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Peter
Cartwright. His colorful Autobiography remains a favorite source
on frontier conditions.
History of Christianity is a six part survey designed to stimulate your curiosity by providing glimpses of pivotal events and persons in the spread of the church.
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efying Flood
Two men on horseback said good-byes. "I
should not be surprised if I never see you again," said the first.
"Well," answered the second, "if I fall and you never
see me again, tell my friends that I fell at my post trying to do my duty."
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Illinois was flooded. Not a path could be seen beneath the sheet of water.
Treetops, which might guide a bold traveler, stood miles away but would
be out of sight whenever he rode into a hollow. He could easily lose his
way or flounder into a hole. Even if he reached the trees, a swollen creek
beside them would compel him to swim twenty yards. He might have to spend
the night on the sopping prairie. The rider paused. On one hand was his
duty to the souls of his frontier parish; on the other, serious danger.
At that moment he recalled his motto: "Never retreat till you know
you can advance no further." He rode forward.
Frontiersman
That decision was characteristic of Peter Cartwright, one of the most
colorful frontier preachers in the young United States. Born in Virginia
in 1785, just two years after treaty ended the American Revolution, he
was taken West to Kentucky. There he became a tough guy in rough Logan
County known as "Rogue's Harbor" because of its swarms of badmen.
His Methodist mother pleaded and prayed with him. Her prayers wakened
a response. In a camp meeting her sixteen year old son was convicted of
his sinfulness and need for a Savior. For hours he cried out to God for
forgiveness until finally the peace of Christ flooded his soul. At once
he joined the Methodist Episcopal Church. Within two years he was a traveling
preacher, bringing the gospel to the backwoods of the new nation. His
rough past and hardy constitution served him well, for he faced floods,
thieves, hunger and disease. He met every challenge head on.
Fear no mortal man
Once Cartwright warned General Jackson (future President of the United
States) that he would be damned to Hell just as quickly as any other man
if he did not repent. A timid preacher apologized to Jackson for Cartwright's
bluntness. The general retorted that Christ's ministers ought to love
everybody and fear no mortal man, adding that he wished he had a few thousand
officers like Peter Cartwright.
Peter the pugnacious preacher
Frequently rowdies disrupted Cartwright's meetings. When one thug promised
to whip him, Cartwright invited the man to step into the woods with him
and do it. The two started for the trees. Leaping over the fence at the
edge of the campground, Cartwright landed painfully. He clutched his side.
The bully shouted that the preacher was going for a dagger and took to
his heels.
Another time Cartwright charged a group of rowdies in the dark, yelling
to imaginary forces, "Here! here! Officers and men, take them!"
The troublemakers bolted in panic. Such events gave him a name. A story
spread that he had fought legendary river boatman Mike Fink.
Soul winner extraordinary
Crowds flocked to hear him. Throughout Kentucky, Tennessee and Illinois,
Cartwright preached to hosts of men and women, speaking three hours at
a stretch, several times a week. The conviction in his booming voice could
make women weep and strong men tremble. 10,000 came to Christ through
his preaching in meetings that often ran day and night. Cartwright baptized
thousands, adding them to the church. Several church buildings were erected
at his instigation to house services for the new converts. To answer a
desperate need for more preachers, he championed the creation of Methodist
colleges. Having schooled himself, he saw the value of learning. Wherever
he went he left behind religious books and tracts to convert and strengthened
souls in his absence. The joy of soul-winning compensated him for all
hardships.
Continual Hardships
Hardships were plentiful. Several times Cartwright went two and three
days without food. He once returned from his circuit with just 6¢
of borrowed money in his pocket. His father had to outfit him with new
clothes, saddle and horse before he could ride again. Traveling preachers
were paid a measly $30- 50 a year with no family allowance. Nonetheless
Cartwright married and raised children. His family was not spared tragedy.
Forced to camp in the open one night, they were startled awake when a
tree snapped in two; Cartwright flung up his arms to deflect the falling
log, but it crushed his youngest daughter to death.
A Move For the Sake of the Family
In 1823 Peter Cartwright sold his Kentucky farm. He was disturbed by the
effects of slavery on consciences and feared his daughters would marry
slave owners. Slavery, he felt, sapped independence of spirit. His family
readily agreed to the change and his bishop appointed him to a circuit
in Illinois.
In Illinois he more than once braved floods. Once he had to chase his
saddle bags which were swept downstream. Another time, in snowy weather,
when even he hesitated to enter a flooded river, his eldest daughter,
riding with him, proved her own mettle, urging him onward. In every instance,
the Lord brought him to safety. He died at eighty-seven, leaving behind
an autobiography which became a classic as much for the exploits it recounted
as for the picture it painted of frontier life. His courage won him numerous
sons and daughters for Christ. He stayed at "his post to do his duty."
Fascinating Facts. . .
