- Tolbert Fanning
Tolbert Fanning (
May 10 ,1810 –May 3 ,1874 ) was aRestoration Movement preacher andwriter born inCannon County, Tennessee . His conservative theology within that movement, often expressed in the pages of Fanning's publication, the "Gospel Advocate ", inspired others such asDavid Lipscomb , leading to the 1906 identification of theChurch of Christ as a distinct religious body, 33 years after Fanning's death.Biography
Early life
As a boy Fanning lived on the
plantation s ofAlabama and moved toNashville, Tennessee to attend the formerUniversity of Nashville .Contributions to the Restoration Movement
Fanning is said to have converted under the influence of preachers
Ephraim D. Moore andJames E. Matthews . He was baptised a member of the church in response to a sermon preached by Matthews seven miles north ofFlorence, Alabama , aroundOctober 1 ,1827 [ [http://www.therestorationmovement.com/fanning,bio.htm Three Biographical Sketches of Tolbert Fanning] at [http://www.restorationmovement.com/ RestorationMovement.com] ] .Fanning soon after his arrival in Nashville became one of the recognized leaders of the
Restoration Movement , an attempt to purge the Christianreligion of its many denominations and restore it to the originaldoctrine s and practices of the church in the 1st century largely associated with the religious figure Alexander Campbell.Fanning founded a girls' school in
Franklin, Tennessee in 1837, the year of his graduation fromNashville University . Franklin College in 1840, notable alumni of which includeDavid Lipscomb ,T. B. Larimore ,E. G. Sewell ,E. W. Carmack ,J. E. Scobey and William Lipscomb. He was president of the college until 1861 [ [http://www.pioneerpreachers.com/ PioneerPreachers.com] ] .Fanning almost invariably was an advocate for what the Restorationists regarded as the conservative side of the issues facing the group; this tendency was heightend by his experiences in the schism experienced by the
Nashville Church of Christ congregation in the early 1850s as a result of the teachings of Spiritualism as advocated by a charismatic minister namedJesse Babcock Ferguson , who was the preacher of the congregation from 1846 until his resignation in April 1857 [ [http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/jesseferguson.html Jesse Babcock Ferguson] at the web site of theUnitarian Universalist Association ] .Fanning's advocacy of the group's traditional positions was a major factor in Ferguson's eventual discrediting within, and removal from, the group. Fanning wrote a lengthy pamphlet entitled "The History of the Church of Christ in Nashville" attacking Ferguson's positions and advocating his own.
Legacy
Aside from his actions against Ferguson, Fanning's major legacy within the Restoration Movement lay with his advocacy of education. He was an important mentor to
David Lipscomb and thought by many to be the source of many his protegé's more pacifist views.Lipscomb University has a dormitory named in honor of him.Following the
American Civil War , Fanning was instrumental in resisting the growth ofmissionary societies and the use ofinstrumental music . Lipscomb's championing of Fanning's theology would lead to the 1906 schism in which theChurch of Christ was first recognized as a separate body from the more liberal Disciples of Christ.References
External links
* [http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/people/tfanning.html Tolbert Fanning] page at the [http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/ Restoration Movement] pages of the
Memorial University of Newfoundland
* [http://www.restorationquarterly.org/Volume_001/rq00101holton.htm Tolbert Fanning] byA. R. Holton , [http://www.acu.edu/sponsored/restoration_quarterly.html Restoration Quarterly 1:1]Nashville, Tennessee :Abilene Christian University , 1957.Books
*"The Hazard of the Die: Tolbert Fanning and the Restoration Movement" by
James R. Wilburn . 288 pages with index.Sweet Publishing Company ,Austin, Texas , 1969
*"Tolbert Fanning vs. Robert Richardson: battling for the birthrights of the "People of the Book" byDarren Ross Johnson . 1999.
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