Unknown County GaArchives Church Records.....Georgia Baptists Flint River Association Copyright Date 1874 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ga/gafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00001.html#0000031 January 26, 2005, 3:01 pm FLINT RIVER ASSOCIATION Was constituted at Rocky creek meeting-house, Monroe county, on the 16th October, 1824. Preparatory sermon by Edmund Talbot, who also sat as moderator pro. tem. The presbytery were J. Nochols, E. Talbot, D. Montgomery, J. Callaway, J. Milner, V. A. Tharp and T. Pierce. Fourteen churches joined in the new organization. Robert McGinty, moderator, and Robert Kelton, clerk. Churches, fourteen; ministers, five; total, five hundred and twenty-five. The second session was at Mount Pisgah, Monroe, in 1825. Introductory by Robert McGinty. Refused to correspond with General Association. Eleven new churches join. The following year the body met at Bethel meeting-house, Butts county. William Mosely preached the introductory. No business of interest is reported in the minutes—nothing more than receiving and appointing correspondence, etc. In 1827 the body meets at Sardis, Pike county, near Barnesville. Eight new churches join. Granade, Callaway and Henderson preach on the Sabbath. Shiloh, in Bibb county, was the seat of the session, 1828. John M. Gray preached the introductory; J. S. Callaway and A. Sherwood on the Sabbath. About $60 were raised for Domestic Missions. "About nineteen hundred baptized!" The powerful revival, prevailing in other parts of the State, is advancing gloriously within the bounds of this body likewise. Agreed to observe the monthly concert for prayer. Men, in a state of revival, will not oppose the missionary cause. Seventeen churches dismissed to form the Itchaconna. Forsyth was the place of meeting in 1829. Here an act was perpetrated that did much injury and caused great grief, in the case of the Sharon church. For several years, the body passed through a scene of affliction, over which the historian would gladly cast the mantle of Christian charity, and suffer these things to die with the passing generation. The meeting for 1835 is at Shiloh, Fayette county. J. S. Callaway, moderator, T. Langly, clerk. Nothing of importance transacted. Churches, forty-one; baptisms, one hundred and nine; ministers, eighteen; total, two thousand four hundred and sixty-four. In 1837, the session is at Holly Grove, Monroe county. The subject of benevolent institutions had been some time on the carpet; but a majority of the delegates, instead of declaring non-fellowship with such institutions and their adherents, "Resolved, that we are unwilling to go into any new declaration of fellowship or non-fellowship, but feel disposed to continue in the same old Baptist path of faith and practice, which the Association has heretofore pursued." Whereupon fifteen churches, with Rev. William Mosely at their head, withdraw from the house—hold a meeting in the grove, and agree to have a convention at County Line meeting-house, in July, 1838. After Mr. Mosely and his party have left the body, they agree to open correspondence with the Rehoboth and Central in about 1840. Since that time, she has become a component member of the Georgia Baptist Convention. Missions and Sabbath schools are encouraged. Her ministers are laborious and self-denying men, “ready unto every good work." Many of their churches have experienced seasons of glorious "refreshings from the presence of the Lord." The Lord smiles graciously upon the body from year to year. Rev. J. D. Stewart, of Griffin, is now the moderator. Of late years, this body has been actively engaged in the work of missions. Its mission to the Indians dates from October 1st, 1872. During the first year, Benjamin Baker and Wilson Nail, native Indians, were employed as missionaries, who did efficient service. They reported twenty-four baptisms, the establishment of two Sabbath-schools, numbering in the aggregate over one hundred pupils and teachers, and a satisfactory amount of other labor. This year there are three Indian missionaries employed—Benjamin Baker, Solomon Baker and Wilson Nail. They have reported for the first quarter, nine baptisms, two natives licensed to preach, and the commencement of one or two church buildings. These missionaries have been paid promptly at the end of each quarter. The Association has also engaged two home missionaries to labor a portion of their time within her own bounds—Jonathan Milner and J. M. DeFoor. Additional Comments: From: GEORGIA BAPTISTS: HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL BY J. H. CAMPBELL, PERRY, GEORGIA. MACON, GA.: J. W. BURKE & COMPANY. 1874. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by J. H. CAMPBELL, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ga/unknown/churches/gbb210georgiab.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/gafiles/ File size: 5.1 Kb