delivered the opinion of tiie majority of the court :
This litigation between conflicting sections of a once harmonious, but now discordant body of Presbyterians, involves fundamental principles in church and State peculiar to our own jurisprudence, and essential to the purity of religion and to the civil liberty contemplated by the Constitutions of the Anglo-American Union and States.
As early as the year 1828, a Presbyterian Church, called the “Bethel Union,” was organized in Marion county, Kentucky. In the year 1857, the appellant, B. N. Penick, who was a member of that church, conveyed to Chandler and others, in trust for its use, several acres of land, on *114which it erected a new house of worship. That dedication was to “The Bethel Union Church” without any other description or limitation. At that time this church was affiliated with the “New School” organization of Presbyterianism. The deed of 1857, duly acknowdedged and recorded, was burnt with the records of the clerk’s office in the year 1863; and Penick, in the year 1865, made, without authority, another conveyance of the same house and ground to other trustees for the use of the “ Bethel Union Church, adhering to the General Assembly.'''’ Nearly a year after the conveyance of 1857, the members of the “ Bethel Union ” unanimously joined the “ Old School ” organization.
Until about the year 1861, the members of this church appear to have harmonized as a fraternal unit in the use of the church property, and afterwards to have continued, though rather discordantly, the joint use of it, until the year 1867, when certain “ deliverances,” and other disturbing acts of the General Assembly, hereafter to be considered, had culminated in a partial disruption of the Presbyterian Church as a national unity. After that catastrophe, the appellee, Penick, and about half of the other members of the “ Bethel Union,” adhered to the General Assembly, and the appellant, Gartin, and his associates, co-operated with the protesting party. Penick and his concurrent associates asserted and strove to maintain a right to the exclusive use of the church property, while Gartin and his party, asserting the like right, proposed, as a compromise, an equal and alternate enjoyment of the property. This conflict resulted in this appeal by both parties to the civil tribunals of the State ;■ and here, without now noticing the voluminous pleadings and testimony, it is sufficient to say, that the circuit court adjudged to the appellees the exclusive use of all the *115property of the “Bethel Union” Church; and that, by this appeal, the appellants seek a reversal of that judgment.
In revising the case, this court, in the logical and necessary order of consideration, must first dispose of the controverted question of jurisdiction by the civil power of the State, and which both parties acknowledged by invoking its intervention.
A church, like every other organized body of citizens, must be consolidated by an organic law; and, under and according to the Constitution of the United States, the organic law of the Presbyterian Church is a fundamental compact, voluntarily made between all the members of the unincorporated association, for the guidance and protection of each constituent church and member, and necessarily inviolable by any delegated poioer of the aggregate church. Its supremacy over all representative organs deriving their authority from it, and therefore subordinate to it, was the great end, and must be the necessary consequence of its adoption. It defines the sphere of the “ General Assembly,” as the organized representative of all the members of the Presbyterian Church, as a Christian nationality, subordinate to the political sovereignty of the civil union, which is as supreme over members of churches as over any other citizens. Hence, all acts of the General Assembly not sanctioned by its own, as well as the Federal Constitution, are, like ultra-constitutional acts of Congress, void; and that which is void can impose no obligation, even on the conscience. As no act of an agent is the act of the principal, except so far as it was authorized by the charter or other contract of delegation, so the constituent body in either church or State is not bound by any act of its organic representative — legislative, judicial, or executive — unauthorized by *116its charter of authority. No such unauthorized act of Congress or of the General Assembly can be law; and it is even a misnomer to call it, as it is loosely called, “ an unconstitutional law," instead of an unconstitutional act; for, being as much a legal nullity as if it had never been enacted, it is, in no sense, law, which is necessarily sujxrremeys-
The Presbyterian Church is certainly as much bound as Congress by the Federal Constitution; and all its members are subordinate to that and the State Constitutions, which are supreme over all citizens in every condition. So far as civil rights and duties are concerned, the civil government has the supreme authority to rule; and, to that extent, every citizen of every grade and condition owes a paramount allegiance to that sovereignty, and is reciprocally entitled to its protection over all other human power.
