
PETER CARTWRIGHT
1785 - 1873
Peter Cartwright came to
Rogue's Hollow, in Logan County, Kentucky,
as a child, and was himself a convert in the
"camp-meeting" of 1801. Francis
Asbury made him a deacon of the Methodist
Episcopal Church in 1806, and William McKendree
ordained him an elder in 1808. He rode Methodist
circuits through Kentucky and Indiana until
1823, when he settled in Illinois.
Somewhere between 1800 and 1801, in the upper
part of Kentucky, at a memorable place called
"Cane Ridge," there was appointed
a sacramental meeting by some of the Presbyterian
ministers, at which meeting, seemingly unexpected
by ministers or people, the mighty power of
God was displayed in a very extraordinary
manner; many were moved to tears, and bitter
and loud crying for mercy. The meeting was
protracted for weeks. Ministers of almost
all denominations flocked in from far and
near. The meeting was kept up by night and
day. Thousands heard of the mighty work, and
came on foot, on horseback, in carriages and
wagons. It was supposed that there were in
attendance at times during the meeting from
twelve to twenty-five thousand people. Hundreds
fell prostrate under the mighty power of God,
as men slain in battle. Stands were erected
in the woods from which preachers of different
Churches proclaimed repentance toward God
and faith in our Lord [31] Jesus Christ, and
it was supposed, by eye and ear witnesses,
that between one and two thousand souls were
happily and powerfully converted to God during
the meeting. It was not unusual for one, two,
three, and four to seven preachers to be addressing
the listening thousands at the same time from
the different stands erected for the purpose.
The heavenly fire spread in almost every direction.
It was said, by truthful witnesses, that at
times more than one thousand persons broke
into loud shouting all at once, and that the
shouts could be heard for miles around.
From this camp-meeting, for
so it ought to be called, the news spread
through all the Churches, and through all
the land, and it excited great wonder and
surprise; but it kindled a religious flame
that spread all over Kentucky and through
many other states. And I may here be permitted
to say, that this was the first camp- meeting
ever held in the United States, and here our
camp-meetings took their rise.
As Presbyterian, Methodist,
and Baptist ministers all united in the blessed
work at this meeting, when they returned home
to their different congregations, and carried
the news of this mighty work, the revival
spread rapidly throughout the land; but many
of the ministers and members of the synod
of Kentucky thought it all disorder, and tried
to stop the work. They called their preachers
who were engaged in the revival to account,
and censured and silenced them. These ministers
then rose up and unitedly renounced the jurisdiction
of the Presbyterian Church, organized a Church
of their own, and dubbed it with the name
of Christian. Here was the origin of what
was called the New Lights. They renounced
the Westminster Confession of Faith, and all
Church discipline, and professed to take the
New Testament for their Church [32] discipline.
They established no standard of doctrine;
every one was to take the New Testament, read
it, and abide his own construction of it.
Marshall, M'Namar, Dunlevy, Stone, Huston,
and others, were the chief leaders in this
trash trap. Soon a diversity of opinion sprang
up, and they got into a Babel confusion. Some
preached Arian, some Socinian, and some Universalist
doctrines; so that in a few years you could
not tell what was harped or what was danced.
They adopted the mode of immersion, the water-god
of all exclusive errorists; and directly there
was a mighty controversy about the way to
heaven, whether it was by water or by dry
land.
In the meantime a remnant
of preachers that broke off from the Methodist
Episcopal Church in 1792, headed by James
O'Kelly, who had formed a party because he
could not be a bishop in said Church, which
party he called the Republican Methodist Church,
came out to Kentucky and formed a union with
these New Lights. Then the Methodist Episcopal
Church had war, and rumors of war, almost
on every side. The dreadful diversity of opinion
among these New Lights, their want of any
standard of doctrines, or regular Church discipline,
made them an easy prey to prowling wolves
of any description.
Soon the Shaker priests came
along, and off went M'Namar, Dunlevy, and
Huston, into that foolish error. Marshall
and others retraced their steps. B. W. Stone
stuck to his New Lightism, and fought many
bloodless battles, till he grew old and feeble,
and the mighty Alexander Campbell, the great,
arose and poured such floods of regenerating
water about the old man's cranium, that he
formed a union with this giant errorist, and
finally died, not much lamented out of the
circle of a few friends. And this is the [33]
way with all the New Lights, in the government,
morals, and discipline of the Church.
This Christian, or New Light
Church, is a feeble and scattered people,
though there are some good Christians among
them. I suppose since the day of Pentecost,
there was hardly ever a greater revival of
religion than at Cane Ridge; and if there
had been steady, Christian ministers, settled
in Gospel doctrine and Church discipline,
thousands might have been saved to the Church
that wandered off in the mazes of vain, speculative
divinity, and finally made shipwreck of the
faith, fell back, turned infidel, and lost
their religion and their souls forever. But
evidently a new impetus was given to the work
of God, and many, very many, will have cause
to bless God forever for this revival of religion
throughout the length and breadth of our Zion.