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Written by Chuck Baldwin
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Friday, 04 September 2009 02:41 |
 Most
Americans today would probably still recognize the stirring words from
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s “Concord Hymn”: “By the rude bridge that arched
the flood,/ Their flag to April’s breeze unfurled,/ Here once the
embattled farmers stood,/ And fired the shot heard round the world.”
Most of us are still aware that those embattled farmers won for us the
freedoms we too often take for granted today.
But how many of us are aware of the extent to which faith motivated
those farmers to leave their families and homes and risk their lives
for a cause that most would have considered hopeless at the time? How
many are aware of the extent to which preachers actively participated
in our War for Independence — and not just rhetorically from the
pulpit, though the great sermons on behalf of the freedom fight
provoked many parishioners to action? How many are familiar with the
phrase “Black Regiment”?
That phrase encapsulates what Colonial America possessed in its War for Independence that is sadly lacking today.
The Black Regiment is a moniker that was given to the patriot-preachers
of Colonial America. They were called the “Black Regiment” owing to the
fact that so many of them had a propensity to wear long, black robes in
the pulpit.
According to historian/educator Reverend Wayne Sedlak, in his article
“The Black Regiment Led the Fight in Our War for Independence”:
It was British sympathizer Peter Oliver,
who actually first used the name “Black Regiment.” He complained that
such clergymen were invariably at the heart of the revolutionary
disturbances. He tied their influence to such colonial leaders as
Samuel Adams, James Otis and others of prominence in the cause. He
quotes colonial leadership in its quest to gain the voice of the
clergy. In one instance, he disparagingly cites a public plea of James
Otis who sought the help of the clergy in a particular manner:
“Mr. Otis, understanding the Foibles of human Nature advanced one
shrewd position which seldom fails to promote popular Commotions, that
‘it was necessary to secure the black Regiment.’ These were his Words
and his meaning was to engage ye dissenting Clergy on his Side....
Where better could he fly for aid than to the Horns of the Altar?...
This order of Men … like their Predecessors of 1641 … have been
unceasingly sounding the Yell of Rebellion in the Ears of an ignorant
and deluded People.”
So influential were the patriot-pulpits of Colonial America that it
was said by Prime Minister Horace Walpole in the British Parliament,
“Cousin America has run off with a Presbyterian parson.” In fact,
America’s War for Independence was often referenced in Parliament as
“the Presbyterian Revolt.” And during the Revolutionary War, British
troops often made colonial churches military targets. Churches were
torched, ransacked, and pillaged.
Legendary Exploits
These patriot-preachers were staunchly patriotic, seriously
independent, and steadfastly courageous. They were found in almost all
of the various Protestant denominations at the time: Baptist,
Presbyterian, Congregational, Anglican, Lutheran, German Reformed, etc.
Their Sunday sermons — more than Patrick Henry’s oratory, Sam Adams’
and James Warren’s “Committees of Correspondence,” or Thomas Paine’s
“Summer Soldiers and Sunshine Patriots” — inspired, educated, and
motivated the colonists to resist the tyranny of the British Crown, and
fight for their freedom and independence. Without the Black Regiment,
there is absolutely no doubt that we would still be a Crown colony,
with no Declaration of Independence, no U.S. Constitution, no Bill of
Rights, and little liberty.
The exploits of the Black Regiment are legendary. When General George
Washington asked Lutheran pastor John Peter Muhlenberg to raise a
regiment of volunteers, Muhlenberg gladly agreed. Before marching off
to join Washington’s army, he delivered a powerful sermon from
Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 that concluded with these words: “The Bible tells us
there is a time for all things and there is a time to preach and a time
to pray, but the time for me to preach has passed away, and there is a
time to fight, and that time has come now. Now is the time to fight!
Call for recruits! Sound the drums!”
Then Muhlenberg took off his clerical robe to reveal the uniform of a
Virginia colonel. Grabbing his musket from behind the pulpit, he donned
his colonel’s hat and marched off to war. And as he did, more than 300
of his male congregants followed him.
Muhlenberg’s brother quotes John Peter as saying, “You may say that as
a clergyman nothing can excuse my conduct. I am a clergyman, it is
true, but I am a member of society as well as the poorest layman, and
my liberty is as dear to me as any man. I am called by my country to
its defense. The cause is just and noble. Were I a Bishop … I should
obey without hesitation; and as far am I from thinking that I am wrong,
I am convinced it is my duty so to do — a duty I owe to my God and my
Country.”
