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Early Times at Forest
Forest Chapel.-Lifting
The Collection.-Primitive Mid-Week Meetings
"I have considered the days of old, the years of ancient times."
The following reminiscences of early
times at Forest Church are narrated for
their intrinsic as well as historic
interest. The first one reveals an order of
service that is very general in the colored
Churches. It is one that affords the deacon,
if he be a man so disposed, to spontaneously
introduce considerable native wit and humor
into the part of the service entrusted to
him; and if he does, it very naturally
prepares the way for unexpected shouts of
joy and gladness on the part of those who
are emotional or subject to the sudden
impulse of ecstatic delight.
Forest Chapel
Forest Chapel, as is suggested by its name,
was located in the large and dense oak
forest along Red river eight miles south of
Wheelock. Its post office has been
successively, Wheelock, Fowlerville, Parsons
and since 1906 Millerton. The Forest Church
was organized by Parson Stewart about 1886,
and was served by him once a month the next
seven years. In 1898 it became a remote part
of the field of Rev. William Butler of
Eagletown, who also endeavored to visit it
once a month.
The chapel was a lonely, dingy and
dilapidated building, inside as well as
outside. It was about 20 by 30 feet and was
built entirely of rough lumber. The side
walls consisted of one thickness of wide
inch boards, nailed at the top and bottom,
and having a thin strip over the cracks on
the outside. The roof was covered with long,
split, oak clapboards, that invariably look
black and rough at the end of a year. The
pulpit consisted of a box-like arrangement
that stood on a small platform at the center
of one end. The seats consisted of a half
dozen rough benches without backs, that
could be arranged around the stove in cold
weather, or in three fold groups for a
picnic dinner, the middle one being used for
a table on such occasions and the other two
for seats around it. No paint or even white
wash ever found a place on this building. It
was the largest and best building in the
neighborhood, and the popular resort for all
of their social gatherings.
The leading men of the congregation
consisted of two elders, both venerable and
devout survivors of the slavery period,
neither of whom could read, and a deacon,
who was one of the only two of the older
people who could read a little.
Lifting The
Collection
It was regarded as the duty of the deacon to
"lift the collection" at the Sabbath
services. This gave him a very prominent
part in the services, for the collection is
not lifted by passing the hat or basket, but
each contributor, after the general call
brings their offering and lays it either on
the pulpit or a little stand near it.
However novel this arrangement may at first
appear to those unaccustomed to it, it must
be remembered that a method somewhat similar
to this was in use in the Temple in
Jerusalem, when our Lord Jesus, taking his
seat opposite the treasury, saw the poor
widow cast in her two mites and commended
her very highly.
It was not unusual for the deacon to
announce before hand the amount needed and
then, as the offerings are presented, to
state the amount received from time to time,
until finally the whole amount is obtained.
This part of the service was always
enlivened by singing some soul-stirring
songs that everybody could sing.
Occasionally it would take the form of a
good natured rivalry, as to which could
appear the most happy and joyous, the
deacon, vociferously announcing from time to
time as their offerings came in, the latest
result of the collection, or, the people,
whose merry singing would occasionally
develop into a shout of ecstatic enjoyment,
on the part of one or more of their number.
Primitive Mid-Week
Meetings
The early preachers, having monthly
appointments, were always very faithful in
exhorting and encouraging the elders of
their distant congregations to maintain
regular Sabbath services, for the study of
the Bible and Catechism, and a mid-week
meeting for praise and prayer. The people
were encouraged to attend all these meetings
and cordially co-operate with the elders in
making them interesting and instructive.
The older generation at Forest was one that
had a foretaste of slavery in their early
days, but not a day of school privileges,
except as the Bible was read or taught at
their meetings on the Sabbath. The lack of
school privileges in the neighborhood and
its remote seclusion from the outside world,
had the effect of leaving these colored
people to continue their primitive ways and
methods of doing things, to a later date
than in many other more highly favored
communities.
The following narrative contains an account
of the mid-week meetings held at Forest
about the year 1897 when Miss Bertha L.
Ahrens, a white missionary teacher of our
Freedmen's Board opened a mission school in
the chapel. It shows how the people that
lived in the gross darkness of utter
ignorance, groped for the light and
earnestly endeavored to extend it, when the
gospel was first presented to them.
The mid-week meetings are held regularly
when not prevented by rain or cold weather.
The people live in little shanties scattered
through the timber near springs of water and
are poorly clad. In good weather they "begin
to gather" about 8:30 p. m. and continue to
"gather" until 9:30, when Elder "B." taking
his place at the left of the pulpit,
"reckons that they's all here that's going
to com." Elder F. sits down beside him and
neither of them can read. Deacon L. who
serves as chorister, occupies a short seat
in front of the pulpit. The wives of the
elders, the lady missionary and other
leading sisters occupy seats-a bench-at the
right of the pulpit.