The fundamental institutions of this hopeful and eventful country of ours contemplate the liberty and progress of the human race — liberty in its sterling and most comprehensive sense, and progress upward and onward; and, as adaptable governments are indispensable to these beneficent ends, we have two kinds of government, congenially moulded and intended for hai-monious co-operation — the one political and the other ecclesiastical — each aiming at the security of liberty, civil and religious. But, according to the Constitution of the United States, politics and religion move in separate spheres, clearly defined; and the tutelar genius of this impcrium in imperio guards each from either consolidation or encroachment by one on the peculiar province of the other.
Christianity, though an essential element of conservatism, and a great moral power in the State, should yet only work by love, and inscribe the laws of liberty and *117light on the heart; and the civil government has no just or lawful power over the conscience, or faith or forms of worship, or church creeds or discipline, as long as their fruits neither unhinge civil supremacy, demoralize society, nor disturb its peace or security. Pure Christianity can live only in a serene atmosphere, unagitated by politics and unpolluted by hierarchical tyranny in any form over the conscience. This is the Christian’s charter from the founder of his religion; and it is equally true that the ecclesiastical should not interfere with the political government otherwise than by the influence of moral suasion and a Godlike example.
The political government is founded on the civil Constitution; the ecclesiastical, on the Bible; but the Bible and the Constitution harmonize in aim and in spirit, and religion and politics should go hand in hand together, each equally free, and neither presuming to control the other in its legitimate sphere. This is the true, and only true, illustration of the modern maxim, that church and State should be kept separate. It is the vital principle of both civil and. religious liberty, and its universal prevalence would secure liberty, purify religion, and promote the welfare of mankind.
In the administration of this dual government, justly styled North American, let the political power confine itself to secular, and the ecclesiastical to spiritual interests and concerns, and all may be well, as anticipated by our fathers; and these fundamental doctrines are recognized alike by the Bible and by the Constitution, and are also ratified by the organic law of the Presbyterian Church of these United States.
Antecedently to the memorable year of 1788, the Presbyterian Churches in the United States, like their parental Church of Scotland, ruled by Sessions, Presbyteries, and *118Synods, acknowledged a connection between church and State; but in that year, nearly simultaneously with the adoption of the Federal Constitution, those American churches confederated under a national head, called the General Assembly, then organized by an amended constitution for representing all the subordinate councils, and for acting as the ultimate council for revision and advice in the ecclesiastical affairs of the aggregated church ; and that modified constitution, coevally and concurrently with the political Constitution of the United States, denounced all connection between the ecclesiastical and political governments, and pledged that church to the following fundamental docti’ines:
“ God alone is the Lord of the conscience, and hath left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men, which are in everything contrary to His word, or beside it, in matters of faith or worship; so that to believe such doctrines, or to obey such commandments out of conscience, is to betray true liberty of conscience; and the requiring an implicit faith, and an absolute and blind obedience, is to destroy liberty of conscience and reason also.” (2d sec., chap. 20, of Confession of Faith, p. 113.)
The 2d section of the 31st chapter of the Confession of Faith, as a part of the organic law of the church, defines the jurisdiction of synods and councils, and confines it to controversies of faith and cases of conscience, rules for public worship and government of the church, and “ complaints in cases of maladministration,” and, repudiating any other than moral coercion, prescribes “reverence and submission” as the only sanctions of “ their decrees and determinations, if consonant with the word of God;” and the third and fourth sections are as follows:
*1193d. “ All synods or councils, since the Apostles’ times, whether general or particular, may err, and may have erred; therefore, they are not to be made the rule of faith or practice, but to be used-as a help in both.”
4th. “ Synods and councils are to handle or conclude nothing but that which is ecclesiastical, and are not to intermeddle with civil affairs which concern the Commonwealth, unless by humble petition in cases extraordinary, or by way of advice for satisfaction of conscience, if they be thereunto required by the civil magistrate.”
