x Welsh Tract Publications: Elder Thomas Dudley

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Showing posts with label Elder Thomas Dudley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elder Thomas Dudley. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2024

DEFENSE OF FALSE ALLEGATIONS (DUDLEY) 1835


Lexington, Ky. Aug. 1835.

DEAR BRO. BEEBE: Your two letters came duly to hand, and but for absence from home in the discharge of ministerial duties, should have answered them sooner. It would give me much pleasure to be with the Old School brethren who meet with you in Oct. Next, I indulge some hope that it will be in my power to accomplish it. The matter is however involved in doubt. I have sent you the “Cincinnati Journal” of the 17th of July, which contains an unprovoked attack upon me and the society to which I belong, together with my reply to the attack. I had not heard a sentence of such a piece being in existence, until our Bro. Trott visited us in the latter part of December last. He came across the piece copied into the Southern Telegraph, printed at Richmond, Va. on his way out. After he had given me the information, I used some industry to get hold of the paper containing the original attack; having obtained the loan of it, I wrote a reply in January, but owing to the continued absence of my brother (who lives in Cincinnati) from the city during the most of the latter part of the winter and spring, I did not send the article first written (I may say that some friends urged that it was too lengthy) because of its length, and wrote a second which did not reach the press, owing to the absence of my brother until July.

You may form some idea of the nature of the war waged against me upon reading Mr. Brainard’s piece, as also the prospect of my “capitulating to the enemy,” when you shall have read my reply. A desperate struggle is made to build up their systems by the worshippers of the great goddess Diana; and no wonder, for her “craftsmen live by their craft,” and it is in danger. I think they find heavy pulling, deep roads, and balky oxen; which renders the onward march of their machinery rather tardy. I think the gospel in its simplicity and purity is sweeter to me than ever; and when I find a brother here and there (and there are yet some amongst us, and occasionally we have visitors from a distance) who have firmness and independence enough to speak out plainly the language of the Jews – who can pronounce the “Shibboleth of Jordan” distinctly, he feels nearer my heart than ever. This consideration somewhat reconciles me to persecution. It always did, and always will tend to strengthen the cords of Christian affection.

The Apostle has said, “yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.” O, my dear brother, if we can only have grace (for on it alone am I dependent) sufficient to live as the faithful in Israel, “though a host should encamp against us,” we have nothing to fear; “for the Master has said, One shall chase a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight.” O that we may always remember that “the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God, to the pulling down of the strongholds.” The Poet has said of Jesus:

“He is a solid comfort when
All other comforts fail.”

May we feel in our souls what another Poet has said,

“If bliss thy providence impart,
For which resigned I’ll pray;
Give me to feel the greatfull heart,
And hourly watch and pray.”

Affliction should thy love intend,
As vice or folly’s cure;
Patient to gain the gracious end,
May I the means endure.”

We live in an evil day, when “the love of many seems to wax cold.” I have frequently been reminded of the language of the Psalmist, within the last few months, “Help Lord for the Godly man ceaseth, for the faithful fail from among the children of men.”

Within the last three weeks, a friend has placed in my hands the “Cross and Baptist Journal” published in Cincinnati, in which I find another attack on myself and our Association, over the signature of “R.T. /Dillard.” The ostensible cause of this attack is, the remark contained in my letter to Bro. Reis, viz: “Our Association remains firm as a body; we still have a few disaffected among us, but their number has been diminished since I was with you,” and which was published in the Signs at the request of the Old School brethren. I take no exceptions to its publication. Eld. Dillard admits that dissatisfaction exists; that a majority of the Association is opposed to Missionary operations; and admits and denies that the number of disaffected has been diminished. My reply is written and will be forthcoming shortly – provided the Cross and Journal will agree to publish it; if not, some other medium will be sought. My best love to dear brother Conklin and all the brethren who enquire for me.

Your Brother and companion in tribulation.


THOMAS P. DUDLEY


THE REV. THOMAS P. DUDLEY, OF KENTUCKY.

Last Sept. more than NINE MONTHS ago, the editor of the Journal spent a week in Kentucky, and on his return, he wrote a short account of his visit. – Among other things, we referred to the operations of the particular Baptists, of whom the Rev. Thos. P. Dudley is a leader. The following is an extract from our observations:”

Georgetown.

