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Moravians in Georgia Chapter I
CHAPTER I.
ANTECEDENT EVENTS
The Province of Georgia
It was in the year 1728 that the English Parliament was persuaded by James
Oglethorpe, Esq. -- soldier, statesman and philanthropist, -- to appoint
a committee to investigate the condition of the debtors confined in the
Fleet and Marchalsea prisons. The lot of these debtors was a most pitiable
one, for a creditor had power to imprison a man for an indefinite term of
years, and the unfortunate debtor, held within the four walls of his prison,
could earn no money to pay the debt that was owing, and unless friends came
to his rescue, was utterly at the mercy of the oft-times barbarous jailor.
The Committee, consisting of ninety-six prominent men, with Oglethorpe as
Chairman, recommended and secured the redress of many grievances, and the
passing of better laws for the future, but Oglethorpe and a few associates
conceived a plan which they thought would eradicate the evil by striking
at its very root, the difficulty which many found in earning a living in
the overcrowded cities.
In 1663 King Charles II. had granted to eight "Lords Proprietors"
the portion of North America lying between the 31st and 36th degrees of
latitude, enlarging the boundaries in 1665 to 29 deg. and 36 deg. 30 min.
By 1728 most of these Lords Proprietors had tired of their attempt to govern
the colonies they had established in "Carolina", and in 1729 seven
of the eight sold their interest to the English crown, the district being
divided into "North Carolina", "South Carolina", and
a more southerly portion, nominally included in the latter, which was held
in reserve.
To this unused land the thoughts of Oglethorpe turned, and he and his friends
addressed a memorial to the Privy Council, stating "that the cities
of London, Westminster, and parts adjacent, do abound with great numbers
of indigent persons, who are reduced to such necessity as to become burthensome
to the public, and who would be willing to seek a livelihood in any of his
majesty's plantations in America, if they were provided with a passage,
and means of settling there." They therefore asked for a grant of land
lying south of the Savannah River, where they wished to establish a colony
in which these unfortunate men might begin life anew, and where Protestants,
persecuted in some parts of Europe, might find a refuge. They also offered
to take entire charge of the affair, and their petition, after passing through
the usual channels, was approved by the King, George II, a charter was prepared,
and the great seal was affixed June 9th, 1732.
This instrument constituted twenty-one noblemen and gentlemen a body corporate,
by the name and style of "The Trustees for establishing the Colony
of Georgia in America", and in them was vested full authority for the
collecting of subscriptions and the expending of moneys gathered, the selection
of colonists, and the making and administering of laws in Georgia; but no
member of the corporation was allowed to receive a salary, or any fees,
or to hold land in the new province. The undertaking was to be strictly
for the good of others, not for their own pecuniary benefit. The charter
granted to them "all those lands, countries, and territories situate,
lying and being in that part of South Carolina, in America" between
the Savannah and Altamaha, gave them permission to take over any British
subjects, or foreigners willing to become such, and guaranteed to each settler
the rights of an English subject, and full liberty of conscience, -- Papists
alone excepted. This apparently pointed exception was natural enough, since
from a political standpoint the new colony was regarded as a valuable guard
for the Protestant English Colonies on the north, against the Indians and
Roman Catholic colonists to the south, who had been keeping the border settlers
in a continual state of uneasiness, even in times of nominal peace. Moreover
England had not forgotten the terrible experience of the latter half of
the preceding century, when it was war to the death between Catholic and
Protestant, and the latter party being the stronger the former was subjected
to great and unpardonable persecution, many were executed, and all holding
that faith were laid under political disabilities which lasted for a hundred
and fifty years.
The plans of the Trustees were very broad. They intended "to relieve
such unfortunate persons as cannot subsist here, and establish them in an
orderly manner, so as to form a well regulated town. As far as their fund
goes they will defray the charge of their passage to Georgia -- give them
necessaries, cattle, land, and subsistence, till such time as they can build
their houses and clear some of their land."
In this manner "many families who would otherwise starve will be provided
for, and made masters of houses and lands; * * * and by giving refuge to
the distressed Salzburgers and other Protestants, the power of Britain,
as a reward for its hospitality, will be increased by the addition of so
many religious and industrious subjects."
Each of the emigrants was to receive about fifty acres of land, including
a town lot, a garden of five acres, and a forty-five acre farm, and the
Trustees offered to give a tract of five hundred acres to any well-to-do
man who would go over at his own expense, taking with him at least ten servants,
and promising his military service in case of need.