The political constitutions of the National and each of the State governments recognize, in various modes, these fundamental principles and doctrines of both church and State; and thus we may see that all our organic institutions harmonize on this delicate and interesting subject. Consequently, to a rational mind as free as a tabula rasa, there can be no plausible doubt that the General Assembly, as the head of the Presbyterian Church, can have no reasonable pretense for attempting control over any civil right or duty; and that no department of the civil power has any semblance of authority to secularize the church, or interfere with the acts of the General Assembly in constitutionally exercising its ecclesiastical jurisdiction; but the organic law of the church, like that of the State, being a contract between all the parties to it, and the members of the church being entitled, as citizens, to the protection of the paramount constitution of the State against all wrongful breaches of their contracts, the civil tribunals must have some rightful jurisdiction over the constitution of the church as a contract not less obligatory than any other contract between competent parties; and those tribunals must have jurisdiction also to protect a member of the church against unconstitutional invasion of his *120fundamental right to personal liberty and security, whenever attempted by his ecclesiastical government inconsistently with either its own constitution or that of the political government. A contrary assumption would magnify the General Assembly beyond the sphere of its own oi'ganic law, and install it as an arbitrary, infallible, and final power above all constitutional restraint; and would thus exile members of the church from the guardianship of the civil and only supreme human power, which is bound to protect them as well as all other citizens in their property and personal liberty; but, as they joined the church with a knowledge of its defined powers, and as the civil power cannot interfere in matters of conscience, faith, or discipline, they must submit to rebuke or excommunication, however unjust, by their adopted spiritual advisers and ecclesiastical rulers. So far the jurisdiction of the General Assembly is exclusive and final; but it has no such jurisdiction over property, nor any authority to imprison a member of the church, whose locomotive liberty as a citizen must be protected by the civil power against all ecclesiastic or other usurpation.
Having thus drawn the line imperfectly, but, as we think, truly, between civil and ecclesiastical power and jurisdiction, we may be content with making it more luminous and certain by a reference to a few adjudged cases in Scotland and England corroborating our general theory, and substantially confirmed by many American adjudications which we need not cite. All those cases involved the principles which control this case,/
We cite the following cases only: Craigdaltie’s case on an appeal from the Scotch' Session to the British House of Lords, Paton’s Appl., Rep. VI, 626; Galbreath vs. Smith, 15 Shaw, 808; the Kirkintillock case, 12 Dunlop, 523; Forbes *121vs. Eden, by the House of Lords; Dunbar vs. Skinner, 11 Dow’s Appl. Rep. These cases establish, for Great Britain, the jurisdiction of civil tribunals over controverted claims to the use of church property, and throw light on the boundary of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. In the first case in which civil jurisdiction was recognized by the House of Lords, Lord Eldon said that there was no doubt that, if an estate be conveyed to “ trustees to be used for the purposes of religious worship, the courts of the country, acting on the principles of toleration, will enforce those persons to permit the property to be used for the purposes of that religious worship to which it was devoted.” And in most of the cited cases the court assumed that, to settle the title in cases of schism, the faith and doctrines of each class of conflicting claimants may be considered incidentally for identifying the true beneficiaries, but not for revision of their creeds on the question of comparative orthodox}*.
If these be sound doctrines in a country where there is an established church connected with the civil power, and where Presbyterianism is non-conformity, and therefore unpatronized, and only tolerated, they must be, as often adjudged, sound here, where all forms and denominations are equally protected by the civil power, and unconnected with it.
Without more elaboration, we conclude that our jurisdiction in this case is sufficiently established by policy, principle, and authority^
This conclusion is perfectly consistent with the constitutional freedom of religion, the true interests of the Presbyterian Church, and the rightful and peaceful authority of its General Assembly; and the faithful exercise of the political and ecclesiastical jurisdictions, as thus defined, without the assumption of more by either power, would *122harmonize religion and politics, liberate the church and the State, from strife and entanglement with each other, aid civil liberty, and promote the concord and purity and righteous progress of the church itself.
The opposite course would soon, even in this tolerant country and liberalized age — as always hitherto and elsewhere — adulterate the church, jeopard the peace and stability of the republic, and lead to an unhealthy consolidation which would degrade both the civil and ecclesiastic power from the lofty and self-poised position which they once mutually maintained.
The second question to be now considered is less important, but more difficult, than the first just disposed of in this opinion. Whether the appellants or the appellees, as now constituting separate churches, are entitled to the exclusive or alternate use of the property claimed by each party, depends on the essential identity of one or both of them with the Bethel Union Church to whose use that property was dedicatecL^-''
“ While the general desire of courts of law is to avoid ecclesiastical or spiritual questions, they find it impossible wholly to do so. If a body of men have wrongful possession of a church or of a sum of money, on the pretense, for example, that they are the religious body to which the money or the building was destined, their opponents have no way of redressing the wrong and vindicating their own right, except by appealing to the civil tribunals of the country; and civil tribunals have no means of doing justice except by investigating into the differences of doctrine, discipline, or practice, which, to the litigants, may be religious differences, but to the judge are mere matters of fact, bearing on a question of civil right.” (“ The Law of Creeds, in Scotland,” by an eminent jurist, p. 323.)
