brought into the Trumpet Office by the kind blessing of God,
Brother Fisher having previously engaged it. Thank God that we live to see
this day. The glorious work is spreading like fire in the earth. Glory to God
and the Lamb! Oh, what hosts of fire-baptized saints we have met! With the
increase of numbers there is a continual advancement in clearness and
power.
Thus there was a long day of
waiting before a steam engine was used in the Trumpet Office. Every
improvement of this kind was always an occasion of much rejoicing for Brother
Warner.
By this time the truths of the
reformation were being extensively scattered. Besides the workers named in
southwestern Michigan, there were G. T. Clayton in western Pennsylvania, C.
Z. Lindley in Iowa, J P Haner in Kansas, and W. N. Smith and others
in Ohio. The Lord was raising up ministers in various places, and many people
were accepting the truth.
The first engagement for Brother
Warner and his company, after the latter had been definitely formed, was
at Walkerton, Indiana, in April 1886. They remained two weeks, and a few souls
came out on the clear Bible line. There was a little persecution here, as was
usual. They found the place dark with prejudice. Over forty of the professors
in the place were joined in a holiness band. They professed sanctification,
but most of them were connected with sects.
We went to their meeting on
Tuesday night before we began operations in the hall. Being held in the
United Brethren house, the meeting was led by Pastor S, of that sect. God
powerfully baptized our soul, and we praised him in prayer and testimony,
which made the sect priest grow black in the face. He afterward tried to make
out that we had come there and interrupted their meeting, and actually caused
a report of that kind to go out. He spared no pains to fill the place with
all manner of evil against us. Like Demetrius, the silversmith, his craft was
in danger.
The Methodist priest delivered a
lecture on Monday night in favor of secret societies; he labored especially
to make a good character for the Odd Fellows. The Holy Spirit put it upon us
to rebuke such agents of the devil. This the class-leader of that sect said
made his blood boil. So he went about the town breathing out his venom
against us and enlisting as many as possible in an effort to induce the
proprietor of the hall to break his contract and close the hall. They
succeeded in so influencing him; but the power of God turned his mind right
around, and he not only gave the hall cheerfully to the extent of the time,
but offered it as much longer as we wanted it or at any time we might
return.
Threats were made, eggs were
thrown, and there was considerable disturbance. But the effect of such abuse
was the raising up of many friends for the truth and the salvation of a few
souls. Brother Warner was again called home, and the company returned to
Beaver Dam.
The next trip for the company was
to the Prospect neighborhood, in Jay County, where the truth had been planted
the previous winter. This was in May. Brother Warner and Brother and Sister
Fisher went directly to Portland by train, while the company, including S. L.
Speck and Clara Morrison, were conveyed from Beaver Dam in a wagon. Of this
trip across the country in a wagon, Sister Frances Miller wrote an account in
her diary. It is interesting reading in these days of automobiles, when such
a trip can be made in a few hours, and we here include it as she wrote
it.
The brethren from Beaver Dam
carried our little company from that place to Sweetser, Grant County, by
lumber-wagon. We started at 5 A. M., and reached our destination about 9 P.
M. We had a glorious time by the way, praising God and singing those
beautiful songs. About two miles beyond Roann we drove in at the edge of a
beautiful piece of woods and stopped for dinner. We placed the seats in a
circle and spread our dinner upon Father's green carpet, then thought we
would praise him with a song, supposing we were alone in the woods.
In a few moments we were
surrounded with cattle. There must have been at least twenty-five or thirty,
with their eyes wide open, gazing at us. We felt that God had put the love of
music in these dumb animals, and we sang two or three songs for their
benefit.
Mother Smith then asked God to
bless the food, and we all thanked him for it, in our hearts. After the
horses had finished their dinner we pursued our way, rejoicing because we had
Jesus in our souls, and he made melody through us to the Father.
The next morning the Beaver Dam
brethren returned home, and brethren at Sweetser brought us to Prospect, Jay
County. We started at 7 A.M. It was a beautiful morning. The recent rains had
laid the dust, and we had pike roads most of the way. making traveling
delightful. In the afternoon the clouds began to gather blackness, and in a
short time a terrible storm was upon us. The rain came down in torrents,
drenching us through and through. The wind was furious. It seemed almost
every moment as though it would take us up. Then the hailstones came down so
thickly the horses refused to go. We were seemingly in the midst of an ocean
of water. The recent heavy rains had flooded the country, washing away
several bridges.
We had quite an adventurous trip;
forded one river, and the horses. while pulling us through a deep creek,
pulled loose from the wagon, leaving us in the water. We were able to get to
land, however. This was about two hours after the storm, and while the
brethren were repairing the wagon we gathered hailstones by the handful in
the fence corners.
Well, I am satisfied that none but
the pure in heart could relish such a storm. We did enjoy it; and God so
filled our hearts that we praised him through it all. And when the wind was
blowing the thickest, the calmness in our souls was indescribable. We
knew God had power to prevent the storm; but in his wisdom he saw it was just
what we needed, and his will being ours, we thanked him for it and left the
consequences of our becoming wet in his hands, knowing all would work out for
our good.