‘This is one of the most delightful towns in Kentucky, containing about 1500 inhabitants. Situated on rising ground, furnished with excellent water, and surrounded by the rich and beautiful landscapes, so common in the center of Kentucky, it will hardly lose by comparison with any town of its size in the United States. It is on the direct route from Cincinnati to Lexington, twelve miles distant from the latter, and sixty-eight from the former. A company has been chartered to construct a Macadamized road between the two cities, and when this work is completed, Georgetown can hardly fail to become one of the most flourishing and populous towns in the state.’

‘We have mentioned three kinds of Baptists. The Regular, the Cambellite, and the Newlight. There is another kind still, called Dudleyites, or familiarly Iron Jackets. Their great leader here is the Rev. Mr. Dudley. He preached at Georgetown on the Sabbath we were there. His sermons are often two hours and a half or three hours in length. Wherever he starts he is sure to travel over about the same ground in each sermon. He and his party claim to be the original Simon Pure Baptist denomination, and they everywhere, like another party we could name, denounce as heretics and innovators all those pretended Baptists, who offer salvation to sinners, and endeavor to persuade them to repent and believe in all-sufficient and accessible Saviour. They believe that all efforts by men, to save souls, and savor sacrilege, by invading the sovereignty of God. They are wonderfully afraid of revival excitements; and without scruple, collect and trumpet forth to the world the slanders which the world is willing to originate against revival preachers. The Rev. Mr. Dudley does not scruple to take up Presbyterians, Methodists, Regular Baptists, Episcopalians, &c., by name, and lacerate them without mercy. We know of but one other minister, in any denomination, who deals in this personal abuse, and he in all respects above named is a true yoke-fellow of Mr. Dudley. Against our Bible, Tract, Missionary, Sunday Schools, and Temperance Societies, the Dudleyites have a special antipathy. They rail at these as new measures, calculated to take the work of God out of his hands; as Arminian devices opposed to Calvinism, and not named in the Bible. We know of at least one lady, a member of this ultra Calvinistic and essentially bigoted sect, who tried to break from her chains, by sending her children to the Sunday school. For this, she was disciplined and persuaded to make a public confession. Another, a father, whose son had joined the Temperance Society, came in a great rage and ordered his name to be stricken off. In these churches is still heard the old song about ‘man-made preachers,’ ‘ministerial hirelings,’ &c. The leaders of this denomination are striving to reform the Regular Baptists, by persuading them to give up their revival preaching, and benevolent societies, so that all may lie down together and sleep, and ‘wait God’s time to gather in the elect.’ They are willing to trust sinners throughout a perishing world, to God’s naked sovereignty, bu they are afraid to trust the church to such keeping and stir themselves right heartily to hold their own, and gain proselytes. Marvellous consistency!

Pity that all antinomians of all denomination, who are afraid sinners will be converted too fast, could not be collected into one body, and laid away quietly to sleep, where their slumbers would not be disturbed by the rolling wheels of the gospel chariot, and where they would no longer disturb, by their croaking, those who are fighting the battles of the Lord. Their number we know not, but they are scattered here and there over the west.’

TO THE PUBLISHERS OF THE CINCINNATI JOURNAL.

Gentlemen,

Within the last few months, your paper of the 17th October last has been placed in my hands and my attention especially invited to an unprovoked libel, published (under the editorial head) against me and a respectable proportion of the Baptist denomination, as well, in our own, as other countries.

Were the circulation of your paper confined to the limits of my acquaintance, I should treat that vituperative article with the contempt it merits. But learning that it has been copied into several of the eastern journals, amongst others, the ‘Southern Telegraph,’ printed at Richmond, Va.; I feel it a duty I owe myself, the society to which I belong, and to the cause of truth (unaccustomed as I am to newspaper controversy) to disabuse the public mind by exposing that issue of misrepresentations. As your journal has been the medium of communication for the ‘visitor’s’ attack, I ask it as an act of justice that you publish my reply.

