most vehemently urged, by many petitions and memorials.
   These memorials were referred to a committee of decided anti-
   slavery men. The argument on one side was, that the time was
   now come to take decided measures to cut free wholly from all
   pro-slavery complicity, and avow their principles with decision,
   even though it should repel all such Churches from their com-
   munion as were not prepared for immediate emancipation.
   On the other hand, the majority of the committee were urged
   by opposing considerations. The brethren from slave States made
   to them representations somewhat alike to these: “Brethren,
   our hearts are with you. We are with you in faith, in charity,
   in prayer. We sympathised in the injury that had been done
   you by excision. We stood by you then, and are ready to stand
   by you still. We have no sympathy with the party that have
   expelled you, and we do not wish to go back to them. As to
   this matter of slavery, we do not differ from you. We consider
   it an evil. We mourn and lament over it. We are trying, by
   gradual and peaceable means, to exclude it from our Churches.
   We are going as far in advance of the sentiment of our Churches
   as we consistently can. We cannot come up to more decided
   action without losing our hold over them, and, as we think,
   throwing back the cause of emancipation. If you begin in this
   decided manner, we cannot hold our Churches in the union; they
   will divide, and go to the Old School.”
   Here was a very strong plea, made by good and sincere men.
   It was an appeal, too, to the most generous feelings of the heart.
   It was, in effect, saying, “Brothers, we stood by you, and fought
   your battles, when everything was going against you; and, now
   that you have the power in your hands, are you going to use it
   so as to cast us out?”
   These men, strong anti-slavery men as they were, were affected.
   One member of the committee foresaw and feared the result. He
   felt and suggested that the course proposed conceded the whole
   question. The majority thought, on the whole, that it was best
   to postpone the subject. The committee reported that the ap-
   plicants, for reasons satisfactory to themselves, had withdrawn
   their papers.
   The next year, in 1839, the subject was resumed; and it was
   again urged that the Assembly should take high, and decided, and
   unmistakeable ground; and certainly, if we consider that all this
   time not a single Church had emancipated its slaves, and that the
   power of the institution was everywhere stretching and growing
   and increasing, it would certainly seem that something more
   efficient was necessary than a general understanding that the
   Church agreed with the testimony delivered in 1818. It was
   strongly represented that it was time something was done. This
   year the Assembly decided to refer the subject to Presbyteries, to
   do what they deemed advisable. The words employed were
   these: “Solemnly referring the whole subject to the lower judi-
   catories, to take such action as in their judgment is most judicious,
   and adapted to remove the evil.” The Rev. George Beecher
   moved to insert the word moral before evil; they declined.*
   This brought, in 1840, a much larger number of memorials
   and petitions; and very strong attempts were made by the
   abolitionists to obtain some decided action.
   The committee this year referred to what had been done last
   year, and declared it inexpedient to do anything further. The
   subject was indefinitely postponed. At this time it was resolved
   that the Assembly should meet only once in three years. Accord-
   ingly, it did not meet till 1843. In 1843, several memorials
   were again presented, and some resolutions offered to the As-
   sembly, of which this was one (Minutes of the General Assembly
   for 1843, p. 15).
   Resolved, That we affectionately and earnestly urge upon the Ministers, Sessions,
   Presbyteries, and Synods connected with this Assembly, that they treat this as all
   other sins of great magnitude; and by a diligent, kind, and faithful application of
   the means which God has given them, by instruction, remonstrance, reproof, and
   effective discipline, seek to purify the Church of this great iniquity.
   This resolution they declined. They passed the following:--
   Whereas there is in this Assembly great diversity of opinion as to the proper
   and best mode of action on the subject of slavery; and whereas, in such circum-
   stances, any expression of sentiment would carry with it but little weight, as it
   would be passed by a small majority, and must operate to produce alienation and
   division; and whereas the Assembly of 1839, with great unanimity, referred this
   whole subject to the lower judicatories, to take such order as in their judgement
   might be adapted to remove the evil;--Resolved, That the Assembly do not think
   it for the edification of the Church for this body to take any action on the subject.
   They, however, passed the following:--
   Resolved, That the fashionable amusement of promiscuous dancing is so entirely
   unscriptural, and eminently and exclusively that of “the world which lieth in
   wickedness,” and so wholly inconsistent with the spirit of Christ, and with that
   propriety of Christian deportment and that purity of heart which his followers
   are bound to maintain, as to render it not only improper and injurious for pro-
   fessing Christians either to partake in it, or to qualify their children for it, by
   teaching them the “art,” but also to call for the faithful and judicious exercise
   of discipline on the part of Church Sessions, when any of the members of their
   Churches have been guilty.