*123This is pre-eminently true in this country, where all property is secured by the supreme law of the civil power, and must be protected by the judiciary of that power, which, on all conflicting claims, must decide on the facts, whatever they may be, on which the title depends.- • The first section of article 12, of the Form of Government, page 429, makes the General Assembly “the highest judicatory of the Presbyterian Church; ” and the sixth section, page 431, declares that no amendment to the constitution shall be obligatory until ratified by a majority of all the Presbyteries of the United States.
The seventh section of chapter 1, page 408, declares that “ the Holy Scriptures are the only rule of faith and manners; that no church judicatory ought to pretend to make laws to bind the conscience in virtue of their own authority; and that all their decisions should be founded on the revealed will of God.” And the second section, chapter 8, page 418, provides that “ those assemblies ought not to possess any civil jurisdiction nor to injlict any civil penalties; their power is wholly moral or spiritual, and that only ministerial and declarative,''
//From the pleadings and proofs, the judicial deduction is inevitable that the appellants and the appellees, as now organized, constitute separate and antagonistic churches, each claiming to be the church to which the property in litigation was dedicated; and, consequently, the question now to be decided is one of identity, involving in its solution the equitable title to property dependent on contract, \yhich this court must, when, as in this case, appealed to, interpret and uphold as well between ecclesiastical as civil bodies, or any other parties. The contract is purely civil, and not ecclesiastical, and the usufructuary rights resulting from it depend on the laws of the land, and not on the arbitrium of the Gen*124eral Assembly of the church, which has no civil power; but within the limits of the political and ecclesiastical constitutions, has supreme and final jurisdiction over church doctrines and discipline. The jurisdiction of the civil tribunals over church property does not, therefore, conflict with the exclusive jurisdiction of the General Assembly in the plenitude of its ecclesiastical power, either legislative or judicial. Without interfering with religious liberty, this court could not control or mould the faith or doctrines of the church; nor could it, consistently with the spirit of our institutions, authoritatively settle questions of orthodoxy or optimity among professing Christians. But, so far as the identity of the respective claimants with the beneficiary to whom the church property was dedicated may be affected by their doctrines or by the acts of the General Assembly, the essential coincidence of the doctrines and the legal effect of those acts must necessarily be considered for the purpose of deciding the question of title to the property without concluding the General Assembly, in any way, in its own proper jurisdiction in its ecclesiastical domain. This is no interference with vital Christianity, but leaves it free and undisturbed by the civil powder, and may check its inter-meddling, as an organic power, with civil and political rights, as individual citizens, whether in or out of the church, might rightfully do.
The pleadings and preponderating evidence authorize the judicial deduction that Penick’s conveyance of 1857 is the only legal document of title to the church property, and the conclusion also that it conveyed the property simply to the church, without regard to its external connections with the Old School General Assembly, but only as a Presbyterian organization; and this last conclusion is fortified by the fact that the beneficiary was then at*125tached to the New School separatists from, the Old School of Presbyterianism. It appears that the appellants, as now organized into a distinct church, independent of that of the appellees, both styled “ Bethel Union,” still adhere to the same doctrines and observances which characterized the “Bethel Union Church” at the date of that conveyance; while the appellees recognize the ultimate supremacy of the General Assembly over their church and its property, and the duty of all subordinate churches connected with that headship to submit to all its ordinances, and other acts of administration. Then the appellants constitute the identical church to whose use the deed of 1857 dedicated the property, although they do not adhere to the General Assembly, but stand independently of it, as the same church, including the appellees, did when the deed teas made.
The fact that, some time after that conveyance, the members of that united church unanimously left the New and joined the Old School, did not either affect their identity, or,pcr se, subject their property to the jurisdiction of the General Assembly, or change their tenure of it so as to make it dependent on adherence to that council. According to this conclusion, the appellants, as a distinct church, are entitled to participation in the use of the dedicated property; but whether that right be exclusive or only alternate, we are not required to adjudge in this case.