With the author, I have no personal acquaintance, nor do I recollect ever to have heard of him, except in connection with his unchristian and wanton attack on a body of people, who for integrity, honesty, and real piety, would lose nothing by comparison with any sect in Christendom. It is true, the Particular Baptists stand aloof from the system of mendicancy (erroneously called benevolent institutions) peculiar to those days of invention in religious matters; believing that God has ordained the means which shall infallibly secure the salvation of his elect and that not one word is said in the Bible (the standard of our faith and practice) about missionary, bible, tract and temperance societies, as conducing to effectuate the eternal purposes of Jehovah. Nor do we feel disposed to impose upon the credulity of the religious and irreligious; male and female, bond and free, by telling them, that contributing to rear and sustain those institutions of human invention, they are throwing into the Lord’s treasury. Nor yet, that approaching an anxious seat, front bench, or emphatically a work bench, is a means appointed by the Eternal of securing an interest in a Saviour’s blood. We rely on stronger and more effectual means than such trumpery as this. We rely on the atoning blood of the Lamb as efficacious in the ‘purchase of his church’ and the irresistible work of the Spirit to sanctify and prepare them for the Master’s use. Such was Paul’s reliance, as we learn from the following declarations: ‘We are bound to give thanks always to God for you, brethren, beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation (the end) through sanctification of the spirit and belief of the truth’ (the means:) 2 Thess. ii, 13. It is not surprising, however, that the young man has manifested so much bitterness of feeling when we remember what the Master said to his disciples, ‘Marvel not if the world hates you. If ye were of the world, the world would love his own, but because ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore, the world hateth you.’ We have long since learned that to maintain consistently, that God saves his people by his own uncontrollable power, ‘according to the eternal purposes which He purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord,’ is enough to secure (from the children of the bondwoman) the title of antinomian, fatalist, &c.; and to refuse worship to the great goddess Diana, and withhold patronage from her craftsmen rarely fails to secure (from the same source) the epithet of uncharitable. Yet it is said, ‘Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my name’s sake,’ and we are exhorted to ‘bear hardness as good soldiers of Jesus Christ.’

Had the ‘visiter’ made himself acquainted with the doctrine and practice of the ‘Dudleyites or Iron Jackets’ as he is pleased to name them, and given to the world a fair and impartial representation of them; not a murmur would ever have escaped one. But it is evident such was not his intention. The interest of many is promoted by suppressing the truth. Hence with them ‘the end sanctifies the means.’ If he really has a desire to know something of the doctrine and practice of the ‘Particular Baptists’ (of which he seems entirely ignorant) if he will examine what is commonly called the Apostle’s creed, supposed to have been written shortly after the ascension of the Head of the Church; the Confession of faith published by the Waldenses, who inhabited the valleys of Piedmont in the 12century; the London Confession of Faith, adopted by a number of Particular Baptists near two centuries past; or the Philadelphia Baptist Confession of Faith, adopted in 1742; he may learn something of them. The church of which I am a member was constituted in 1786, and received as her declaration, the last named Confession. From it, we have not departed. If there exists a discrepancy between our views and those of the Regular Baptists, it is because of their departure from original principles, and not from our adopting a new theory, whether called ‘new-school divinity,’ or by any other name.

I might with confidence appeal to the First Presbyterian society, and the various Baptist churches in Cincinnati, (at each of whose houses of worship upon special invitation, I have several times tried to preach) in refutation of the slanders of Mr. Brainerd. His allusion to the length of my sermons and my traveling over the same ground in each is too contemptible to merit serious notice. That I believe the doctrine and practice of the Particular Baptists to correspond with the Bible, is most true; but that I denounce all those who differ from us as ‘heretics and innovators’ is a perversion of truth, for which the author of the attack is holden responsible before the religious community. That I descend to ‘personal abuse’ is equally destitute of foundation in fact. To assign the reasons why I conceive other denominations are in error, and to expose such errors, is my privilege as a minister of the gospel, in doing which, I have studiously avoided misrepresentation, and Mr. Brainerd is challenged to produce a single instance in which I have misrepresented any creed. His cause is indefensible, hence he is disposed to meet argument, sound argument, with abuse. I have again and again said publicly, that I believe there are many heaven-born souls attached to the various denominations of professed christians, but that, in so far as they differ from us I conceive them to be in error.