   Three years after, in 1846, the General Assembly published
   the following declaration of sentiment:--
   1. The system of slavery as it exists in these United States, viewed either in
   the laws of the several States which sanction it, or in its actual operation and
   results in society, is intrinsically unrighteous and oppressive; and is opposed to
   the prescriptions of the law of God, to the spirit and precepts of the Gospel, and
   to the best interests of humanity.
   2. The testimony of the General Assembly from a.d. 1787 to a.d. 1818, inclu-
   sive, has condemned it; and it remains still the recorded testimony of the Pres-
   byterian Church of these United States against it, from which we do not recede.
   3. We cannot, therefore, withhold the expression of our deep regret that slavery
   should be continued and countenanced by any of the members of our Churches;
   and we do earnestly exhort both them and the Churches among whom it exists to
   use all means in their power to put it away from them. Its perpetuation among
   them cannot fail to be regarded by multitudes, influenced by their example, as
   sanctioning the system portrayed in it, and maintained by the statutes of the
   several slaveholding States wherein they dwell. Nor can any mere mitigation of
   its severity, prompted by the humanity and Christian feeling of any who continue
   to hold their fellow-men in bondage, be regarded either as a testimony against
   
					     					 			 the system, or as in the least degree changing its essential character.
   4. But while we believe that many evils incident to the system render it im-
   portant and obligatory to bear testimony against it, yet would we not undertake to
   determine the degree of moral turpitude on the part of individuals involved by it.
   This will doubtless be found to vary, in the sight of God, according to the degree
   of light and other circumstances pertaining to each. In view of all the embar-
   rassments and obstacles in the way of emancipation interposed by the statutes of
   the slaveholding States, and by the social influence affecting the views and con-
   duct of those involved in it, we cannot pronounce a judgment of general and pro-
   miscuous condemnation, implying that destitution of Christian principle and
   feeling which should exclude from the table of the Lord all who should stand
   in the legal relation of masters to slaves, or justify us in withholding our eccle-
   siastical and Christian fellowship from them. We rather sympathise with, and
   would seek to succour them in their embarrassments, believing that separation and
   secession among the Churches and their members are not the methods God ap-
   proves and sanctions for the reformation of his Church.
   5. While, therefore, we feel bound to bear our testimony against slavery, and
   to exhort our beloved brethren to remove it from them as speedily as possible by
   all appropriate and available means, we do at the same time condemn all divisive
   and schismatical measures, tending to destroy the unity and disturb the peace of
   our Church, and deprecate the spirit of denunciation and inflicting severities, which
   would cast from the fold those whom we are rather bound, by the spirit of the
   Gospel, and the obligations of our covenant, to instruct, to counsel, to exhort, and
   thus to lead in the ways of God; and towards whom, even though they may err,
   we ought to exercise forbearance and brotherly love.
   6. As a court of our Lord Jesus Christ, we possess no legislative authority;
   and as the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, we possess no judi-
   ciary authority. We have no right to institute and prescribe a test of Christian
   character and Church membership not recognised and sanctioned in the sacred
   Scriptures, and in our standards, by which we have agreed to walk. We must
   therefore this matter with the sessions and synods--the judi-
   discipline as they may judge it to be their duty, constitutionally subject to the
   General Assembly only in the way of general review and control.
   When a boat is imperceptibly going down stream on a gentle
   but strong current, we can see its passage only by comparing
   objects with each other on the shore.
   If this declaration of the New-School General Assembly be
   compared with that of 1818, it will be found to be far less out-
   spoken and decided in its tone, while in the meantime slavery
   had become four-fold more powerful. In 1818, the Assembly
   states that the most virtuous portion of the community in slave
   States abhor slavery, and wish its extermination. In 1846, the
   Assembly states with regret that slavery is still continued and
   countenanced by any of the members of our Churches. The
   testimony of 1818 has the frank out-spoken air of a unanimous
   document, where there was but one opinion. That of 1846 has
   the guarded air of a compromise ground out between the upper
   and nether millstone of two contending parties--it is winnowed,
   guarded, cautious, and careful.