But the appellees assume, that when the deed of 1857 was made, the members of the then undivided Bethel Union, attached to the New School party, contemplated a junction with the Old School, as afterwards, in less than a year, accomplished; and that, therefore, they expected to hold the property on condition of adherence to the General Assembly, and are as much subject to *126that contingent tenure as they would be had the deed itself so provided. This hypothesis is difficult to maintain on this record. But its truth would not, though presenting a new phase, essentially affect the title to the church property, because, as we shall now proceed to argue and adjudge, unconstitutional acts of the General Assembly detached the appellants from its jurisdiction.
From their first connection with that council until the churches, as well as the States, had become 'distracted by the late civil convulsion, the members of the Bethel Union Church had been signally blessed by Christian fraternity and concord, and,, without disturbance, harmonized with the General Assembly; but the stultifying passions excited by that revolutionary commotion developed a general demoralization, as contagious in our ecclesiastical as in our political councils. In the rapid progress of moral deterioration, Congress and the General Assembly, each representing the Union section of the belligerents, seemed to co-operate, pari passu, in proscribing the revolting section and its sympathizers everywhere, and each body assumed undelegated powers, especially for enforcing “ loyalty” and the abolition of slavery. Antecedently to that elemental war, fanatical abolitionists had, by premature and lawless disturbance of that domestic institution of many of the States, frenzied the popular mind and jeoparded the Union; and many professors of Christianity had sympathized with them in their reckless crusade, in defiance of the prophetic warnings of the most eminent and philanthropic of American Christians and statesmen.
But the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, while often counseling Presbyterians against patronizing slavery, had never advised a war against it, or made *127opposition to it a test of religion, until tbe civil conflict had become flagrant. In the year 1838, the General Assembly published the following declaration: “ The disposition among God’s people is to be carried away with the exciting topics of discussion of the present day. Many of God’s people, instead of lending their talents, their influence, and their feelings to the great work of saving sinners, have given them another direction. They have assisted in attracting the attention of the church and the world to other objects, which have so effectually engrossed the mind as to exclude the peaceful truths of the Gospel and prevent their efficacy.” We will see whether this home-made cap does not fit the late assemblies.
In the year 1845,, the following question was propounded to the General. Assembly: “ Do the Scriptures teach that the holding of slaves, without regard to circumstances, is a sin, the renunciation of which should be made a condition of membership in the Church of Christ?” And the Assembly answered that question in the following words: “ It is impossible to answer the question in the affirmative without contradicting some of the plainest declarations of the word of God. That slavery existed in the days of Christ and his Apostles, is an admitted fact; that they did not denounce the relation as sinful, as inconsistent with Christianity; that slaveholders were admitted to membership in the churches organized by the Apostles; that, whilst they wmre required to treat their slaves with kindness, and, if Christians, as brethren in the Lord, they were not commanded to emancipate them. The Assembly cannot, therefore, denounce the holding of slaves as necessarily a heinous and scandalous sin, calculated to bring on the Church of Christ the curse of God, without charging the Apostles of Christ with conniving at sin, introducing into the *128church such sinners, and then bringing upon them the curse of the Almighty.” We will also see whether late Assemblies have not tattered and torn this graceful cap.
These noble principles and prudent sentiments seem to have been faithfully observed by the Assembly until the year 1861; and, had that observance been continued until now, it might have been better for the Union, better for peace, better for both races, white and black, and much better for the cause of pure and evangelical religion. But that elevated neutrality in politics, which had eminently characterized the General Assembly in successive agitations of slavery, nullification, national bank, annexation of Texas, and other disturbing questions, yielding at last to the spirit of the civil war, the General Assembly, sitting in Philadelphia in the year 1861, so far fell from grace as to inaugurate its political partisanship, by a resolution pledging its devotion to the Union, and its support of the Federal administration in its efforts to put down the rebellion. The Synods of Kentucky, Missouri, New Jersey, £nd Pennsylvania, and many Presbyteries, recorded their disapprobation of that initial “ deliverance” as unconstitutional and pregnant with mischief. The language of the Kentucky protest, moulded by two of her most distinguished Doctors of Divinity, the Rev. R. J. Breckinridge and E. P. Humphrey, was as follows : “ This Synod contents itself with the expression of its grave disapprobation of this action of the General Assembly, which the Synod judges to be repugnant to the word of God, as that word is interpreted in our Confession of Faith.'”
