DISSENTING OPINION.
WOODSON, J.I was one of the dissenters from the opinion handed down in this case, but was prevented by the pressure of other official duties from then expressing my views of the case. Since then a motion for a rehearing has been filed, and I will now avail myself of this opportunity to submit the following observations in reference thereto.
I.
The main legal proposition involved in this case regards the power of the Presbyterian Church, U. S. A. (which will hereafter be designated as the Presbyterian Church), and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church (which will hereafter be designated as the *697Cumberland Church) to unite and become one church. The affirmative of this proposition is contended for by the former, while the latter maintains the negative thereof.
If we should concur with the view entertained and presented by counsel for the latter, then that would dispose of the entire case and would render it wholly unnecessary to decide any of the other questions presented for our determination, and for that reason I will express my views upon that question first.
If I correctly understand counsel for respondent, they contend that the governing bodies of these two churches have the inherent power to order and consummate a union between them, while counsel for appellant insist that the constitutions of these respective churches do not authorize a union between them nor empower those bodies to unite them into one church; but being creatures of those constitutions, their authority in that regard is limited to the powers expressly granted therein. These bodies, or courts, are denominated by section 24 of the Constitution of the Cumberland Church as Church Sessions, Presbyteries, Synods and General Assemblies.
In order to properly understand the character of these courts, we must first ascertain from the constitution what is “The Church” and what is “A Particular Church” over which they exercise jurisdiction.
The Church is defined by sections one and two of the constitution as follows:
“1. Jesus Christ, who is now exalted far above all principality andi power, has established in this world a kingdom which is His Church.
“2. The universal Church consists of all those persons, in every nation, who make profession of the holy religion of Christ and of submission to His laws.
“As this immense multitude cannot meet together in one place to hold communion or to worship God, it is proper, and authorized by Scripture example, that *698they should he divided into many particular churches.”
Section 3 prescribes the requisites for membership, but has no bearing upon any of the questions involved in this litigation.
. And “A Particular Church” by section four is declared to consist of a number of professing Christians voluntarily associated together for Divine worship and Godly living, agreeable to the Holy Scriptures, and submitting to a certain form of government.
Its officers are the Ministers in charge, the Ruling Elders and the Deacons. Its jurisdiction is lodged in the Church Sessions, composed of the Minister in charge and Ruling Elders.
Section 8 provides that “the ordinary and perpetual officers of the Church are Teaching Elders or Ministers of the Word, who are commissioned to preach the Gospel and administer the sacraments; Ruling Elders, the representatives of the people; and Deacons. ’ ’
Section 17 prescribed the duties of the Ruling Elders, and in so far as it is material to this suit is as follows:
“Ruling Elders, the immediate representatives of the people, are chosen by them, that, in conjunction with the Ministers, they may exercise government and discipline, and take the oversight of the spiritual interests of the particular Church, and also of the Church generally, when called thereunto. It appertains to their office, both severally and jointly, to watch diligently over the flock committed to their charge, that no corruption of doctrine or morals enter therein. Evils which they cannot correct by private admonition they should bring to the notice of the Church Session.”
The Church Session and its jurisdiction are defined by sections 26, 27 and 28 of the constitution, as follows:
“The Church Session consists of the Minister in *699charge and two or more Ruling Elders of a particular Church.
“In the absence of the Minister in charge, and in a vacant church, the Ruling Elders alone may form a Church Session for the transaction of any business.
“The Church Session shall be convened when any two Ruling Elders shall so request. The Minister in charge may convene the Church Session at any time.
“A majority of the Church Session shall be necessary to constitute a quorum, unless, with the concurrence of the Church, the Church Session shall otherwise determine; but any two of the Ruling Elders, in conjunction with a Minister, may receive members and grant letters of dismission.
“27. The Church Session is charged with maintaining the spiritual government of the' Church, for which purpose it is its duty to inquire into the doctrines and conduct of the Church members under its care; to receive members into the Church; to admonish, suspend, or ex-communicate those found delinquent, subject to appeal; to urge upon parents the importance of presenting their children for baptism; to grant letters of dismission, which, when given to parents, shall always include the names of their baptized children; to ordain and install Ruling Elders and Deacons when elected, and to require those officers to devote themselves to their work; to examine the records of the proceedings of the Deacons; to establish and control Sabbath schools and Bible classes, with especial reference to the children of the Church; to order collections for pious uses and Church purposes ; to take the oversight of the singing in the public worship of God; to assemble the people for worship when there is no minister; to concert the best measures for promoting the spiritual interests of the Church; to observe and carry out the injunctions of the higher courts; and to appoint representatives to the higher *700courts, and require on their return a report of their diligence.
“28. Every Church Session shall keep an accurate record of its proceedings, which must be, at least once in every year, submitted to the inspection of the Presbytery. ...”
Sections twenty-nine to thirty-four, both inclusive, define what is a Presbytery and its jurisdiction in the following language: .
“Presbytery.
“29. A Presbytery consists of all the ordained ministers and one ruling elder from each church within a certain district.
“Every particular Church which is willing to support the Gospel as God has prospered it shall be entitled to be represented by a ruling elder in Presbytery;
“Every ruling elder not known to the Presbytery shall produce evidence of his regular appointment from the Church he represents.
“30. Any three ministers belonging to the Presbytery being met at the time and place appointed shall be a quorum competent to proceed to business.
“31. The Presbytery has the power to examine and decide appeals, complaints and references brought before it in an orderly manner; to receive, examine, dismiss, and license candidates for the holy ministry; to receive, dismiss, ordain, install, remove and judge ministers; to review the records "of the Church Sessions, redress whatever they may have done contrary to order, and take effectual care that they observe the government or the Church; to establish the pastoral relation, and to dissolve it, at the request of one or both of the parties, or where the interests of religion imperatively demand it; to set apart evangelists to their proper work; to require ministers to devote themselves diligently to their sacred calling, and to censure and otherwise discipline the delinquent; to see that the injunc*701tions of the higher courts are obeyed; to condemn erroneous opinions which injure the purity or peace of the Church; to resolve questions of doctrine and discipline seriously and reasonably proposed; to visit particular churches, to inquire into their condition, and redress the evils that may have arisen in them; to unite or divide churches, with the consent of a majority of the members thereof, and, for cause, to dissolve the relations between it and a particular church, which shall thereafter cease to be a constituent of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church and forfeits all rights as such to form and receive new churches; to take special oversight of vacant churches; to concert measures for the enlargement of the church within its bounds; in general, to order whatever pertains to the spiritual welfare of the churches under its care; to appoint representatives to the higher courts; and, finally, to propose to the Synod, or to the General Assembly, such measures as may be of common advantage to the church at large.
“32. The Presbytery shall keep a full and fair record of its proceedings, and shall send it up to the Synod annually for review. It shall report to the Synod and the General Assembly every year the condition and progress of religion within its bounds during the year, and all the important changes which may have taken place, such as the licensures, the ordinations, the receiving or dismissing of members, the removal of members by death, the union and division of churches and the formation of new ones, ,and such statistical information as may be required.
“33. The Presbytery shall meet as often as once a year on its own adjournment, and when an emergency shall require a meeting sooner than the time to which it stands adjourned, the Moderator, or, in case of his absence, death, or inability to act, the Stated Clerk, shall, with the concurrence or at the request of two ministers and two ruling elders of different churches, *702call a special meeting. For this purpose he shall give notice — specifying the particular business of the intended meeting — to every minister belonging to the Presbytery, and to the Church Session of every particular church, in due time previous to the meeting, which shall not be less than ten days. And nothing shall be transacted at such special meeting besides the particular business for which the Presbytery has been thus convened.
“34. If, for any cause, the Presbytery shall fail to meet at the time and place to which it stands adjourned, it shall be the duty of the Moderator, or, in case of his absence, death, or inability to act, the Stated Clerk, or, in case of his absence, death, or ina,bility to act, any three ministers belonging to the Presbytery, to call a meeting as early as practicable, at such place as may be designated, for the transaction of the regular business; and for this purpose a circular letter shall be sent, as before prescribed, not less than ten days before the meeting. ’ ’
A Synod and its jurisdiction are stated in the following sections:
“35. The Synod consists of all the ministers and one ruling elder from each church in a district comprising at least three Presbyteries. The Synod may be composed, at its own option, with the consent of a majority of its Presbyteries, either of all the ministers and one ruling elder from each Church in its district, or of equal delegations of ministers and ruling elders selected by the Presbyteries on a basis and in a ratio determined in like manner by the Synod and its Presbyteries.
“36. Five ministers, who are members of one or more of the Presbyteries composing the Synod, shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of Synodical business, provided there be present at least one minister or one ruling elder from each of three Presbyteries. Members of the different Presbyteries in Synod shall *703not "be entitled to vote on questions of appeal before tbe Synod from tbeir own Presbyteries, nor on other questions immediately concerning their own Presbyterial action.
“37. The Synod has power to receive and decide all appeals, complaints, and references regularly brought up from the Presbyteries; to review the records of the Presbyteries, and to redress whatever they may have done contrary to order; to take effectual care that Presbyteries observe the government of the church, and that they obey the injunctions of the higher courts; to create, divide, or dissolve Presbyteries, when deemed expedient; to appoint ministers to such work, proper to their office, as may fall under its own particular jurisdiction — in general, to take such order with respect to the Presbyteries, Church Sessions, and Churches under its care as may be in conformity with the principles of the government of the Church and of the word of God, and as may tend to promote the edification of the Church; to concert measures for promoting the prosperity and enlargement of the Church within its bounds; and, finally, to propose to the General Assembly such measures as may be of common advantage to the whole Church.
“38. It shall be the duty of the Synod to keep full and accurate records of its proceedings, to submit them to the inspection of the General Assembly at each of its stated meetings, and to report to it the number of its Presbyteries, and of the members thereof; and, in general, all important changes which may have occurred within its bounds during the year, as well as such statistical information as may.be required.
“39. The Synod shall meet as often as once in two years, on its own adjournment. If, for any cause, the Synod shall fail to meet at the time and place to which it stands adjourned, it shall be the duty of the Moderator, or, in case of his absence, death, or inability to act, the Stated Clerk, or, in case of his absence, *704death, or inability to act, any three ministers entitled to membership in the Synod, and belonging to different Presbyteries, to call a meeting as early as practicable, at snch place as may be designated, for the transaction of the regular business; and for this purpose a circular . letter shall be sent to every minister and ruling elder entitled to membership, or constituent body entitled to representation, therein, not less than thirty days before the meeting.”
And the General Assembly and its jurisdiction are stated in the following sections:
“40. The General Assembly is the highest Court of this Church, and represents in one body all the particular churches thereof. It hears the title of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and constitutes the bond of union, peace, correspondence, and mutual confidence among all its churches and courts.
“41. The General Assembly shall meet as often as once every two years, at such time and place as may have been determined at its preceding meeting, and shall consist of commissioners from the Presbyteries in the following proportion: Every Presbytery shall be entitled to send one minister and one ruling elder; but if it consists of eighteen or more ministerial members, it may send an additional minister and ruling elder.
“Each commissioner, before his name shall be enrolled as a member of the General Assembly, shall produce from his Presbytery satisfactory evidence of his appointment.
“42. Any twenty or more of these commissioners, at least ten of whom shall he ministers, being met on the day and at the place appointed, shall he a quorum for the transaction of business.
“43. The General Assembly shall have power to receive and decide all appeals, references and complaints regularly brought before it from the inferior *705courts; to bear testimony against error in doctrine and immorality in practice, injuriously affecting tbe cburcb; to decide in all controversies respecting doctrine and discipline; to give its advice and instruction, in conformity with the government of the Church, in all cases submitted to it; to review the records of the Synods; to take care that the inferior courts observe the government of the Church; to redress whatever they may have done contrary to order; to concert measures for promoting the prosperity and enlargement of the church; to create, divide or dissolve Synods; to institute and superintend the agencies necessary in the general work of the church; to appoint ministers to such labors as fall under its jurisdiction; to suppress schismatieal contentions and disputations, according to the rules provided therefor; to receive under its jurisdiction other ecclesiastical bodies whose organization is conformed to the doctrine and order of this Church; to authorize Synods and Presbyteries to exercise similar power in receiving bodies suited to become constituents of those courts, and lying within their geographical bounds respectively; to superintend the affairs of the whole church; to correspond with other churches; and, in general, to recommend measures for the promotion of charity, truth and holiness throughout all the churches under its care.
“44. If, for any cause, the General Assembly shall fail to meet at the time and place to which it stands adjourned, it shall be the duty of the- Moderator, or, in case of his absence, death, or inability to act, the Stated Clerk, to call a meeting as early as practicable, at such place as he may designate, for the transaction of the regular business; and for this purpose a circular letter shall be sent to the Stated Clerk of the Presbyteries not less than sixty days before the proposed time for the meeting.
“In case of the death, absence, or inability to act of both the Moderator and Stated Clerk, such meeting *706may, in like manner, be called by the Commissioners, or one or more of them, from any five of the Presbyteries.”
The Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline are governed by section 60', which reads as follows:
“60. Upon the recommendation of the General Assembly at a stated meeting, by a two-thirds vote of the members thereof, voting thereon, the Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline, may be amended or changed when a majority of the Presbyteries, upon the same being transmitted for their action, shall approve thereof.”
The other parts of the government — that is to say, the General Regulations, the Directory of Worship, and the Rules of Order — may be amended or changed at any meeting of the General Assembly by a vote of two-thirds of the entire number of Commissioners enrolled at that meeting, provided such amendment or change shall not conflict in letter or spirit, with the Confession of Faith, Catechism, or Constitution.
The jurisdiction of the foregoing courts is limited by the express provisions of section 25, which reads as follows:
“Sec. 25. The church session exercises jurisdiction over a single church, the Presbytery, over what is common to the ministers, church sessions, and churches within a prescribed district; the Synod, over what belongs .in common to three or more Presbyteries, and their ministers, church sessions and churches; and the General Assembly, over such matters as concern the whole church; and the jurisdiction of these courts is limited by the express provisions of the constitution. Every court has the right to resolve questions of doctrine and discipline seriously and reasonably proposed, and in general to maintain truth and righteousness, condemning erroneous opinions and practices which tend to the injury of the peace, purity or progress of *707the church; and, although each court exercises exclusive original jurisdiction over all matters especially belonging to it, the lower courts are subject to the review and control of the higher courts, in regular gradation. All church courts shall be opened and closed with prayer.”
The Constitution of the Presbyterian Church in so far as it is material to the question of the power of these two churches to unite is substantially the same as are the foregoing provisions copied from the Constitution of the Cumberland Church; and it will for that reason be unnecessary to burden this opinion with extracts from the former; and what is said of the one will apply equally as well to the other.
In the discussion of this proposition it is all important to bear closely in mind those constitutional' provisions which are common to both churches, showing that the judicatories of each possess and exercise the same authority, jurisdiction and powers; and upon these provisions are based the contentions of counsel for the respective parties.
In order to successfully maintain appellants’ position as stated at the beginning of this opinion, counsel must also successfully maintain this preliminary question, namely, that these constitutional provisions are not only expressive of the sole mode of union, but are also a limitation upon the authority of the governing bodies of the churches to act in the premises. In other words, they contend that “the jurisdiction of the General Assembly and of the Presbyteries, as well as the other courts of the church, being limited in their nature and by the express provisions of section 25 of the constitution, and those provisions not conferring the power in question, it must follow inevitably that the union and merger attempted, as aforesaid, and all steps taken for the accomplishment of that end were without constitutional authority, and therefore, ultra vires and void. Their powers being restricted by the *708constitution to those enumerated, the courts of the church cannot constitutionally exercise any other power.”