Remember, too, it was Pastor Jonas Clark and his congregants at the
Church of Lexington who comprised that initial body of brave colonists
called Minutemen. These were the men, you will recall, who withstood
British troops advancing on Concord to confiscate the colonists’
firearms and arrest Sam Adams and John Hancock, and fired “the shot
heard round the world.”
The “Supreme Knight” and great martyr of Presbyterianism was Pastor
James Caldwell of the Presbyterian church of Elizabethtown (present-day
Elizabeth), New Jersey. He was called the “Rebel High Priest” and the
“Fighting Chaplain.” He is most famous for the story “Give ’em Watts!”
It is said that at the Springfield engagement, when the militia ran out
of wadding for their muskets, Parson Caldwell galloped to the
Presbyterian church and returned with an armload of hymnbooks, threw
them to the ground, and exclaimed, “Now, boys, give ’em Watts! Give ’em
Watts!” — a reference to the famous hymn writer, Isaac Watts.
 Not
an easy path: Presbyterian minister James Caldwell, who gained fame
during the battle of Springfield, New Jersey, when he gathered Watts
hymnals from a church for use as rifle wadding and shouted to the
troops as he handed them out, “put Watts into them,” was killed in the
war, as was his wife. Caldwell so angered British commanders
that they made martyrs of both him and his wife. General Knyphausen’s
expedition took Elizabethtown in 1780, burning Caldwell’s church and
shooting his wife. Later Caldwell himself was shot. (Source: Humphrey, Nationalism and Religion in America, 1924)
Then there was the Baptist, Joab Houghton, of New Jersey. Houghton was
in the Hopewell Baptist Meeting-house at worship when he received the
first information of Concord and Lexington, and of the retreat of the
British to Boston with heavy losses. His great-grandson gave the
following eloquent description of the way he treated the tidings:
Stilling the breathless messenger, he
sat quietly through the services, and when they were ended, he passed
out, and mounting the great stone block in front of the meeting-house,
he beckoned to the people to stop. Men and women paused to hear,
curious to know what so unusual a sequel to the service of the day
could mean. At the first words a silence, stern as death, fell over
all. The Sabbath quiet of the hour and of the place was deepened into a
terrible solemnity. He told them all the story of the cowardly murder
at Lexington by the royal troops; the heroic vengeance following hard
upon it; the retreat of Percy; the gathering of the children of the
Pilgrims round the beleaguered hills of Boston. Then pausing, and
looking over the silent throng, he said slowly: “Men of New Jersey, the
red coats are murdering our brethren of New England! Who follows me to
Boston?” And every man of that audience stepped out into line, and
answered, “I!” There was not a coward nor a traitor in old Hopewell
Baptist Meeting-house that day. [Source: Cathcart, The Baptists and the American Revolution, 1876]
Consider, too, Pastor M’Clanahan, of Culpepper County, Virginia, who
raised a military company of Baptists and served in the field, both as
a captain and chaplain. Reverend David Barrow “shouldered his musket
and showed how fields were won.” Another Baptist, General Scriven, when
ordered by a British officer to give up Sunbury, near Savannah, sent
back the answer, “Come and get it.” Deacon Mills, of the First Baptist
Church of Philadelphia, “commanded skillfully” 1,000 riflemen at the
Battle of Long Island, and for his valor was made a brigadier general.
Deacon Loxley of the same church commanded the artillery at the Battle
of Germantown with the rank of colonel. (Source: McDaniel, The People Called Baptists, 1925)
A list drawn up by Judge Curwen, an ardent Tory, contained 926 names of
British sympathizers living in America — colonial law had already
exiled a larger number — but there was “not the name of one Baptist on
the list.” Maybe this is why President George Washington, in his letter
to the Baptists, paid the following tribute: “I recollect with
satisfaction that the religious society of which you are members has
been, throughout America, uniformly and almost unanimously, the firm
friend to civil liberty, and the persevering promoters of our glorious
Revolution.” Maybe it explains why Thomas Jefferson could write to a
Baptist church, saying, “We have acted together from the origin to the
end of a memorable Revolution.” (Source: Ibid.)
Faith and Conviction
These were not the acts of wild-eyed fanatics; they were the acts of
men of deep and abiding faith and conviction. Their understanding of
the principles of both Natural and Revealed Law was so proficient, so
thorough, and so sagacious that their conscience would let them do
nothing else. Hear the wise counsel of the notable colonial preacher
Reverend Samuel West (1730-1807):
Our obligation to promote the public
good extends as much to the opposing every exertion of arbitrary power
that is injurious to the state as it does to the submitting to good and
wholesome laws. No man, therefore, can be a good member of the
community that is not as zealous to oppose tyranny, as he is ready to
obey magistracy.
