A
UNITARIAN DESCRIBES ALEXANDER CAMPBELL
(This
rare account of Campbell I found in Andover Library at Harvard under
the title “Alexander Campbell at Louisville” in
Western
Messenger,
1836,
p.56. Restoration scholars would do well to study the historical
affinities between the early Unitarians and Disciples.—the Editor)
As
Alexander Campbell is a distinguished man, possessing great influence
in the western states; claiming to be a reformer; and without doubt,
an intelligent, bold and powerful preacher of rational and liberal
views in religion: his character and doings belong to the religious
history of the times, and should be interesting to all interested in
that. I offer no further apology, either to him (his public character
is public property) or our readers, for communicating the following
account of my connection with him while in this city last April.
Before
his arrival, some of his friends had requested the use of our
Unitarian church, on the morning of the Lord’s day, April 5th,
on which he was expected to be present. We willingly consented; not
however wishing to give up our church entirely on that day, but
rather that Mr. C should come and preach to us, and his own friends,
together. We thought it a more Christian way, for us all to worship
together on that morning, than to desert our church because Other
Christians were coming to it. We are not of the sort to fear
contamination from those whose forms of worship may differ from our
own. There are differences of operation, but the same Lord. One may
worship like dying Jacob, leaning on the top of his staff; another,
kneeling on a cushion; one may sing, making melody in his heart,
while the swelling organ bears up his voice with its strong and sweet
tones; another may prefer a less formal song: what matters it? Is it
not well for them to come together sometimes, and see how entirely
they agree in more vital matters?
So
I thought; and going to see Mr. C, on Saturday morning, told him so.
I told him my friends would be interested and happy to hear him.
“Perhaps I may say something that will not suit you,”
said he with a smile. “It is a great maxim with us,” I
answered, “to prove all things, and hold fast only what is
good. I am not afraid that you will do my people any harm. I do not
teach them to receive every thing as gospel which comes from the
pulpit, but to prove it all by God’s word.” He said that
he thought this right, and that those preachers who were afraid to
let their people hear different opinions, were satirizing themselves,
confessing that they had not been able fully to convince them of the
truth of their own doctrines. We parted after a little more
conversation.
The
next morning a great multitude, many having come from a distance, out
of Indiana and the neighboring counties of Kentucky, crowded the
church at an early hour. They listened with great attention, to a
discourse of about an hour and a quarter in length, as nearly as I
can judge. To our New England readers this may seem a long sermon,
but it is quite an usual thing for a western audience to listen with
interest for two or three hours. No preacher, at all distinguished,
ever satisfies himself with less than an hour. The western people
have a real taste for oratory, and willingly listen to long
harangues. And besides, there is in western speakers, a
conversational ease of delivery, an absence of the pulpit monotone, a
constant variety of intonation and emphasis, an exciting mode of
statement and illustration, which keep the attention from flagging.
There are earnesrness and simplicity; and it is effectual oratory,
for it engages and interests. Of this the speaker is sure; for he
knows his audience would not scruple to get up and go out of the
house, and leave him to talk to the walls, if he did not interest
them.
I
think that in this respect the western pulpit manner is much nearer
the truth than the eastern. Yet a western speaker would probably be
thought not reverential enough, by most New England
Congregationalists. As an illustration of this, let me record the
following anecdote. I was to speak one evening last summer, to a
society in the vicinity of Boston. I endeavored to adopt, as far as I
was able, the western natural conversational manner. After the
service, while going home, I chanced to overhear the following
criticism. “How did you like the preacher tonight?” “Not
very well; I thought his voice was too uneven.” The good old
lady missed the accustomed monotone. I was pleased with her remark,
for I knew I had succeeded in my endeavor, and I was sure that,
whatever criticism they might afterward make on my delivery, it had
for the time the effect of interesting them in what I said, which was
all I wanted.
I
have heard several of the distinguished western pulpit speakers, and
on the whole, I liked Mr. C.’s manner as well if not better
than that of any of them. Many are more imaginative and sublime in
their language; he keeps a pretty even flight in this respect, never
soaring very high. Many excel him in the inflections and management
of voice, and gracefulness of gesture. He stands upright, his head a
little back, his right hand leaning on a cane, with which he
occasionally gives an emphatic rap on the floor; bur most of his
gestures are made with his left hand. The great excellence however of
Campbell’s delivery, consists in the feeling which it inspires,
of his manly independence, entire conviction of the truth of what he
says, and entire understanding of his whole subject. He is plain,
forcible, and self-possessed; he is not hurried away by his words or
by his thought, but has the command of both.
This
comprehensive view of his subject, enables him to bring out, in an
emphatic way, the leading points. It is a fault of western speakers
generally, to have no clear train and sequence of ideas, but to hurry
backwards and forwards, round and round the field, showing great
fleetness and power, but making no progress. Herein Campbell is
superior. He has a view of his whole subject, while he is laying it
down in parts. I have heard distinguished speakers divide their
orations into two or three heads, and say exactly the same things
under each of them.