If I abuse and denounce all other denominations, as Mr. Brainard accuses me of doing; or if I ‘collect and trumpet forth to the world slanders,’ is it not passing strange that our congregations have increased since Mr. B’s. visit to his classmate in Georgetown, and that those congregations are composed of Presbyterians, Methodists, Episcopalians, Regular Baptists, Reformers and Unitarians, &c? which is known to be a fact. Gentle reader, ask yourself the question: Is it rational to suppose, that those congregations meet me month after month, to hear themselves abused? Shameful perversion of truth! We believe that Jesus is an all-sufficient Saviour only for those whom he has redeemed and that he will save all such with everlasting salvation. We believe him the only medium of access to the Father; ‘For through him we both (Jews and Gentiles) have access by one Spirit unto the Father.’ Eph. ii, 18. We warn the impenitent of the claims of the LAW upon them, their duty to turn from sin; but we dare not promise them salvation upon their obedience to the law. ‘By the deeds of the law, there shall no flesh be justified in his sight.’ Rom. iii, 20. Men are ‘dead in trespasses and sins;’ when made alive by the Spirit, (whose province it is to give life, ‘it is the Spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth nothing:) Then and not till then are they the subjects of gospel address. ‘But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned.’ Hence it is seen that the agency of the Holy Spirit is indispensable to the production of gospel faith, without which it is impossible to please God. The law, and the law alone has to do with men in an unregenerate state; the gospel has to do with those who are alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.’ The Saviour said ‘Make the tree good and his fruit shall be good,’ in reference to the principle of faith, whence flows good works.

A heavy charge is leveled against us for our supposed opposition to ‘revival preaching and benevolent institutions.’ Whence the term ‘revival preaching I know not; I am very certain it is not drawn from the sacred volume. The gospel of Christ is the same whether preached in times of revival, or when Zion is languid, and the ministry is required to ‘preach the gospel.’ Why then is this distinction drawn? In relation to ‘benevolent institutions,’ as they are called, I remark, that we have no earthly objection to men associating together for the suppression of vice and substitution of virtue in its place, but we do object to setting up those institutions as ‘religious institutions.’ – They are unknown to the Bible (the standard of our faith and practice) hence we are unwilling to dishonor our divine Head by saying (virtually) he has been deficient in the appointment of the means to secure his ends, and that we will supply that deficiency with our societies. Or that the laws for the government of Zion are inadequate, and we will, therefore, supply that inadequacy. Religious and irreligious may, and have become members of most or all of them, by paying their money. In such association, are we not violating the command of Christ: – ‘Be ye not conformed to this world’ – ‘Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers’ – ‘Touch not, taste not, handle not?’ But, it is said we ‘are willing to trust sinners throughout a perishing world to God’s naked sovereignty.’ In this, he has said truly; but as untruly has he said, we are afraid to trust the church to such keeping. We have no city of refuge but the eternal God; hence we cannot trust ourselves or others anywhere else. ‘Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it; except the Lord keep the city, the watchmen waketh not in vain.’ Ps. cxxviii, 1. Every soul who has experienced regeneration, who has been made acquainted with the holy character of his Creator, the purity of his law, the heinous nature of sin, the corruption of his own heart; who has tasted, figuratively, of the wormwood and gall, being ‘ten thousand talents in debt and having nothing to pay,’ is brought to cry ‘Lord save, we perish.’ ‘God be merciful to me a sinner.’ ‘Lord, if thou wilt, thou canst make me clean.’ Here he relies exclusively on God’s naked sovereignty and here must Mr. Brainerd be brought to rely, or he will assuredly hear the sentence depart. – ‘Not unto us, but unto thy name give glory.’

Mr. Brainerd says, we know of at least one lady, a member of this ultra Calvinistic and essentially bigoted sect, who tried to break from her chains, by sending her children to the Sunday School. For this, she was disciplined and persuaded to make a public confession.’ There is not the least shadow of foundation in fact for this charge, and Mr. Brainerd should be held up to the world as a calumniator for asserting it. The case of the father, which he says he knows to exist, is alike untrue in every essential particular. It is humiliating indeed to see a man professing to be a minister of the gospel, so reckless of truth.

Tenacious as we are of our principles, believing them to be gospel principles, I rejoice that no individual is to be found in our ranks, who seems to regret that all these who differ from us ‘could not be collected together, and laid away quietly to sleep (ay, the sleep of death) where the rolling wheels of the gospel chariot can no more disturb their slumbers.’ No, they may ‘croak’ on, until the Lord shall stop them. Christians of all denominations, has it come to this, that because an individual or body of christians wants a ‘precept or example’ drawn from the bible to sustain the inventions of men before they are to be prescribed; yes, but for the laws of the land, deprived of their liberty, and perhaps of life? Charity would hope that the young man’s pen wrote that which his heart did not dictate. But that I may do the Rev. T. Brainerd a presbyterian preacher of Cincinnati, Ohio, no injustice, I quote his own language. ‘Pity that all antinomians of all denominations who are afraid sinners will be converted too fast, could not be collected into one body, and laid away quietly to sleep, where their slumbers would not be disturbed by the rolling wheels of the gospel chariot, and where they would no longer disturb, by their croaking, those who are fighting the battles of the Lord. Their numbers we know not, but they are scattered here and there over the west.’ The above sentence closes Mr. Brainerd’s philosophy against me and the society to which I belong. We have a cause of gratitude to God in that we enjoy religious toleration. Had Mr. B. the sanction of law, we know not how soon he would engage in exterminating all who dare proclaim ‘salvation is of the Lord.’

