- Benjamin Franklin (religion)
Benjamin Franklin (
February 1 ,1812 –October 22 ,1878 ) was an important conservative figure in the AmericanRestoration Movement , especially as the leading antebellum conservative in the northern United States branch of the movement. He is notable as the early and lifelong mentor ofDaniel Sommer , whose support of the 1889 Sand Creek Declaration and Address set in motion events which led to the formal division of theChurches of Christ from theDisciples of Christ in 1906.According to contemporary biographies "His early religious training was according to the
Methodist faith, though he never belonged to any church until he united with the Disciples." [cite web|title=The Living Pulpit of the Christian Church: A Series of Discourses, Doctrinal and Practical |url=http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/wmoore/tlp/TLP15.HTM#Page339 |author=Moore, W. T. |date=1868 |publisher=R. W. Carroll & Co.|pages=339-340|location=Cincinnati, Ohio|editor=Moore, W. T. ]Family and early life
Born near present-day
Belmont County, Ohio in 1812, Franklin was said to be a fourth-generation descendant of a brother ofAmerican Revolutionary War figureBenjamin Franklin , for whom he was named. He was the eldest son of a fairly big family. cite book |chapter= Benjamin Franklin|author=Hagger, Thomas|title=Heralds of Christian Unity: Being Brief Biographical Sketches of Some Pioneers of the Restoration Movement |location=Melbourne, Australia|publisher=Austral Printing and Publishing Company|date=1938|pages=31-35|url=http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/thagger/HERALDS.HTM#Page31]When Franklin was near 21 years old, thus in late 1832 or early 1833, Franklin's father moved the family to farmland about three miles south of Middletown in
Henry County, Indiana . Franklin himself purchased 80 acres.It was in this new context that he met his future wife, Mary Personet. They married on
December 15 ,1833 : the couple had eleven children, of which nine survived to adulthood. cite book |chapter=Benjamin Franklin |title=Churches of Christ: A Historical, Biographical, and Pictorial History of Churches of Christ in the United States, Australasia, England, and Canada. |author=Brown, John T.|location=Louisville, Kentucky |publisher=John P. Morton and Company|date=1904|pages=420-421|url=http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/jtbrown/coc/COC1311.HTM]Conversion to Restoration Movement
In November 1834, noted pioneer Restoration Movement preacher and elder
Samuel Rogers (Restoration Movement) moved to the Falls of Rough Creek in Henry County fromKentucky , becoming a neighbor of the Franklin family.Rogers began to preach
Restoration Movement doctrine using a local schoolhouse to deliver his orations. He was quickly rejected as heretical by theMethodist leadership in the area: however, his family was sympthetic toward the neighbor and soon came under his theological influence. Franklin was baptised by full immersion in 1836 by Rogers near Middletown inHenry County, Indiana , along with many others who were baptised in the same meeting. (One source also credits Elijah Martindale in Franklin's conversion.cite book |title=Hoosier Disciples|author=Shaw, Henry K.|publisher=Bethany Press, for the Association of the Christian Churches in Indiana|date=1966] ) Of those baptised at this meeting, six or seven would go on to become preachers in the movement: Franklin, three of his brothers, Eider Adamson, John T. Rogers, and possibly another whose name was forgotten by one of Rogers' biographers. cite book |chapter=Samuel Rogers |author=Brown, John T.|title=Churches of Christ: A Historical, Biographical, and Pictorial History of Churches of Christ in the United States, Australasia, England, and Canada. |location=Louisville, Kentucky |publisher=John P. Morton and Company|date=1904|pages=447-449|url=http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/texts/jtbrown/coc/COC1333.HTM]Early ministry and editorship
At the Connersville State Meeting in 1842, Franklin was designated as the lead evangelist of the northeastern quarter ("district") of
Indiana : the districting plan soon failed for lack of local funds to pay the evangelists' salary of US$500 per year.Franklin began preaching at
New Lisbon, Indiana in 1842. He began publishing his "Reformer" in 1845, soon changing the name to "Western Reformer". He moved toMilton, Indiana in 1846 and published the journal from his own shop. This publication was to be merged with Hall's "Gospel Proclamation" as the "Proclamation and Reformer" in 1850. Franklin served as one of two secretaries at the Disciples' eighth state meeting atColumbus, Indiana , which covened onOctober 3 ,1846 .Later, Franklin published the "Christian Age" with collaborator
David S. Burnet . His last publication was theAmerican Christian Review begun in 1856: following Franklin's death the name of the paper would be changed to theOctographic Review . He was said to have influenced the founding ofButler University as well as other national societies, and was also said to have been anabolitionist andpacifist , like many of his contemporaries within the movement.After changing residences several times in Indiana and Ohio, Franklin settled in
Cincinnati, Ohio in 1850, where he remained for 14 years. It was during the 1850s that Franklin changed his views to oppose missionary societies.Editor, "American Christian Review" (1856–1878)
In 1856, Franklin began to publish the ultra-conservative "American Christian Review," which he published until his death in 1878. Its influence, initially considerable, was said to have waned following the
American Civil War . Franklin undertook a rigorous program of publication correspondence, and traveling lectures which took him to "many" U. S. states and Canada.Franklin's last move was to
Anderson, Indiana , where he lived from 1864 until his death.Traveling orator
In 1871 Franklin gave a series of sermons at
Wellsburg, West Virginia . It was here that he attracted the interest of a youngBethany College student namedDaniel Sommer , becoming a lifelong mentor of Sommer, who would take up Franklin's mantle as publisher following Franklin's death. Sommer would become notable for his participation in the 1889 Sand Creek Address and Declaration, a particularly strong statement of exclusivity which helped to drive the split between theDisciples of Christ and more conservativeChurch of Christ .Death
Franklin died suddenly at his home in
Anderson, Indiana onOctober 22 ,1878 .References
External links
* [http://www.mun.ca/rels/restmov/people/bfranklin.html Works by Benjamin Franklin] at the
Restoration Movement pages of theMemorial University of Newfoundland .
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