I am unable to lend my concurrence to that contention, for the reason that when we read the constitution it is to he seen that while section 25 purports to limit the jurisdiction and powers of the courts as regards the matters and things enumerated therein, as long as they remain in force, yet there is nothing contained in that instrument which even remotely indicates that they have no other powers or authority than those stated. Much light may be shed upon this question by a brief consideration of the Presbyterian Church and its mode of government. Both of these churches are of the associated class of religious societies, the initial unit of each being the “particular church,” or local congregation, then ascending to the Presbytery, embracing all local churches within a given territory, then extending to a Synod including not less than three Presbyteries, and, finally, reaching the General Assembly, which comprises all of the local churches, Presbyteries and Synods, and constitutes the supreme judicatory of the church. These courts possess not only judicial power, but also legislative and executive. [Mack v. Kime, 129 Ga. 1.]
These powers are inherent in these bodies, and are not delegated to them by the constitution. In fact, the General Assemblies of these churches are not only the legislative bodies thereof, but .they also have the power, with the approval of the Presbyteries, to formulate, adopt, amend and repeal the constitutions of their respective church, and under this form of government their power is unlimited in that regard. (I am not now speaking of its effect upon property rights. That will be discussed later.) Of course, as long as the constitution, or any provision thereof, is in force it is binding upon the General Assembly and upon all other judicatories of the church; but, as before stated, *709there is no provision contained therein, or exists elsewhere, which prevents the General Assembly, with the concurrence of the Presbyteries, from repealing or amending any and all provisions of the constitution. The individual church members have no voice in such matters. The General Assembly is supreme, and can no more be bound by a law enacted by a previous session than one Legislature of the State can bind a succeeding one by statute. The only limitation that is placed upon its authority in church matters is written in the constitution, and as long as it is in force, its mandate is supreme and must be obeyed by all, the General Assembly included; but where the constitution is silent, the Assembly is supreme. The constitution of neither of these churches is like the Oonstitution of the United States — a delegation of power — but it is more in the nature of the Constitution of the State — a limitation upon the inherent and otherwise absolute powers of the Legislature. [McBride v. Porter, 17 Iowa 211; McGinnis v. Watson, 41 PR. St. 9; Methodist Church Case, 16 How. 288; Mack v. Kime, 129 Ga. 1; Fussell v. Hail, 134 Ill. App. 620; Ramsey’s Appeal, 88 Pa. St. 60.]
In the Iowa case the Synod was the highest court; and in discussing the inherent power of the churches to unite the court used this language: “But, upon principle as well as by concession, the Synod possessed the power. If it is regarded as a representative body, and governed by the republican principle that a majority must rule, its acception [action] must be sustained; or, if the more fundamental principle is appealed to, that the people who are to be affected by a law, is the primary source from whence comes the power to enact that law, we find a practical and literal adherence to that principle in the action of the Synod, by which the question was first referred or overtured to the several churches, and by them acted upon as instructions to the Synod. The Synod then had the power, for it *710derived it from the primary source of all governmental power — the people.”
The inherent power of a church to divide into two branches was involved in the case cited from the Supreme Court of the United States, and in passing upon that question the court used this language:
“It is insisted, however, that the General Conference of 1844 possessed no power to divide the Methodist Episcopal Church as then organized, or to consent to such division; and hence, that the organization of the Church South was without authority, and the traveling preachers within it separate from an ecclesiastical connection, which is essential to enable them to participate as beneficiaries” in the fund in controversy.
“But we do not agree.that this division was made, without the proper authority. On the contrary, we entertain no doubt that the General Conference of 1844 was competent to make it; and that each division of the church, under the separate organization, is just as legitimate, and can claim as high a sanction, ecclesiastical and temporal, as the Methodist Episcopal Church first founded in the United States. The same authority which founded that church in 1784 has divided it, and established two separate and independent organizations occupying the place of the old one.
“In 1784 when this church was first established, and down till 1808, the General Conference was composed of all the traveling preachers in that connection. This body of preachers founded it by organizing its government, ecclesiastical and temporal, established its doctrine and discipline, appointed its superintendents or bishops, its ministers and preachers, and other subordinate authorities to administer its policy and promulgate its doctrines and teachings throughout the land.
“It cannot therefore be denied, indeed, it has scarcely been denied that this body, while composed of *711all the traveling preachers, possessed the power to divide it and authorize the organization and establishment of the two separate independent churches. The power must necessarily be regarded as inherent in the General Conference.”
This principle is the same whether exercised in dividing or uniting two churches.
Again, the court, after noticing certain restrictions placed upon the General Conference, says: “In all other respects and in everything else that concerns the welfare of the church, the General Conference represents the sovereign power the same as before.” [Methodist Church Case, 16 How. l. c. 306.]
The Supreme Court of Georgia had before it the identical union under consideration in the case at bar, and, in Mack v. Kime, 129 Ga. l. c. 29, said upon this branch of the case: “The authority of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church is derived from the constitution. This church, in its form of government, is like its predecessors. The form of government is not unlike the Federal form of government under which we live. The General Assembly of the church is the highest legislative, executive and judicial power of the church. It has, in these three capacities, all of the authority that is expressly conferred by the constitution, as well as that which is to be necessarily implied from any of the express powers therein granted or from the general design and purpose for which the organization was formed. It being settled by the judgment of the General Assembly, as the final arbiter of the church in all such matters, that there is no substantial difference between the teachings and doctrines of the two churches, the question as to whether it was expedient for the two churches to unite under one name and form of government was a matter addressed to the sound judgment of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church itself. The very constitution contemplates union with the other church*712es. It is authorized to receive into its jurisdiction other ecclesiastical organizations that conform to the doctrine and order of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. When this provision was inserted in the constitution, it was probably contemplated that such organizations would generally be organizations of less power and less strength and less numbers than the existing Cumberland Presbyterian Church; but there is no limitation in the constitution upon the power to receive other organizations, and this power carries with it the implied power to unite with other organizations under the same limitations under which they could receive in their name and in their jurisdiction similar organizations. In the judgment of the General Assembly of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, the purpose for which it was organized is to be promoted by the reunion with the church from which it sprang. They may be mistaken in this. The reunion may thrust upon them and their associates perplexing questions, which in time to come may bring about disagreement and separation. But all of those matters are matters for the ecclesiastical body itself, and, when determined by it, those members of the church who are not in accord with the governing authority must either bow in submission to the powers that be, or make their alignments with other organizations with whom they can live in accord and harmony. ’ ’
In Fussell v. Hail, decided by the Appellate Court for the Third District of Illinois, and cited with approval by the Georgia Supreme Court, in discussing this union, the court said, in referring to the sections of the constitution of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church defining the powers of the General Assembly: “The effect of such sections is to make the General Assembly, not only the legislative and administrative body, but one with judicial powers upon ecclesiastical questions as well. It represents, in one body, all the particular churches in the Cumberland Presbyterian *713Church organization, and constitutes one bond of union. Why is it not possible to promote the prosperity and enlargement of the church by uniting with another body that teaches a doctrine of faith identical with its own? If these two churches, in their confession of faith and their religions teachings, are the same, then these interests may be promoted by uniting all those who preach, teach and believe in and care for those interests, the same as can be done by individuals joining their interests in copartnerships or corporations. United action is productive of more good than divided action under the circumstances. The General Assembly has power to receive under its jurisdiction other ecclesiastical bodies of the same faith. This clause must be read with the clause that directs the taking of measures to promote and enlarge the church; and in our judgment the church is enlarged, and its prosperity made more sure, by receiving the support of a stronger sister church. If a smaller church can be received, surely affiliation and union can be made with a stronger sister church, if thereby the church, as a religious body, is prospered and enlarged.”
It will thus be seen that the courts, in the above cases, held that, under a reasonable construction of the express provisions of the written constitution, the power to form the union exists.
But returning to the analogy between the General Assembly and the Legislature of the State — the former is not bound with the same degree of firmness with which the Legislature of the State is bound by the Constitution, for the former may enact and enforce any and all laws for the good of the church, whether they be constitutional in character or merely ordinances for its government; while the latter can enact no law in conflict with the Constitution of the State. [Russie v. Brazzell, 128 Mo. 93.]
Under the constitution of the Church, the powers of the General Assembly are just as absolute and unlim*714ited in that regard as are the powers of the framers of the State Constitution, yea., more so, for the former may adopt a constitutional provision proposed by itself with the approval of the Presbyteries, while the latter can only frame and. refer it to the people for adoption.
Whether or not that is a wise form of church government, we have nothing to do, but must be content to deal with the situation as we find it. We might add, however, that there are other churches and even governments which are governed substantially in the same manner.
If the foregoing observations regarding the church judicatories are sound, and I do not believe they will be questioned, we must look to the constitution as it stood at that time to determine whether or not there is any provision therein preventing a union, or which prohibited the General Assemblies of the two churches from submitting the question of union tO' the Presbyteries, or from entering into a union with each other.
Counsel for appellants contend that there is such a provision in the constitution, and call our attention to section 43 thereof, and especially to the following language therein, to-wit: first, “to concert measures for promoting the prosperity and enlargement of the Church;” and, second, “to receive under its jurisdiction other ecclesiastical bodies whose organization is conformed to the doctrines and orders of this Church. ’ ’
Appellants’ contention is that those provisions expressly authorize a consolidation of the Cumberland Church with other churches whose organization conforms to the doctrines and ordinances of that church, and having failed to provide for any other mode of union, the maxim inclusio unius exclusio alterius est applies.
In my opinion counsel misconceive the proposition in hand. The question involved in this litigation is one *715of union between separate and independent churches, whose doctrines and ordinances were not the same, while those referred to in section 43 refer to the consolidation of two or more churches of the same faith and doctrine, or to receive into its organization another church which would conform to its doctrines and would come under and submit to its jurisdiction.
It is not pretended that the Presbyterian Church proposed to submit itself to the jurisdiction of the Cumberland, and thereby become consolidated as one church under the name of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church; but the express intention of both was to adopt a new confession of faith, which was a modification of the Westminster Confession; neither to adopt the doctrines and ordinances of the other or to become subject to the jurisdiction of the other; but to unite as one church under the name of the Presbyterian Church U. S. A., as above indicated.
Prom this it seems perfectly clear to my mind that section 43 of the constitution is perfectly foreign to the question of the power of these two- churches to form a union with each other; and that being true, and failing to find any other provision prohibiting their union, I am therefore forced to the conclusion that section 43 of the constitution is not only not a delegation of power to the General Assembly, but at most is only a limitation of power as long as it stands unrepealed by the General Assembly.
That being unquestionably true, then it must necessarily follow that the various judicatories of the church possessed all the ecclesiastical powers of the church which had Rot been- taken from them by the express provisions of the constitution at the time this union is alleged to have been entered into. The same conclusion was reached by the Court of Appeals of Kentucky in the case of Wallace v. Hughes, 115 S. W. 684. To the same effect are the following cases: Clark v. Brown, 108 S. W. 421 (Supreme Court of Texas); Lan*716drith v. Hudgins, 120 S. W. 783 (Supreme Court of Tenn.); Ramsey v. Hicks, 87 N. E. 1091.
All of these cases cited grew out of the same church controversy, and involved the question of the power of these two churches to form a union, and all held that they had that inherent power, and no case can he found which holds to the contrary.
II.
This brings us to the consideration of another important question, namely: was there a union in fact effectuated between these two churches?
Section 60 of the constitution provides that “upon the recommendation of the General Assembly, by a two-thirds vote of the members thereof, voting thereon, the Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline may be amended or changed when a majority of the Presbyteries, upon the same being transmitted for their action, shall approve thereof.”
In pursuance to this constitutional provision, the General Assembly of each of these two churches appointed a committee upon union. These committees devised a scheme, called a “plan of reunion and union.” This plan of union was by this joint committee submitted to the General Assembly of each of the two churches, which was as follows:
“2. Joint Report on Union.
“ As the second part of our report we submit the following Joint Report on Union:
“The Committee on Church Co-operation and Union of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, and the Committee on Fraternity and Union of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, after a free and full interchange of views, with continued supplication for Divine guidance, unanimously recommended to their respective General Assemblies *717for their consideration, and, if they deem proper, for their adoption, the accompanying papers, viz.:
“I. Plan of Ee-nnion and Union of the two churches.
“II. Concurrent Declarations to he adopted hy the respective General Assemblies meeting in 1904.
“III. Eeeomendations.
“7. Plan of Re-Union and Union of the Two Churches.
“We believe that the union of the Christian Churches of substantially similar faith and polity would be to the glory of God, the good of mankind, and the strengthening of Christian testimony at home and abroad.
“We believe that the manifest providential developments and leadings in the two churches since their separation, together with present conditions of agreement and fellowship, have been and are such as to justify their reunion.
“Therefore, we cordially recommend to our respective General Assemblies, that the Ee-union of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church be accomplished as soon as the necessary steps can be taken, upon the basis hereinafter set forth.
“1. The Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, whose General Assembly met in the Immanuel Church, Los Angeles, Cal., May 21st, 1903, and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, whose General Assembly met in the First Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Nashville, Tenn., May 21st, 1903, shall be united as one church, under the name and style of The Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, possessing all the legal and corporate rights and powers which the separate churches now possess.
“2. The union shall be effected on the doctrinal basis of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, as revised in 1903, and of its other doctrinal and Ecclesiastical *718Standards; and the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments shall he acknowledged as the inspired word of Cod, the only infallible rule of faith and practice.
“3. Each of the Assemblies shall submit the foregoing basis of Union to its Presbyteries, which shall be required to meet on or before April 30th, 1905, to express their approval or disapproval of the same 'by a categorical answer to this question:
“ ‘Do you approve of the re-union and union of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America and. the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, on the following basis: The union shall be effected on the doctrinal basis of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, as revised in 1903, and of its other Doctrinal and Ecclesiastical Standards; and the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament shall be acknowledged as the inspired word of God, the only infallible rule of faith and practice ? ’
“Each Presbytery shall, before the tenth day of May, 1905, forward to the Stated Clerk of the Assembly with which it is connected, a statement of its vote on the said Basis of Union.
“4. The report of the vote of the Presbyteries shall be submitted by the representative Stated Clerk to the General Assemblies meeting in 1905, and if the General Assemblies shall then find and declare that the foregoing- Basis of Union has been approved by the constitutional majority of the Presbyteries connected with each branch' of the Church, then the same shall be of binding force, and both Assemblies shall take action accordingly.
II. Concurrent Declarations.
“As there are matters pertaining to the interests of the Church, which will manifestly require adjustment when the reunion shall have been accomplished, *719and concerning which it is highly desirable that there shall be a previous good understanding, the two Assemblies agree to adopt the following Concurrent Declarations, as in their judgment proper and equitable'arrangements and agreements.
“1. In adopting the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, as revised in 1903, as a basis of union, it is mutually recognized that such agreement now exists between the systems of doctrine contained in the Confessions of Faith of the two Churches as to warrant this union —a union honoring alike to both. Mutual acknowledgment also is made of the teaching and defense of the divine favor and blessing that have made this common faith and service effectual.
“It is also recognized that liberty of belief exists by virtue of the provisions of the Declaratory Statement, which is part of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, and which states that ‘ the ordination vow of ministers, ruling elders and deacons, as set forth in the form of Government, requires the reception and adoption of the Confession of Faith, only as containing the system of doctrine taught in the Holy Scriptures.’ This liberty is specifically secured by the Declaratory Statement, as to Chapter III and Chapter X, Section 3, of the Confession of Faith. It is recognized also that the doctrinal deliverance contained in the Brief Statement of the Reformed Faith, adopted in 1902, by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, ‘for a better understanding of our doctrinal beliefs,’ reveals a, doctrinal agreement favorable to reunion.