THO’S. P. DUDLEY.
Fayette, Co. Ken. April 1, 1835

Signs of the Times
Volume 3, No. 21
October 14, 1835

Tuesday, November 19, 2024

CALL TO THE GOSPEL MINISTRY (DUDLEY) 1874


Lexington, Ky., Nov.24, 1874.

MY DEARLY BELOVED BROTHER BEEBE: - A short time since I received a letter from a brother in a distant state, asking me to write for publication in the “Signs,” my views on the call to the gospel ministry. I can only give the exercises of my own mind on this important subject.

Monday, November 18, 2024

ONE OFFERING (DUDLEY) 1879


Lexington, Ky., Jan., 1879.

MEMBERS OF HIS BODY (DUDLEY) 1879


Lexington, Ky., Jan., 1879.

MY DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - I have been fully satisfied for more than fifty years, that the difficulty with the people of God in explaining the warfare which so distressingly annoys and perplexes them, results from want of understanding the relations they sustain to the Lord Jesus Christ, and their complex character as the sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty. 

Friday, November 15, 2024

I JOHN 2.3 (DUDLEY) 1841


Near Lexington Ky., April 20, 1841.

DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: – The 3d no., current vol. of the “Signs,” did not come to hand until a few days since in looking over it I found a request from a “Correspondent” for my views on 1 John iii. 2, 3:

Thursday, November 14, 2024

REVELATION 2:2-6 (DUDLEY) 1859


Near Lexington, Ky., Feb.1, 1859.

DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - In the 23rd number of the last volume of the SIGNS, I find a request from sister Sarah H. Izor, of Indiana, for my views on Rev. 2:2-6, inclusive.

Saturday, November 9, 2024

THE MEDIATORIAL WORK OF CHRIST (DUDLEY) 1872


Lexington, Ky., Feb. 29, 1872.

DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - I have reflected much on the crude and undigested notions of almost, if not altogether, the religious world, so-called, excepting Particular, or Old School Baptists, with regard to the mediatorial work of the Lord Jesus Christ, and am constrained to acknowledge, that, if those notions comport with the teachings of Christ, and his apostles, and prophets, I have wholly mistaken them.

Friday, November 8, 2024

CHRISTIAN WARFARE (DUDLEY) 1845


TO THE CHURCHES

Composing the Licking Association of Particular Baptists, especially, and to the “Old School Baptists,” generally.

Circumstances seem, in the judgment of the undersigned, to render it necessary to his own vindication, and but justice to those who concurred with the sentiments contained in the following Circular; that it should be published for your prayerful consideration.

Thursday, November 7, 2024

PASSED FROM DEATH UNTO LIFE (DUDLEY) 1877


Lexington, Ky., Nov.7, 1877.

MY DEAR BROTHER IN CHRIST: - You and I have been permitted to live and labor long, as we have presumed to hope, in the cause of our divine Savior, and have witnessed many defections from the faith of the gospel, among those who professed to “walk with us to the house of God in company;” and why is it that we have not been “turned away from the truth, and been turned unto fables?” What anguish has that question stirred. “Will ye also go away?” I feel the language to be appropriate to me.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

CORRUPTED MAN AND THE HEAVENLY FAMILY (DUDLEY) 1861


CIRCULAR LETTER of the Licking Association of Particular Baptists of Kentucky, now in session with the Church at Bryant’s, Fayette County, Kentucky, to the Churches of which she is composed, sendeth Christian salutations.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

THE BIRTH OF THE NEW MAN AND ADOPTION OF THE OLD MAN Or, The “Soul of Man” is not the New Man, nor the subject of Regeneration (DUDLEY) 1853


Dearly Beloved Brethren,

In our youth, we were taught to seek instruction from those sources which time and improved opportunities, had rendered most competent to impart it. As we have increased in years, our desire to know the truth as it is in Christ Jesus, has increased.

