Religious History Shows Many Changes

The religious history of Monroe County is very absorbing. Most of the Virginians and Kentuckians were old School Baptists or Presbyterians, with a bare sprinkling of the other denominations. The stirring evangelism of Alexander Campbell himself was a visitor twice in Paris, the last time in 1848.

The Primitive or Old School Baptist, originally one of the strongest in num­bers and financial standing, has finally died out, the swan song of this picturesque organization being sung about 30 years ago when the Primitive church at Stoutsville was converted into a cemetery shelter house.

Attending divine services in the ear­ly days was the big event of the month and in the earlier decades they worshipped in the school houses. As the communities became more prosperous church edifices were erected. Church services were the occasion when the community met and exchanged small talk and opinion on politics, crops, elections, roads, neighborhood gossip, etc. Everyone put on his Sunday best to wear to church; the women their full skirts and sunbonnets and the men their best jeans. Many rode horseback, the women riding sidesaddles. Children would ride behind their elders, frequently falling asleep from sheer fatigue. Arriving at the church all would go in and the services begin.

The songs would be “Jesus Lover of My Soul,” “Rock of Ages,” “How Firm a Foundation” and other Isaac Watts masterpieces. The preacher then read the scripture and delivered the sermon. These sermons were some­times of three or four hours duration lasting from 11:00 until 2:00. The early church elders in many instances were dead against having an organ in the church, deeming that it was an instru­ment of the devil and tended to distract the worshippers from a reverent and contemplative state of mind. The stern Puritan ideal was especially strong and any factor that tended to soften or mitigate the stern and ascetic ideal of the services was considered the machinations of the devil. 

Old time hell fire and damnation sermons would be the order of the day. Hell loomed large in the preacher’s vocabulary and the congregation would be frequently admonished that unless they mended their ways the devil would roast them over a slow fire. Revivals were a feature of church life from their earliest establishment. Nearly every church in the county, at some time during the year would have a revival. None but the most necessary work was done when the “big meet­ing” was on. The preacher worked with zeal and fervor to get converts. If there were an especially wicked person in the community whose soul was felt to be lost, the good women would join in a general prayer meeting until the recalcitrant sinner was brought to his knees in penitence. 

Sins of the flesh were glossed over, but dancing was violently excoriated. Cards were considered the last word in wickedness and the devil’s own private invention to lure the unwary into the paths of sin. Indeed so bitter were some of the preachers against the venial sins of drinking, card playing and dancing, that churches were dis­organized, the members taking sides on the question. An outstanding instance in the church split over these moral questions occurred in Monroe City at the close of the nineteenth century. The fanatical element actually built another church and formed a new organization. 

Preachers especially directed their fulminations against drinking, calling it a filthy habit and warning drunkards that there was an especially deep pit in hell for the husband who abused his wife and neglected his children for the bottle. The lessons of “Ten Nights in a Barroom” were much taken to heart. Purity in thought and deed was the exalted ideal held up and even to perform unnecessary work on Sunday was deemed in pleasing to the Deity.

Camp Meeting Era

No history of churches would be complete without a mention of the old time Camp Meeting. A tent would be erected in a shady grove and a plat­form and seats provided. Usually two preachers would hold forth, for one preacher would fulminate so vehe­mently and vociferously that he would be exhausted by the time the after­noon services were over and would have to be relieved that night. The faithful and devout members of that particular sect sponsoring the meeting would come in numbers and camp out in the woods nearby. White tents would dot the landscape and the cooking was done in camp fires.

Frequently hundreds remained while the meeting lasted. Straw was scat­tered on the ground for the fanatical penitents would frequently be lashed into transports of frenzy and lather by the emotional and zealous fervor of the preachers. The success of the meeting was gauged by the number of converts the divine succeeded in enticing to the mourner’s bench. The air would be punctuated by such outbursts as “Glory, Glory Hallelujah, I’ve found God, I’ve got salvation,” and some­times the penitent would fall in a sort of cataleptic trance as the preacher implored the Lord to cast the devil out of him. The second coming of Christ was the theme of much perfervid exhortation. The preacher intimated that Christ might appear at any time and catch the wicked when he was up to some devilment so it would be better to mend his ways at once and henceforth walk in the straight and narrow path.

By the time the meeting was over the dust had usually become so thick under the tents and the fleas so numerous that there was a sigh of relief from all.

After every revival and camp meeting in the early days, there would be the baptizing in a creek or river nearby, usually on the Sunday follow­ing the close of the meeting. This custom was followed clear up to within the beginning of the 20th century and Is still practiced in some of the country churches. This was a big day for the countryside and people would come from far and near to witness the spectacle. Sunday afternoon was the usual time and the crowds would line up on the bank nearby where the event was scheduled to take place.

The preacher and the converts would dress for the affair in a clump of bushes nearby. The girls wore white and the preacher a long swallow tail coat. Sometimes he was protected by long rubber boots. The congregation would sing “Happy Day That Fixed My Choice” and “Washed in the Blood of the Lamb” and the converts would file down the river bank one by one and be dipped clear under the water.

  The rite of baptism would be ad­ministered with a vengeance. No meaningless sprinkling on the head with a few drops of water. The sinner’s misdoings must be washed away with a good healthy douse and thence-forward he “was as white as snow.” Sometimes this rite would be administered in the dead of winter and the ice would have to be cut to allow the baptizing to take place. The poor little girls would come shivering down the bank without a wrap and be ducked in the ice cold water. This was supposed to give the convert a special state of grace, and the colder the water, the more merit he achieved in Heaven.