After the storm, it turned quite
cold. We had thirty miles yet to drive; but we had the holy fire burning
within us. We reached Brother Key's about twelve o'clock that night, waking
Brother and Sister Key with the song, "Oh, 'twas love, 'twas love that
found out me!" The next morning, Saturday, May 15, we arose feeling
refreshed after a few hours rest, not one of us feeling any the worse after
our exposure of the previous day.
Oh, what a wonderful God! Let us
praise him for his goodness and for his wonderful works to the children of
men. We drove out to Prospect that morning, six miles, and to our surprise
and joy met Brother and Sister Fisher, who had come with Brother Warner. Our
hearts were made to rejoice to meet the dear saints at Prospect, with whom we
had labored in the Lord last January. We had a glorious time and witnessed
the salvation of many precious souls.
This second meeting at Prospect
was to be held in a grove; but on account of the weather being cold and damp,
and the meeting-house being refused, the meetings were held most of the time
in a granary building owned by a brother, Jesse Wickersham. This brother had
given the land on which the Prospect meeting-house stood, and had contributed
largely to its erection, with the understanding that the house should be open
to all true worshipers of God. But here the sect refused the house, the
preaching of the truth on the former occasion having been too much for them.
In August of this year (1886) was
held the first of the annual grove- or camp-meetings in the Beaver Dam
vicinity. It was in W. W. Ballenger's grove. For the next five years the
annual camp-meeting was held in J. Kuhn's woods; and then, beginning in 1892,
it was held for five years in D. Leininger's woods. Beginning with 1897 this
meeting has since been held on the beautiful ground overlooking Yellow
Lake.
Before attending the Indiana
grove-meeting in August, Brother Warner felt impressed that from that meeting
he should labor on a line eastward from that place. In conjunction with this
came urgent calls from that direction, and brethren even made preparation for
his coming before asking him. The first place was Arcola, Indiana. We quote
from his report in which he speaks of this part of his trip:
On Friday morning, August 13, with
our heart melting with pure parental love for our child, we kissed his
innocent cheek and left him in silent slumber, not daring to wake him lest
his little heart should break with grief at our departure, and our soul also
be filled with sorrow at his pitiful tears. O God, thou knowest the abundance
of thy grace that enables us to tear away from this affectionate child! The
poor boy has recently been sick insomuch that many of the saints despaired of
his life. O Lord, only thou knowest the great trial of our soul when we felt
the awful sickness of our boy, by the Spirit of God, while we were making up
the last Trumpet at Williamston, and packing the Office, which none of our
company had any experience in! Our presence was much needed, so that we did
not feel permitted to go, though we keenly felt his sickness and told some of
the saints that we felt he was sick. After suffering those feelings a week,
we received a letter stating that he had been very low but was better. This
took a great load off our heart, and a few days later a second, letter stated
that through the laying on of hands in prayer the Lord had gloriously healed
the poor little fellow.
Oh, praise our God for his great
mercy toward us, that he has spared our soul the great sorrow of such a
bereavement as would have been the departure of this last and dear beloved
friend in the flesh! And yet we know that had the blessed Lord seen fit to
take him, as in all the trials of the past we would have been "exceeding
joyful in all our tribulations." This trial of our faith was a great blessing to us. It gave us a sure evidence that
notwithstanding our intense love for the child we could leave him in the
hands of God, and feel sweetly resigned to his will who had worked for us
elsewhere. We found the precious boy feeling well, but still so slim and poor
that it touched our heart to look upon his lean face. The Lord bless Brother
Leininger's family, with whom the child was staying during his sickness, and
all the beloved saints who did all they could for the comfort and help of the
dear boy.
We started at three o'clock in the
morning, the Lord having sent a glorious shower before us to cool the air and
put away the dust. As the day began to break, we were blessed in looking at
the sublime and beautiful clouds which Father piled up in the heavens, of
every shape, tint, and hue. Looking to the north we saw the perfect form of a
great hand pointing to the East, and the Spirit of God filled our heart as we
acknowledged it the hand of our Father, and that we were going in the
direction Father was pointing. We felt something like Nehemiah must have felt
when he said, "The hand of the Lord is good upon me.
We sang the praises of God much of
the way, and the gentle breezes carried the sweet sound over the surrounding
country. Once we finished a hymn just as we were ascending a hill. At the top
of the hill, to our right, stood a house. The song had sounded on ahead of us
and found an echo in the heart of a blessed old mother in Israel, who was
clapping her hands and shouting the praises of God, and who waved her hand and
nodded her head toward us as we came opposite the house, as good as to say,
"I felt the Spirit of God in the song and it has set my soul on
fire." Oh, how it stirred our soul as we saw the joyful demonstrations
of the dear old sister! We reached our destination in good time and had a
blessed meeting that night.
That his frail body should endure
the strenuous evangelistic work--the much travel, loss of sleep, and the
strain of preaching and laboring for souls--as well as editing and writing
for the Trumpet, is in itself a miracle. On more than one occasion, when he
was exhausted, he was miraculously strengthened by the power of the Spirit.