But there was a commercial as well as a benevolent side to the designs of
the Trustees, for they thought Georgia could be made to furnish silk, wine,
oil and drugs in large quantities, the importing of which would keep thousands
of pounds sterling in English hands which had hitherto gone to China, Persia
and the Madeiras. Special provision was therefore made to secure the planting
of mulberry trees as the first step towards silk culture, the other branches
to be introduced as speedily as might be.
Filled with enthusiasm for their plan, the Trustees proceeded to spread
abroad the most glowing descriptions of the country where the new colony
was to be settled.
"The kind spring, which but salutes us here,
Inhabits there, and courts them all the year.
Ripe fruits and blossoms on the same trees live --
At once they promise, when at once they give.
So sweet the air, so moderate the clime,
None sickly lives, or dies before his time.
Heaven, sure, has kept this spot of earth uncurst,
To shew how all things were created first."
So wrote Oglethorpe, quoting the lines as the best pen picture he could
give of the new land, and truly, if the colonists found the reality less
roseate than they anticipated, it was not the fault of their generous, energetic
leader, who spared neither pains nor means in his effort to make all things
work out as his imagination had painted them.
The Trustees having, with great care, selected thirty-five families
from the number who wished to go, the first emigrant ship sailed for Georgia
in November, 1732, bearing about one hundred and twenty-five "sober,
industrious and moral persons", and all needful stores for the establishment
of the colony. Early in the following year they reached America, and Oglethorpe,
having chosen a high bluff on the southern bank of the Savannah River, concluded
a satisfactory treaty with Tomochichi, the chief of the nearest Indian tribe,
which was later ratified in a full Council of the chiefs of all the Lower
Creeks.
His fairness and courteous treatment won the hearts of all, especially of
Tomochichi and his people, who for many years remained on the best of terms
with the town which was now laid out upon the bluff.
The Salzburgers
The Salzburgers, referred to by name in the proposals of the Georgia Trustees,
were, at this time, very much upon the mind and heart of Protestant Europe.
They were Germans, belonging to the Archbishopric of Salzburg, then the
most eastern district of Bavaria, but now a province of Austria.
"Their ancestors, the Vallenges of Piedmont, had been compelled by
the barbarities of the Dukes of Savoy to find a shelter from the storms
of persecution in the Alpine passes and vales of Salzburg and the Tyrol,
before the Reformation; and frequently since, they had been hunted out by
the hirelings and soldiery of the Church of Rome, and condemned for their
faith to tortures of the most cruel and revolting kind.
In 1684-6, they were again threatened with an exterminating persecution;
but were saved in part by the intervention of the Protestant States of Saxony
and Brandenburg, though more than a thousand emigrated on account of the
dangers to which they were exposed.
"But the quietness which they then enjoyed for nearly half a century
was rudely broken in upon by Leopold, Count of Firmian and Archbishop of
Salzburg, who determined to reduce them to the Papal faith and power. He
began in the year 1729, and ere he ended in 1732 not far from thirty thousand
had been driven from their homes, to seek among the Protestant States of
Europe that charity and peace which were denied them in the glens and fastnesses
of their native Alps.
"The march of these Salzburgers constitutes an epoch in the history
of Germany. * * * Arriving at Augsburg, the magistrates closed the gates
against them, refusing them entrance to that city which, two hundred years
before, through Luther and Melancthon and in the presence of Charles V and
the assembled Princes of Germany, had given birth to the celebrated Augsburg
Confession, for clinging to which the Salzburgers were now driven from their
homes; but overawed by the Protestants, the officers reluctantly admitted
the emigrants, who were kindly entertained by the Lutherans.
"The sympathies of Reformed Christendom were awakened on their behalf,
and the most hospitable entertainment and assistance were everywhere given
them." Only a few months after the signing of the Georgia Colony Charter,
the "Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge" requested
the Trustees to include the Salzburgers in their plans.
The Trustees expressed their willingness to grant lands, and to manage any
money given toward their expenses, but stated that they then held no funds
which were available for that purpose.
In May, 1733, the House of Commons appropriated 10,000 Pounds to the Trustees
of Georgia, "to be applied towards defraying the charges of carrying
over and settling foreign and other Protestants in said colony," and
over 3,000 Pounds additional having been given privately, the Trustees,
at the suggestion of Herr von Pfeil, consul of Wittenberg at Regensberg,
wrote to Senior Samuel Urlsperger, pastor of the Lutheran Church of St.