Monday, October 28, 2024

QUICKENED SPIRITS (DUDLEY) 1877


Lexington, Ky., Jan.25, 1877.

MY DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - My attention has been recently called to an expression that occurs in the Circular on the Warfare – “quickened spirits.” I remember the expression was severely criticized immediately after the Circular was first printed.

Sunday, October 27, 2024

THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD (DUDLEY) 1877


Lexington, Ky., Jan.11, 1877.

MY DEAR BROTHER IN CHRIST: - If you knew my anxiety to hear from you, the interest I take in your temporal and spiritual welfare, I think you would have written before this time. I have not heard anything directly or indirectly from you since we parted in Louisville.

Sunday, October 13, 2024

CHURCH MEMBERSHIP (DUDLEY) 1879


Lexington, Ky., Jan.8, 1879.

MY DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - Sitting and reflecting this morning, I remember this day is the anniversary of what was called the great battle of New Orleans, fought on the 8th of January, 1815; and I was led, not for the first time, to ascribe the victory achieved by the American arms on that memorable day to the God who rules in the army of heaven and among the inhabitants of earth. The victory was so astounding to all parties that when the result came to be known, I commenced a letter to my father as follows: “The Lord has blessed us with the most extraordinary victory on record.” But how little I then knew of the power, providence, and grace of our God. I had not then read that Saul shall slay his thousands, but David his tens of thousands; nor the declaration of Moses, “O that they [Israel] were wise, that they understood this, that they would consider their latter end! How should one chase a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight, except their Rock had sold them?” Deut. 32:29,30. Nor yet the victory achieved by Gideon and his little army of three hundred men, over the innumerable hosts of his enemies. When the battle was over, the victory won by the American arms, it was reported, two thousand, six hundred and fifty of the enemy killed, wounded, and prisoners, while the American army had lost but six killed and eight wounded! You will not wonder that I should have written to my father as I did. The contrast between the loss of the contending armies was so great as to almost bewilder.

Our God made a covenant with Abraham and his seed, which ran thus: “If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the good of the land; [not go to heaven for your obedience] but if ye refuse, and rebel, ye shall be devoured with the sword; for the Lord hath spoken it.” According to the statute, God required a mark to be placed on his covenanted people, which should distinguish them in all time from the other nations of the earth. Hence he commanded him to circumcise his son Isaac; not to constitute or make him his son. The command reached all the male descendants of Abraham, and those males bought with his money. This sign of circumcision was intended to distinguish this people from all other people; hence the Lord said unto them, on a certain occasion, “You only have I known of all the nations of the earth; therefore will I punish you for your iniquities.” A statute of Israel forbade the giving of their sons or daughters in marriage to the heathen nations by whom they were surrounded, that the seed might not be corrupted. Few of the violations of the statute to keep the seed holy were more severely punished than the foregoing. “Thou shalt not bring the uncircumcised into the congregation of the Lord.” The uncircumcised were positively forbidden to eat of the Passover. And yet we hear a prophet say, “In those days saw I Jews that had married wives of Ashdod, of Ammon, and of Moab; and their children spake half in the speech of Ashdod, and could not speak in the Jews’ language, but according to the language of each people.” If there was nothing in the statutes given to Israel forbidding those unlawful marriages, why does the prophet bring them up, as showing the divine displeasure, in that the offspring could speak neither the language of father or mother, but a confounded language that neither father nor mother could understand? We learn from the divine word that, “Whatsoever was written aforetime was written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the scriptures might have hope.” Israel in her corporate capacity was a type of spiritual Israel, or the church of the living God. The vessels of the sanctuary were committed to the priests under the law, and they were held responsible for safekeeping and proper use.

I now come to the matter I had in contemplation when I commenced this letter. Allow me to say at the outset, that our God did not command any to see, whose eyes of the understanding he had not opened to see “wondrous things out of thy law,” or whose ears he had not circumcised, or opened to hear the holy messages he was about to deliver to them. It is but too manifest that the professed Baptist ministry of our day, like those other denominations, have turned their backs on the teaching of the divine word, listening to fables, desiring to be teachers of the law, understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm; worshiping the idols of men’s hands, bible, missionary and tract societies, theological and Sabbath Schools, by which they “worship and serve the creature more than the Creator, who is over all God blessed for evermore.” The Lord by the prophet Jeremiah said, “Among my people are wicked men; they lay snares, they set traps, they catch men.” Again, “The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests bear rule, and my people love to have it so; and what shall be at the end thereof.” And yet again, “O my people, they that lead thee cause thee to err.”