The Synod of Missouri resolved, “ that the action of the General Assembly, in relation to the political condition of the country, was unscriptural, unconstitutional, unwise, and unjust; and we, therefore, solemnly protest *129against it, and declare it of no binding force whatever upon the Synod, or upon the members of the Presbyterian Church within our bounds.”
Concerning the protest of the Kentucky Synod, the Genera] Assembly of 1862 declared that “ the General Assembly cannot approve of the Synod’s disapproval of the action of the Assembly of 1861.”
Thus a firebrand was thrown into the bosom of the church, which was fanned into a consuming flame by subsequent and more incendiary acts of the General Assembly, which became more and more sectional and self-secularized. The Assembly of 1862 also declared that the church was “ agitated everywhere in the country, divided in sentiment in many places, and was openly assailed by schism in a large section of it;” that the Assembly had “ the authority of the glorified Saviour, who was also the Sovereign Ruler of all things, to give utterance to the church, the people, and to the civil authorities,” and then made this utterance : “ This whole treason, rebellion, anarchy, fraud, violence, is utterly contrary to the dictates of natural religion and morality, and is plainly condemned by the revealed will of God ; ” also, that “ disturbers of the church ought not to be allowedand finally, that “it may be wrell for this General Assembly to reaffirm, as it now solemnly does, the great principles to which utterance has already been given. We do this the more readily because our beloved church may then be understood to take her deliberate and well chosen standi'’ This cap well befits the head of its manufacturer.'
While President Lincoln’s proclamation of emancipation had aggravated the horrors of the war, and perverted it.from a defense of the Union into a military crusade against slavery, the General Assembly of 1864, without disguise, boldly entered'the political field, and *130espoused the cause of extirpating that domestic institution at once by force and in blood. It then made the following declarations: “ The Assembly, in the name of the Presbyterian Church, expresses her thanks to Almighty God that the President of the United States has proclaimed the abolition of slavery within most of the rebellious States, and has decreed its extinction by military force. He has ordered the enlistment of soldiers of those formerly held as slaves in the national armies. It is the President's declared, policy not to consent to the reorganization of civil government within the seceded States upon any other basis than that of emancipation
"Our communion must also be mindful of the fact that now, while multitudes of these freedmen are taught the use of arms, and have been trained in military tactics, and, inspired with the thought that they are now called of God to conquer for their people a position among the races of mankind," &c.
How far these extraordinary declarations of presumptuous dogmas, which have long vexed enlightened jurists and philanthropists, were consistent with the Constitution or the Bible, or wise economy or humanity, this court will not presume to say; but it must say, that they signalized the Assembly as an intermeddling and revolutionary partisan in an unconstitutional, unholy, and bloody work of abolition by armies, and even servile war and insurrection.
The Assembly of 1865, after the close of the war, ordered all Presbyteries to examine southern applicants for admission into the church on the subjects of the rebellion and slavery, and to reject all who should admit their agency in the revolt, or their belief that slavery is an ordinance of God, unless “ they give evidence of repentance for their sin and renounce their error.” It also en*131dorsed all the acts of the administration during the war, and specially approved the military intervention of General Rosecrans in the organization of Presbyterian courts in Missouri, and published, what might have been expected, that “ the spirit of true worship has almost fled from the sanctuary; ” and of that decay of the Christian spirit of faith and love, the belligerent conduct of the Assembly itself, contrary to both the ecclesiastical and civil constitutions, was not only proof, but an efficient cause.
As might have been expected, if the free and self-poised spirit of true Christianity still lived in the Presbyterian Churches, many of them remonstrated against the political interferences and intolerant proscriptions by the Assembly, as manifested by most of the foregoing “ deliverances.”
The most conspicuous of these protests was an argumentative document called “ The Declaration and Testimony ,” signed by a multitude of Kentucky Presbyterians, and adopted by the Presbytery of Louisville in September, 1865. After arguing to prove the unconstitutionality of some of the Assembly’s deliverances since 1861, and especially those of 1864 and 1865 on loyalty and slavery, this famous protest concludes in the following language :
“We declare our deliberate purpose, trusting in God, who can save by few as well as by many, to use our best endeavors to bring back the church of our fathers to her ancient purity and integrity, upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, and under the banner of our .only King, Priest, and Prophet, the Lord Jesus Christ. In this endeavor we pledge ourselves to assist and co-operate with each other. And, by the grace of God, we will never abandon the effort, no matter what sacrifices it may require us to make, until we shall either have succeeded in reforming the church and restoring her tarnished glory, *132or, failing in this, necessity shall be laid on us, in obedience to apostolic command, to withdraw from those who have departed from the- truth. Compelled to this coui-se, we will go, bearing with us the true Presbyterian Church, with her doctrine, order, worship, and freedom, as they have been given her by the Divine Head, and transmitted from generation to generation by the hands of saints, confessors, and martyrs.”