“2. All the ministers and churches included in the two denominations shall be admitted to the same standing in the United Church which they may have held in their respective connections up to the consummation of the reunion,
*720“3. The boundaries of the several Presbyteries and Synods shall be adjusted by the General Assembly of the United Church.
“4. The official records of the two Churches during the period of separation shall be preserved and held as making up the history of the one Church.
“5. As soon as practicable after the union shall have been effected, the General Assembly shall reconstruct and consolidate the several permanent committees and boards, which now belong to the two Assemblies, so as to represent, with impartiality, the views and wishes, of the two bodies constituting the reunited Church.
“The institutions of learning, together with the endowment and other property, real and personal, owned by them which are now under the control of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, shall remain in charge of and be controlled by the board of trustees, or other managers respectively, now in charge of such institutions, endowment and property, or by their successors similarly appointed or elected; and no greater control of such institutions, their property or affairs shall be exercised by the General Assembly, or other ecclesiastical court, or body, of the reunited Church, than is now exercised by the General Assembly, or other ecclesiastical church or body, of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. Provided, that the governing board of any of said institutions of learning shall be at liberty to enter into such special arrangement or agreement with the ecclesiastical body controlling it, as may enable said institution to preserve its integrity and maintain its present policy. And also provided that nothing in this declaration shall affect the relationship or control of any of the institutions of learning now connected with the General Assembly, or other ecclesiastical court or body, of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.
*721“7. The corporate rights now held by the two General Assemblies and by their boards and committees, shall be consolidated and applied for their several objects as defined and permitted by law.
“8. It should be regarded as the duty of all our judicatories, ministers and people to study the things which make for peace, to guard against all needless and offensive references to the causes which have divided us, and to avoid the revival of past issues.
III. Recommendations.
“1. It is recommended that such a change be made in'the form of government of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, as will allow additional or separate Presbyteries and Synods to be organized in exceptional cases, wholly or in part, within the territorial bounds of existing Presbyteries or Synods respectively, for a particular race or nationality, if desired by such race or nationality.
“2. The foregoing Basis of Union and eight Concurrent Declarations shall be submitted to the respective General Assemblies of 1904, and the above Recommendation, Numbered 1, shall be submitted to the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, meeting in 1904; and this entire plan of union shall be operative when said Basis of Union, Concurrent Declarations, and Recommendation Numbered 1, shall have been adopted in their entirety, and where necessary by Presbyterial action.
“3. That the blessing of the great Head of the Church may rest upon the results of our efforts for reunion and union, it is earnestly recommended to the congregations throughout both branches of the Church, that they observe Sabbath, September 18th, 1904, as a day. of fervent and united prayer to Almighty God, that he would grant unto us all ‘the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord, ’ and in the new relation now con*722templated, enable us to keep ‘the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace.’
“W. H. Black, R. M. Tinnon, Ira Landrith, E. E. Beard, S. M. Templeton, M. B. Templeton, B. P. Fullerton, "W. E, Settle, D. E. Bushnell, A. E. Turner, W. J. Darby, B. G. Mitchell, W. H. Roberts, Chas. A. Dickey, Robert F. Coyle, Reuben H. Hartly, Douglass G. Putnam, Reuben Tyler, E. S. Wells, Wm. N. Page, Wilton M. Smith.
“In conclusion, we imite heartily and prayerfully in the recommendation that the ‘Joint Report on Union’ be adopted and its provisions carried out with an eye single to the glory' of God.
“Fraternally and obediently submitted.
“Wm. H. Black, Chairman;
“James M. Hubbert, Sec’y.”
Upon the incoming of this report, the following resolution was offered by Dr. Templeton in the General Assembly.
‘ ‘ Resolved, 1. That the foregoing report and supplemental report of the Committee on Presbyterian Fraternity and Union, appointed by the General Assembly in 1903, be received and spread upon the minutes of this General Assembly, and that the included joint-report on union be adopted; and that the basis of union be and is recommended to the Presbyteries of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church for their approval or disapproval.
“Resolved, 2. That the Moderator and the Stated Clerk be instructed to submit the'basis of union, contained' in said report, to the Presbyteries of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, in the usual constitutional manner, upon receiving official notification of the adoption of the said joint-report 'on union by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America.”
This resolution was adopted by a vote of 162 to 74, *723and was declared to be by tbe constitutional two-thirds vote. Upon a submission to the Presbyteries, of the question to be categorically answered, set out above, it was found that all Presbyteries had returned their vote. Of those, 60 answered the question in the affirmative and 51 answered in the negative, thereby adopting the plan of reunion and union recommended and submitted to them by the General Assembly, by a constitutional majority of nine. The same action, with like results, was taken by the Presbyterian Church.
In the General Assembly of the Cumberland Church for the year 1906, upon the announcement of the adoption of the resolution of union and reunion, about one hundred of the delegates thereto filed a, protest, in which they charged the invalidity of the action of the Presbyteries and General Assembly, in forming the union, assigning many grounds in support thereof.
Counsel for respondents contend that the foregoing proceedings show that all of the steps necessary to ascertain the will of the churches and for the orderly determination of the question of union in accordance with the constitution and form of their church government were regularly taken; that the General Assemblies of these two churches, had the power, with the consent and approval of a majority of their respective Presbyteries, to form the union; that the highest judicatories of these churches have declared the plan of union duly and legally adopted, and consequently that said decision is binding upon the civil courts of the State.
In the discussion of a kindred question involving this same principle, this court, in the case of Russie v, Brazzell, supra, at page 112, used this language:
“It was said in the recent case of Prickett v. Wells, 117 Mo. 502: ‘The people of that society’ (which wa,s a Congregational church) ‘in the exercise of their religious liberty, had the undoubted right to adopt *724rules for tlieir own church government, if not inconsistent with the laws of the land. In adjusting their respective claims to the use of church property, as. between themselves, the civil courts will give effect to those rules, subject to the qualifications just, adverted to.’
“In another case it was agreed ‘that, according to the rules governing the church, a majority of those present and voting at a regular meeting should govern, and its action is binding upon the whole body.’ It was accordingly held that a majority vote, taken according to the customs and rules of the church, authorized an incorporation of the body, and the transfer of the property of the congregation to the corporation, though a majority of all the members did not vote in favor of the proposition. [North St. Louis Christian Church v. McGowan, 62 Mo. 279.]
“The general conference of the United Brethren, being the highest legislative and judical body of the church, declared that an affirmative vote of two-thirds of those voting on the amendments should be taken as a request of two-thirds of all the members. This resolution must be taken, not only as expressive of the rules and customs of the church, but as also declaring what vote should be required on the question submitted. The civil courts should take this action of the conference as conclusive.”
And the Supreme Court of Georgia in discussing this question, growing out of this same schism, in the case of Mack v. Kime, supra, at page 19, said:
“2. The constituted tribunal of the religious organization has jurisdiction to determine all ecclesiastical questions which are submitted to it under the law and usages of the society. It has also the authority to determine for itself whether it has jurisdiction in a given case. The highest church court of a religious society is like the highest civil court. It has submitted to it not only questions growing out of controversies, *725but it has, of necessity, imposed upon it the duty and responsibility of determining what are within the limits of its jurisdiction. In the case of State ex rel. Watson v. Farris, 45 Mo. 183, it was held that the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church, commonly known as the ‘old school,’ possessed extensive original and appellate jurisdiction, and whether a case is regularly or irregularly before it is a subject for it to determine for itself. In the opinion Judge Wagner. says (page 197): ‘Now,, the General Assembly is the highest court of judicatory known to the Presbyterian Church. It possesses extensive original and appellate jurisdiction; and whether the case, in the matter of the Declaration and Testimony signers, was regularly or irregularly before it, was a subject for it to determine for itself, and no civil courts can revise, modify, or impair its action in a matter of purely ecclesiastical concern. ’ When ' a controversy involving the rights of a member is presented to the civil courts, they will examine into the constitution and laws of the religious society, to determine whether a tribunal has been erected for the decision of ecclesiastical questions, and they will also examine into the laws of the association, to determine whether the decision by the tribunal was concerning a matter which was within its jurisdiction. If its jurisdiction depends upon the construction of its own laws, and such laws have, either expressly or impliedly, conferred upon it the right to determine the limits of its jurisdiction, the decision of the church tribunal as to its jurisdiction will be no less binding than its decision on the merits of the ecclesiastical question determined by it.”
In the case of Watson v. Jones, 13 Wallace, at page 727, the Supreme Court of the United States, in speaking through Mr. Justice Miller, said: “In this class of cases we think the rule of action which should govern the civil courts, founded in a broad and sound view of the relations of Church and State under our *726system of laws, and supported by a prepondering weight of judicial authority is, that, whenever the question of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom, or law have been decided by the highest of these church judicatories to which the matter has been carried, the legal tribunals must accept such decisions as final, and as binding on them, in their application to the case before them.”
The Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit, in the case of Brundage v. Deardorf, 92 Fed. 214, l. c. 228, used this language: “What effect will a civil court give to the interpretation and construction by the highest judicatory of an ecclesiastical body of its own fundamental law? Is that judgment subject to review in the civil courts? Or, will the civil courts accept the interpretation placed upon the organic law of the church by its highest judicatory, and apply the law so interpreted to the settlement of property questions depending upon that law? As we have already stated, the property here involved was not devoted by the express terms of any grant, gift, will, or sale to the support of any specific religious dogma, doctrine, or belief, but is property acquired by the church for the general use of the society for religious purposes, and with no other limitation. The property here in question is held for the particular use of a congregation, which is only one of numerous others united to form a general body of churches, and subject to the ecclesiastical control of the General Conference, whose jurisdiction extends to all congregations composing the general body. The question here presented is merely one of identity — which of the two bodies claiming to be the legitimate successor of the original united organization is the legal successor of the body to which this property was conveyed? When this question is answered, the property must be awarded to that organization. The decision of this question involves the interpretation of the organic law of the church in re*727spect to the appropriate method of altering or amending that law. But that fundamental law has been construed, interpreted, and applied by the highest judicatory of this church before its division, and the very changes in the constitution and confession now complained of as irregular and revolutionary sanctioned and approved as having been made in accordance with the method prescribed by the fundamental law of the church for its own amendment. Shall we review that decision, and overturn its conclusiveness, upon questions purely relating to ecclesiastical law and government, and take from the majority the general property of the church upon some difference of opinion as to whether the highest authority within the church had not mistaken the meaning of the church organic law? The question is not an open one in courts of the United States. It is the duty of this court under the law as settled to accept that decision as final, and as binding upon it in so far as that decision has application to the case for decision. This question was most thoroughly and elaborately considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in the leading case of Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. 679-726. That case originated in a schism which occurred in the Presbyterian Church in respect to certain declarations made by its General Assembly during the late Civil War touching the subjects of slavery and secession.”
In the case of Connitt v. R. P. D. C. of N. Prospect, 54 N. Y. l. c. 561, Earl, C., speaking for the court, said: “Having thus reached the conclusion that this was an ecclesiastical matter, and that the church judicatories had jurisdiction of it, we cannot inquire whether they have proceeded according to the laws and usages of their church, nor whether they have decided the matter correctly. It is the settled law of this country, repeatedly announced by the most learned judges and highest courts, that in such cases the civil courts must take the decisions of the eccle*728siastical courts as final and binding upon the parties. ... In German Reformed Church v. Seibert (3 Barr 291), it is said by the court: ‘The decisions of ecclesiastical courts, like every other judicial tribunal, are final, as they aré the best judges of what constitutes an offense against the Word of God and the discipline of the church. Any other than those courts must be incompetent judges of matters of faith, discipline and doctrine; and civil courts, if they should be so unwise as to attempt to supervise their judgments on matters which come within their jurisdiction, would only involve themselves in a sea of uncertainty and doubt, which would do anything but improve either religion or good morals.’ ”
And Chief Justice Andrews, in the case of Trustees of Trinity M. E. Church v. Harris, 47 Atl. l. c. 119, in speaking for the Supreme Court of Connecticut, said: “The consolidation of the three churches into one was a matter of ecclesiastical law and practice, and the decision of the ecclesiastical tribunal on that matter is binding on the superior court and on this court. In all ecclesiastical matters the courts are bound by the decision of the ecclesiastical tribunal. It is so laid down by this court in Whitney v. Society, 5 Conn. 406, and in Gibbs v. Society, 38 Conn. 153. ‘In this class of cases we think the rule of action which should govern the civil courts, founded in a broad view of the relations of the Church and State under our system of laws, and supported by a preponderating weight of judicial authority, is that, whenever the questions of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom, or law, have been decided by the highest of these church judicatories to which the matter has been carried, the legal tribunals must accept such decisions as final and as binding on them in their application to the case before them.’ [Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. 727, 20 L. Ed. 666; Bouldin v. Alexander, 15 Wall. 131, 21 L. Ed. 69.]”
*729In Lamb v. Cain, 14 L. R. A. l. c. 527, the Supreme Court of Indiana, in speaking through Chief Justice Coffey, said:
“All who unite with such associations, when so organized, impliedly consent to submit to such government. Prom these considerations the rule in this country has become elementary that when a civil right depends upon some matter pertaining to ecclesiastical affairs, the civil tribunal tries the right and nothing more, taking the ecclesiastical decisions out of which the civil right has arisen as it finds them, and accepts such decisions as matters adjudicated by another legally constituted jurisdiction. [White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends v. White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends, 89 Ind. 135; Watson v. Jones, supra; Dwenger v. Geary, 113 Ind. 106, 12 West. Rep. 691; Connitt v. Reformed P. D. Church of New Prospect, 54 N. Y. 551; Gaff v. Greer, 88 Ind. 122; Harrison v. Hoyle, 24 Ohio St. 254.]
“In the case of White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends v. White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends, supra, this court said: ‘The civil courts act upon the theory that the ecclesiastical courts are the best judges of merely ecclesiastical questions, and of all matters which concern the doctrines and discipline of the respective religious denominations to which they belong. When a person becomes a member of a church he becomes so upon the condition of submission to its ecclesiastical jurisdiction, and however much he may be dissatisfied with the exercise of that jurisdiction, he has no right to invoke the supervisory power of a civil court so long as none of his civil rights are invaded. ’
“In the case of German Reformed Church v. Seibert, 3 Barr 291, it was said by the court: ‘The decisions of ecclesiastical courts, like, every other tribunal, are final, as they are the best judges of what constitutes an offense against the Word of God and the *730disciplne of the Church. Any other than those courts must he incompetent judges of matters of faith, discipline and doctrine; and civil courts, if they should be so unwise as to attempt to revise their judgments on matters which come within their jurisdiction, would only involve themselves in a sea of uncertainty and doubt, which would do anything but improve either religion or good morals.’ ”
In Gaff v. Greer, 45 Am. Rep. l. c, 452, the Supreme Court of Indiana said:
“In the Presbyterian system, a local church is but a member of a larger and more important religious organization, and is under its government and control. The session or local church, is controlled by the Presbytery, the Presbytery by the Synod, and the Synod by the General Assembly. The general church is controlled and governed by a body of constitutional and ecclesiastical laws, and exercise legislative and judicial power. Questions of rule, usage and custom affecting the local church or the relation of its members to the organization, are subject to the judgment of these several bodies, called judicatories, in the order named, and the decision of the highest to which any question is carried is binding upon all. The decision of the Presbytery in this case adjudged that the withdrawal of the majority from its jurisdiction was a secession from the church. This cannot, we think, be gainsaid. The order was that those who remained constituted and would thereafter be recognized by the Presbytery as the church. This excluded those withdrawing, and if the order is binding the withdrawal operated as a secession from the church as fully and as completely as though these persons had voluntarily severed their connection with the church. The word ‘church’ is-here used for ‘congregation,’ as a withdrawal from the Presbytery is, of course, a secession from the general organization. The judgment fixes the fact that the appellants seceded from the *731church, and if this decision hinds the civil courts, the proffered testimony was properly excluded. In Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. 679, the Supreme Court of the United States, in a similar case, between the two bodies of a Presbyterian church, each contending for the possession of the property, thus states the law: ‘In this class of cases we think the rule of action which should govern the civil courts, founded in a broad and sound view of the relations of the Church and State under our system of laws, and supported by a preponderating weight of judicial authority, is that whenever the questions of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom, or law have been decided by the highest of these church judicatories to which the matter has been carried, the legal tribunals must accept such decisions as final and as binding on them, in their application to the case before them.’
