Peter
Cartwright
- (1785 - 1872)
-
- GOD’S BREAKING PLOW
-
- by Jonas Clark
One
of the most fascinating ministers of the Gospel in American history
has to be the American Methodist circuit rider Peter Cartwright.
Peter Cartwright was born September 1st, 1785 to poor
parents in Amherst County, nestled along the foothills of the Blue
Ridge Mountains, in the State of Virginia. His father was a soldier
fighting for liberty in the Revolutionary War. After the colonies
gained their independence his parents immigrated on pack horses to
Kentucky. At that time the area was known as an unbroken wilderness,
and the trail from Virginia to Kentucky was filled with thousands of
hostile Indians who murdered and scalped many a white adventurer.
Upon reaching the
Commonwealth of Kentucky, the 15th State in the Union,
the Cartwright’s lived in a rented farmhouse in Lincoln County for
two years. Then in 1793 they moved to Logan County only one mile
from the State line of Tennessee. Logan County Kentucky had an
ominous reputation. It was referred to as Rogues Harbor and was
populated with every vile sort of despot from murders and highway
bandits to horse thieves. There were no grocery stores, mills or
schools to be found. Those living there had to live off the land.
The woods were filled, however, with lots of wild game from ‘canes
to turkeys.’ The Cartwright’s would kill their own meat, beat their
own meal, bake their own bread and spin their own clothes. Thus was
the lifestyle of the early American pioneering family.
Young Peter Cartwright
was a wild young man who loved playing cards, gambling and dancing.
His father overlooked many of his vices but if his mother caught him
betting on a horse race or some other unsettling behavior she would
have some stern words for him ending with a tearful, yet monishing
prayer. Peter’s Cartwright's father ‘wasn’t much into religion’ but his mother
was a Methodist.
When Peter
Cartwright was
sixteen years old he began to feel guilty and condemned because of
his sinful condition. For three months he wrestled with a deep agony
over this malady. He thought he was going to die and was ill
prepared to meet his maker. One night he promised God that if He
would spare his life then he would ‘seek and serve him.’ Sometime
after that he heard a voice from heaven saying, “Peter, look at me.”
His mother prayed with him many times during this seeking period,
but still there was no relief for his soul. He was often tempted
thinking that he might be a reprobate that was eternally lost
without any chance of salvation.
From 1800 to 1801
the region was powerfully affected by the Holy Spirit because of a
great spiritual awakening that broke out called the Cane Ridge
Revival. This outpouring of the Holy Spirit was the birthing of an
America Pentecost. “I counted seven ministers, all preaching at one
time, some on stumps, others in wagons and one standing on a tree
which had, in falling, lodged against another,” wrote eyewitness
James Finley in his biography. “I stepped up on a log where I could
have a better view of the surging sea of humanity. The scene that
then presented itself to my mind was indescribable. At one time I
saw at least five hundred swept down in a moment as if a battery of
a thousand guns had been opened upon them, and then immediately
followed shrieks and shouts that rent the very heavens.” On Saturday
night in May of 1801 Peter Cartwright attended a similarly charged camp meeting
where he accepted Jesus as his Savior. At this open air assembly,
with mother and friends present, he was mightily converted and
became a Christian. The next month he joined the Methodist and
attended the Ebenezer society held in a building probably built from
blue ash logs cut with broadaxes.
In the fall of 1802
his family moved again about eighty miles west of Logan County near
the mouth of the Cumberland River. When applying for a church
membership transfer he received a letter licensing him as an
Exhorter in the Methodist church. The letter read, “Peter Cartwright
is hereby permitted to exercise his gifts as an exhorter in the
Methodist Episcopal Church, so long as his practice is agreeable to
the Gospel. Signed in behalf of the society at Ebenezer, Jesse
Walker, A. P. May 1802.” After moving he attended school for a short
while and was briefly persecuted for his faith by the other
students. When his teacher refused to intervene he quit school later
regretting that he never finished his education. He did learn,
however, to ‘read, write and cipher.’
When Peter Cartwright was
but eighteen years old and in October of 1803 he was asked to
accompany ‘Brother Lotspeich’ on the Cumberland Circuit. At the
first meeting, Brother Lotspeich asked Peter Cartwright to preach.
Peter Cartwright
responded by saying that he carried only an exhorter’s license. Lotspeich prevailed on his concerns and Cartwright withdrew his
protest. Before the meeting Peter Cartwright prayed fervently and asked God for
a sign that he was truly called to preach by allowing at least one
soul to be born again. That night he ‘entered the meeting house,
took his stand, gave out a hymn, sang and prayed.’ Then with all the
boldness he could muster up preached, “Trust ye in the Lord forever:
for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength.” (Isaiah 26:4) That
night those present broke out in tears and sure enough, God
confirmed his calling, a ‘professional infidel’ was born again.