The meetings are opened by the deacon, who
reads two lines of a hymn and, winding out a
tune, the people unite in singing them. Two
more lines continue to be read and sung
until the hymn has been completed.
When the deacon is not present Elder "B."
says: "Will some of you select something to
sing?" If no brother is present, who can
read, a sister or the missionary, or perhaps
one of her school boys, may "line out" a
hymn and may even "raise it" but the tune
must be one "the old folks can sing." If the
one who "raises the tune" breaks down with
it, any one may pick it up and go on with it
to the end of the two lines that have been
"lined out."
The missionary's organ is in position ready
for use, but it must be silent in the prayer
meeting, and also at the preaching service.
It is a new and troublesome innovation. It
takes the prominence in the singing that
belongs to the officers of the Church. The
missionary cannot wind and slur the tunes on
it, the way the old folks have learned to
sing them, and it robs the singing of its
old-time sweetness and power. The organ
therefore remains silent.
After the first hymn, Elder "B." who never
allows any one else, not even the preacher,
to lead the prayer meeting, now calls on
some one to "read us a lesson from the
Bible." This was an innovation introduced
into the prayer meeting after the arrival of
the lady missionary. It is at first merely
tolerated; comments and explanations are
strictly forbidden. These restrictions in
regard to the Bible in the meeting were due
to the influence exerted by the wife of
Elder "B." who had been the first real
leader of the Church and was still regarded
as a "mother in Israel, whose opinions
should be respected." She felt that God had
taught her by visions and dreams, and
believed he would teach others the same way.
Elder "F." however, is not satisfied till he
and others have heard the "Word of God" and
permission to read it is given.
"Down to pray," is the next request of the
leader, and the voice of every one present
is expected to be heard in this part of the
meeting. A sister, whose seat is near a
window, begs the Lord to "come this-a-way,
just a little while, to lay his head in the
window and hear his servant pray." A brother
near the front door responds approvingly,
"Yes sir," and bids him, "Walk in, and take
a front seat." The prayer of a devout sister
after one or two petitions, becomes an
earnest exhortation to all the sinners to
repent and be saved.
Some seemed to believe their prayers have to
travel long journeys and are better long
than short. Some prayers are chanted with a
pleasing variety of the voice, while others
are agonized by using many repetitions. All
are witnessed to by "amen" and similar words
of attestation; for these are "live
Christians", and have no use for "dead
meetings."
Elder "F." who sits beside the leader,
sometimes insists on "making some remarks."
If the leader whispers to him "make it
short," and he does not give good heed, the
starting of a familiar hymn is the method
adopted to "bring him down."
At a meeting held on the forenoon of
Christmas, Elder "F." was feeling too happy
and grateful to restrain himself. His theme
was "Our Wonderful Savior," and he began to
exhort sinners to open their hearts to him.
He became so absorbed in the greatness and
importance of his theme as not to heed the
usual whisper of the leader or even the
starting of the familiar hymn. The situation
is one of embarrassment to the leader. The
one that proves equal to it is Elder "B.'s"
wife. She walks over to him, grabs him by
both arms and pushes him down on his seat,
saying, "Bud, you talks too much, sit down
now and keep still." She laughs as she says
this, the elder smiles as he sits down, and
the meeting proceeds in good form.
The usual way of closing the mid-week
meeting was about as follows: Elder "B."
says, "Well we's done about all we can do.
Let us sing something and go home." If elder
"F." does not call for the new hymn, they
have recently learned from the organ.
"Lord dismiss us with thy blessing," they
stand and sing a familiar one. Elder "B."
then says: "Amen!" and dismisses the
congregation with a wave of his hand.
In the Sunday school the attitude of the
people toward the Bible, the organ and the
lady missionary was altogether different.
Here she is the recognized leader, both in
the singing and Bible instruction. As they
profit by her instruction, and listen a few
times to some of their familiar hymns on the
organ, the younger people manifest pleasure
and delight and the early prejudices of the
older ones are gradually forgotten.
The first elders of Forest Church were Simon
Folsom, Charles Bibbs and Lee Bibbs. Charles
Bashears was soon afterward added to their
number and died in 1912. His wife exerted a
leading influence in the earlier years of
this Church.
The allotment of lands in 1905 made it
necessary to move Forest Church to another
location; and in 1909, it was moved about
two miles east in the valley of Red river.
Choctaw Freedmen
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includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
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Choctaw Freedmen and Oak Hill Industrial
Academy, 1914, Robert Elliott Flickinger
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