The first temple was demolished, raised to its foundation, because of a violation of the statutes and judgments given to govern Israel. With regard to the building of the second, we are told, “When the adversaries of Judah and Benjamin heard that the children of the captivity were about to build to the Lord God of Israel, they said, Let us build with you; we worship your God, even as ye do.” But Zerubbabel and Jeshua, and the rest of the chief of the fathers of Israel said, “Ye have nothing to do with us; we ourselves together will build to the Lord God of Israel, according to the decree of king Cyrus, king of Persia.” These very pious adversaries set about immediately to obstruct the building, throwing obstacles in the way, so that the builders, before the work was consummated, had to hold their weapons for defense in one hand and rear the building with the other. And seeing their hypocrisy, shall we, dare we, enter into a partnership or make a compromise with such men? Now let us hear the solemn warning of our God, in the prophecy of Ezekiel, 44:5-9 – “And the Lord said unto me, Son of man.” [I do not recollect that the expression, son of man, is ever applied to any but this prophet, and to the Lord Jesus, in the scriptures. “No man hath ascended up to heaven, but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven.” Again, “What and if ye shall see the Son of man ascend up where he was before?” Ezekiel is addressed in that way in the 37th chapter of his prophecy. “Son of man, can these dry bones live? O Lord God, thou knowest.” Again, in the 43rd chapter, “Son of man, shew the house to the house of Israel, that they may be ashamed of their iniquities; and let them measure the pattern.”] “Mark well, [give the most earnest attention] and behold with thine eyes, and hear with thine ears all that I say unto thee concerning all the ordinances of the house of the Lord and all the laws thereof; and mark well the entering in of the house, with every going forth of the sanctuary.” I know of only two ordinances pertaining to the anti-type, the gospel church: Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.

But the prophet was commanded to mark well the entering in of the house, with every going forth of the sanctuary, as well as “the laws thereof.” The law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus, and the law of sin and death, together with all the laws pertaining to the government of the house, or church of God. “And thou shalt say to the rebellious, even to the house of Israel, O ye house of Israel, let it suffice you of your abominations, in that, ye have brought into my sanctuary strangers uncircumcised in heart and in flesh, to pollute it, even my house, when ye offer my bread, the fat, and the blood, and they have broken my covenant because of your abominations.”

I remember, when I was a soldier in the war of 1812-15, and was posted on picket guard, I forfeited my life if I suffered a stranger to enter the camp who did not give the watchword. And are we less criminal, as the servants of our God, if we allow persons to enter the sanctuary of our God who are unable to pronounce Shibboleth, the pass-word of safety? And are we not guilty of causing them to break the covenant? I remember to have heard a minister ask the question, many years since, “Ought not great allowance to be made for ignorant or illiterate persons, in telling their experience to churches?” He replied, “O yes; but if they have sense enough to tell when the pigs get into the cornfield, they can tell a Christian experience if they have one.”

Allow a short digression. I have heard some contend that baptism is the anti-type of circumcision. Now, the latter was an external sign by which the circumcised identified themselves as the children of Abraham, and bore with them in all countries whithersoever they went, that they belonged to the family of Abraham. Now, what evidence does the sprinkling of a few drops of water on the face carry with it that they belong to the family of our God? Or what evidence do they give to others that they so belonged? Are not both the sign and substance lost in the operation? Again, as circumcision pertained alone to the male descendants of Abraham, and those males bought with his money, where do you get your authority for baptizing females? The whole system is anti-Christian – utterly without divine warrant. Circumcision in the flesh, made by hands, is typical of the circumcision of the heart; hence an apostle said, “He is not a Jew which is one outwardly, neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh; but he is a Jew which is one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter, whose praise is not of men, but of God.” Hence we hear it said: “He fashioneth their hearts alike.” And, “As face answereth to face in water, so the heart of man to man.” Again, “The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him, and he will shew them his covenant.” And yet again, “We are the circumcision which worships God in the spirit, rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh.” Hence the exhortation of the apostle Peter, “But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and be ready to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you.” This is indispensable, as the only means of obtaining gospel fellowship, without which a seat in the gospel church has no charm for me. Christ said, “I am the door; by me, if any man enters in he shall be saved, and shall go in and out and find pasture.” A double wrong is committed in receiving persons into the church who fail to give evidence that their hearts have been circumcised by the Spirit of God. They must realize their utter helplessness, their just condemnation as violators of the divine law, and be brought to rely alone on the atoning blood of Christ to cleanse from sin, and his righteousness to clothe and present them faultless before the divine throne, and have been baptized by immersion, by an administrator called of God, as was Aaron, and in fellowship with the church, or they have no right to membership in the church. If brought in otherwise, they eat the bread and drink the wine unworthily, not discerning the Lord’s body, and the church is justly chargeable for the wrong.