The General Assembly of 1866 condemned that document “ as a slander against the Presbyterian Church, schismatical in its character and aims, and its adoption by any of our church courts as an act of rebellion against the authorities of the General Assembly;” and, arraigning the signers and Presbytery at Louisville for trial at the next General Assembly, resolved, that “ until their case is decided, they shall not be permitted to sit as members of any church court higher than the Session; ” and also declared, that if any Presbytery should, during that suspension, enrol any such person, it should be “ ipso facto dissolved.”
The Assembly of 1867 required the remonstrants to make humiliating acknowledgments as a sine qua non to their restoration ; and declared that all who should refuse to make such concessions should “ be dropped from the roll, as having voluntarily withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the Presbyterian Church of the United States of America, under the care of the General Assembly; and they shall thenceforth be regarded as being no longer ministers in or members of said Presbyterian Church
There were then in Kentucky six Presbyteries, one hundred and sixty-three churches, one hundred and eight ministers, and nearly twelve thousand members of the Presbyterian denomination; and of these, only thirty-two ministers, twenty-eight churches, and about eighteen *133hundred members, adhered to the General Assembly; and the residue, constituting a very large majority, unwilling to submit to what they held to be unscriptural and unconstitutional orders of the General Assembly, united on the “Declaration and Testimony” platform, and were, for this heroic recusancy, and for imputed insubordination and contempt, irregularly exscinded without trial. A recital of all the intermediate proceedings by all parties is deemed useless in the decision of this case. They all betray the same unsanctified temper.
The appellees, submitting to the General Assembly, and recognizing its asserted powers, continued under its assumed jurisdiction; but the appellants, uniting with the non-conformists, reorganized themselves as the Bethel Union Church, under the auspices of the excommunicated party. These conflicting communities of a dissevered church no longer communed together; but, by amicable arrangement, each party occupied the same house of worship on alternate days — the appellants on the first and third, and the appellees on the second and fourth Sabbaths of each month; but finally, the appellees, claiming the exclusive use of it, attempted to exclude the appellants altogether; and this litigation is the monstrous offspring of that unrighteous conflict.
“ The Declaration and Testimony ” was neither insubordinate nor contemptuous, unless it be insubordinate to act according to religious conscience, and contemptuous to vindicate the act by decent argument and bold appeal to the Bible, to the example of the Founder of Christianity, and to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and of that of the Presbyterian Church founded expressly on the revealed will of God, all of which are supreme over the will of the General Assembly. Entertaining the opinions and principles which the *134remonstrants professed, they not only had a. moral and constitutional right to protest, as they did, but would have been guilty of recreance from their sacred duty had they, by servile submission to a false notion of the infallibility and supremacy of the Assembly, sacrilegiously stifled conscience, and prostituted religion at the shrine of usurped power. Right or wrong in their sentiments, they preferred the martyrdom of excommunication to hypocritical recantation and unconscientious co-opera.tion in what they felt to be a wrongful perversion of free religion to an illicit connection with turbulent politics, and thereby adulterating both civil and ecclesiastical government; but for this manifesto and a consistent adherence to it, the Assembly renounced all connection with them. This it had the constitutional power to do, without civil remedy for any abuse of that mere power. Nevertheless, if its acts which were complained of were unconstitutional, and therefore void, the expulsion cannot affect property which the civil tribunals are bound to protect. Then, were any of those acts unconstitutional ? We think that they were demonstrably so. But we deem it sufficient to illustrate this conclusion by the deliverances of 1864-’5 on loyalty and slavery. These, at all times, would have been unauthorized interferences with civil affairs; but the crisis aggravated their flagrancy. The seceding States asserted the doctrine of paramount allegiance to the individual States; the non-seceding claimed it for the Union; and this conflict of radical principles was an efficient cause of the insurrectional war. This difference in theory was not less sectional than the war itself. Each section denounced as treason what was loyalty in the other; and even in the Union sections there were various notions of loyalty to the National Government. While many rightly considered *135devotion to the Constitution as the only true loyalty, a majority treated it as disloyalty when not subservient to all the acts of the Federal administration, constitutional or unconstitutional, right or wrong'.
