First Free Will Baptist Church of Blountstown, Inc. v. Franklin

4 So. 2d 390, 148 Fla. 277, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 880
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 21, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 So. 2d 390 (First Free Will Baptist Church of Blountstown, Inc. v. Franklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Free Will Baptist Church of Blountstown, Inc. v. Franklin, 4 So. 2d 390, 148 Fla. 277, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 880 (Fla. 1941).

Opinion

Chapman, J.

The record here discloses that the Blountstown First Free Will Baptist Church was organized during the year 1919, and on July 26, 1920, G. F. Tucker and wife, Mary Ida Tucker, conveyed to the First Free Will Baptist Church of Blountstown, and E. S. Streetman and J. W. Causey, Deacons of said Church, and their successors, certain real estate situated in the Town of Blountstown; and an old school house was converted into a church building and religious services were held therein for a number of years; and in 1933 or 1934 the church roll contained approximately one hundred members.

The Salem Association of which the Blountstown Church was a member, along with several othei churches of similar faith located in West Florida, held quarterly and annual meetings and well kept minutes of some of these annual meetings appear as evidence in the record. The membership of the Blountstown Church, in 1933 or 1934, divided over the *279 selection of a minister. The church prior and sub sequent thereto, was a member of the Salem Association of Free Will Baptists. The Salem Association in turn possessed membership in the National Association of Freewill Baptist Churches. .

Pertinent and material portions of Articles of Faith and Rules for Church government of the Freewill Baptist Church, as contained in “Treatise of the Faith and Practice of the Free Will Baptist,” are viz:

“The Holy Scriptures
“Chapter in. Divine Government and Providence.
“1. God exercises a providential care and superintendence over all his creatures, and governs the world in wisdom and mercy, according to the testimony of His Word.”
Chapter I. The Church
“Section II. — Officers of The Church.
“The church then proceeds to elect its officers, which are a clerk, a treasurer, a pastor who acts as moderator in all church meetings, and a board of deacons, who, with the pastor, clerk and treasurer, constitute a committee to promote order, activity, attendance on the means of grace, and efficient discipline of the church. Deacons should possess sound piety, good business capacity, and large benevolence; they should be ordained by prayer, and the laying on of hands by the presbytery; they hold their office for life, or during the maintenance of good moral character and sound doctrine; they assist at baptism and the Lord’s Supper, have care of the poor, and conduct religious meetings, in the absence of the pastor.
*280 “Section III. — Meetings of the Church.
“(5) Questions of fellowship and expulsion are settled by vote of the majority present, provided that if only a minority of the resident membership is present, a majority of all such members at a fuller meeting may reconsider the action and re-investigate the subject. But a vote of the majority of all the resident members is always final; and the Quarterly Meeting has no power to reverse it, but may, if deemed necessary, withdraw the hand of fellowship from a church as a whole when its action is inconsistent with sound doctrine of Christian policy.
“Sec. V. — Government of the Church.
“1. The local church is an independent body, so far as it relates to its own government, the transaction of its business, the choice of its officers, and the discipline of its members.”
Chapter III. Quarterly Meetings
“Section III. — Discipline of the Quarterly Meeting.
“1. A Quarterly Meeting cannot deprive a church of its independent form of government, nor its right to discipline its own members, nor labor with individual members of churches as such; but, as the church is a member of the Quarterly Meeting, it has the right to labor with the church as a body in case of unscriptural or disorderly walk, and may determine whether the church is worthy of its fellowship or not.”
*281 “Chapter IV. Yearly Meetings or Associations
“Section III. — Discipline of Yearly Meeting or Association.
“1. Every Yearly Meeting or Association has the same right to discipline the Quarterly Meetings of which it is composed, as a Quarterly Meeting has to discipline the churches which belong to it, and for the same reasons. The Yearly Meeting or Association cannot reverse the decisions of a Quarterly Meeting, nor labor with individual churches; but it can labor with the Quarterly Meeting as a body, in case the Quarterly Meeting pursues an unscriptural or disorderly course.”
“Chapter V. The Eastern General Association and The Western General Association United Form The National Association.
“Sec. 1. — Design of the Association.
“1. The Eastern General Association and the Western General Association are designed to comprise all the Annual Associations in the Free Will Baptist denomination, and to complete the organization of the connection in one national body; to consolidate the body by harmonizing its different parts, keeping a common interest in view, and producing unity of sentiment and discipline; to concentrate its strength in the common cause of the Redeemer; and, by a fraternal inter-change of views among its members, to promote growth in grace and knowledge of Gospel Truth.”
*282 “Constitution
“Article V. — Discipline.
“This National Association shall have the right to settle any question of discipline, doctrine or usage that may properly come before it from either of the bodies composing said organization of the National Association of the Free Will Baptist Church, or act upon any appeal that may be made by any body belonging to this National Association. Said appeal shall have been written and properly signed by the constituent body or bodies, and its decision shall be final. Such appeals are to come before the National Association, after having been appealed from the lower body to the next higher body.
“Sec. 2. All appeals coming before the National Association may be settled in either of the following ways: (1) By the National Association when sitting in a Committee as a whole. (2) By a special committee whose report shall be voted on without discussion.”

An allegation in the answer of the defendants is to the effect that during the year 1930 the Blountstown Association merged with the West Florida Liberty Association of Free Will Baptist, and there is testiingmony to sustain this view. There is testimony showing that the Blountstown church had membership in the Salem Association of Free Will Baptist Churches.

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4 So. 2d 390, 148 Fla. 277, 1941 Fla. LEXIS 880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-free-will-baptist-church-of-blountstown-inc-v-franklin-fla-1941.