Ann in the city of Augsburg, who had been very kind to the Salzburgers on
their arrival there, "and ever afterward watched over their welfare
with the solicitude of an affectionate father." On receipt of the invitation
from the Trustees, seventy-eight persons decided to go to Georgia, and left
Augsburg on the 21st of October, reaching Rotterdam the 27th of November,
where they were joined by two ministers, Rev. Mr. Bolzius, deputy superintendent
of the Latin Orphan School at Halle, and Rev. Mr. Gronau, a tutor in the
same, who were to accompany them to their new home. In England they were
treated with marked kindness, and when they sailed, January 19, 1734, it
was with the promise of free transportation to Georgia, and support there
until they could reap their first harvest from the fifty acres which were
to be given to each man among them.
They reached Charlestown, South Carolina, the following March, and met General
Oglethorpe, the Governor of Georgia, who was intending an immediate return
to Europe, but went back to help them select a suitable place for their
settlement, they preferring not to live in Savannah itself. The site chosen
was about twenty-five miles from Savannah, on a large stream flowing into
the Savannah River, and there they laid out their town, calling it "Ebenezer",
in grateful remembrance of the Divine help that had brought them thither.
Baron von Reck, who had accompanied them as Commissary of the Trustees,
stayed with them until they had made a good beginning, and then returned
to Europe, leaving Ebenezer about the middle of May.
Unitas Fratrum
But while the Salzburgers received so much sympathy and kindness in Germany
on account of their distress, other exiled Protestants, whose story was
no less touching, were being treated with scant courtesy and consideration.
On the 6th of July, 1415, the Bohemian Reformer, John Hus, was burned at
the stake. But those who had silenced him could not unsay his message, and
at last there drew together a little body of earnest men, who agreed to
accept the Bible as their only standard of faith and practice, and established
a strict discipline which should keep their lives in the simplicity, purity,
and brotherly love of the early Apostolic Church.
This was in 1457, and the movement quickly interested the thoughtful people
in all classes of society, many of whom joined their ranks. The formal organization
of the Unitas Fratrum (the Unity of Brethren) followed, and its preaching,
theological publications, and educational work soon raised it to great influence
in Bohemia, Moravia, and Poland, friendly intercourse being established
with Luther, Calvin, and other Reformers as they became prominent.
Then came destruction, when the religious liberty of Bohemia and Moravia
was extinguished in blood, by the Church of Rome. The great Comenius went
forth, a wanderer on the face of the earth, welcomed and honored in courts
and universities, introducing new educational principles that revolutionized
methods of teaching, but ever longing and praying for the restoration of
his Church; and by his publication of its Doctrine and Rules of Discipline,
and by his careful transmission of the Episcopate which had been bestowed
upon him and his associate Bishops, he did contribute largely to that renewal
which he was not destined to see.
In the home lands there were many who held secretly, tenaciously, desperately,
to the doctrines they loved, "in hope against hope" that the great
oppression would be lifted. But the passing of a hundred years brought no
relief, concessions granted to others were still denied to the children
of those who had been the first "protestants" against religious
slavery and corruption, and in 1722 a small company of descendants of the
ancient Unitas Fratrum slipped over the borders of Moravia, and went to
Saxony, Nicholas Lewis, Count Zinzendorf, having given them permission to
sojourn on his estates until they could find suitable homes elsewhere.
Hearing that they had reached a place of safety, other Moravians took their
lives in their hands and followed, risking the imprisonment and torture
which were sure to follow an unsuccessful attempt to leave a province, the
Government of which would neither allow them to be happy at home nor to
sacrifice everything and go away.
Among these emigrants were five young men, who went in May, 1724, with the
avowed intention of trying to resuscitate the Unitas Fratrum. They intended
to go into Poland, where the organization of the Unitas Fratrum had lasted
for a considerable time after its ruin in Bohemia, but, almost by accident,
they decided to first visit Christian David, who had led the first company
to Herrnhut, Saxony, and while there they became convinced that God meant
them to throw in their lot with these refugees, and so remained, coming
to be strong leaders in the renewed Unity.
Several years, however, elapsed before the church was re-established. One
hundred years of persecution had left the Moravians only traditions of the
usages of the fathers, members of other sects who were in trouble came and
settled among them, bringing diverse views, and things were threatening
to become very much involved, when Count Zinzendorf, who had hitherto paid
little attention to them, awoke to the realization of their danger, and
at once set to work to help them.
It was no easy task which he undertook, for the Moravians insisted on retaining
their ancient discipline, and he must needs try to please them and at the
same time preserve the bond of union with the State Church, -- the Lutheran,
-- of which, as his tenants, they were officially considered members. His
tact and great personal magnetism at last healed the differences which had
sprung up between the settlers, the opportune finding of Comenius' `Ratio
Disciplinae' enabled them with certainty to formulate rules that agreed
with those of the ancient Unitas Fratrum, and a marked outpouring of the
Holy Spirit at a Communion, August 13th, 1727, sealed the renewal of the
Church.
