Bishop
Seybert Museum
and Archives
The museum
was established to honor Bishop John Seybert, the First Bishop
of the Evangelical Association, in 1975 for Seybert Church's
centennial
"How
beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that
bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace..."
- Unknown
Seybert
United Methodist Church (former Evangelical) of Bellevue, Ohio
is indebted to the United Methodist Historical Society of Ohio
as well as the East and West Ohio Commission on Archives and
History for permission to establish a repository for the personal
effects and historical articles pertaining to Bishop John Seybert,
first bishop of the former Evangelical church.
Bishop John
Seybert
1791-1860
It seems
entirely fitting that Seybert Church should house these items
of such a spiritual symbolism
and historic moment. Not only does Seybert Church bear the name
of this sainted circuit rider and evangelist, but its very location
bears out its suitability for the housing of these artifacts.
It is locatedabout half way between the site of the Historic
Parker house on Route 20 west where the Bishop died, and the
Old Stone Church near Flat Rock where his funeral was held,
and the nearby cemetery where he wasburied. (Both places have
been historic Shrines for over on hundred years.) Therefore
the esteem and regard for this pioneer evangelist of the former
Evangelical Church is today treasured in this community as in
no other place.
In ad dition
to the cooperation of the historical society and conference
archives and history commissions, Seybert Church acknowledges
the efforts of the General Commission on Archives and History
of the United Methodist Church of Madison, New Jersey. Seybert
church is indebted to the Rev. Jerry Evans, former pastor, who
first created the awareness of the spiritual heritage of the
church and through whose foresight and timely efforts, did much
to expedite the amassing of information concerning the whereabouts
of the personal effects of Bishop Seybert. We are also thankful
for the generosity of Dr.
Roy B. Leedy, the great historian and author of the Ohio Conference
of the former Evangelical Church in sharing his papers with
our archives center. These papers are a wealth of first hand
historical knowledge of the original Pioneers that made of the
Evangelical Association in Ohio in the 19th and 20th century.
Bishop
John Seybert, a bachelor, was born in Pennsylvania, and grew
up to be a circuit rider throughout the mid-west, including
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin as well as Pennsylvania,
New York, and even Ontario Canada. He gave forty years of service
to the Lord: First as an itinerant evangelical preacher, labeler
as a presiding elder of a district, and the last twenty years
as an itinerant Bishop. Tireless in pursuing his God-given call
he traveled during this long period of service, on foot, on
horseback, and in a horse-drawn wagon, a distance of 175,000
miles, preached 9850 sermons, held 8,000 prayer and class meeting,
made about 46,000 pastoral calls and made 10,000 calls on the
sick. It is doubtful if the extent of his travels could be equaled
by any other personage of his time. On the meager salary of
$100 per year, he often paid his own frugal expenses from his
salary.
In his
round of duties, no place was too far, no hour too late, no
effort too great for him to counsel with a person or to preach
to a gathering or to a congregation, in the interest of reaching
souls for Christ's Kingdom. Neither sickness nor weariness could
discourage him from continuing his travels. Often half-sick
from exposure (for he often slept outside) he nevertheless pursued
his daily travels and his preaching and exhorting duties.
Sensing
a great need for good reading to disseminate gospel truth, he
serves as a colporteur of many books and tracts in his journeys.
Cognizant of the scarcity of books in the Western area of the
church. He did more than any other person in the history of
the Evangelical church to transport books wherever they were
needed. Three times he brought a cargo of books across the mountains
of Pennsylvania to Ohio. In the year 1842 he brought 23,725
volumes to the Ohio Conference when it met.
After becoming
Bishop, John Seybert made fifteen trips to Ohio in the interest
of the church, and spent an average of one hundred sixty seven
days each year in Ohio. It seems fitting that his travel should
end in Ohio where he spent himself so much in loving and sacrificial
service. Thus it was at the Isaac Parker home where the Bishop
stopped, being grievously ill, and where he died on January
4, 1860, at the age of sixty eight years.
Among
the many articles on display relating to Bishop Seybert, some
merit special attention and description. Perhaps the most outstanding
is the spring wagon, the third and last he owned. It stands
in a special place of honor inside the main entrance of the
church. The Bishop's German Bible in it's leather case is especially
meaningful, His English and German New Testament was placed
in the cornerstone of the former Seybert Church building on
East Main Street when it was built. The Bible was moved to our
present cornerstone when the current church building was built.
Seybert
Church deems it a privilege and honor to be the custodian of
these efforts and enthusiasm of museum pieces so fraught with
spiritual significance. May Seybert Church never lose the thrill
of a glorious past, especially as lived out in the life of Bishop
John Seybert, and may she draw from it the stimulating challenge
to serve well the future. As was spoken in the Book of Daniel:;
John Seybert did indeed, "Turn Many to Righteousness."
The
prayer of Seybert Church is:
"O God, to us may grace be given to follow in his footsteps."

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