For the next
several years Peter Cartwright meet the hardships of frontier preaching
with apostolic faith and resolve. Working with a seldom kept promise
of eighty dollars support a year he spent days on the intrepid
trail. It would take some 4 to 5 weeks to complete the excursion,
preaching every day and night with only two days rest. Francis
Asbury himself, the founding bishop of American Methodism,
demonstrated the lifestyle of the circuit rider having traveled some
270,000 miles and preaching over 16,000 sermons. Peter Cartwright carried that
same pioneering grit. Peter Cartwright wrote about the life of a circuit
rider in his autobiography:
“A Methodist preacher, when he felt that God had called him to
preach, instead of hunting up a college or Biblical Institute,
hunted up a hardy pony, and some traveling apparatus, and with his
library always at hand, namely, a Bible, Hymn book, and (Methodist)
Discipline, he started, and with a text that never wore out nor grew
stale, he cried, ‘Behold, the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sin
of the world.’ In this way he went through storms of wind, hail,
snow, and rain; climbed hills and mountains, traversed valleys,
plunged through swamps, swollen streams, lay out all night, wet,
weary, and hungry, held his horse by the bridle all night, or tied
him to a limb, slept with his saddle blanket for a bed, his
saddle-bags for a pillow. Often he slept in dirty cabins, ate
roasting ears for bread, drank butter-milk for coffee; took deer or
bear meat, or wild turkey, for breakfast, dinner, and supper. This
was old-fashioned Methodist preacher fare and fortune.”
Peter Cartwright married
nineteen year old Frances Gaines in August of 1808. She had moved to
Kentucky with her parents from Virginia two years earlier. Together
they had two sons and seven daughters.
Peter Cartwright had
peculiar signs and wonders occur at many of his meetings
particularly what was referred to as ‘the jerks.’ Suddenly, during a
song or a sermon, those in attendance would start to jerk. It didn’t
matter if they were saint or sinner. If they resisted, the jerks
would get more violent. If they yielded and prayed they would
subside. Some would rise up and dance and others would run to ‘to
obtain relief.’ Peter Cartwright said he saw as many as 500 people at a
time get these jerks. To him it was an amusing sign of God’s
presence.
Peter Cartwright tells
the story of two fashionably dressed sisters that attended one of
his meetings in 1804. Their brothers, who didn’t attend the meetings
but stayed outside, saw their sisters get the jerks. This greatly
disturbed them and they determined to horse whip Peter Cartwright when the
meeting was over. After the service the two brothers met Peter Cartwright
outside the church. They said they had seen him take something out
of his pocket and give it to their sisters and that’s why they got
the jerks. What they didn’t know was Peter Cartwright often carried a tin
of peppermint in his pocket and would put one in his mouth before he
spoke. It was the peppermint that they saw him retrieve from his
pocket. Peter Cartwright, trying to avoid the whipping, answered them
directly. Taking the peppermint tin out of his pocket, “I need not
deny it,” he said. “Yes, I gave them the jerks and I can give them
to you too.” Fear struck the brothers and they ran away yelling at
him not to follow them or they would kill him.
Peter Cartwright, unlike
the preachers of settled denominations, possessed the needed
qualities to survive the harsh and dangerous world of the American
frontier wilderness. The circuit rider had to fight and preach,
oftentimes dealing with ruffians, rowdies and disrupters who
attended their meetings.
Peter Cartwright in his
autobiography writes of recruiting one of the areas most feared
rowdy leaders to help him maintain order outside the camp grounds.
The rowdy agreed as long as he could select his own companion
helpers. In those days they would seat the men and women on
different sides of the church. A young man of swaggerer fashion had
his hair in a roach with a fancy curl across the top from front to
back who would come and sit each time in the ladies section.
Peter Cartwright spoke to him about this forbidden encroachment but the
young man persisted. Determined to solve this problem Peter Cartwright met
with the rowdy leader about this young man’s obstinance. The rowdy
leader told Cartwright he would take care of it as long as
Peter Cartwright would let him have a little fun. Under the pretense of
offering the young man something to drink the rowdies lured him into
the woods where they took scissors and gave him the ‘newest
Nashville fashion.’ The young man trembling with fear beelined it
back to the campground where he met Peter Cartwright. Taking off his hat
he said, “Look what them rowdies have done!” Peter Cartwright had a very
difficult time to keep from breaking out in a laugh. He told him he
should say nothing about it or the rowdies might do something worse.
The young man was cured from disrupting any more meetings.
In 1823 Peter and
Frances sold their farm in Kentucky and moved their family to
Sangamon County, Illinois where they purchased a small farm for two
hundred dollars. They moved because they were strongly opposed to
slavery and didn’t want their daughters to marry a slave owner. Upon
their arrival Peter Cartwright was quickly assigned another circuit. Five
years later Peter Cartwright entered politics believing that Illinois
would soon enact laws permitting slavery that he called an
‘abomination of desolation.’ He served as a Representative in the 6th
and 8th General Assemblies of the Illinois State
Legislature, having been elected in 1828 and again in 1832. He was
defeated for the U. S. Congress in 1846 by a former opponent, a rail
splitter named Abraham Lincoln.
Peter Cartwright served
the Lord faithfully throughout his many years of service. He passed
away September 25th, 1872. He was 87 years old. Peter
Cartwright, God’s breaking plow, left behind the legacy of great
American pioneering ministers of the Gospel. He and Frances are
buried in the Pleasant Plains Illinois Cemetery just south of town.
Inscribed on his tombstone is the text from his first sermon and the
words of his favorite hymn.
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Copyright © by Jonas Clark.
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