Freeborn Garrettson

Freeborn Garrettson (1752 in Maryland September 26, 1827 in New York City) an American clergyman. He entered the Methodist ministry in 1775, travelled extensively in several states.

Role in American Methodism

Kenneth E. Rowe's foreword to the book "American Methodist Pioneer," which presents the journals of Freeborn Garrettson, begins,"Freeborn Garrettson was unquestionably the most competent native born Methodist preacher in the American colonies in the founding period." [1] Early in his career Garrettson served the Delmarva Peninsula. Although he favored the revolutionary cause he would not fight in the war and was placed in jail for a time in Maryland during the Revolutionary War. Most of the Methodist preachers who had come from England before the outbreak of war, returned there once the war began. In 1784 he went as a missionary to Nova Scotia, which led to the founding of Methodist congregations in Cape Negro and the free black settlement of Birchtown.[2] In 1788 he began working in the state of New York. In 1791, he married Catherine Livingston of Rhinebeck, after which he confined his ministry to New York.[3] During Garrettson's time American Methodism rose from total obscurity to a place of import within American religion.

He was a very popular preacher and at his death he made provision in his will for the perpetual support of a missionary.[3]

In the late 1780s Reverend Garrettson settled in the Village of Rhinebeck, NY to bring Methodism. He married Mrs. Catherine Livingston, and held the first Methodist church services in the Benner House on Mill Street.

Garrettson's anti-slavery stance

Not long after Garrettson inherited several slaves, he freed them. Garrettson wrote that a "voice" moved him to do so. His journals divulge an anti-slavery stance, but do not reveal the extent of his activism. A wave of voluntary emancipation mirrored and followed Garrettson's time on the Delmarva. By 1810 76% of African Americans in Delaware were free, though slavery remained legal in Delaware. Garrettson wrote on the issue of slavery including a published work, "A Dialogue Between Do-Justice and Professing Christian." The Rev. Freeborn Garrettson's preaching on the Delmarva led directly to the emancipation of Richard Allen, who upon his return to Philadelphia founded the Bethel Church and then the African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) denomination.[4]

Freeborn Garrettson Early Life

Born on the west side of the Chesapeake Bay at the mouth of the Susquehanna River in Maryland, what is known today as Bush River Neck, Freeborn Garrettson was the third generation in his family to settle in this low-lying stretch of land at the Northern portion of the large body of water. The Garrettson family owned a large amount of land which included a farm, a general store, and a blacksmith shop. The Garrettson estate was an exceptional property made more valuable by the numerous families of slaves which ran the various business of the Garrettson estate. Freeborn Garrettson was born in 1752.Growing up in a wealthy Anglican family allowed for the young man to experience an above average education, a proper education by colonial standards. The curriculum was rich in religious and social principals. The instruction Freeborn Garrettson received was consistent with America’s well-to-do farmers and landowners. In addition to the basic reading, writing, and arithmetic, Freeborn Garrettson learned basic book keeping. Added to this schooling was the study of surveying and astronomy. According to the page on Freeborn Garrettson, "Uniquely, it is the study of the planets and stars that seems to drive his quest for philosophical and spiritual significance."

Freeborn Garrettson Conversion Experience

"‘Do you know what a saint is? A saint is one who is wholly given up to God.’ The voice is so real as if someone is talking to me face to face. The question stirs my heart.” This is the beginning of the conversion experience of Freeborn Garrettson.

The audible encounter above is not the first divine event for Freeborn Garrettson. Just prior to the question of knowing what a saint is, he experiences another audible event. The statement which Freeborn Garrettson heard clearly was, ‘Ask and it shall be given you.’ Who was asking? According to the nine-year-old Freeborn Garrettson, these were audible requests from God. Yes, Freeborn Garrettson expressed hearing an audible voice in each of these instances. Much like the Old Testament character of Joseph, the inspirational events cause him to race home and tell his siblings, even going as far as to predict from an additional encounter that he is going to be a wealthy man someday. After his ‘knowing what a saint is’ episode, he writes in a journal that he ‘saw such a person, the most beautiful of any I had ever beheld, I… prayed to the Lord to make me a saint.’ These experiences cause one to ask, 'Is Freeborn a mystic?' These experiences at the very least seem to point to an extraordinary child. Shortly after these supernatural happenings at the age of 10, Freeborn Garrettson faces a most unfortunate tragedy. In a series of events, he loses his mother, his sister Sally and two family servants. These tragic developments usher in a sensitivity to depression and melancholy, causing his spiritual yearnings to lie dormant for nearly ten years. Almost a decade later, the preaching of Methodist itinerants, Robert Strawbridge, and Joseph Pilmoor serve to awaken the spiritual yearnings in Freeborn Garrettson. Despite the stellar efforts of these traveling preachers, the completion of the conversion to Christianity of Freeborn Garrettson will not complete until the active mentoring of the British itinerant, Francis Asbury. By the year, 1776, Freeborn Garrettson becomes one of Francis Asbury’s traveling itinerants. According to the page, Freeborn Garrettson, "Strong willed, ready to defend the oppressed and an independent spirit, these are the running themes of Freeborn Garrettson. His conversion experience initiates an immediate release of his family’s slaves. When asked to fight for the colonials in the Revolutionary War he shows up to camp, however, he refuses his rifle, his reply to the raging sergeant, ‘I fight not for the first death, but against the second death.’ "

References

  1. Simpson, Robert Drew, American Methodist Pioneer, The life and Journals of the Rev. Freeborn Garrettson, Academy Books, 1984, p. viii.
  2. The Black Loyalists, James W. St. G. Walker, University of Toronto Press, 1992, p.73
  3. 1 2 George Ripley and Charles A. Dana (1873). "Freeborn Garrettson". The American Cyclopædia. Vol. 7. Boston: D. Appleton & Company. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  4. Wesley, Charles H. , Richard Allen, Apostle of Freedom, The Associated Publishers Inc, 1935, pp 15-16.

External links

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