- In 1812 a severe earthquake struck New Madrid, Missouri. At places
along the fault the Mississippi flowed backward. Thousands cried out
for forgiveness of sins, believing the end of the world had come. Many
later joined churches.
- Pioneers, isolated from church communities, often had little knowledge
of spiritual terms. One preacher asked a woman if she had any religious
convictions. "Naw," she replied, "nor my old man neither.
He were tried for hog-stealin' once, but he weren't convicted."
- Because drunkenness was a problem on the frontier, Peter Cartwright
thought he'd demonstrate the danger of strong drink. He placed a worm
in a glass of wine. It wriggled. He transferred it to a glass of whiskey.
It curled up and died. "There," Cartwright said. "What
does that tell you?" A man replied, "It shows that if you
drink whiskey you won't have worms."
- Francis Asbury, one of Cartwright's overseers, was the first Methodist
bishop in the United States. He traveled nearly 300,000 miles in his
life, building the Methodist church from 300 members to over 200,000.
- Historian Nathan Hatch asserts: "Between 1840 and 1860, the
Methodists founded at least 35 institutions of higher education. Between
the Civil War and 1900, they founded more than one college or university
per year. . . . By 1852, eleven of thirteen congressmen from Indiana
were Methodists. In 1880, no denomination could claim the affiliation
of more governors than the Methodists."
Peter vs. Abraham
Running for Congress in 1846, Peter Cartwright lost to none other than
Abraham Lincoln. In 1832, over a decade earlier, however, Cartwright had
defeated Lincoln in a race for the Illinois legislature.
In His Own Words. . .The Price of Being
a Preacher
". . .in reference to the Methodist Episcopal Church, when we consider
that her ministers were illiterate...that we were everywhere spoken against,
caricatured and misrepresented; without colleges and seminaries, without
religious books or periodicals, without missionary funds, and almost all
other religious means; and our ministers did not for many years, on an
average, receive over fifty dollars support annually, and a Methodist
preacher's library almost entirely consisted of a Bible, Hymn Book, and
a Discipline, may we not, without boasting, say with one of old, 'What
hath God wrought?' A Methodist preacher in those days, when he felt that
God had called him to preach, instead of hunting up a college or Biblical
institute, hunted up a hardy pony of a horse and some traveling apparatus
and. . .cried 'Behold the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin of the
world.' In this way he went through storms of wind, hail, snow, and rain;
climbed hills and mountains, traversed valleys, plunged through swamps,
swam swollen streams, lay out all night, wet, weary, and hungry, held
his horse by the bridle all night, or tied him to a limb, slept with his
saddle blanket for a bed, his saddle or saddle bags for his pillow, and
his old big coat or blanket, if he had any, for a covering. Often he slept
in dirty cabins, on earthen floors, before the fire. . .His text was always
ready, 'Behold the Lamb of God.' "
--From Cartwright's Autobiography
Changes in Glimpses
Glimpses is now in its eighth year. For the first few years we treated
a single person or subject on a single sheet in two colors. Then two years
ago we expanded to the present four page format and full color. The response
to this change was overwhelmingly favorable, however, there has been one
persistent lament expressed by readers. Many missed the more in depth
treatment of the single person or theme that we had somewhat sacrificed
with the new format.
With this issue we introduce a further modification of our format that
we hope recaptures the appeal of the older approach while maintaining
the attractiveness of the new. As you see from this issue we are devoting
the first three pages to a single subject, yet breaking it up into a few
different features.
More on Cartwright's Autobiography (Editor's
Notebook)
While riding to a meeting with Professor Richard Heitzenreiter, a Wesley
scholar who teaches at Southern Methodist University, I asked him how
he aroused interest in his students in Christian history. He told me one
particularly effective approach is to have his students pick up the Autobiography
of Peter Cartwright and tell them open it to just about any page at
random. There they inevitably find some fascinating anecdote from the
life of the great circuit rider that draws them in to want to read more.
Hopefully this issue has done the same for you. Get ahold of the autobiography
for fascinating reading.--Ken Curtis
Landmark Quotes
QUICKLY: How many of the following sayings have you ever heard of? Do
you know where they come from?
The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.
Our hearts are restless until they find their rest in thee.
Here I stand.
The world is my parish.
Expect great things from God. Attempt great things for God.
You have just dipped into the 3rd, 5th, 16th, 18th and 19th centuries
with Tertullian, Augustine, Luther, Wesley and Carey. We have a new series
that looks at such landmark quotations that have survived the centuries.
We have selected ones that captured an event or an issue, or a turning
point event in such a significant way that it was remembered and survived
for centuries. The dense forest of church history is strewn with these
kinds of sayings. They were remembered because they summed up something
important for the church and brought it home with clarity and potency.
Go to Stories behind Famous Sayings.
There you will find the stories behind these unforgettable sayings passed
down generation after generation. |
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