   Considering the document, however, in itself, it is certainly
   a very good one; and it would be a very proper expression of
   Christian feeling, had it related to an evil of any common
   magnitude, and had it been uttered in any common crisis; but
   let us consider what was the evil attacked, and what was the
   crisis. Consider the picture which the Kentucky Synod had
   drawn of the actual state of things among them:--“The mem-
   bers of slave-families separated, never to meet again until the
   final judgment; brothers and sisters, parents and children, hus-
   bands and wives, daily torn asunder, and permitted to see each
   other no more; the shrieks and agonies, proclaiming as with
   trumpet-tongue the iniquity and cruelty of the system; the cries
   of the sufferers going up to the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth;
   not a neighbourhood where those heart-rending scenes are not
   displayed; not a village or road without the sad procession of
   manacled outcasts, whose chains and mournful countenances tell
   they are exiled by force from all that heart holds dear; Christian
   professors rending the mother from her child to sell her into
   returnless exile.”
   This was the language of the Kentucky Synod fourteen years
   before; and those scenes had been going on ever since, and are
   going on now, as the advertisements of every Southern paper
   show; and yet the Church of Christ since 1818 had done
   nothing but express regret and hold grave metaphysical discus-
   sions as to whether slavery was an “evil per se,” and censure the
   rash action of men who, in utter despair of stopping the evil any
   other way, tried to stop it by excluding slaveholders from the
   Church. As if it were not better that one slaveholder in a
   hundred should stay out of the Church, if he be peculiarly circum-
   stanced, than that all this horrible agony and iniquity should
   continually receive the sanction of the Church's example! Should
   not a generous Christian man say, “If Church excision will stop
   this terrible evil, let it come, though it does bear hardly upon
   me! Better that I suffer a little injustice than that this horrible
   injustice be still credited to the account of Christ's Church. Shall
   I embarrass the whole Church with my embarrassments? What
   if I am careful and humane in my treatment of my slaves--what
   if, in my heart, I have repudiated the wicked doctrine that they
   are my property, and am treating them as my brethren--what
   am I then doing? All the credit of my example goes to give
   force to the system. The Church ought to reprove this fearful
   injustice, and reprovers ought to have clean hands; and if I
   cannot really get clear of this, I had better keep out of the
   Church till I can.”
   Let us consider, also, the awful entrenchments and strength
   of the evil against which this very moderate resolution was dis-
   charged. “A money power of two thousand millions of dollars
   held by a small body of able and desperate men; that body
   raised into a political aristocracy by special constitutional pro-
   visions; cotton, the product of slave-labour, forming the basis of
   our whole foreign commerce, and the commercial class thus
   subsidised; the press bought up; the Southern pulpit reduced
   to vassalage; the heart of the common people chilled by a bitter
   prejudice against the black race; and our leading men bribed by
   ambition either to silence or open hostility.”* And now, in
   this condition of things, the whole weight of these Churches goes
   in support of slavery, from the fact of their containing slave-
   holders. No matter if they d 
					     					 			id not participate in the abuses of
   the system; nobody wants them to do that. The slave power
   does not wish professors of religion to separate families, or over-
   work their slaves, or do any disreputable thing--that is not their
   part. The slave power wants pious, tender-hearted, generous
   and humane masters, and must have them, to hold up the system
   against the rising moral sense of the world; and the more pious
   and generous the better. Slavery could not stand an hour with-
   out these men. What then? These men uphold the system,
   and that great anti-slavery body of ministers uphold these men.
   That is the final upshot of the matter.
   Paul says that we must remember those that are in bonds, as
   bound with them. Suppose that this General Assembly had
   been made up of men who had been fugitives. Suppose one of
   them had had his daughters sent to the New Orleans slave-
   market, like Emily and Mary Edmondson; that another's daugh-
   ter had died on the overland passage in a slave-coffle, with no
   nurse but a slave-driver, like poor Emily Russell: another's wife
   died broken-hearted when her children were sold out of her bosom;
   and another had a half-crazed mother, whose hair had been turned
   prematurely white with agony. Suppose these scenes of
   agonizing partings, with shrieks and groans, which the Kentucky
   Synod says have been witnessed so long among the slaves, had
   been seen in these ministers' families, and that they had come
   up to this discussion with their hearts as scarred and seared as
   the heart of poor old Paul Edmondson, when he came to New
   York to beg for his daughters. Suppose that they saw that the
   horrid system by which all this had been done was extending
   every hour; that professed Christians in every denomination at
   the South declared it to be an appointed institution of God;
   that all the wealth, and all the rank, and all the fashion in the
   country were committed in its favour; and that they, like
   Aaron, were sent to stand between the living and the dead, that
   the plague might be stayed.
   Most humbly, most earnestly, let it be submitted to the
   Christians of this nation, and to Christians of all nations, for