“In Shannon v. Frost, 3 B. Mon. 253, the court, on a similar question said: ‘This court, .having.no ecclesiastical jurisdiction, cannot revise or question ordinary acts of church discipline or excision. Our only judicial power in the case arises from the conflicting claims of the parties to the church property and the use of it. . . . We cannot decide who ought to be members of the church, nor whether the excommunicated have been justly or unjustly, regularly or irregularly, cut off from the body of the church. ’ The same rule is asserted in the following cases: State ex rel. v. Farris, 45 Mo. 183; Robertson v. Bullions, 9 Barb. 64, 134; German Reformed Church v. Seibert, 3 Barr 282; Gibson v. Armstrong, 7 B. Mon. 481; Harmon v. Dreher, 1 Speer’s Eq. 87. These authorities establish the proposition that the decision of these judicatories is- binding upon the courts where such questions arise.”
I might cite and quote from many other cases of similar import, but I think that is unnecessary, as it clearly appears from the foregoing quotations that *732the rule therein stated is elementary and is supported by the great weight of authority. In fact, I do not understand counsel for appellants to controvert the broad principle that, where questions of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom or law have been decided by the highest church judicatories to which the matter has been carried, the civil courts must accept such decisions as final, and as binding on them in their application to cases pending before them; but seek to modify that general rule by saying that where property rights are involved in and depend upon such decisions, then the civil courts will .not be bound thereby, but will investigate and determine for themselves the ecclesiastical questions so involved.
This is not only an anomaly to me, but, in my judgment, it is supported by neither reason nor by the weight of authority. Anomalous, because all must concede that church property is but a minor incident to religion and religious worship. And it is conceded by all, and supported by all the authorities cited by counsel for both sides, that in all matters purely ecclesiastical the church judicatories have original and exclusive jurisdiction, and that the civil courts have no jurisdiction or authority whatever to interfere therewith. This is true, because where, as in this country, there is a separation of Church and State, the ecclesiastical code constitutes no part of the civil jurisprudence of the State, consequently all questions arising thereunder are beyond the jurisdiction and pale of the State tribunals, thereby leaving all such questions to be determined by the Church judicatories, in accordance with the ecclesiastical laws. The laws and courts of the Church are just as separate and independent of those of the State, as the Church itself is separate and independent of the State. The former follows as an incident of the latter, and the latter is firmly founded upon both a Federal and State constitutional provision. Under this guaranty the Church *733has selected for judges of its courts men learned in its laws, devout and pious, and who acknowledge allegiance to its laws and God. No others, according to the ecclesiastical law, are eligible to occupy those positions. Otherwise we might witness the spectacle of a judge of a civil court administering ecclesiastical law which is as foreign to his jurisprudence as the Kingdom of God is foreign to the Kingdom of Man. Not only that, but if the contention of counsel for appellants is correct, then we might also witness a judge of a civil court who is a nonbeliever in Christ and His Holy Religion sitting in judgment, expounding and determining questions of belief and other doctrinal matters according to the laws of the Church, and at the same time disbelieve in them and in the divinity of Christ, to whom he acknowledges no allegiance. What a sacrilege it would be to compel the followers of Christ to submit to the decisions of infidels involving ecclesiastical matters. I can conceive of nothing which would hold religion up to greater ridicule, scorn and disrespect than such a spectacle.
In response to this, it has been suggested that the judgment of the civil court is only binding in so far as it affects the property involved therein; and that the portion of the judgment which construes and determines the question of doctrine, belief or creed may be ignored and disobeyed by all those members of the Church who disbelieve in the doctrine or creed as construed and interpreted by the court, just as was done by them in this and in all other similar cases. That is true, they may disregard that part of the judgment, because, as before stated, the Constitution of the United States and that of this State guarantee religious liberty to all and the right to worship God according to the dictates of their own conscience; and those rights cannot be legally restrained by the judgment and decree of any court of this land. But this presents an anomalous position. Here we have a civil *734court sitting in judgment between two contending factions of a church, over tbe ownership of certain property, which depends upon the proper construction of the creed and doctrine of the church. The ownership of the property is determined and follows as an incident to the decision of the doctrinal questions involved, and not otherwise. So we have a court deciding in this class of case two questions, first, the doctrinal questions which is the principal and paramount one; and, second, the property rights, which is incidental and subordinate to the first, or doctrinal question. The first is not only the principal question to be adjudicated, but it is preliminary to the second, or subordinate question; and, as before stated, the second follows the determination of the first as naturally as day follows night. Tet, notwithstanding these conceded facts, the very moment the judgment is entered and the property is delivered in pursuance thereof, the principal part of the judgment has no binding effect whatever upon either faction of the church; they may violate it with, impunity, for the reason the courts have no power to bind a man’s religious views or opinions; yet the second part of the judgment, which was purely incidental to the first part, remains in full force and effect, and must be obeyed by all. If the judgment is not binding upon the parties to it, then the court had no authority ‘to render it; and if the court had the authority to render it, then it is binding upon all until it is reversed, modified or set aside according to law. This is axiomatic, but this is clearly a case, if I may be excused for the comparison, where the tail wags the dog, and where the dog is killed for having been wagged.
So it is in all cases of this class; the incident controls the principal, and the church is destroyed because its judicatories construed its own laws differently from what the civil courts thought was correct.
It has also been suggested that the church is not *735injured by depriving it of its property. This I deny. While the church grounds and buildings are only incidental to religious worship, yet the teachings of Christ cannot in this day and age be conducted and carried on successfully without proper grounds and suitable buildings for that purpose. It is true one or both factions might organize a new congregation, and each might erect new buildings for worship, and get along nicely and harmoniously until some other doctrinal question should arise; but if the decisions of the judicatories of the two churches did not meet with unanimous concurrence of all the members, then they would have the right to split up, and there would then be another schism in each, and we would have four weak and impoverished church organizations, incapable of accomplishing much good, instead of one, the original, which was stronger than all of its different branches and off-shoots, and which was capable of accomplishing much good for the cause of Christ. But, if this policy of appealing from the" decisions of the church tribunals to the civil courts of the country is continued, then the cause of Christ and his teachings will be sacrificed upon an altar of gold. In this way it is made possible for the courts of the country to absolutely destroy the Church, if such a thing were possible, through the improper control of its property. But it is said that if there was no restraint or limitation placed upon the powers, of the Church judicatories regarding property rights, then they might, and probably have in some cases through error of judgment or evil design, divert property from the teaching “and promulgation of the doctrine and faith for which it was donated, to the teaching of some other doctrine, and thereby defeat the will of the donor and deprive those of the property who adhered steadfastly to the faith. This is only conjectural, but concede it to be true, yet might it not also be said with equal or even with a greater degree of truthfulness, that civil *736courts also might, through error, ignorance or design, so interpret ecclesiastical questions as to divert such property from the purposes for which it was donated? I dare say the civil courts have and will continue to commit more errors and more serious in character, in the administration of ecclesiastical laws, on account of their ignorance of those laws, than have or will be committed by the judicatories of the Church. This is perfectly natural, because the judges of the latter are more conversant in their laws than a layman can hope to be; and especially is that true in doctrinal questions, which are but the expressions of ‘faith and belief in Christ and ’His teachings which are incapable of being fully and perfectly understood by those who do not believe therein. The 17th verse of the 10th Chapter of Romans reads as follows: “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of Grod.”
This, in my judgment, is one of the chief causes for the existence of so much strife and division among Christian people." They do not hear alike, nor do they understand the word of Cod alike; but those who do hear and understand the Scriptures alike, associate themselves together into one religious body, called a church; and those who hear and understand them in a different way associate themselves together and form . another church, and so on unto the end of differentiation. All Christian people recognize the fact that faith is the chief constituent element entering into all doctrines, and that before one can properly and correctly understand and interpret them, he must hear and understand the Scriptures in the same spirit in which they were heard and understood by those who wrote the creed. It is for this reason that the judicatories of all churches and those of the State should be completely barred from passing upon doctrinal questions of another church, for, obviously, without faith being called unto requisition as an assistant interpreter, the correctness of their decisions would depend *737largely upon mere chance; and, consequently, in most cases would be erroneous. This matter will, however, receive further attention later under a more appropriate topic. The sole effect of such decisions is to transfer the church property from one of the factions to the other and leave both branches of the shattered church to heal their wounds the best they may, permitting the members thereof to form a new church organization, promulgate a new creed and worship God according to the dictates of their own consciences, untrampled by decisions of our civil courts until another schism arises.
The extent of the power of the civil courts to interfere with the authority of church tribunals to decide upon questions involving the rights to church property should be limited to the inquiry as to their jurisdiction of the latter. If under the constitution and laws of the church its judicatories have jurisdiction of the subject, then the hand of the former should be stayed, and leave it to the latter to inquire into and determine all questions of faith, doctrine, discipline, rule, custom and ecclesiastical government, as well as all property rights depending thereon. [Mack v. Kime, supra; Watson v. Jones, supra.]
Nor, in my opinion, as before stated, is the contention of counsel for appellants supported by the weight of authority.
It is true there are cases which hold that wherever rights of property depend upon an ecclesiastical question, the civil courts will not only look into the jurisdiction of the church judicatories, but will also decide for themselves all questions of doctrine, confession of faith, etc., upon which the property right depends, and overrule the decisions of the church judicatories where, in their judgment, the latter have erroneously decided such doctrinal questions. But, in my opinion, that position is not sustained by reason or by ’.the weight of authority.
*738The Supreme Court of Georgia, in the ease of Mack v. Kime, 129 Ga. 1, which grew out of this same church schism, on page 17, said: “When an individual becomes a member of a religious organization, his uniting with it is his voluntary act, and he becomes bound by the rules and usages of the organization. A religious association usually adopts a constitution, by-laws, and form of government. A member, when he enters the organization, voluntarily assumes the duty of obeying the laws of the association. As to all matters purely ecclesiastical he is bound by the decisions of the tribunals fixed by the organization to which he belongs, as an arbiter to determine the disputed questions relating to matters peculiarly within the province of the organization. In attempting to carry out the purpose for which religious associations are formed it becomes necessary, in almost every instance, for the organization to hold and own property. The members of the organization therefore become interested in the property so owned. Differences may arise which bring about disputes as to what interest a member or class of members of an organization may have in this property. Eights of property are as peculiarly within the jurisdiction of the civil courts of the land as purely religious rights are within the jurisdiction of the ecclesiastical tribunals of a religious organization. How far the civil courts will interfere in the affairs of a religious body, where property rights are involved, is a question which has been addressed to many courts of this country. Often the controversy as to the right of the property grows out of a controversy as to creed, doctrine, or teaching. While all of the rulings of the American courts cannot be said to be entirely uniform, the great weight of authority is to the effect that if a religious organization has, under its form of government, a tribunal constituted with jurisdiction to decide differences between its members as to creed, teaching, or doctrine, the civil courts will *739not undertake to review or revise the judgment of the church tribunal in reference to such matters. The cases which support this ruling seem to be founded upon sound reasoning, when we take into consideration the constitutional provisions which deny to Congress and the law-making powers of the different States the right to interfere in matters purely ecclesiastical. In some cases it has been said that the decisions of the church tribunals are persuasive, and not to be departed from by the civil courts, except where the decisions are clearly wrong. But the sounder rule is that laid down in those cases in which it is held that, if the matter relates to creed, doctrines, or teaching, the judgment of the constituted church tribunal is absolutely conclusive upon the civil courts, whether, in the opinion of the judge of such courts, the decision appears to be right or wrong. Where a right of property turns upon such a decision the civil courts will allow the property to go in that direction in which the decision of the church tribunal carries it. One of the leading cases on the subject in this country is Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. (U. S.) 679, 20 L. Ed. 666. It was there held that in a case where the right of property asserted in the civil courts is dependent upon a question of doctrine, discipline, ecclesiastical law, rule, custom, or church government, and that question has been decided by the highest tribunal within the organization to which it has been carried, the civil courts will accept that decision as conclusive, and be governed by it in its application to the case before it. In the opinion Mr. Justice Milker says, ‘It is not to be supposed that the judges of the civil courts can be as competent in the ecclesiastical law and religious faith of all these bodies as the ablest men are in reference to their own. It would therefore be an appeal from the more learned-tribunal in law, which should decide the case, to the one which is less so.’ [Page 729 of 13 Wall. (20 L. Ed. 666). See, also, 7 Rose’s Notes, 769; Brundage v. *740Deardorf, 92 Fed. 214, 34 C. C. A. 304; Schweiker v. Husser, 146 Ill. 399, 34 N. E. 1022; Lamb v. Cain, 14 L. E. A. 518, 129 Ind. 486, 29 N. E. 13; Watson v. Avery, 65 Ky. 332; Trustees of Trinity M. E. Church of Norwich v. Harris, 73 Conn. 216, 47 Atl. 116, 50 L. R. A. 636; White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends v. White Lick Quarterly Meeting of Friends, 89 Ind. 136.] ”
The question was most learnedly and exhaustively gone into by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Watson v. Jones, 13 Wall. 679. On pages 722, et seq., Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the court, used this language:
“We are next to inquire whether the decree thus rendered is based upon an equally just view of the law as applied to the facts of this controversy.
“The questions which have come before the civil courts concerning the rights to property held by ecclesiastical bodies, may, so far as we have been able to examine them, he profitably classified under three general heads, which of course do not include cases governed by considerations applicable to a church established and supported by law as the religion of the State.
“1. The first of these is when the property which is the subject of controversy has been, by the deed or will of the donor, or other instrument by which the property is held, by the express terms of the instrument devoted to the teaching, support, or spread of some specific form of religious doctrine or belief.
“2. The second is when the property is held by a religious congregation which, by nature of its organization, is strictly independent of other ecclesiastical associations, and so far as church government is concerned, owes no fealty or obligation to any higher authority.
“3. The third is where the religious congregation or ecclesiastical body holding the property is but a *741subordinate member of some general cburcb organization in which there are superior ecclesiastical tribunals with a general and ultimate power of control more or less complete, in some supreme judicatory over the whole membership of that general organization.
