[p15]
[p16]
We detest Abolitionism because it
trespasses upon our rights of conscience. It
does not allow us judge for ourself the
morality of slaveholding. It intends to
treat the slaveholder and the polygamist
alike, and it demands that we shall not
obey the dictates of our own conscience,
or else shall feel the weight of Northern
displeasure. Every one must see the
haughtiness of its contempt in Mr. Seward,
and its hyena ferocity in Mr. Sumner. --
These are representative men. Their spirit
is the spirit of the class. An Abolitionist
has vastly less regard of the slaveholder's
right of conscience, than a slaveholder has
for the same right in his slave.
[p17]
And we abhor Abolitionism for its
atrocious impiety. It stigmatizes as a gross sin
what God guards in the very Decalogue as
a sacred right. "Thou shalt not covet thy
neighbor's * * * man servant, nor his
maid servant." It assumes to understand
religious duty better than an inspired Apostle.
He sent a runaway slave back to his master.
The Abolitionists encourage him to run
away. "To God's [illegible] it must come
at last." The tirades against slaveholders
-- not for the abuse of their relationships as masters,
but for the relationship itself -- is an
outrage on the authority of God's word.
Southern Christians have honored the
authority of the Bible, in withdrawing from
such bodies as have infected with
Abolitionism. Here is the Divine
injunction -- "Let as many servants as are nder
the yoke count their own masters worthy
of all honor. And they that have believing
masters, let them not despise them,
because they are brethren, but rather let
do them service, because they are holy and
beloved, partakers of the benefit. These
things teach and exhort. If any man teach
otherwise, and consent not to wholesome
words, even the words of our Lord Jesus
Christ, he is proud, knowing nothing, but
doting about questions and strifes of words,
whereof cometh envy, strife, railing, evil
surmising, perverse disputings of men, of
corrupt minds, and destitute of truth, supposing
that gain is godliness; from such
withdraw thyself." See 1 Tim. 6:1-5.
[p18]
When Southern States separate from
Northern ones, on the ground of their Abolitionism,
they will be doing it under the highest
sanction that can warrant human action.
[p19]
To you, citizens of Greenville, in common
with the citizens of the State, will the question
soon be presented: What shall the State
do? Shall she remain in a Union thus
attended with danger and dishonor, "to be girt
about by a belt of fire," or driven to die
like a poisoned rat in its hole? Or shall she
assume her unquestionable Independence,
ready to enter, when other Southern States
shall be prepared for it, into a new confederacy
with them? Such a Government must
be formed, for it cannot be that the Southern
portion of the present United States -
the finest country in the world -- is destined
to be sacrificed to the Utopian schemes of
the shallow pretenders and schemers who
are forming new plans for Providence, and
uttering their follies as predictions.
[p20]
Men of Greenville, show yourselves men.
Many of you are Baptists. They know the
relation which the churches and associations
sustain to each other. The churches are the
smaller bodies, and the associations are the
larger; yet the churches make the association,
and if at any time an association should
interfere with the rights of a church, that
moment that Church would secede. Just so
here; the States have formed the General
Government, and the moment that Government
invades, directly or indirectly, the
rights of a State, that moment such a State
owes it to herself to throw off the odious
tyranny.
[p21]
Such, fellow citizens, is the position of
South Carolina. Self-respect, honor, the
safety of our wives, our children, and our
slaves themselves, whose well being is
inseparably connected with the welfare of their
masters all conspire to urge you to sustain
the State in the high position which, if she
is true to herself, she must assume. As your
fellow citizens, we shall be grievously
disappointed if you do not make common cause
with us. The negro is not your equal, unless
the Bible be untrue, or you prove yourselves
unworthy of the name of free men.
The Abolitionists are not our masters, and
though they have "assumed the Government,"
yet they cannot exercise it over you
without your submission. Men of Greenville,
will you submit!
JAMES C. FURMAN,
THOS. S. ARTHUR,
WM. H. CAMPBELL,
WM. M. THOMAS.
Transcribed by Lloyd Benson, Department of History,
Furman University, from the Greenville, South Carolina,
Southern Enterprise, 22 November 1860.