The sentiment on the subject of slavery was also essentially sectional, and was the proximate cause of the war. One party considered it a sin, and, treating it as a crime, advocated its extinction at any time, under all circumstances, and, by all possible means. Many of the pro-slavery party tolerated it as legal, and others considered it a providential blessing to the black race, by translating barbarous and hopeless Africans to America, where they were rescued from the worst form o.f slavery, and secured from the doom of sacrifice, always imminent in their native country, and were gradually civilized and Christianized for their own exaltation and for the regeneration of their fatherland. They also thought that, wdien the white and black races co-exist on the same territory in such relative proportions as in this country, the security of both races required the subordination of the black to the white race, and that such subordination could not be secured otherwise than by slavery in some form; that, in the providence of God, those races are immiscible without great deterioration of the Caucasian blood and degradation of society; that the Union would never have been formed had not its architects conceded to each State the exclusive right to control all its domestic relations; and that, therefore, the Federal Government had no right, in any mode, to interfere w7ith the institution of slavery; that the abolition of slavery, to be tolerable, must be spontaneous and gradual; and that the immediate and forcible emancipation of four millions of slaves would be a greater curse to both races than American slavery could be felt to be by any con*136siderate abolitionist; and this was the opinion of Henry Clay, a lifetime emancipationist, and also of Abraham Lincoln, who, though zealously anti-slavery, yet, not two weeks before the promulgation of his emancipation proclamation, published that he had no power to abolish slavery, and that if he had, he would not do it suddenly or forcibly, which he would apprehend as a greater evil than slavery itself.
Now, whatever may have been intended, the deliverances of the Assembly on loyalty, which it deñned as co-operation with the Government in whatever it might do, and on the abolition of slavery at once, and even by servile war, must have tended to widen the breach, aggravate and prolong the war, and retard restoration; and there can be no candid pretense for saying- that, by this conduct, so inflammatory and inopportune, the General Assembly did not try to guide civil affairs, and unconstitutionally intermeddled with vital questions in all-absorbing politics.
We will not debate so plain a question. The inevitable conclusion is, that the General Assembly itself forced the dismemberment of the Presbyterian Church by acts which are void for want of higher authority; and, consequently, even if the appellants held their interest in the church property by the tenure, of adherence to the Assembly, a severance of that connection by the unauthorized acts of the Assembly cannot affect the title to the property. They are still, in every essential element of identity, the same “ Bethel Union Church” as always hitherto. There might be more reason for saying that the General Assembly has lost its own identity. It is certainly not what it was always before the civil war. By its belligerent anti-slaveryism and political propagandism, it forced a division of one American and once *137homogeneous church into two sectional and alien .churches, and the disruption of the union between itself and many dissenting churches of the Northern section; and its changed conduct has, without any constitutional amendment, practically made vital innovations in its Confession of Faith and its constitution of government. In this way, and by its excinding resolution of 1867, it compelled a dissolution of all ties of government and allegiance between itself as organic head of the church, and "the appellants as a reorganized and independent church. If the title to the church property had been granted on the condition of continued connection with the General Assembly, still, if that union has been dissolved by the unconstitutional acts of the Assembly, the condition has become impossible, and the property, liberated from the condition, may be held just as if there had never been such a limitation; and upon the foregoing considerations we adjudge that' it may be so held now, even if the title should depend on the conveyance of 1865; but, as before suggested, the only valid title was passed by the deed of 1857, which contained no such condition ; and in either aspect of the title, the reorganized church of the appellants, still called “ Bethel Union,” not having, as before decided, lost its essentia] identity, the final conclusion is, that the appellants, as now organized in a church capacity, have a right to use the property of the “ Bethel Union” Church; but whether the appellees are entitled to any use, we cannot decide on the issue made between the litigants, whereby the appellants claim only one half of the use, as stipulated by compromise.
Wherefore, the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to secure to the appellants, by all proper means, the un*138disturbed use of the church for one half of the time which may be dedicated to religious services...
The Chief Justice, not having sufficient opportunity to investigate this case, reserves the right hereafter to file his own opinion, either concurring in the result or dissenting therefrom