“In regard to the first of these classes it seems hardly to admit of a rational doubt that an individual or an association of individuals may dedicate property by way of trust to the purpose of sustaining, supporting, and propagating definite religious doctrines or principles, provided that in doing so they violate no law of morality, and give to the instrument by which their purpose is evidenced, the formalities which the laws require. And it would seem also to be the obvious duty of the court, in a case properly made, to see that the property so dedicated is not diverted from the trust which is thus attached to its use. So long as there are persons qualified within the meaning of the original dedication, and who are willing to teach the doctrines or principles prescribed in the act of dedication, and so long as there is any one so interested in the execution of the trust as to have a standing in court, it must be that they can prevent the diversion of the property or fund to other and different uses. This is the general doctrine of courts of equity as to charities, and it seems equally applicable to ecclesiastical matters.
“In such case, if the trust is confided to a religious congregation of the independent or congregational form of church government, it is not in the power of the majority of that congregation, however preponderant, by reason of a change of views on religious subjects, to carry the property so confided to them to the support of new and conflicting doctrine. A pious man building and dedicating a house of worship to the sole and exclusive use of those who believe in the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, and placing it under the control of a congregation which at the time holds the same *742belief, has a right to expect that the law will prevent that property from being used as a means of support and dissemination of the Unitarian doctrine, and as a place of Unitarian worship. Nor is the principle varied when the organization to which the trust is confided is of the second or associated form of government. The protection which the law throws around the trust is the same. And though the task may be a delicate one and a difficult one, it will be the duty of the court in such cases, when the doctrine to be taught or the form of worship to be used is definitely and clearly laid down, to inquire whether the party accused of violating the trust is holding or teaching a different doctrine, or using a form of worship which is so far variant as to defeat the declared objects of the trust. In the leading case on this subject, in the English courts, of the Attorney-General v. Pearson, 3 Merivale 353, Lord Eldon said, ‘I agree with the defendants that the religious belief of the parties is irrelevant to the matters in dispute, except so far as the King’s court is called upon to execute the trust.’ That was a case in which the trust-deed declared the house which was erected under it was for the worship and service of God. And though we may not be satisfied with the very artificial and elaborate argument by which the chancellor arrives at the conclusion, that because any other view of the nature of the Godhead than the Trinitarian view was heresy by the laws of England, and any one giving expression to the Unitarian view was liable to be severely punished for heresy by the secular courts, at the time the deed was made, that the trust was, therefore, for Trinitarian worship, we may still accept the statement that the court has the right to enforce a trust clearly defined on such a subject.
“The case of Miller v. Gable, 2 Denio 492, appears to have been decided in the Court of Errors of New York on this principle, so far as any ground of decision *743can be gathered from the opinions of the majority of the court as reported.
“The second class of cases which we have described has reference to the case of a church of a strictly congregational or independent organization, governed solely within itself, either by a majority of its members or by such other local organism as it may have instituted for the purpose of ecclesiastical government ; and to property held by such a church, either by way of purchase, or donation, with no other specific trust attached to it in the hands of the church than that it is for the use of that congregation as a religious society.
“In such cases where there is a schism which leads to a separation into distinct and conflicting bodies, the rights of such bodies to the use of the property must be determined by the ordinary principles which govern voluntary associations. If the principle of government in such cases is that the majority rules, then the numerical majority of members must control the right to the use of the property. If there be within the congregation officers in whom are vested the powers of such control, then those who adhere to the acknowledged organism by which the body is governed are entitled to the use of the property. The minority in choosing to separate themselves into a distinct body, and refusing to recognize the authority of the governing body, can claim no rights in the property from the fact that they had once been members of the church or congregation. This ruling admits of no inquiry into the existing religious opinions of those who comprise the legal or regular organization; for, if such was permitted, a very small minority, without any officers of the church among them, might be found to be the only faithful supporters of the religious dogmas of the founders of the church. There being no such trust imposed upon the property when purchased or given, the court will not imply one for *744the purpose of expelling from its use those who by regular succession and order constitute the church because they may have changed in some respect their views of religious truth.
‘ ‘ Of the cases in which this doctrine is applied no better representative can be found than that of Shannon v. Frost, 3 B. Mon. 253, where the principle is ably supported by the learned Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky.
“The case of Smith v. Nelson, 18 Vt. 511, asserts this doctrine in a case where a legacy was left to the Associate Congregation of Ryegate, the interest whereof was to be annually paid to their minister forever. In that case, though the Ryegate congregation was one of a number of Presbyterian churches connected with the general Presbyterian body at large, the court held that the only inquiry was whether the society still exists, and whether they have a minister chosen and appointed by the majority and regularly ordained over the society, agreeably to the usage of that denomination. And though we may be of opinion that the doctrine of that case needs modification, so far as it discusses the relation of the Ryegate congregation to the other judicatories of the body to which it belongs, it certainly lays down the principle correctly if that congregation was to be treated as an independent one.
“But the third of these classes -of cases is the one which is oftenest found in the courts, and which, with reference to the number and difficulty of the questions involved, and to other considerations, is every way the most important.
“It is the case of property acquired in any of the usual modes for the general use of a religious congregation which is itself part of a large and general organization of some religious denomination, with which it is more or less intimately connected by religious views and ecclesiastical government.
*745“The ease before us is one of this class, growing out of a schism which has divided the congregation and its officers, and the Presbytery and Synod, and which appeals to the courts to determine the right to the use of the property so acquired. Here is no case of property devoted forever by the instrument which conveyed it, or by any specific declaration of its owner, to the support of any special religious dogmas, or any peculiar form of worship, but of property purchased for the use of a religious congregation, and so long as any existing religious congregation can be ascertained to be that congregation, or its regular and legitimate successor, it is entitled) to the use of the property. In the case of an independent congregation we have pointed out how this identity, or succession, is to be ascertained, but in cases of this character we are bound to look at the fact that the local congregation is itself but a member of a much larger and more important religious organization, and is under its government and control, and is bound by its orders and judgments. There are in the Presbyterian system of ecclesiastical government, in regular succession, the Presbytery over the session or local church, the Synod over the Presbytery, and the General Assembly over all. These are called, in the language of the church organs, ‘judicatories,’ and they entertain appeals from the decisions of those below, and prescribe corrective measures in other cases.
“In this class of eases we think the rule of action which should govern the civil courts, founded in a broad and sound view of the relations of Church and State under our system of laws, and supported by a preponderating weight of judicial authority is, that, whenever the questions, of discipline, or of faith, or ecclesiastical rule, custom, or law have been decided by the highest of these church judicatories to which the matter has been carried, the legal tribunals must ac*746cept such decisions as final, and as binding on them, in their application to the case before them.
“We concede at the outset that the doctrine of the English courts is otherwise. In the case of the Attorney-General v. Pearson, cited before, the proposition is laid down by Lord Eldon, and sustained by the peers, that it is the duty of the court in such cases to inquire and decide for itself, not only what was the nature and power of these church judicatories, but what is the true standard of faith in the church organization, and which of the contending parties before the court holds to this standard. And in the subsequent case of Craigdallie v. Aikman, 2 Bligh 529, the same learned judge expresses in strong terms his chagrin that the Court of Sessions of Scotland, from which the case had been appealed, had failed to find on this latter subject, so that he could rest the case on religious belief, but had declared that in this matter there was no difference between the parties. And we can very well understand how the Lord Chancellor of England, who is, in his office, in a large sense, the head and representative of the Established Church, who controls very largely the church patronage, and whose judicial decision may be, and not infrequently is, invoked in cases of heresy and ecclesiastical contumacy, should feel, even in dealing with a dissenting church, but little delicacy in grappling with the most abstruse problems of theological controversy, or in construing the instruments which those churches have adopted as their rules of government, or inquiring into their customs and usages. The dissenting church in England is not a free church in the sense in which we apply the term in this country, and it was much less free in Lord Eldon’s time than now. Laws then existed upon the statute book hampering the free exercise of religious belief and worship in many most oppressive forms, and though Protestant dissenters were less burdened than Catholics and Jews, there did not exist that full, entire *747and' practical freedom for all forms of religious belief and practice which lies at the foundation of our political principles. And it is quite obvious, from an examination of the series of cases growing out of the organization of the Free Church of Scotland, found in Shaw’s Reports of Cases in the Court of Sessions, that it was only under the pressure of Lord Eldon's ruling, established in the House of Lords, to which final appeal lay in such cases, that the doctrine was established in the Court of Sessions after no little struggle and resistance. The full history of the case of Craigdallie v. Afirman, in the Scottish court, which we cannot further pursue, and the able opinion of Lord Meadowbank in Galbraith v. Smith, 15 Court of Sessions Cases 508, show this conclusively.
“In this country the full and free right to entertain any religious belief, to practice any religious principle, and to teach any religious doctrine, which does not violate the laws of morality and property, and which does not infringe personal rights, is conceded to all. The law knows no heresy, and is committed to the support of no dogma, the establishment of no sect. The right to organize voluntary religious associations to assist in the expression and dissemination of any religious doctrine, and to create tribunals for the decision of controverted questions of faith within the association, and for the ecclesiastical government of all the individual members, congregations, and officers within the general association, is unquestioned. All who unite themselves to such a body do so with an implied consent to this government, and are bound to submit to it. But it would be a vain consent and would lead to the total subversion of such religious bodies, if any one aggrieved by one of their decisions could appeal to the secular courts and have them reversed. It is of the essence of these religious unions, and of their right to establish tribunals for the decision of questions arising among themselves, that those decisions *748should be binding in all cases of ecclesiastical cognizance, subject only to such appeals as the organism itself provides for.
“Nor do we see that justice would be likely to be promoted by submitting those decisions to review in the ordinary judicial tribunals. Each of these large and influential bodies (to mention no others, let reference be had to the Protestant Episcopal, the Methodist Episcopal, and the Presbyterian churches), has a body of constitutional and ecclesiastical law of its own, to be found in their written organic laws, their books of discipline, in their collections of precedents, in their usage and customs, which as to each constitute a system of ecclesiastical law and religious faith that tasks the ablest minds to become familiar with. It is not to be supposed that the judges of the civil courts can be as competent ,in the ecclesiastical law and religious faith of all these bodies as the ablest men in each are in reference to their own. It would therefore be an appeal from the more learned tribunal in the law which should decide the case, to one which is less so.
“We have said that these views are supported by the preponderant weight of authority in this country, and for the reasons which we have given, we do not think the doctrines of the English Chancery Court on this subject should have with us the influence which we would cheerfully accord to it on others.
“We have already cited the case of Shannon v. Frost, in which the appellate court of the State where this controversy originated, sustains the proposition clearly and fully. ‘This court,’ says the Chief Justice, ‘having no ecclesiastical jurisdiction, cannot revise or question ordinary acts of church discipline. Our only judicial power in the case arises from the conflicting claims of the parties to the church property and the use of it. We cannot decide who ought to be members of the ehureh, nor whether the ex-communicated have *749been justly or unjustly, regularly or irregularly cut off from the body of the church. ’
“In the subsequent case of Gibson v. Armstrong, 7 B. Mon. 481, which arose out of the general division of the Methodist Episcopal Church, we understand the same principles to be laid down as governing that case, and in the case of Watson v. Avery, the case relied on by the appellants at bar, and considered in the former part of this opinion, the doctrine of Shannon v. Frost is in general terms conceded, while a distinction is attempted which we shall consider hereafter.
“One of the most careful and well-considered judgments on the subject is that of the Court of Appeals of South Carolina, delivered by Chancellor Johnson in the case of Harmon v. Dreher. The case turned upon certain rights in the use of the church property claimed by the minister, notwithstanding his expulsion from the Synod as one of its members. ‘He stands,’ says the chancellor, ‘convicted of the offense alleged against him by the sentence of the spiritual body of which he was a voluntary member, and whose proceedings he had bound himself to abide. It belongs not to the civil power to enter into or review the proceedings of a spiritual court. The structure of our government has, for the preservation of civil liberty, rescued the temporal institutions from religious interference. On the other hand, it has secured religious liberty from the invasion of the civil authority. The judgments, therefore, of religious associations, bearing on their own members, are not examinable here, and I am not to inquire whether the doctrines attributed to Mr. Dreher were held by him, or whether if held were anti-Lutheran; or whether his conduct was or was not in accordance with the duty he owed to the Synod or to his denomination. . . . When a. civil right depends upon an ecclesiastical matter, it is the civil court and not the ecclesiastical which is to decide. But the civil tribunal tries the civil right, and no more, taking the *750ecclesiastical decision out of which the civil right arises as it finds them. ’ The principle is reaffirmed by the same court in the John’s Island Church case, 2 Rich. Eq. 215.
“In Den v. Bolton, 7 Halsted (N. J. L.) 206, the Supreme Court of New Jersey asserts the same principles, and though founding its decision mainly on a statute, it is said to be true on general principles.
“The Supreme Court of Illinois, in the case of Ferraria v. Vasconcelles, 23 Ill. 456, refers to the case of Shannon v. Frost with approval, and adopts the language of the court that ‘the judicial eye cannot penetrate the veil of the church for the forbidden purpose of vindicating the alleged wrongs of excised members; when they became members they did so upon the condition of continuing or not as they and their churches might determine, and they thereby submit to the ecclesiastical power, and cannot now invoke the supervisory power, of the civil tribunals. ’
“In the very important case of Chase v. Cheney, 58 Ill. 509, recently decided in the same court, Judge Lawrence, who dissented, says, ‘We understand the opinion as implying that in the administration of ecclesiastical discipline, and where no other right of property is involved than loss of the clerical office or salary incident to such discipline, a spiritual court is the exclusive judge of its own jurisdiction, and that its decision of that question is binding on the secular courts.’ And he dissents with Judge Sheldon from the opinion because it so holds.
“In the case of State ex rel. Watson v. Farris, 45 Mo. 183, which was a case growing out of the schism in the Presbyterian Church in. Missouri in regard to this same Declaration and Testimony and the action of the General Assembly, that court held that whether a case was regularly or irregularly before the Assembly was a question which the Assembly had the right to determine for itself, and no civil court could reverse, *751modify, or impair its action in a matter of merely ecclesiastical concern.
“We cannot better close this review of the authorities than in the language of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in the case of the German Reformed Church v. Seibert. ‘The decisions of ecclesiastical courts, like every other judicial tribunal, are final, as they are the best judges of what constitutes an offense against the word of God and the discipline of the church. Any other than those courts must be incompetent judges of matters of faith, discipline, and doctrine; and civil courts, if they should be so unwise as to attempt to supervise their judgments on matters which come within their jurisdiction, would only involve themselves in a sea of uncertainty and doubt which would do anything but improve either religion or good morals.’
“In the subsequent ease of McGinnis v. Watson, this principle is again applied and supported by a more-elaborate argument.
“The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, in the case of Watson v. Avery, before referred to, while admitting the general principle here laid down, maintains that when a decision of an ecclesiastical tribunal is set up in the civil courts, it is always open to inquiry whether the tribunal acted within its jurisdiction, and if it did not, its decision could not be conclusive.
“There is, perhaps no word in legal terminology so frequently used as the word jurisdiction, so capable of use in a general and vague sense, and which is used so often by men learned in the law without a due regard to precision in its application. As regards its use in the matters we have been discussing it may very well be conceded that if the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church should undertake to try one of its members for murder, and punish him with death or imprisonment, its sentence would be of no validity in a civil court or anywhere else, Or if it should at the *752instance of one of its members entertain jurisdiction as between him and another member as to their individual right to property, real or personal, the right in no sense depending on ecclesiastical questions, its decision would be utterly disregarded by any civil court'where it might be set up. And it might be said in a certain general sense very justly, that it was because the General Assembly had no jurisdiction of the case. Illustrations of this character could be multiplied in which the proposition of the Kentucky court would be strictly applicable.