They walked with God in peace and love,
But failed with one another;
While sternly for the faith they strove,
Brother fell out with brother;
But He in Whom they put their trust,
Who knew their frames, that they were dust,
Pitied and healed their weakness.
He found them in His House of prayer,
With one accord assembled,
And so revealed His presence there,
They wept for joy and trembled;
One cup they drank, one bread they brake,
One baptism shared, one language spake,
Forgiving and forgiven.
Then forth they went with tongues of flame
In one blest theme delighting,
The love of Jesus and His Name
God's children all uniting!
That love our theme and watchword still;
That law of love may we fulfill,
And love as we are loved.
(Montgomery)
At this time there was no thought of separating
from the State Church and establishing a distinct denomination, and Zinzendorf
believed that the Unitas Fratrum could exist as a `society' working in,
and in harmony with, the State Church of whatever nation it might enter.
This idea, borrowed probably from Spener's "ecclesiolae in ecclesia",
clung to him, even after circumstances had forced the Unity to declare its
independence and the validity of the ordination of its ministry, and many
otherwise inexplicable things in the later policy of the Church may be traced
to its influence.
Halle Opposition
In 1734 Zinzendorf took orders in the Lutheran Church, but this, and all
that preceded it, seemed to augment rather than quiet the antagonism which
the development of Herrnhut aroused in certain quarters. This opposition
was not universal. The Moravians had many warm friends and advocates at
the Saxon Court, at the Universities of Jena and Tuebingen, and elsewhere,
but they also had active enemies who drew their inspiration principally
from the University of Halle.
The opposition of Halle seems to have been largely prompted by jealousy.
In 1666 a revolt against the prevailing cold formalism of the Lutheran Church
was begun by Philip Jacob Spener, a minister of that Church, who strongly
urged the need for real personal piety on the part of each individual. His
ideas were warmly received by some, and disliked by others, who stigmatized
Spener and his disciples as "Pietists", but the doctrine spread,
and in the course of time the University of Halle became its centre. Among
those who were greatly attracted by the movement were Count Zinzendorf's
parents and grandparents, and when he was born, May 26th, 1700, Spener was
selected as his sponsor.
Being of a warm-hearted, devout nature, young Zinzendorf yielded readily
to the influence of his pious grandmother, to whose care he was left after
his father's death and his mother's second marriage, and by her wish he
entered the Paedagogium at Halle in 1710, remaining there six years. Then
his uncle, fearing that he would become a religious enthusiast, sent him
to the University of Wittenberg, with strict orders to apply himself to
the study of law. Here he learned to recognize the good side of the Wittenberg
divines, who were decried by Halle, and tried to bring the two Universities
to a better understanding, but without result.
In 1719 he was sent on an extensive foreign tour, according to custom, and
in the picture gallery of Duesseldorf saw an Ecce Homo with its inscription
"This have I done for thee, what hast thou done for me?" which
settled him forever in his determination to devote his whole life to the
service of Christ.
Rather against his wishes, Count Zinzendorf then took office under the Saxon
Government, but about the same time he bought from his grandmother the estate
of Berthelsdorf, desiring to establish a centre of piety, resembling Halle.
The coming of the Moravian and other refugees and their settlement at Herrnhut,
near Berthelsdorf, was to him at first only an incident; but as their industry
and the preaching of Pastor Rothe, whom he had put in charge of the Berthelsdorf
Lutheran Church, began to attract attention, he went to Halle, expecting
sympathy from his friends there. Instead he met with rebuke and disapproval,
the leaders resenting the fact that he had not placed the work directly
under their control, and apparently realizing, as he did not, that the movement
would probably lead to the establishment of a separate church.
In spite of their disapprobation, the work at Herrnhut prospered, and the
more it increased the fiercer their resentment grew. That they, who had
gained their name from their advocacy of the need for personal piety, should
have been foremost in opposing a man whose piety was his strongest characteristic,
and a people who for three hundred years, in prosperity and adversity, in
danger, torture and exile, had held "Christ and Him Crucified"
as their Confession of Faith, and pure and simple living for His sake as
their object in life, is one of the ironies of history.
Nor did the Halle party confine itself to criticism. Some years later Zinzendorf
was for a time driven into exile, and narrowly escaped the confiscation
of all his property, while its methods of obstructing the missionary and
colonizing efforts of the Moravians will appear in the further history of
the Georgia colony.
Table of Contents
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
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