Reverend West went on to say:
If magistrates are ministers of God only
because the law of God and reason points out the necessity of such an
institution for the good of mankind, it follows, that whenever they
pursue measures directly destructive of the public good, they cease
being God’s ministers, they forfeit their right to obedience from the
subject, they become the pests of society, and the community is under
the strongest obligation of duty both to God and to its own members, to
resist and oppose them, which will be so far from resisting the
ordinance of God that it will be strictly obeying his commands.
This was the spirit of 1776; this was the preaching that built a
free and independent nation; this is what Colonial America had that, by
and large, America does not have today.
 Moral
underpinnings: Baptist minister David Barrow gave his whole being to
causes he joined. He was nearly drowned by vigilantes for preaching as
a Baptist in areas dominated by the Church of England, and he took up a
gun to fight in the Revolutionary War. In the thinking and
preaching of the Black Regiment, freedom and independence were precious
gifts of God, not to be trampled underfoot by men; human authority was
limited and subject to proper divine parameters; and the mind of man
was never to be enslaved by any master, save Christ Himself.
Membership in the Black Regiment was unofficial and without human
oversight. Preachers of the black robes were young and old, loud and
soft-spoken, rough and gentle, urban and rural. They differed on
secondary doctrines and never surrendered their theological
distinctives. Yet they formed an irresistible and indefatigable army
that neither King George nor the demons of hell could stop.
As one reads the colonial history of the United States, one must be
struck with the observation that the American people, on the whole,
seemed to appreciate the courage and independence of their preachers.
Even America’s early political leaders shared in this appreciation.
For instance, John Adams once remarked,
It is the duty of the clergy to
accommodate their discourses to the times, to preach against such sins
as are most prevalent, and recommend such virtues as are most wanted.
For example, if exorbitant ambition and venality are predominant, ought
they not to warn their hearers against those vices? If public spirit is
much wanted, should they not inculcate this great virtue? If the rights
and duties of Christian magistrates and subjects are disputed, should
they not explain them, show their nature, ends, limitations, and
restrictions, how muchsoever it may move the gall of Massachusetts?
The problem today is that America’s preachers have taken off the
black robes and put on yellow ones. Where is the preaching against
prevalent sins? Where is the spiritual, scriptural explanation
concerning the rights and duties, or limitations and restrictions of
civil magistrates from America’s pulpits today?
The famed 19th-century revivalist Charles G. Finney had some trenchant words on this subject. He said,
If there is a decay of conscience, the
pulpit is responsible for it. If the public press lacks moral
discrimination, the pulpit is responsible for it. If the church is
degenerate and worldly, the pulpit is responsible for it. If the world
loses its interest in religion, the pulpit is responsible for it. If
Satan rules in our halls of legislation, the pulpit is responsible for
it. If our politics become so corrupt that the very foundations of our
government are ready to fall away, the pulpit is responsible for it.
Black Regiment Today
Yes, indeed. It was the patriot-pulpit that delivered America from
bondage; and it is the timid pulpit, on the part of those who do or
should know, that is helping to deliver America to the brink of
destruction and judgment.
It is for this reason that I took on the task of resurrecting the Black
Regiment. In July of 2007, I put out my first appeal to help locate a
modern-day Black Regiment. (And my appeal echoes other great
Americans’, such as Professor David Alan Black and Rev. Wayne Sedlak,
who called for a resurrection of the Black Regiment even before I did.)
I asked readers to help me locate brave and courageous patriot-pastors
in the similitude of the Black Regiment of old. The result of this
appeal has been truly exciting.
On my Black Regiment website
(www.chuckbaldwinlive.com/blackregiment.php), we now have over 200
pastors and evangelists who have signed up to be included in a
modern-day Black Regiment. This was done primarily so that people
around the country who hunger to attend a church that has a
patriot-pastor in the pulpit can find a place of worship. I extend the
invitation to readers of this column to further assist me in locating
such patriot-preachers.
I am personally convinced that the only thing necessary for God to send
another Great Awakening — along with the accompanying reclamation of
liberty and independence — is for God’s men in the pulpits to return to
their heritage by becoming the champions of freedom: sounding forth the
clarion call to resist tyranny and defend liberty, as did our forebears
in the Black Regiment.
Chuck Baldwin is a radio broadcaster, syndicated columnist, and pastor. He was the Constitution Party's nominee for president in 2008. |