“But it is a very different thing where a subject-matter of dispute, strictly and purely ecclesiastical in its character — a matter which concerns theological controversy, church discipline, ecclesiastical government, or the conformity of the members of the church to the standard of morals required of them — becomes the subject of its action. It may be said here, also, that no jurisdiction has been conferred on the tribunal to try the particular case before it, or that, in its judgment, it exceeds the powers conferred upon it, or that the laws of the church do not authorize the particular form of proceeding adopted; and, in a sense often used in the courts, all of those may be said to be questions of jurisdiction. But it is easy to see that if the civil courts are to inquire into all these matters, the whole subject of the doctrinal theology, the usages and customs, the written laws, and fundamental organization of every religious denomination may, and must, be examined into with minuteness and care, for they would become, in almost every case, the criteria by which the validity of the ecclesiastical decree would be determined in the civil court. This principle would deprive these bodies of the right of construing their own church laws, would open the way to all the evils, which we have depicted as attendant upon the doctrine of Lord Eldon, and would, in effect, transfer to the *753civil courts where property rights were concerned the decision of all ecclesiastical questions.”
The same result was reached by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit, in the case of Brundage v. Deardorf, 92 Fed. 214. The syllabus tersely states the substance of the opinion, as follows: “The general conference of a religious society decided that its constitution and creed, which the conference had previously adopted, and which provided that it should not be amended except on request of two-thirds of its members, etc., was inadequate, and adopted measures for its amendment. The amendments were submitted to a vote of the members, after due notice, and more than two-thirds of those Voting voted in favor of the amendments, whereupon the general conference decided that they had been adopted. A portion of the dissenting members then withdrew, and claimed the property purchased by the church, on the ground that those favoring the amendments had departed from the principles and purposes of the church. Held, that the amendment to the constitution and creed were matters of ecclesiastical cognizance within the jurisdiction of the conference, that the society was bound by its decisions, and that the withdrawing members were not entitled to such property.”
And the Supreme Court of New York announced the same rule in the case of Connitt v. R. P. D. C. of N. Prospect, 54 N. Y. 551; and on page 562 the court quoted approvingly the following language of Chancellor Johnson in the case of Harmon v. Dreher (1 Speer’s Eq. 87): “ ‘When a civil right depends upon an ecclesiastical matter, it is the civil court and not the ecclesiastical which is to decide; but the civil tribunal tries the civil right, and no more, taking the ecclesiastical decisions out of which the civil right arises as it finds them.’ These views are fully sustained by the courts of our own State. [Dutch Church of Albany v. Bradford, 8 Cowen 457; Walker v. Wainwright, 16 *754Barb. 486; Robertson v. Bullions, 9 Barb. 64; Dieffendorf v. Reformed Calvinist Church, 20 Johns. 12.] I have purposely abstained from discussing the question whether the decision of the classis and other judicatories was right, that is, in accordance with the constitution, laws and usages of the church, because of the view I have taken that those judicatories had jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and, hence, that we are not to review their decision.”
And in the case of Trustees of Trinity M. E. Church v. Harris, 47 Atl. 116, Chief Justice Andrews, in speaking for the Supreme Court of Connecticut, b a well-considered case, on page 119, said:
“The case of Gaff v. Greer, 88 Ind. 122, is in principle precisely identical with the one at bar. That was an action demanding the title to, and the possession of lands, and the case depended upon the application of ecclesiastical law. Land had been conveyed to certain persons named in the deed, and decribed as trustees for the Presbyterian Church in Aurora, Illinois, and to their successors in office. The church edifice was erected on this land. A disagreement had arisen between members of the church in respect to the employment of a pastor. The matter was taken before the Presbytery. The Presbytery decided that the further employment of this pastor was unwise, and directed the church to secure the services of some other minister. With this decision the majority were dissatisfied, and, the Presbytery refusing upon application to recede from its position, they presented to the Presbytery a paper reciting their grievances, and asking for certain relief, which concluded by saying: ‘ Failing in this, we have no other alternative but to withdraw from your ecclesiastical jurisdiction.’ The Presbytery considered the paper, and determined that when any portion of the members of a church withdrew the remaining members constitute the church. This decision has been approved by the Synod, and by the General As*755sembly of the Presbyterian Church. The majority had possession of the church building, and continuously had regular preaching and services in conformity with the rites and ceremonies of the Presbyterian Church. - The minority, under the direction of the Presbytery, thereafter selected elders, elected trustees, employed another minister, demanded the possession of the church property, and, that being refused, brought the suit for its recovery. The court held and decided that the determination of the Presbytery ‘that where any portion of the members of a church withdrew the remaining members constitute the church’ was binding upon it (the court), and that the minority was entitled to- recover. The decision may be expressed in this way: ‘Where a Presbytery has decided that certain members of a Presbyterian church have seceded, the decision binds the civil courts, and the seceders, although a majority, lose their rights to the church property.’
“There are many other cases to the same effect, among which we have examined the following ones: State ex rel. v. Farris, 45 Mo. 183; Robertson v. Bullions, 9 Barb. 64, 134; McKinney v. Griggs, 5 Bush 401; Henderson v. Hunter, 59 Pa. St. 335; Krecker v. Shirey, 163 Pa. St. 534, 30 Atl. 440, 29 L. R. A. 476; College v. Wyatt, 27 Or. 390, 31 Pac. 206, 37 Pac. 1022, 26 L. R. A. 68; Shannon v. Frost, 3 B. Mon. 253; Smith v. Swormstedt, 16 How. 288, 14 L. Ed. 942; Hennessey v. Walsh, 55 N. H. 515, 530; Baxter v. McDonnell, 155 N. Y. 83, 49 N. E. 667, 40 L. R. A. 670. In Wheelock v. Presbyterian Church, 119 Cal. 477, 51 Pac. 841, the court said: ‘But the ecclesiastical court known as the “Presbytery” had the power to deal with the First Presbyterian Church in all matters ecclesiastical. The church, as an ecclesiastical body, was under the absolute control and dominion of the Presbytery, and the decisions and decrees of that body were binding upon it, as the decisions of this court are binding upon in*756ferior judicial tribunals. These decisions are not only binding upon the church as an ecclesiastical body, but they are binding and conclusive upon courts wherever and whenever material to pending litigation.’
“We think these authorities are sufficient to establish the proposition made a little above, that in all matters ecclesiastical the decision of the ecclesiastical tribunals is binding on the courts, and that the action and decision of Bishop Walden, to the effect that the plaintiffs are, according to the rules, usages, laws and discipline of the Methodist Church, the successors of the. grantees named in the deed of Mr. Swan, ought to have been held by the superior court as binding upon it, that the general claims of the plaintiffs are correct, and that their prayers for relief, as the pleadings now stand, should have been granted.”
In the case of Lamb v. Cain, 14 L. R. A. 518, at page 527, the Supreme Court of Indiana said: “In this case it is contended by the appellants that the new constitution and the revised confession of faith were never legally adopted, and that those acting under such constitution and confession of faith have created a new organization, which is not the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, while they, adhering to the old constitution and the old confession of faith, which are still in force and unchanged, constitute the church and that they are for that reason entitled to hold and control the property in controversy. We. think it must be true that if the old constitution and the old confession of faith have never been legally changed and are still in force, those adhering thereto constitute the church, while, on the other hand, if they have been legally changed and the new constitution and new confession are now the confession of faith and constitution of the Church of the United Brethren in Christ, those who refuse to accept and act under them are to be regarded as seceders, and no longer *757members of that church, and have no right to control its property.”
And the same court, in the case of Gaff v. Greer, 45 Am. Rep. 449, held that: “Where a Presbytery have decided that certain members of a Presbyterian Church under its jurisdiction have seceded, the decision binds the civil courts, and the seceders, although a majority, lose their rights to the church property.”
I think I would be perfectly safe in stating that there are probably a hundred other cases in this country announcing the law to be in harmony with the views expressed by the courts before mentioned, but I will neither cite nor quote from them, because I believe the arguments made and cases referred to in those cited will convince any disinterested and unprejudiced mind that both the reason and great weight of authority are on respondents’ side of this question.
The vice underlying the cases relied upon by counsel for appellants consists in their failure to differentiate between the principles of law governing cases decided by the courts of those countries where a union of Church and State exists, and where ecclesiastical law forms a part of their jurisprudence, and where, under that dual form of government, the civil courts must exercise more or less jurisdiction over ecclesiastical questions, as was pointed out by Mr. Justice Muller in the case of Watson v. Jones, supra; and that class of cases where the property which was the subject of litigation was by the deed or will of the donor, or other instrument by which the same was held, by express terms of the instrument devoted to the teaching, support or spread of some particular form of religious doctrine or belief. In this class of cases the instrument is the declaration of the trust and the terms upon which the property was conveyed to and accepted by the trustee; and in that case the ecclesiastical body occupies the position of an ordinary trustee of an express trust, and it must administer the *758property according to the express terms of the instrument creating the same, and not according to the doctrines and beliefs entertained and taught as interpreted by the judicatories of the class of ecclesiastical bodies to which the trustees belong. In all such cases nothing is left to the judgment and discretion of the trustees; consequently its doctrines and beliefs are wholly foreign to and cannot enter into the administration of property so dedicated; the donor has formulated and promulgated his own creed, and the trustee must administer the property according to that creed, and not in accordance with its own.
In the light of these brief observations it can be readily seen that when civil courts assume jurisdiction in that class of cases they do so under the civil and not by virtue of the ecclesiastical laws; and all property so held must be administered under the former law and not under the latter. From this, of course, it follows that the civil courts have exclusive jurisdiction in all such cases, and are not bound by the decisions of church judicatories.
But the property involved in this litigation was not donated to an ecclesiastical body for the purpose of teaching, support or spread of some specific form of religious doctrine or belief; but it was conveyed to the trustees of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Warrensburg, Missouri, which was a subordinate member of the general organization known as the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, in which there are superior ecclesiastical tribunals possessing a general and ultimate power of control over the entire membership of the general organization, which, of course, gives them jurisdiction also over all church property as an incident to their general jurisdiction over all church matters. [First Baptist Church v. Fort, 54 S. W. 892; Lamb v. Cain, supra; Watson v. Jones, supra; Mack v. Kime, supra.]
*759III.
Counsel for appellants also assail the validity of the union effectuated between these two churches, for the reason that the plan of union, as reported by the committee appointed by the General Assembly of each church, was not submitted as an entirety to the Presbyteries of each church for their approval, but only such portions-thereof were submitted as indicated below, namely, that the report of this joint committee, in formulating a plan of union, not only provided for the submission of the questions of union and adoption, by the Cumberlanders, of the doctrines and Confession of Faith of the Presbyterians, as revised by them in the year 1903, but also for the surrender of the former’s name and church organization; while the General Assemblies submitted to the Presbyteries only the former, and made no provision whatever for the expression of the will of the Cumberlanders upon the proposition of surrender of name and organization. It is therefore contended by them that the submission of this incomplete report upon the plan of union nullified the entire proceedings and prevented a legal union from being consummated between them.
For the sake of argument concede that to be true, yet it is the first time in the history of parliamentary usage and practice that I ever heard it contended that the conventions or assemblies appointing a committee to report upon any given subject or proposition were bound by such a report, and were not at liberty to accept or reject any or all portions thereof as in their judgment they deemed wise, just and proper. Yet for the first time in history this schism has afforded the basis of a decision which is relied upon by this court for so holding and thereby solemnly adjudicated that the agent has greater powers than its principal, and that the fountain is higher than its source.
The case of Landrith v. Hudgins, 120 S. W. 783, is the case relied upon as the authority supporting this *760contention. That case so holds, but no authority is cited by the learned judge who wrote that opinion supporting him in those views. Nor does he give any reason for his conclusion, except the bare statement that section 60 of the constitution of the Cumberland Church required the submission of the entire plan of union.
I do not so read that section. It is set forth m hciec verba in a former portion of this opinion, and it could serve no good purpose to recopy it at this place. It is sufficient to state that it provides in substance that upon the recommendation of the General Assembly, the Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline may be amended or changed with the approval of the Presbyteries.
It should be noted that this section does not require the General Assembly to submit any proposition whatever to the Presbyteries for their approval. It simply provides that the Confession of Faith, etc., may be amended or changed in any manner upon the recommendation of the General Assembly. This, of course, permits it to exercise its own discretion in determining what amendments, if any, it will submit for the approval of the Presbyteries. This record shows that the General Assembly submitted to the Presbyteries two propositions — first, the question of union; and, second, the acceptance by the Cumberland Church of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church as revised in the year 1903. Both of these recommendations were duly and legally adopted by the Presbyteries, which, upon approval, became operative and binding upon both churches, because both agreed to them in a constitutional manner by and through their duly constituted authorities. But if the question of the surrender of the name and church organization of the Cumberland Church was not included as a. necessary incident to those recommended and approved, then it is self-evident that it still retains *761its name and its organization. But this can in no manner affect the legality of the propositions which were properly submitted to and duly approved by the Presbyteries; the union of the two churches, and the acceptance by the Cumberland Church of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church.
But in my judgment appellants’ whole contention is untenable, for the reason that the record unmistakably shows that the whole object of the entire proceedings was to bring about the union between these two churches, which was duly submitted to and approved by the Presbyteries, and 'the question of doctrine and Confession of Faith was the only serious difference existing between them. That question was also properly submitted to the Presbyteries for approval, and it was approved by a constitutional majority. All else was mere formality, and the change of the name and church organization would necessarily in the absence of an agreement to the contrary follow as the result of and as an incident to the union — in the same manner and to the same extent as if, for instance, two business co-partnerships -existed under the names of Jones & Smith and Brown & Smith, and they should agree to unite their old businesses and form a new co-partnership and for the same purpose under the name of the former. The moment the union was agreed to and the new co-partnership was formed, the names of the old firms would be surrendered and their business organizations would, as a matter of law, be dissolved. In the supposed case it would be self-evident that after the formation of the new co-partnership neither of the old co-partnerships of Jones & Smith and Brown & Smith could longer exist, much less could those names be retained and transferred by the old firms to the new firm, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary; and that would be true whether the latter had agreed upon a new name or not. In the absence of an agree*762ment to the contrary, as before stated, both of the old names would he surrendered, as a matter of law, thereby leaving the new firm to adopt a name and to organize its business according to its own plans, regardless of the names and organizations Of the old firms.
The same is unquestionably true of these two churches. If, however, it be true, which I do not believe, they have not agreed upon a name for the united church, nor formulated its organization, then there is nothing in the civil law which will prevent them from now doing so; and their failure to do so in advance of the formation of the union can in no manner affect the legality of that union. These observations, it seems to me, are self-evident.
IV.
The next insistence presented by counsel for appellants for determination involves the question of identity of doctrine and Confession of Faith as believed in and taught by these two churches. It is insisted that a radical difference exists in that regard between these two churches; that before a valid union can be effectuated between them there must he identity of doctrine and faith possessed by both; and that in the absence of such showing, the majority of neither can legally take possession of and transfer the property thereof to the other church without the unanimous consent of all of the members, or so long as there is a single dissenter thereto. Upon the other hand, counsel for respondents contend that at the time of the submission of the question of union to the Presbyteries for their approval there was no substantial difference of doctrine and faith existing between these two churches; that a literal identity was not necessary; that the determination of that question rested exclusively with and was determined by the judicatories of the church; that the decisions of those *763courts are conclusive upon all ecclesiastical questions and upon all property rights of the church depending upon those questions; and that the members of the church, as well as all civil courts, are concluded and bound thereby.