In
the present discourse, however, he introduced so many important
topics which he had no time to dwell upon, and which came in
incidentally, that it is not easy to give an accurate account of its
contents. I will however recount the most important of the ideas.
His
subject being Christian Union, he took the passage at the
commencement of the fourth chapter of Ephesians, as the basis of his
remarks. He first made some sound and important observations, on the
right way of reading scripture; that it was doing it injustice to
read it by piecemeal; that the Bible should be read like other books,
with the use of our reason. He remarked that there was one point to
each epistle, and to understand it, we must find what that point was.
He
then proceeded, after some other remarks, to develop his great idea
—the Union of Christians. He spoke of the evils of disunion,
party spirit, sectarian rancor. He quoted our Saviour’s
declaration, that a house divided against itself could not stand. He
said that considering the dissensions in the Christian church, it
would have fallen long ago, were it not founded on a rock. But that
by being divided it is shorn of its power, and can never convert the
world. Your divisions, your sectarianism, said he, are producing
infidelity, in a swelling flood. You must stop this warfare. I know
what I say, I speak from personal knowledge, when I declare that
there is a strong undercurrent of infidelity in all our churches. I
know there is a great show of zeal, great bustle and activity; it is
an age of missions and revivals; but there is not the power of
godliness.
(These
remarks reminded me and others very strongly of some, almost verbally
the same, made by Dr. Wylie, of Indiana, in the First Presbyterian
church, in this place, some time since. This shows that men of all
parties are beginning to find out that sectarianism will not answer,
and that there must be a reform.)
If
I rightly understood him, he then went on to show the grounds of
Christian Union, in the following manner. All Christians, who have
one Lord, one faith, one baptism, should be united in spirit and
fellowship. Now they all have one Lord, one faith, and one baptism;
for even the Quakers have a spiritual baptism or immersion. (These
were his words.)
And
all Christians have the same faith. For what is faith? A belief of
facts. The Bible is all facts, from beginning to end; there are no
speculations or opinions in it. The creeds begin “There is one
God, immutable, infinite, without parts,” etc. This no one can
understand. But the Bible begins, “In the beginning God created
the heavens and the earth:’ And so it goes through, all facts.
And I think it is proof that the creed which goes by the name of the
Apostle’s creed, is an ancient one, that it contains only
facts, in which all Christians agree. How does faith operate? In this
way. First, there must be something done; then a report of what has
been done; then a belief of that report; and feelings and conduct
follow from that belief. Suppose a mother receives a letter giving
her an account of the dangerous illness of her son. She breaks it
open and is exceedingly agitated. First came the fact, then a report
of it; then a belief of that report; and then her heart was moved.
Why? Because she had true faith.
If
I were to divide the Bible anew into chapters, he continued, I should
divide it into three: one of faith; one of piety; and one of
morality. But now people have gone on and added two more chapters to
it; one of opinions, and one of traditions. Now I have given you my
definition of faith, I will give you my idea of opinion. Opinion is
not knowledge; opinion is not faith; but merely speculation about
facts not known or believed. I know I am standing here. I believe
there is such a place as St. Petersburg; I do not know it: I believe
it on the testimony of others. I think Saturn is inhabited. I do not
know it; I have never been there. I do not believe it; no one has
ever come from there to tell me. But it is my opinion drawn from
speculation. Now I have my opinions on religious subjects as well as
on other subjects. But they are my private property; no one has a
right to take them from me, neither have I a right to impose them on
anyone as matters of faith. Then for traditions; they are simply the
opinions of our fathers, consecrated and embalmed in creeds and
symbols. These have been added to the Bible, and tend to make the
word of God of none effect. But we are not so much to blame for this,
as those from whom we received them. We are the creatures of creeds,
not their authors. They made us, we did not make them.
Now
we must, all of us, if we wish for union, give up our opinions and
traditions. We must give up our episcopalianism, and our
presbyterianism, and our methodism, our trinitarianism, our
unitarianism, our baptistism too. (I understood him to say this,
which is intelligible enough.) I am willing to compromise all my
opinions and speculations, and demand the same of others. But some
things I cannot compromise. I cannot compromise the seven unities
mentioned by St. Paul, in the text. Something is due to peace,
something also to truth.
I
have thus endeavored to give a faithful view of the substance of Mr.
Campbell’s sermon. I do not know that I have not mistaken some
parts, but I think the above statement in the main accurate. He asked
me, after he had finished, whether he had gone too far for me. I told
him
no.
I
could agree to all he said, with my whole heart. It strikes me that
all this ground, is exactly what Unitarians have always taken, plead,
and prayed for. Another question comes, however: We are agreed in
general principles; are we consistent in carrying them Out in detail?
There is an immense number of Christians who would agree with this
view of essentials and unessentials. The great difficulty, after all,
consists in applying it to points in dispute, to find out where
controversy turns round an axis of facts, and where it floats on an
element of opinion.