“And ye have not kept the charge of my holy things, but have set keepers of my charge in my sanctuary for yourselves.” They have employed men as professed ministers, whom the Lord has not called to the work, “desiring to be teachers of the law, understanding neither what they say nor whereof they affirm.” They lack an important qualification; namely, “the husbandman that laboreth must be first partaker of the fruits.” “Therefore thus saith the Lord, No stranger uncircumcised in heart and uncircumcised in flesh shall enter into my sanctuary, [dwelling place] of any stranger that is among the children of Israel.” Remember the Lord said, “They are prophets of the deceit of their own hearts, prophesying lies in my name.” But our adversaries tell us, “All these warnings, admonitions, and exhortations were well enough in that dark and cloudy day, under the legal dispensation; but we live in a day of light and liberty, the gospel day, and they are inappropriate when applied to us.” Let us see. But do we remember it is said, “The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done, is that which shall be done?” The Savior said, “Beware of false prophets that come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves. Ye shall know them by their fruits” – the doctrine they preach. And the apostle Paul says, “I know that after my departure shall grievous wolves enter in among you, not sparing the flock. Also of your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.” Again, “For the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine; but after their own lusts shall they heap to themselves teachers, having itching ears; and they shall turn away their ears from the truth, and shall be turned unto fables.” Where do the denominations of that order look for teachers, but to the theological schools? One of which boasts of having graduated more than four hundred. How many have other schools graduated, I know not, but presume the aggregate very far exceeds the number of Baal’s prophets. The apostle Peter tells us, “There were false prophets also among the people, even as there shall be false prophets among you, who privily shall bring in damnable heresies, even denying the Lord that bought them, and shall bring upon themselves swift destruction.” And the apostle John says, “And hast tried them which say they are apostles and are not, and hast found them liars.” The King of Zion has given a rule by which to try them. “To the law and to the testimony; if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” I well remember when the Baptists of this state were pretty much one people; but how is it now, when Fullerism, Arminianism, Campbellism, Two-seedism, Non-resurrectionism, Missionism, with its kindred heresies, are made tests of orthodoxy? Divided and subdivided. God grant that we may take warning, dear brethren, and may we be found contending for the faith which was once delivered to the saints, remembering the chief Shepherd has said, “Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life that fadeth not away.”

Brother Beebe, you will pardon this long letter when you remember I spend much of my time alone, and that I can neither read a sentence in print or manuscript and am utterly unable to read what I have written. There may be mistakes, especially in quotations, but I am unable to correct them. Truth is omnipotent, and enlightened public justice is certain. If you see anything in this letter that will compensate you for reading, and your compositor for setting the type, it is at your disposal.

As ever, with warm affection, your brother, I hope, in the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ,

Thomas P. Dudley.

MISSIONISM (DUDLEY) 1873


Lexington, Ky., March 27, 1873.

To the Editor of the Western Recorder:

My attention has been called to a series of articles over the signature of “Old Flint,” published in your paper, the first, of date Feb.1st, the second, Feb.22nd, and the third, March 1st, in all of which he labors hard to establish his claims to the title of Old School Baptist. 

Saturday, October 12, 2024

THE CREATION OF GOD (DUDLEY) 1876


Lexington, Ky., Dec.30, 1876.



MY DEAR BROTHER BEEBE: - I have been able to read or write but little, in consequence of the condition of my eyes, for many months. I have heard read your reply to a correspondent asking your understanding of the expression found in the Circular on the Christian Warfare –

Friday, October 11, 2024

THE NEW BIRTH (DUDLEY) 1868


The word of God teaches, “That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit” (John 3:3).