File:The illustrated history of Methodism (electronic resource); the story of the origin and progress of the Methodist church, from its foundation by John Wesley to the present day. Written in popular (14777433202).jpg

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Identifier: 01861476.emory.edu
Title: The illustrated history of Methodism (electronic resource); the story of the origin and progress of the Methodist church, from its foundation by John Wesley to the present day. Written in popular style and illustrated by more than one thousand portraits and views of persons
Year: 1900 (1900s)
Authors: Lee, James Wideman, 1849-1919 Luccock, Naphtali, 1853-1916 Dixon, James Main, 1856-1933
Subjects: Methodism
Publisher: St Louis New York : The Methodist magazine publishing co.
Contributing Library: Emory University, Pitts Theology Library
Digitizing Sponsor: Emory University, Pitts Theology Library

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as such, constitute a bishop.The right of ordination, essential to hisoffice, lay elsewhere. To assert that theright to appoint involves the right to re-move is a patent fallacy, disproved bythe analogy of judges and senators, who,though appointed by the legislature of astate, are not thereby subject to summaryremoval. The recent resolution suspend-ing Bishop Andrew was, in their opin-ion, an outrage upon justice as well aslaw, reducing the bishops of the Meth-odist Episcopal Church to the conditionof slaves, at the mercy of their mastersand holders, the General Conference. Thereafter the proceedings of thismomentous assembly moved on steadilyin the direction of a mutual and friendlydivision of the Church. For three daysafter June 5th, a committee of nine wasat work devising such a scheme, andthey appeared at length with their re-port, known in history as the Plan ofSeparation. Its provisions, which hadfor their object the meeting of the emer- 536 The Illustrated History of Methodism.
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LEADERS IN THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH, SOUTH, IN THE FIFriES.i. W. P. Ratcliffe, Wichita Conference. 2. W. H, Seat, Texas Conference. 3. W. C. Lewis, Texas Con-erence 4. 8. K. Vatjgiit, West Virginia Conference. 5. S. S. Riggs, Tennessee Conference. 6. J. Atkins, Hols-ton Conference. 7. J. W. Kelly, South Carolina Conference. 8. W. A. Gamewell, South Carolina Conference9 t wEwS°N MlLSOU c°u^r^ce. 10. Z. M. Taylor, Louisville Conference. 11. M. Yell, Texas Conference2. J. W. Whipple, Texas Conference. 13. K. Heao, Alabama Conference. 14. D. M. Wiggins, Mississippi Con-ference i5. N. W. Burks, East Texas Conference. 16. J, W. Fields, East Texas Conference. r7. J. W. Phillips,Texas Conference. 18. W. C. Dandy, Kentucky Conference. The Illustrated History of Methodism. 537 gency with Christian kindness and thestrictest equity, were contained in tenarticles, summarized as follows: 1. In case the delegates from Confer-ences in the slave-holding states shouldfind it necessary to unite

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current01:07, 4 October 2015Thumbnail for version as of 01:07, 4 October 20151,718 × 2,360 (2.02 MB) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{information |description={{en|1=<br> '''Identifier''': 01861476.emory.edu<br> '''Title''': [https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/tags/bookid01861476.emory.edu The illustrated history of Methodism (electronic...

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