(a) What are the doctrines and beliefs of these two churches? They are reduced to writing and are found printed in what is denominated the “Confession of Faith,” which in so far as they are material to the questions involved in this case are set forth in the majority opinion. Any one can read them, but like all other written documents, in order to ascertain the meaning of those who wrote and promulgated them, they must be construed; and that brings us to the consideration of the question, by whom should they be construed? Counsel for appellants insist that it should be done in this case by the civil courts, for the reason that upon them depend property rights; while counsel for respondents contend that under the Constitution of the United States and that of this State that authority rests exclusively in the church tribunals.
Article I of the Amendments to the Constitution of the United States reads as follows: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
And Section 5 of article II of the Bill of Rights of this State, reads as follows: “That all men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own, conscience; that no person can, on account of his religious opinions, be rendered! ineligible to any office of trust or profit under this State, nor be disqualified from testifying or from serving as a juror; that no human authority can control or interfere with the rights of conscience; that no person ought, by any law, to be molested in his person or estate on account of his religous persuasion or profession; but the liberty of *764conscience hereby secured shall not be so construed as to excuse acts of licentiousness, nor to justify practices inconsistent with the good order, peace or safety of this State, or with the rights of others.”
In order to fully and properly understand these constitutional provisions, we should bear in mind the conditions that existed in other countries, and the evils our forefathers intended to abolish by their adoption. At that time practically all European countries had a union of Church and State, and out of this grew religious intolerance, persecution and oppression; and to that door history has laid many of the most diabolical crimes which are recorded in the annals of time. Under such a union the ecclesiastical laws constituted a portion of the jurisprudence of those countries, and especially was that true of England, our mother country. Without going to the bottom of the question, yet from a superficial investigation of the subject, I conclude those laws were more in the nature of ordinances of cities than general laws of the country. And while the church judicatories were called ecclesiastical courts, yet they were in fact legally constituted institutions of such countries, with the whole power of government back of them. Under this form of government the judges of these courts, and their advisers, were made the arbitrators of religious liberty, the bigotry of many of whom was more profound than was their knowledge of God’s word. This, of course, led to sacrifice of individual religious liberty and conviction upon the altar at the feet of the ignorant bigot; and all who possessed the courage of their conviction could not and would not submit to such outrage, which in the course of time led to great strife, persecution and oppression. Our forefathers having seen the outrages which had been perpetrated in the name of the Holy religion, and sanctioned by the laws of the country, wisely made up their minds to prevent a repetition thereof, at least *765in this country, by the adoption of the constitutional provisions before mentioned.
But since there is no union of Church and State in this country, where every man is at liberty to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, ecclesiastical laws form no part of our jurisprudence or laws of the country, nor are ecclesiastical courts legally constituted institutions of the State or Nation. The former are not laws at all, nor are the latter courts within the meaning in which this term is used in civil government. Under the constitutional provisions before mentioned, all men are at perfect liberty to form voluntary unincorporated church societies, and to organize a church government, not inconsistent with the laws of the land, and to adopt a confession of faith and form of religious worship which is commendable to their own conscience, untrammeled by any law or any other legally constituted authority.
Under this law all church societies were authorized to hold and own church buildings and other property which were necessary incidents to proper and orderly worship. Their properly constituted authorities were authorized to enact their own laws, if we may so call them, create their own judicatories, and elect their own officers. These judicatories alone have jurisdiction to construe and enforce these laws, for the reason they involve questions of religious conviction and confession of faith, which is but the written or oral expressions of one’s belief in God and his teachings. Civil courts have no jurisdiction to construe and compare confessions of faith and other religious questions, because they constitute no part of the laws of the land, but are simply doctrinal statements, expressing the religious beliefs entertained and taught by the church which promulgated them; but even if they possessed legislative sanction, still they would be invalid and void, for the reason that they would *766clearly violate those constitutional provisions which were adopted for the purpose of preventing the' Legislature from enacting any law which would infringe upon religious liberty, or control man’s religious convictions. The laws -of this State permit members of churches to investigate their own confession of faith and select their own interpreters thereof, and are not bound by the construction placed thereon by either the civil courts or by the judicatories of some other church organization. Either that must be true, or else those courts would have the absolute power of driving every member of the church therefrom by placing a construction upon the confession of faith which would be at war with every religious conviction such members entertain. Most certainly it would have that effect upon all who could not conscientiously subscribe to the faith as expounded by such courts. Not only that, but under the plain letter of the constitutional provisions before mentioned, every man has the perfect right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, untrammeled not only by the laws and courts of the State but also by those of his own- church; but notwithstanding that constitutional provision, the majority opinion in this case takes from and deprives appellants, and especially those members who formerly belonged to the Cumberland Church, of all of their rights and interests in and to this church property, for no other reason except that they availed themselves of their constitutional right to revise their Confession of Faith in such manner as to express, their religious convictions.
Said provision of the State Constitution provides that all men have the right to worship God according to the dictates of their own conscience, and that no human authority can interfere with or control that right, nor molest them in their property rights on account of their religious persuasions. Clearly, the majority opinion not only molests appellants in their *767property rights, hut it has completely deprived them of all of their rights, title and interests in and to the same; and for no other reason, as before stated, except they expressed their religious persuasion in their Confession of Faith in a manner guaranteed to them by the Constitution of the State and by the constitution of both of these churches.
Again, a person can no more surrender or contract away his religious liberty and convictions by associating himself with a church than could the Legislature of the State deprive him of them by a statutory enactment — both would be absolutely void. When a person unites with a church it is supposed that he subscribes to the confession of faith as promulgated by that church and agrees to abide by its doctrines and teaching as expounded and taught by its lawfully constituted authorities, with the knowledge and understanding that the confession of faith and all doctrinal questions are liable to be amended from time to time by the judicatories of that church; and in this class of churches it has always been the common understanding of clergy and laymen, that if any member does not subscribe to the doctrines of the church as expounded by the highest tribunal thereof, then his only remedy is to withdraw his membership therefrom; and should he decline to do so, the church may expel him therefrom; and in both instances he would lose whatever interest he had in the church property. This seems to be the consensus of opinion of all of the courts of this country and of England. But in this case the exact reverse is held to be the rule. The majority who remained steadfast with the church have forfeited their property rights to the retiring minority.
If the position contended for by counsel for appellants is sound in this case, then the same contention should also hold good in a similar case arising out of a schism in any other church, This, I suppose, will be conceded; and *768in view of the concession, let us suppose the following case: Suppose the members of the Christian Church at St. Joseph (which is strictly congregational or independent organization governed solely within itself, by a majority of its members) should elect officers and employ a minister who construe the Scriptures to mean and teach Fatalism in the sense in which it was interpreted and stated by the Presbyterian Church in the Calvinistic Confession of Faith prior to its revision; and suppose a minority of the members should disagree with said officers and minister in their interpretation of the Scriptures bearing upon the question of salvation, and should believe and teach that salvation was possible to all and certain to Christians; and suppose a schism should arise in the church over this difference of construction, and thereupon the minority should attempt to expel the majority, who concur with the minister in his belief and teachings; and suppose the minority should bring suit for the possession of the church property, alleging for their cause of action the above assumed facts, and pray judgment for the possession of the property for the reason that those facts showed the majority had departed from the faith and teachings of the church as expounded by Alexander Campbell and other eminent theologians of that church, would it, under that state of facts, be seriously contended by counsel for appellants that the courts of the State would have jurisdiction over and should take up the Scriptures, which constitute the only creed and confession of faith which that church has, and construe them for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not they taught foreordination and predestination, and solemnly determine that fact in favor of the minority or majority, and in pursuance to that ascertainment and determination decree the property to the parties whose faith coincides with the interpretation of the court? Certainly not, and any civil tribunal in Christendom which would undertake so foolish a thing would *769justly subject itself to contempt and ridicule. Yet, that is just what they ask this court to do in principle in this case. There is not a whit’s difference in principle between the two cases. In the case at bar, the Confession of Faith and other doctrinal teachings of the Presbyterian Church are simply condensed statements of the Scriptures, as construed by the church authorities, expressing the religious belief of the church and setting forth the most important doctrines the church believes the Scriptures teach. The Bible itself expressed the religious beliefs and teachings of the Christian Church, while the Confession of Faith in a brief manner expresses that of the Presbyterian Church; and if error has been committed by either church in its construction of the Scriptures, that error should be corrected by another and proper construction ; and any law which would prevent that correction would, in my judgment, be unwise and greatly injurious to the Christian religion; and no court should hesitate for one moment to declare it invalid under the constitutional provisions before mentioned. The mere fact that the Presbyterian Church, or other church for that matter, has deemed it proper to summarize and compile its beliefs and teaching into a statement, called a “Confession of Faith,” should no more prevent that church from reconstruing the Scriptures and thereby expunge error from its confession any more than the early construction placed upon the Scriptures by Alexander Campbell should prevent the ministers of to-day of the Christian Church from placing a different construction upon them. The only difference I am able to see consists more in the form in which the construction is stated than in substance. The former is in writing and is called a Confession of Faith, while the latter was oral and is called a sermon; and in the former, as I understand it, all of the ministers adhere to and teach the Confession of Faith as written, until it is repealed or amended in the manner provided *770for by.the constitution of the church; while in the latter each indivdual minister is at liberty to place his own construction upon each passage and preach that construction to all who will hear him. And if error be committed in that regard today, tomorrow will witness its correction by the first minister who discovers it, thereby placing it beyond the power of any individual, or even an entire congregation, from binding the entire church to error, until there is an unanimous agreement among all of the members to correct the error.
The belief of the Presbyterian Church, as well as that of the Christian, is based upon the Scriptures, and the chief distinguishing feature existing between the two churches, as I see it, is the manner in which the Scriptures are interpreted and taught by each. If that is true, and if the minority of the members of the Christian Church would have no right to oust the majority from the possession of the church property because its ministers at different times placed different constructions upon certain portions of the Scriptures, then a fortiori should the minority in the Presbyterian Church be denied the power to oust the majority and take possession of the church property for amending the Confession of Faith in conformity to the teaching of the Scriptures, as shown by a later and wiser construction. The churches of the country should be encouraged along this line of progress, in order that they may keep abreast of the times, and throw aside all useless doctrinal matters, and teach and practice Christianity as Christ taught and practiced it while he was on earth.
The framers of the constitutions of these two churches, in their wisdom, foresaw the time when doctrinal questions would cease to play important roles in the teachings and practices of the Christian religion and would give way to broader and higher conceptions of God and Christ and His teachings. In order to meet these important emergencies as they might *771arise from time to time, the constitution of each provides that “upon the recommendation of the General Assembly, . . . the Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline may be amended or changed” by the approval of a majority of the Presbyteries. The framers of those instruments saw and fully understood that the Confession of Faith was not perfect when adopted, and that in the course of time members of these churches would grow in grace and knowledge through works and faith in Christ, and would for that reason be better fitted to understand the teachings of the Scriptures, which would necessitate a modification or change in the Confession of Faith, in order to conform to this new knowledge of Christian teachings. The founders of these churches, knowing from the teachings of the Scriptures, that this growth of their members in the spirit of God would require a modification of the Confessions of Faith, met that contingency by a constitutional provision, authorizing amendments to the Confession of Faith, and every member when he or she joined the church thereby agreed to that constitutional provision in the sanie manner that he and she agreed to all other laws of the church. That being true, it must follow as a necessary sequence, that when the two churches through their properly constituted authorities amended the Confession of Faith, in the manner pointed out by the constitutions of the two churches, all members of both churches are bound thereby so long as they remain in the church; and if the amendment does not meet with their religious convictions, they are legally bound according to the ecclesiastical laws of the church to withdraw from its membership, otherwise each and every dissenting member may effectually prevent all amendments to the Confession of Faith, and thereby bind the church to the Confession as originally written, as long as time lasts, although every other member of the. entire church may believe in and favor the amendment. *772Such, a result is clearly against the whole spirit and growth of the church and violative of all of its laws, and no court, civil or ecclesiastical, should lend its aid to such an unwise and unjust result.
Not only are members of religious associations, such as churches, bound by constitutional provisions which authorize amendments to their Confession of Faith and other by-laws, as is fully established by the numerous authorities heretofore cited, but the same rule of law applies in fraternal insurance associations, the primary object of which is pecuniary protection, and upon which property rights depend; and when such amendments are made in the manner provided for by the constitution thereof, they are binding upon all.
The Supreme Court of Indiana in the case of Supreme Lodge, Knights of Pythias, v. Knight, 3 L. R. A. l. c. 412, used this language:
“The provisions of the established by-laws of an association such as that with which the assured united are, as appellee’s counsel justly affirm, elements of the contract of insurance. They are factors that cannot be disregarded. That they have this effect all who become members of the association must know. A person who enters an association must acquaint himself with the laws, for they contribute to the admeasurement of his rights, his duties and his liabilities. [Bauer v. Samson Lodge K. of P., 102 Ind. 262; Fugure v. Mut. Society of St. Joseph, 46 Vt. 368; Simeral v. Dubuque Mut. F. Ins. Co., 18 Iowa 319; Coles v. Iowa State Mut. Ins. Co., 18 Iowa 425; Coleman v. Knights of Honor, 18 Mo. App. 189; Mitchell v. Lycoming Mut. Ins. Co., 51 Pa. St. 402; People ex rel. v. St. George’s Society, 28 Mich. 261; Osceola Tribe v. Schmidt, 57 Md. 98; Sperry’s Appeal, 8 Cent. Rep. 215, 116 Pa. St. 391; Bacon, Benefit Societies, sec. 81.]
“It is not one by-law or some by-law of which the *773member must take notice, but he must take notice of all which affect his rights or interests. [Poultney v. Bachman, 31 Hun 49.]
“Where, as here, there is an express and clear reservation of the right to amend, he is bound to take notice of the existence and effect of that reserved power. The power to enact laws is inherent in every corporation as an incident of its existence. This power is a continuous one. [Niblack, Mut. Ben. Societies, sec. 124.]
“No one has a right to presume that by-laws will remain unchanged Associations and corporations have a right to change their by-laws when the welfare of the corporation or association requires it, and it is not forbidden by the organic laws The power which enacts may alter or repeal. [Richardson v. Union Cong. Society, 58 N. H. 187; Com. ex rel. v. Mayor, 5 Watts 152; St. Patrick’s Male Beneficial Society v. McVey, 92 Pa. St. 510.]
“The duly chosen and authorized representatives of the members alone are vested with the power of determining when a change is demanded, and with their discretion courts cannot interfere. Were it otherwise, courts would control all benevolent associations, all corporations, and all fraternities. It is only when there is an abuse of discretion, and a clear, unreasonable and arbitrary invasion of private rights, that courts will assume jurisdiction over such societies or corporations. With questions of .policy, doctrine or discipline courts will not interfere. Courts will compel adherence to the charter, and to the purpose for which the society was organized, but they will not do more. [Stadler v. Grand Lodge, 3 Am. Law Rec. 589; Crossman v. Massachusetts Ben. Asso., 3 New Eng. Rep. 517, 143 Mass. 435; Hussey v. Gallagher, 61 Ga. 86.]
“The principle which rules here is strictly analogous to those which prevail in controversies between the officers and members of religious organiza*774tions; and it is well settled that in snch cases court's will not control the exercise of discretionary powers, or direct the course of an action in matters of expediency or polity. [Dwenger v. Geary, 12 West. Rep. 691, 113 Ind. 106.]
“To justify interference by the courts, and war-' rant the overthrow of by-laws enacted in the mode prescribed by the by-laws, it must be shown that there was an abuse of power, or that the later by-law is unreasonable. It is not enough to show that a better or' wiser course might have been pursued, for it must be shown that there was an abuse of discretion, or that the by-law is so unreasonable as to be void.