The following is a portion of his account of the meeting at Antwerp, Ohio,
held while on this tour:
Having labored hard all day in the
Lord, our body was so worn that we felt scarcely able to stand on our feet,
so closed the meeting about dark. But finding some unsaved souls had just
come who seemed concerned about salvation, we asked God to touch our body
with renewed strength. Praise God, he did as we asked. We called the people
to order and renewed the battle of the Lord for the rescue of perishing souls
at stake. Praise God, a rich harvest of souls followed. We labored on until
after ten o'clock. Two or three times we announced the meeting closed, when
other souls were found under conviction and were constrained by the Spirit of
God to yield. About eight were converted and a few sanctified through the
blood. The work was wrought in mighty power. Strong men shouted in their
new-born joys sent down from heaven by the sweet Spirit of adoption. Oh, what
a heavenly sight! Even little boys, who had just found the Lord, were so
powerfully blessed of God that they clapped their hands and leaped with the
glory. In twenty years of labor for God we never saw anything like it. It
verily seemed their little bodies must burst asunder by the power of the
Spirit. .
Every meeting is getting richer
and more wonderful. O my Lord, whereunto will this great kingdom yet grow?
Truly the saints of the Most High have taken the kingdom and the dominion and
the greatness of the kingdom under the whole heaven.
Leaving his company at Jerry City,
Ohio, he returned to Van Buren County, Michigan, long enough to attend the
assembly at Geneva Center where saints from over an extensive territory were
gathered. He makes the following reference to this meeting:
Tuesday afternoon, the great day
of the feast, near the beginning of the service, we sang, "Perishing
Souls at Stake" when the Holy Sprit overwhelmed all our souls with the
awful condition of this dark world and the worth of millions of souls who
would receive the pure gospel and be saved if it were brought to them. Oh,
how all our hearts were melted in sympathy for "perishing souls at stake
today!"
Up to that time we had been
looking for one of the dear ministerial brethren to work with us; but then we
said, O Lord, send them everywhere, and we will trust thee to 'make all grace
abound unto us, so that we always, having all sufficiency in all things, may
abound unto every good work.' Through the Lord Jesus Christ we feel
abundantly able to do as much preaching and laboring with souls as one man
would be supposed to perform, and also one man's work with the pen.
How beautiful the sight of God's
host, all mustered to the battle by the Lord himself! No jealousy, strife,
and selfish manipulation for the best places and fattest fields. Every soul
feels that he has the very best place while he abides in Christ and Christ
abides in us. Oh, what fools the devil has made of poor blind Babylonians
whose backs are galded by the sect harness and whose hearts are often crushed
beneath the sect machinery! We speak from experience. For ten years we felt
this cold, heartless heel of selfish oppression. More than once we wet our
pillow with the tears that the accursed Baal-idol pressed from our wounded
heart. By the grace of God we shall "render unto her double," as
God hath commanded us.
Instead of wire-pulling and
ungodly plotting against one another, and each one greedily looking for his
meat from his quarter, each worker in the Lord's vineyard is looking to the
Lord to guide his feet in the paths of His own will. And all go out in
perfect freedom whither the Lord will and yet all work in perfect harmony,
under the sweet and heavenly management of the Holy Spirit.
Of his return to Ohio and of an
attempt by a mob to capture and mistreat him we have his account in The
Trumpet of November 1.
After the assembly of the saints
in Michigan, we returned to our little company of fellow workers in Ohio;
found them all together at dear Brother and Sister Miller's, at Jerry City.
Praise God, it was joyful to our souls to meet all well again. How all hearts
praised God for the tidings of his wonderful works in the assembly! Of course
dear Brother Barney began to bound like a rubber ball, almost to the ceiling,
when he learned of the salvation of his brother William. Doubtless angels in
heaven took a part in the celebration of God's holy praises. . .
October 1 we came to Brother S.
Phillips' near Rising Sun. We held some meetings in a house on his place. We
enjoyed preaching the glorious gospel of Christ to the people that came
together there.
October 7, we moved a few miles
farther east and one mile north, to the house of dear Brother Daniel Roush,
where we invited the neighbors together to hear the word of the Lord. The
room soon proved too small, and the weather being pleasant, we obtained a
tent from Brother Phillips, that covered about 18 x 20 feet, which we
attached to one end of a large porch; these together made quite a good
meeting room. The Lord helped us to preach the glorious gospel of Christ, and
we poured out the vials of God's wrath upon every evil way. The Lord worked,
and souls were saved almost every day.
Thursday, October 14, the Lord
sent a very strong wind and we had to take the tent down. That night we held
the meeting in the house. The night being dark and rainy, the congregation
was not very large. While we were preaching the word, suddenly in
rushed a black mob.
To be continued ...
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This is a personal effort to create awareness about God's true church, in the midst of the confusion of denominations and sects. Zechariah 14:7 speaks of light in the evening time of the last days, after a dark period of day. Thank God for the light of truth that was given to D S Warner and others after the dark ages. Amen. Eric O Winter
Friday, March 2, 2012
Life And Labors Of D. S. WARNER PT3
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