“We do not affirm that a benefit society may, by a; change in its by-laws, arbitrarily repudiate an obligation created by a policy of insurance; but we do affirm that where a change is regularly made in its by-laws', and the motive which influences the change is an honest one to promote the welfare of the society, and the members are all given an opportunity to avail themselves of the change, no actionable wrong is done the" members of their beneficiaries. It may sometimes happen that the interests of an individual, or of a few individuals, may be impaired; but it is the right, and indeed it is the duty, of the society, to protect the interests of.the many, rather than of the few. Persons-who become members of such societies must take notice of this; and one person cannot, therefore, demand that the welfare of the. society and the interests of the many be sacrificed for his sole benefit.
“In the case before us the change from the one plan to the other was not an arbitrary or unreasonable exercise of power; nor was it the repudiation of a debt, nor the destruction of a vested right. It was not unreasonable, because it may well be that the system of insurance originally adopted, which gave no heed to age, was so infirm as to be incapable of long: enduring. It was not arbitrary, because the by-laws. *775reserved the right of amendment, and a desire to promote the welfare of the society brought about the change. It was not the repudiation of a debt, because the right to the avails of assessment provided for by the contract was not taken away. It was not the destruction of a vested right, because the power to amend was, as reserved, a part of the contract from which the right of the beneficiary emanated, and because, also, the right to enter the new class was open to all members on equal terms.” If such amendments are valid and binding upon the property rights of members in fraternal associations, whose primary object is to furnish protection for the families of the deceased members, which is purely a property right, then how much stronger should the reason be for holding such amendments valid and binding upon members of religious societies, where the primary object of the society is to care for the spiritual welfare of its members, and where their property rights and interests are purely incidental and of minor and secondary consideration. In each case the members have agreed in advance that the amendment might be made, and where so made in pursuance to their previous agreement, they are bound thereby so long as they remain members of the society; and in each case if they are dissatisfied with and cannot conscientiously subscribe to the amendment, then his only legal remedy is to withdraw from the society and by so doing in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, he forfeits all his interests in and rights to the property of the association.
The mere fact that some of the members of the Cumberland Church could not subscribe to the Confession of Faith of the united church, which was a modification of the Presbyterian confession, which was adopted as the confession of the-united church, was wholly immaterial from a legal standpoint, for the reason that the constitutional provisions which authorized *776such amendment did not limit the church to any particular kind of amendment, nor require that it should conform to the religious beliefs and convictions of each and all of the members before it should become valid and operative.
(b) We are now brought to the question, was there an inconsistency and irreconcilable conflict between the confessions of faith at the time the union was approved by the Presbyteries of the two churches? Should we concede this to be true, still that, in my judgment, would not alter the legal aspect of the question involved, for the reason, as before pointed out, there was no limitation placed by the constitution upon the church as to the character of amendments that it might make to the Confession of Faith, Catechism, Constitution and Rules of Discipline; and in the absence of such limitation clearly the church had the power to make any amendments they deemed proper and for the good of the church, especially in doctrine or touching doctrinal matters; and if any member cannot conscientiously subscribe to the confession as amended, then he may withdraw, if he wishes, from the church. But to my mind such conflict would not warrant the courts in declaring the union invalid, or justify any member in withdrawing from the church any more than he would be warranted in repudiating the Christian religion, simply because there are the same apparent and irreconcilable conflicts contained in the Holy Scriptures themselves. That such apparent conflict does exist therein is evidenced by the existence of so many churches, all of which believe in the Christian religion, but no two of them construe or interpret the Scriptures alike, thereby showing that they mean one thing to one church and another thing to another church, and so on to the end of the list.
Take this very case, and if it be conceded that the Presbyterian Church prior to the modification of its Confession of Faith in 1903 believed that the Bible *777taught fatalism or predestination or foreordination, while the Cumberland Church believes it teaches man is a free, moral agent, and that all men through the atonement and divine influence of God may be saved. In fact, my understanding is that this very difference in belief largely caused the Cumberland Church, in 1810, to separate from the Presbyterian. So, it is seen that it would be just as consistent for the Cumberland members to say that they would repudiate the Christian religion because those apparent inconsistent teachings are found in the Bible as for them to withdraw from the united church because its Confession of Faith contains those same identical inconsistences. But let us withdraw the concessions before made and look at these two confessions of faith as they were at the time the union was voted upon.
In the year 1884, the Cumberland Church amended its Confession of .Faith regarding the question of “Fatalism” and “Free Agency” and promulgated the same with the following preliminary statement:
“The founders of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in their licensure and ordination by the Presbyterian Church were permitted to ‘ except the idea of fatality,’ as they believed it to be embraced in the doctrines of unconditional election and reprobation, and an atonement, limited to a definitely elected number, as taught in the Westminster Confession of Faith. Subsequently, having for this been cut off from the parent church, in fixing a standard of doctrine for the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, which they organized, they adopted the Westminster Confession of Faith, modified in the following particulars:
“1. That there are no eternal reprobates.
“2. That Jesus died, not for a part only, but for all men, and in the same sense.
“3. That all infants dying in infancy are saved.
“4. That the Holy Spirit operates on all the *778world — on all for whom- Christ died — in sneh manner as to render all men responsible, and therefore inexcusable. ”
And in 1903 the Presbyterian Church accomplished a revision of its Confession of Faith also, which embraced a declaratory statement intending to explain the objectionable clauses and remove all misapprehension of their meaning, which in so far as is material to this case reads as follows:
“II. The Declaratory Statement.
“While the ordination vow of ministers, ruling elders, and deacons, as set forth in the Form of Government, requires the reception and adoption of the ' Confession of Faith only as containing the System of Doctrine taught in the Holy Scriptures, nevertheless', seeing that the desire has been formally expressed for a disavowal by the church of certain inferences drawn from statements in the Confession of Faith, and also for a declaration of certain aspects of revealed truth which appear at the present time to call for more explicit statement, therefore the Presbyterian-Church in the United States of America does authoritatively declare as follows:
“First, with reference to Chapter III of the Confession of Faith; that concerning those who are saved in Christ, the doctrine of God’s eternal decree is held in harmony with the doctrine of His love to all mankind: His gift of His Son to be the propitiation for the sins of the whole world, and- His readiness to bestow His saving grace on all who seek it. That concerning those who perish, the doctrine of God’s eternal decree is held in harmony with the doctrine that God desires not the death of any sinner, but has provided in Christ a salvation sufficient for all, adapted to all, and freely offered in the Gospel to all; that men are fully responsible for their treatment of God’s gracious offer; that his decree hinders no man from ac*779eepting that offer;’ and that no man is condemned except on the ground of sin.
“Second. With reference to Chapter X, Section 3, of the Confession of Faith, that it is not to be regarded as teaching that any who die in infancy are lost. We believe that all dying in infancy are included in the election of grace and are regenerated and saved by Christ through the Spirit, who works when and where and how he pleases. ’ ’
For years, yes, for more than half a century, the former church had from time to time made overtures to the latter, looking toward a union between them; and with that idea in view, as I understand this record, the principal difference that existed between them was over the question of fatalism, and in order to harmonize their Confession of Faith with each other in that regard, the amendments before stated, were made. Thereupon steps were taken to form this union, and, as before stated, each church appointed a Committee on Fraternity and Union. These committees met, formulated and agreed upon the joint report herein-before set out. This report declared in substance: That such agreement now exists between the system of doctrine contained in the Confessions of Faith of the two churches as to warrant this union — a union honoring alike to both. The plan of union provides that the two churches “shall be united as one Church, under the name and style of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, possessing all the legal and corporate rights and powers which the separate churches now possess.” It was further provided that “all ministers and Churches included in the two denominations shall be admitted to the same standing in the united Church which they may have held in their respective connections up to the consummation of the reunion.” Also “that the boundaries of the several Presbyteries and Synods shall be. adjusted by the General Assembly of the United Church, and the offi*780cial records of the two Churches during the period of separation shall be preserved and held as making up the history of the one Church.”
This report was duly adopted by the General Assembly of each church, and was by them recommended to their respective Presbyteries for approval, which was duly approved by each in the manner and form provided by their respective constitutions, as before stated.
Counsel for respondents contend that this record shows that the creeds of the two churches are substantially the same, and that there is no. real conflict between them.
The two churches, in a constitutional manner, after years of work and deliberation, solemnly declare that they were substantially the same, and that the only difference, “Fatalism” and “Free Agency,” that separated and held them apart had been removed by the revision of the Confession of Faith of the Presbyterian Church in the year 1903. It seems to me that the determination of that question by the decisions of the highest judicatories of . those two churches should and does fully determine that question. It was purely a. question of belief regarding spiritual matters, and in the very nature of things no one can tell what the religious convictions of a man are as well as he can himself. The good people of these churches were not feigning and trying to deceive each other as to what their beliefs were upon the question of “Fatalism.” It seems to me that the time, place and subject matter were sufficient inducements for them to speak the truth, and should remove every doubt as to their sincerity, when they solemnly declared that the two Confessions of Faith were substantially the same. This alone, should constitute sufficient reason for this court to adopt the decisions of the courts of these churches upon that question.
But independent of this, a creed or confession of *781faith cannot he construed hy the same canons of construction with which we construe ordinary written documents.
One of the principal rules for construing wills, deeds and other documents is that all “words and phrases used therein shall he taken in their plain or ordinary and usual sense. ’ ’ When applied to the construction of legal instruments that is a wise and helpful rule in ascertaining the intention and meaning of the parties who executed it, for the reason they refer to things and express ideas about worldly matters with which all are familiar; but that is not true in spiritual matters. No one possesses actual knowledge of God and His infinite wisdom, and for that reason hut few persons can have the same conception of Him or of His will. So it must follow therefrom that all words and phrases spoken or written of or concerning God are understood and interpreted in the light of the conception the reader or hearer of those words have of God and of His will, and when so used and interpreted he attaches to them the usual meaning which is given to them by the persons who have the same’ idea or conception as his own of God, and with whom he usually associates and discusses religious matters. Or to make my meaning plainer, words and phrases are used to express and convey ideas which are transcripts, images or pictures of images of things we have in mind, and when applied to terrestrial matters, such, for instance, as contracts or other legal instruments, the mind naturally reverts to the worldly matters which constitute the subject-matter of the contract, about which practically all persons possess the same common knowledge.; and for that reason when words are used regarding such instruments, they convey practically the same image, picture or idea to the minds of all who read or hear the words spoken; and it is for this reason that the rule requires courts in the construction of contracts and other legal instruments to give to the *782words thereof their plain and ordinary meaning. But that is not true in religious matters, where the words used refer to spiritual matters and present to the minds of those who use, read or hear them images or pictures of spiritual and invisible things as they conceive them to he, few of whom, however, entertain the same conception or idea of God, Christ and the Holy Spirit, and for that reason when words are used in reference to spiritual matters, they convey to the minds of those who read or hear them quite different-ideas, for the reason that they have not the same conception of those matters, as they have in the case of worldly matters, consequently the word’s used present to the mind of each person the picture or image of God and a transcript of His words as they have previously conceived Him and them to be. To all persons of a particular sect the words and phrases employed, by them in their Confession of Faith, or other doctrinal inatters, have a particular or technical meaning which expresses their own particular conceptions and beliefs in spiritual matters; but such language would fail to express the conceptions and belief of any other relb gious sect, for the reason that their conception of spiritual matters is entirely different from the former; and this is the reason, as before stated, for the exist-? ence of so many different religious denominations. This same rule of interpretation is applied in the business affairs of life. The books are full of cases which show that certain words and phrases when used in certain business transactions have a particular meaning, which is understood only by those who are familiar with that particular kind of business; and if applied to some other business, they would convey an entirely different meaning. This condition calls for expert testimony, and no witness is qualified to testify of such matters except when it is first shown that he is .familiar with that particular class of business: So it is in religious matters — no one is competent to inter*783pret the words and construe the Confession of Faith of a particular church without it is first shown that he is a believer in that doctrine. His belief in spiritual matters occupies the same relative position to the knowledge of the expert in business affairs, and without that belief the former cannot properly interpret the words of the Confession of Faith of a particular church any more than a witness without such knowledge could testify as to the meaning of technical words used in a particular business transaction. This rule applies equally as well to all, whether judges, saints or sinners.
This being unquestionably true, then we may have the same word spoken in the presence of two or more persons regarding religious matters and each and every one of them may attach a different meaning to them and understand the proposition stated differently. This truth is recognized and acknowledged generally by all well informed religious people, and is taught in the Scriptures. For this reason it would lead to erroneous conclusions were we in the construction of creeds and confessions of faith to give to the words and phrases thereof the plain and ordinary meaning that is attached to them in the ordinary affairs of life, for by so doing they would mean one thing to the member of one church and another thing to a member of a different church; and just so long as people have imperfect conceptions of God and spiritual matters, just that long will this apparent conflict in the Scriptures and creeds of churches exist, for the reason, as before stated, the language used therein does not express or; convey the same idea alike to all who read or hear it spoken, but is construed by each individual and church according to the correct or incorrect conception he or it has of God and of heavenly matters. If his conception of God is that He is, for instance, a personal God, then the word “God” conveys to his mind the image of some perfect man; and, of course, that conception or *784image differs in the minds of all such, for the reason that they do not all have the same conception of what constitutes a perfect man, but each attributes to his own ideal man the most perfect qualities and attributes 'which his mind is capable of conceiving. That being true, then in all such cases each person’s conception of God varies according to his various conceptions of what constitutes a perfect man; and the latter depends largely upon his intelligence, knowledge and moral qualities. But these are all formal matters and have nothing to do with true religion. The fault rests with the individual and not with religion or the Scriptures; and my only object in mentioning them was to show why, in my judgment, the Scriptures and church creeds are misunderstood by so many people.
But when we come to investigate true religion and the teachings of Christ, we find that there is no real conflict either in the Scriptures or between the two Confessions of Faith involved in this case. All teach substantially the same great fundamental truths, and all Christians regardless of the particular church to which they belong believe in those truths, some of which are as follows:
The existence of God, the Trinity, the authenticity of the Bible, Creation, Providence, the Fall of Man, God’s universal love for all, that Christ died for the sins of the world, that through the atonement whomsoever will may be saved, that all infants dying in infancy and all others who never possessed reason, and all who have no knowledge of the Scriptures, but have led exemplary lives according to their dim lights, will be saved.
Upon these matters all churches and all Christians agree, and their only differences grow out of their imperfect knowledge of God and His plan of salvation, which has caused confusion in the minds of many, leading them to believe that some formal and immaterial matters are of substance and are essential to salvation; *785but, upon the other hand, the Bible is so plain upon the fundamental principles of religion that no church or member thereof has ever been so confused or so misled thereby as to mistake substantial matters taught therein for formal or immaterial matters, and for that reason disregard its mandate.
When we take this broad view of the Scriptures and read the two Confessions of Faith in the light thereof, can there be any possible doubt in the minds of intelligent men about the identity of doctrine stated in the two? If I had the legal right to decide that question, which I deny, I would not hesitate one moment in answering it in the negative. Any other construction would seem to me to be too narrow and technical to meet the broad and useful purposes intended to be accomplished by their promulgation.
On account of the inestimable good which would have been done for the Church, religion and the human family generally, it is, in my judgment, to be deeply regretted that this wise and beneficial union is to be disturbed.
For the reasons hereinbefore stated, I believe the motion for a rehearing should he sustained, in order that this important case, the most important, in my judgment, which has ever been presented to this court, may be argued again.